Psycho-Babble Administration Thread 1100306

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Re: to alexandra_k, credit deserves... » ert

Posted by alexandra_k on August 16, 2018, at 5:18:53

In reply to Re: to alexandra_k, credit deserves..., posted by ert on August 15, 2018, at 8:50:51

> especially posters. some credit deserves also dr bob (who does research). but most credit actually deserve people like ed uk and others who supported a lot with their knowledge...

yeah. i think bob only cited or quoted people's posts in an attempt to portray them in a positive or good or helpful or knowledgeable light. to give them credit.

there was controversy over people liking or tweeting or reposting... because there could be this unhelpful... uncivil... laughing at or whatever sort of commentary that would not have been tolerated here...

i know that we *think* or are told that other sites remove this or that information... but, uh, why should we believe them? i don't think anything goes away anymore... i think that this place serves as something of a warning or reminder of that. a heads up.

you aren't alone in thinking that bob should delete posts.

he has sort of... hidden posts. archiving boards.

but the stuff is still here...

if you don't want to remember you don't have to look back... but it's there for those who do want to remember.

and maybe it's there so that people don't have to remember.

i don't know.

 

Re: to alexandra_k, credit deserves...

Posted by ert on August 16, 2018, at 7:14:38

In reply to Re: to alexandra_k, credit deserves... » ert, posted by alexandra_k on August 16, 2018, at 5:18:53

the question is not if he should, it is more if he must. you can't say everyone, "you don't have to look back".

 

Re: to alexandra_k, credit deserves...

Posted by ert on August 16, 2018, at 7:23:29

In reply to Re: to alexandra_k, credit deserves..., posted by ert on August 16, 2018, at 7:14:38

> the question is not if he should, it is more if he must. you can't say everyone, "you don't have to look back".

When he does not and it is against the law, he acts unlawful. When he does reluctantly he acts irresponsibly.

 

Re: to alexandra_k, credit deserves...

Posted by ert on August 16, 2018, at 8:58:59

In reply to Re: to alexandra_k, credit deserves..., posted by ert on August 16, 2018, at 7:23:29

there also is a component of voyeurism. Someone knows what illnesses they have, what they ate, can assume their social status, maybe the places where they were, their family affairs, what pets they have... The medical data is connected with all sort of things. (I dont want to suggest that dr bob started this because of voyeurism). the problem is not that the database exists, but that it can barely deleted by posters and it dates back (i don't know), before the year 2000 (?). also, someone maybe got cured or symptoms lessened substantially and they want to cut off from the past. One suggestion is that the public database could be cleared every year or up to five years or so. That would also guarantee that when somebody dies, the data will disappear.

 

Re: to alexandra_k, credit deserves... » ert

Posted by alexandra_k on August 16, 2018, at 18:36:21

In reply to Re: to alexandra_k, credit deserves..., posted by ert on August 16, 2018, at 8:58:59

> Someone knows what illnesses they have, what they ate, can assume their social status, maybe the places where they were, their family affairs, what pets they have...

But why would someone bother to try and collate all that information from masses and masses of text on this site when one could so very much more easily get that from Facebook or from random surveys that people choose to click through, or whatever.

> One suggestion is that the public database could be cleared every year or up to five years or so. That would also guarantee that when somebody dies, the data will disappear.

But the Facebook and Survey data isn't going anywhere. Just because you think something has been deleted, just because a site hides what you wanted deleted from you, doesn't mean other people don't have access to it, anymore.

What law do you think Dr Bob is violating in not pulling the site down?

I don't understand.

 

Re: to alexandra_k, credit deserves...

Posted by alexandra_k on August 16, 2018, at 18:43:25

In reply to Re: to alexandra_k, credit deserves... » ert, posted by alexandra_k on August 16, 2018, at 18:36:21

I mean, think about bank data. That's how much money you have coming in, and all the outgoings. Do you have a supermarket card? That's itemisation of everything you purchase. You can match that to things like which items were on special and product placement and so on if you cared to (pretty sure that's what the supermarket cards are for). Then you have peoples facebook posts - what they like and so on. You have information about their product purchases (including medications). You can get health information from health information billing administrative systems...

The companies with the Software... I think it would be disingeuous to think that they weren't profiting from the data they have...

But from that kind of point of view...

What would this site add to the picture?

I don't know how much things are a mess, really, with collating various things. I know it is likely that there is a dearth of expertise, really, and thus pretty likely that things do work together at the end of the day (like how in this part of the world, anyway, there aren't changes to the make up of parliament or parliamentary advisors and so on from one election to the next in total disregard of who wins the damned thing). So I would expect there would likely be more.

And it's all billing or administrative data. So it's not protected as being anything special...

I think it is actuaries. Health insurance companies. Big data, sure. Stuff about distributing risk. Basically about protecting the few at the expense of the many. Future projections... Get whatever whatever to buy in... And now the situation is that the future must simply come to be. Whether the future be that many people will need to live in aged care institutions or the future will be that most of them will be indigenous or whatever... People just... Accept it.

People just accept that politicans and people on councils and boards earn so very much money... Just take it. Just take it from the tax money that was (for the most part) taken from other people. People accept it. Like to like and follow these people. Admire them. Want to be them.

I don't know how they live with themselves.

But they do.

 

Re: to alexandra_k, credit deserves...

Posted by alexandra_k on August 16, 2018, at 19:52:17

In reply to Re: to alexandra_k, credit deserves..., posted by alexandra_k on August 16, 2018, at 18:43:25

I've got Stats NZ people harrassing me, now.

They used to have a website which said that individuals had the right to be communicated with in the form of communication they prefer.

So I said that I didn't want to let a surveyer in my house or have a yak to them for 40 minutes to complete this survey on how I spend my money. That they can leave paper forms and I'll fill them out and post them back.

So they updated their webpage to remove all reference to people having the right to be communicated with in the manner they prefer (where written English is reasonable, fairly sure about that) and now i'ts just... Bully content. About how they have the right to send people out and you have to participate by law.

Does the government really not have better things to be spending their money on? Just think of the houses they could buy and the central heaters they could install and how they could rent them to people at an affordable amount...

But, no, they want to hire bully people to go around banging on people's doors demanding entry to their personal property so they can sit down with them for 40 minutes and hear all about how they spend their money while tap tap tapping it all into their form fields that make it impossible (once again) for people to actually say anything about how they actually do spend their money (or want to convey that they do).

I would imagine it's really about what people will say to the bully-person in front of them compared with what people actually do via their bank records and supermarket records and so on. I would imagine that it is.

I think it is $600 not to participate. I suspect a lot of people just eat that.

I hate this f*ck*ng country.

 

Re: to alexandra_k, credit deserves...

Posted by alexandra_k on August 16, 2018, at 19:56:36

In reply to Re: to alexandra_k, credit deserves..., posted by alexandra_k on August 16, 2018, at 19:52:17

Or maybe it is about how the presence of the surveyer bully person in your face gets you changing your spending behavior. Maybe that is it. Maybe it is like how if you *say* you will vote for a particular party on a survey then you become committed to that, which makes it more likely to occur... Wait, that apparently didn't work so well...

Or that's what they want us to believe.

It's just f*ck*ng tiresome.

You can bet the politicians aren't being randomly surveyed to sit down with a surveyer and tell them all about how they spend their \$250,000+ per year. You can just bet they don't have to do this.

You can also bet that when the Prime Minister gives birth in a public hospital she's not spending her time hanging out on the open ward with all the other new mums and their friends and family all hanging about with their phones livestreaming for y'all.

What a f*ck*ng farce.

 

Re: to alexandra_k

Posted by ert on August 16, 2018, at 23:12:53

In reply to Re: to alexandra_k, credit deserves..., posted by alexandra_k on August 16, 2018, at 19:56:36

For my ears you sound like a fairly naive, lovely young lady. But maybe I am wrong. Young people deserve special protection. They can post things that they dont want. They are vulnerable, they cant outguess the consequences of their decision and actions.

This is not a supermarket card and not facebook. On supermarket cards turnover of nutritional products is saved, on facebook you can delete data and you can delete an account, its not just the surveyor in nz its about the Chinese, Americans, the Spaniards, coworkers, departments and even more. Here is other data saved than that.

He violates intellectual property rights, sensitive personal data rights (depending on country), personally identifiable information (PII) and newly EU right to be forgotten.

I dont want to point out only negative aspects here, but if its possible someone should act according to the boundaries that the law sets.

The laws also adapted to new circumstances in the recent twenty years. I dont want to blame him here only, because of the fact that he started this project almost twenty years ago.

If you think he could make money, due to the altruistic behavior of sick participants and ads pop up from eg. pfizer or glaxo, the project would be even more ethically questionable. And a psychiatrist is at least middleclass or more.

The quality of a database is one thing, the property rights and personal rights of individuals another. A database can be archived and saved personally, printed out or downloaded with tools like Cyotek Webcopy.

I am sorry that you got harassed by stat people in nz. Thanks for having you from nz. Take care.

 

Re: to alexandra_k

Posted by alexandra_k on August 17, 2018, at 17:15:25

In reply to Re: to alexandra_k, posted by ert on August 16, 2018, at 23:12:53

> On supermarket cards turnover of nutritional products is saved

*What* you buy is saved. How much milk do you buy? How much cheese? Are you brand loyal to some / most / all or will you change your brand if there is a discount. How much is your 'favorite' brand worth to you? How much will you substitute another product, entirely, for a discount?

You might think that they only care about things en masse, and not about particular purchasers...

But some purchasers turn out to be predictive of the behavior of certain other groups. It can be cheaper and easier to track particular purchasers, therefore. In the interests of... Tricking them so that one can turn greater profits.

And some purchasers turn out to be particularly 'rational' or whatever. There might be interests in learning more about people who seem particularly in control (shall we say) of their supermarket purchasing. One might have a special interest in how they spend the rest of their money...

> on facebook you can delete data and you can delete an account

On facebook you can *ask for data to be deleted* and the data is no longer visible to you, or to people you know. Do you really think your data is actually removed from facebook and the people facebook have passed your data on to? Similarly, you an ask for an account to be deleted and you can no longer log into it and it is no longer visible to people you know. That certainly doesn't mean that a whole bunch of people can't view what you posted before.

Including your request that things be deleted. People might well have a special interest in those who decide to opt out. Might want to track these people, particularly. Like how it has been noted, now, on my HealthOne health record that I asked to opt out of having a HealthOne record. It is my right to ask to opt out and have my dissent noted there, you see. At which point they inform me that I might not be able to get the healthcare I need from the public system, anymore. Of course, I wasn't likely to have gotten it before, anyway. But they appear to have a special interest in tagging and tracking dissentors.

> its not just the surveyor in nz

Of course it's not. For better, or worse. Our supermarket check-out system in the major supermarkets (New World, Countdown, Pack and Save) is Norwegan. The Health Administrative Data was... I tracked it around the world, a bit. Companies that are subsidaries of other companies and so on... It got lost somewhere in America - though I'm sure liability stops somewhere where there aren't any laws

US Health data was hacked by Russians. US... Something something about Russian Doctors and performance enhancing drug prescriptions and the Olympics...

> He violates intellectual property rights, sensitive personal data rights (depending on country), personally identifiable information (PII) and newly EU right to be forgotten.

?
Reference?

> If you think he could make money, due to the altruistic behavior of sick participants and ads pop up from eg. pfizer or glaxo, the project would be even more ethically questionable. And a psychiatrist is at least middleclass or more.

I think he could have chosen to have done such things with this site. After there was an article in the New York Times there was (and would have been predicted to be) a boon in posting numbers. I'm pretty sure he could have made money off of ads. But he chose not to. That says something about him as a person, I think. Quite a lot. Not many have made such choices with the sites they run.

I sympathise a lot about privacy concerns and so on... I guess I just don't understand what people are likely to gain from here, particularly. And what you think is to be gained by tearing the whole site down.

 

Re: to alexandra_k

Posted by alexandra_k on August 17, 2018, at 18:10:44

In reply to Re: to alexandra_k, posted by alexandra_k on August 17, 2018, at 17:15:25

It is because I studied psychology at an undergraduate university that was fairly focused on animal behavior and organisational psychology.

as such, we learned quite a lot about behaviorism - even though since then cognitive psychology, and more lately, neuro psychology have become the prominent focus.

but if we consider much of what we know about behavior and the control of behavior from psychology... and we apply that stuff to marketing and management... and we consider statistics and the power of computing these days...

which is why most universities don't teach behaviorism anymore, i suppose.

even a lot of the cognitive psychology techniques. how to 'persuade' people to do what you want them to without them even knowing.

bullying techniques. bait and switch techniques. and so on...

it's all old news. old old old news. but they don't teach it in the schools, anymore, and most people don't seem to realise.

many of the bullying techniques. having burly men walking about with 'security' written on their back telling people to display their ID or to move along... getting all up in people's faces and so on...

the lack of leagal advice.

or 'legal advice' which consists of scripts of 'information' nobody asked for and no time for people to ask about the things they want to know (nobody knowlegable - AskLegal - so all the idiot unemployable lawyers can be employed to mislead and waylay and data collect so those who need to hire actual lawyers to conceal their wrong are given the approriate heads up well in advance).

people care more about these things than about creating a world even they feel is worth living in. or... in creatin a world they feel is good for their kids to live in.

that's partly the thing about kids. they are saying that having kids keeps people off drugs and the like. clearly since i didn't have kids i'm a noisy druggy. yeah, NZ, you know me so well.

f*ck*ng idoits.

 

Re: to alexandra_k

Posted by alexandra_k on August 17, 2018, at 18:19:09

In reply to Re: to alexandra_k, posted by alexandra_k on August 17, 2018, at 18:10:44

i never used to think that other people were idiots, or whatever.

but they really went over and above when it came to hiring particular people to do particular jobs.

i know it's not socially acceptable to say anything. but that's a method of controlling people. you don't complain about the incompetent doctor or lawyer or teacher or librarian or whatever. it wouldn't be polite. they are lovely. they are doing their best. that's what you say. you rate that you are 'satisfied' with their service.

so the manager gets to go 'see - we don't need to hire skilled, qualified people, the masses can't even tell the difference! we can literally hire the unskilled and incompetent people of the world and we can hire, like, 4 or 5 for the price of a skilled and competent one!'

or... when skilled and competent people are rare, they can collect them me-wards. into the private hospitals and schools that the can afford with all the money they saved!

and the other people can't tell the difference. or, care more about being polite than they care about their own or their childrens or their family and friends education and healthcare and so on.

right?

everyones happy??

 

Re: to alexandra_k

Posted by ert on August 18, 2018, at 8:38:30

In reply to Re: to alexandra_k, posted by alexandra_k on August 17, 2018, at 18:19:09

in one of the supermarket chains "New World, Countdown, Pack and Save", they maybe need psychologists, Alexandra K from NZ.

He takes responsibility only for his posts, can and would delete it, but he does not take responsibility for the intellectual property of others and would not delete, even if it is against the law and they could get harmed or even harassed.
but you're right Alexandra K, it is costless. Probably it can help you. but it does not mean that there is no room for improvement.

 

Re: to alexandra_k

Posted by alexandra_k on August 18, 2018, at 19:24:57

In reply to Re: to alexandra_k, posted by ert on August 18, 2018, at 8:38:30

> even if it is against the law..

what law?

do you have the particular act or section or whatever?

 

Re: to alexandra_k

Posted by alexandra_k on August 18, 2018, at 20:35:28

In reply to Re: to alexandra_k, posted by alexandra_k on August 18, 2018, at 19:24:57

https://www.consumer.org.nz/articles/supermarket-psychology

actually two supermarket chains (I learned something).

they already have hired organisational psychologists.

there's a lot more that goes into the product placement / tracking now they can more readily collet up all the purchase information, though.

and things they can do with eye gaze tracking software and the like. the strategic use of loudspeaker advertisements. the strategic use of phantom shoppers (notice how when most people seem stuck to make a choice if someone dives in and grabs something swiftly the stuck peron will copy).

and so on.

it just makes shopping a really unpleasant sort of an experience. like trying to avoid mines walking through a minefield. i guess that's why you make a list and ignore discounts (or have a list of 'only if discounted' or whatever. but what you need only when it is discounted rather than when you need to replace)

 

Re: to alexandra_k

Posted by alexandra_k on August 18, 2018, at 20:38:33

In reply to Re: to alexandra_k, posted by alexandra_k on August 18, 2018, at 20:35:28

https://www.otago.ac.nz/marketing/staff/staffprofiles/otago079928.html

groan.

this is how public health moves from strength to strength to strength where our brightest and most competent look out for the public interest.

not at all where the incompetent get paid enough to keep them cowed to saying what they are told.

how you get to teach stuff you never formally studied?

ffs..

 

Re: to alexandra_k

Posted by alexandra_k on August 18, 2018, at 21:12:21

In reply to Re: to alexandra_k, posted by alexandra_k on August 18, 2018, at 20:38:33

it's nothing personal against her. i don't know her. i've never met her. she might be an absolutedly brilliant human being. or, she might have been selected to do precisely what she does because, of course, tobacco people have had so very much time to get their money out of tobacco and into all the other things that are going to to into the vape substances.

i have a friend... who is going to be advisor to the science advisor, or similar. of course! i mean, he doesn't really have a background in science (certainly not the standard background in chemisty or physics) or in industry that is important (in biochemistry or biochemicals or pharmaceuticals or in milk product reconstitution or in electronics or in engineeringing or in anything like any of that... and of course having science advisor people without much background in either science or in industry is the way to safeguard and protect our science into the future - right?

only it would seem like i'm being bitter that i point out sh*t like this. that i'm being butt hurt that i didn't get picked to do any of it. why did they apply for / take those jobs? do they think they are helping?

i'm trying to remember my friend who told me her job was basically to scan paper records in so american business people could better assess whether they wanted to invest in nz. handing over all the data to foreign business interests. how the department was all involved in slowing down this request for information by these people in one of the pacific island countries who might have had an alternative claim on royalty.

her attitude... she was like... this is the job... this is what i do... it pays well.. i'm successful. yay.

yay.

the world that they've made.

i really don't want to be writing philosophy any more. i cant' really be any clearer abotu that. it isn't good for me. i have no desire to join them. i have no desire to play that game.

maybe they like the idea of having a doctor who yessir nosir anything yousaysir (the person isnt' in the position to be able to assess competency or competent treatment). smiling happy face such friendly people leading their own into the death camps...

they world they seem really committed to making...

it would be nice to just get away from it all and focus on being the best i can be. but so much fun for most to 'play' with other people and prevent that from being the case. for the good of... uh... yeah. successful. yay you. well done.

sigh.

 

Re: to alexandra_k

Posted by alexandra_k on August 18, 2018, at 21:15:53

In reply to Re: to alexandra_k, posted by alexandra_k on August 18, 2018, at 21:12:21

i guess it's because they think they don't have the power to prevent most from becomming.... but they have power to prevent me from becomming (tee hee! what fun!)

and i... do not desire to be one of them.

so...

it would be kinder for me to be murdered in my sleep.

but i guess it's funner to keep me around. as a lesson to y'all.

they really like to live like that.

civilisation... yeah, right.

 

Re: to alexandra_k

Posted by alexandra_k on August 18, 2018, at 21:36:53

In reply to Re: to alexandra_k, posted by alexandra_k on August 18, 2018, at 21:15:53

and i guess the issue is, then, that these people aren't psychopaths, so much as being 'adaptable'. and they are people who were raised in poverty / lower middle class. or with enough of it around for them to know that there wasn't a great deal of difference in abiltity or deserts for people in one or the other of those.

and they are people who prioritise money. are incentivised by it. and the interest they serve (formerly tobacco, now unregulated pharma, i guess) and so on... well, that's where there money comes from. that's how come they have the money they do.

they do invest in good things with their money, sometimes. one of my friends earns enough as a consultant to have a lot of time off work. she's a real type A, though, so in her 'time off' work she works just as hard on volunteer projects. promoting cycling or some green hippy thing or other. and she walks the walk on moderate consumtion and so on. and other friends... they are my friends for a reason. we became friends when things were more mutual and, even, when i was earning more in one case... and they were there for me. they do have generosity of spirit and kindness and so on. they aren't psychppathic. they are doing the best they can to get by. they say they... just couldn't handle doign what i've done in going back to undegrad study.. back even further with the maths and chemistry and physics... living with the kids because we don't believe in adult education...

it's wikipedia: hospitals for poor people make poor hospitals. indeed. you need... mixed things. hospitals for black people are more likely to be hijacked to serve white interest. clinics for maaori and poor people here are more likely to be hijeacked to serve white interest.

you don't want a clinic that serves underprivaledged / impoverished. because it will only gain funding if it serves that other interest.

you want a clinic that is genuinely mixed. the same standard of care to ALL patients. you might have to draw a ring around HOW MANY patients you have - but there are things you should be able to do to create REPRESENTATIVE patients - with respect to income, race, and so on...

That's what ensures things are better.

The manager that eats from the same pot you do is incentivised not to 'just a litle more salt and sugar just a little more salt and sugar' each and every day until the people die of malnutrition and he's off to invest his fortune feeding the aged care facility for the impoverished people of the world...

i bet they already have a f*ck ton of people high paid giving obviously high paid medical advice to the government on how to better stabotage our public system so less and less people have access to less and less qualified people to drive drive drive the prices up so there's a tight circle of money going around for a few at the cost of the majority...

but these adaptable people would back something viable / genuine if it was offered... they would like to see it.

i guess they've been kicked at their lives. they couldnl't handle what i've done...

i'm just afraid they won't let me do what i have worked for doing precisely because of that.

nobody likes to feel bad about the choices they've made.

i just... i couldn't do the things they've done.

 

Re: to alexandra_k

Posted by ert on August 19, 2018, at 7:29:55

In reply to Re: to alexandra_k, posted by alexandra_k on August 18, 2018, at 21:36:53

Your friend could send compromising material on one of the supermarket chains facebook. By the time you work there. Maybe you are on good terms, I hope so. But the problem is, you could not delete the source (your intellectual property) of it.

 

Re: to alexandra_k

Posted by ert on August 19, 2018, at 15:40:48

In reply to Re: to alexandra_k, posted by alexandra_k on August 18, 2018, at 19:24:57

> > even if it is against the law..
>
> what law?
>
> do you have the particular act or section or whatever?
>
>

many people do not know their rights, obviously you are not an exception.

I am sorry that the current situation in NZ is not so good, but probably when the conditions will change, you will also be able to change your mind.

 

Re: Ert

Posted by alexandra_k on August 20, 2018, at 18:35:11

In reply to Re: to alexandra_k, posted by ert on August 19, 2018, at 15:40:48

> many people do not know their rights, obviously you are not an exception.

Yep. And even when people do know their rights, the people around them don't / won't understand their duties not to interfere with the rights of the people around them.

> I am sorry that the current situation in NZ is not so good, but probably when the conditions will change, you will also be able to change your mind.

Maybe.

Conditions might change for me... But I don't know at all how likely it is that conditions will change for most people.

The trajectory seems to be the other way, honestly.

I've been pretty surprised to learn that the most basic of free speech is in jepardy here (e.g., people won't speak up about their landlord or their employer mistreating them because they have been encouraged to believe that if they speak up they will find themself locked out of accommodation or employment into the future -- like so very many of the people they see around them).

because the imbalance in power (favoring landlords and employers).

government people thinking that x or y amount of homelessness or employment is actually desirable for a 'functioning economy' where people live in terror and do precisely what they are told.

but of course unemployment is down because people can't seem to apply for unemployment anymore... and you can throw them into 'training courses' and call them 'students'.

 

Re: alexandra_k

Posted by ert on August 25, 2018, at 15:00:01

In reply to Re: Ert, posted by alexandra_k on August 20, 2018, at 18:35:11

that's very interesting what u tell me about nz, alexandra. did not know that...

btw, i don't say that dr bob isn't lovely or has good properties in his character, but do you want a doc who could have made a lot of money with this or someone who does abide by the law and respect the fate of his participants (?). but i am sure that dr bob will change his mind.

 

Re: alexandra_k

Posted by alexandra_k on August 27, 2018, at 0:12:49

In reply to Re: alexandra_k, posted by ert on August 25, 2018, at 15:00:01

> someone who does abide by the law and respect the fate of his participants (?)

I don't understand how you think he has done either of those.

If I thought he had done those things, I would feel less... Happy... About his character.

 

Re: alexandra_k

Posted by ert on August 27, 2018, at 9:54:54

In reply to Re: alexandra_k, posted by alexandra_k on August 27, 2018, at 0:12:49

> > someone who does abide by the law and respect the fate of his participants (?)
>
> I don't understand how you think he has done either of those.
>
> If I thought he had done those things, I would feel less... Happy... About his character.
>
>

I would like that you can feel happy from that point on but later on too without facing any danger. Auckland will be a bit warmer weather, if you go. And also good for swimming with less waves.


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