If a computer search alters the state/contents of a machine, how would it be legal? e.g.: a naive software-based search of files, that alters metadata on files? Or: disassembling a device that wasn't designed to be disassembled, in order to clone the HD?
If border officials order a user to boot-up and enable the same access the traveler would have: What if there's software on the machine, that is *designed* to alter file contents when they are viewed? (The precise reason doesn't matter, but: what if the uncorrupted state of these files, or hardware, are important for one reason or another? say, to enable a security audit, by the traveler's employer?)
So (perhaps unlike other personal effects or "papers"), a computer search is not necessarily a passive process -- it's an ACTIVE one, that can (likely?) lead to damage, destruction, or complete loss.
1.) Oh, the originating country does not allow Americans to work there, under the same or better conditions? BAM! No H1-B visas for you.
1-a.) If no U.S. government agency will maintain a list? The U.S. worker just needs to prove they were statutorily barred working in the country that originated any H1B visa the company sponsored.
2.) For ANY violation of the H1-B visa conditions, make the sponsoring company subject to triple damages, paid to any U.S. worker that was passed-over, in favor of an H1-B.
Ultimately, the companies that hire Infosys should pay for this outrageous behavior. What other strategy will yield the fastest end to this degradation of American workers?
Pick one at random. How about: Kellogg's? (They have such a homey, "All-American" brand image, don't they?)
Make them pay: Shame them, give them bad publicity, DESTROY THEIR BRAND -- do anything legal & necessary to make them drop Infosys as a vendor, permanently.
> Personally, I'd rather see an open system. [...] a prorated debt to to the company that paid for getting them the H-1B
If the system were truly "open," the companies wouldn't pay any fee for an H1-B, at all.
Sapient hired about 2,000 staff in India last year too. The Boston-based company has 65% of its total workforce of more than 10,100 based in India.
"About 35% of our people are hired locally [in markets the company operates]," Mr. Endow said. "That's a very healthy mix."
However: Sapient has only about 1,500 US employees, and at least one-third to one-half of those are here b/c of visa sponsorship. (Consider that an H1-B lasts for 3 years -- extendable up to 6 -- and 2013 isn't even over, yet.) So:
Radionuclides were detected in 2013, and 2006.
North Korea may have taken extra precautions to prevent their tests from releasing radionuclides, in order to conceal the nature of their fission devices (Pu-239 vs U-235, or possibly other isotopes) -- and thus, conceal & protect the supply chain for their fissile material.
Furthermore, don't let the low explosive yields fool you: NK is likely testing the compact trigger for full-blown, fission-fusion-fission thermonuclear devices -- whose explosive yield could be up to several hundred kilotons.
> This is war. This is what war is. This is wha
Oh no! They got him!
> 1700 miles a second
This is obviously a mis-print, right?
(i.e.: "sunlight" correlates to sleep patterns, sleepiness, and alertness.)
> to purchase the product and violate US law (and apple policy)
According to Forbes, items that can be purchased at retail do not require an export license.
> Apple should be lauded for following it.
But the Apple Store employees did not follow the actual export law; and then they eventually told her she could buy the iPad online.
This girl was with her uncle, and intending to give the iPad to her cousin.
I don't do it for the money. -- Donald Trump, Art of the Deal