Wednesday, October 27, 2010

Why Is My Period Blood Mucus

spam "Submitted" or "posted"? Virtual




Im Gutachten "Modernisierung des Datenschutzrechts" im Auftrag des Bundesministeriums des Innern, verfasst im Jahr 2001 von Alexander Rossnagel, Andreas Pfitzmann and Hans Jürgen Garstka were first made comprehensive proposals for adapting the law to the new realities of electronic networking, which can be described by the terms globality, virtuality, convergence and transparency. The proposals were but weiterverfolgt.Nun not for many years are proposals from the Independent Centre for Privacy Protection Schleswig-Holstein (ULD) for the regulation of personal Internet data releases from:

law on the regulation of Internet publications in the Federal Data Protection Act (as of 10/27/2010)
https: / / www.datenschutzzentrum.de/internet/20101027-gesetzentwurf-internetveroeffentlichungen.html

The draft formulated the main guidelines for a specific specification, such as a regulated self-regulation can be observed and substantiated and need. In this respect, he takes up the key points of the Federal Ministry of the Interior during the peak call "Digitalization of urban and rural areas" of 20.09.2010 on.

I reach out this time only two changes, but I recommend the text read at the link above.

Ad 2 Amendment to § 3 para 1 (Relevant data)

The increased collection of factual data to which a personal reference can be made, for example via the Internet of things "(such as smart phones, intelligent household") or through the acquisition of property (for example, automobiles, houses, properties) as the content data of Internet publications, is an uncertainty in the determination of people to mere factual data formed. The Art 29 Data Protection Working Party of the European Union has this worked out an opinion that is not the be placed on the theoretical Personenbeziehbarkeit a material date, but whether the subject date is in a context of a natural person or may be made functionally and thus there is a moral rights meaningful. The Article 29 Working Party established the first results from the context, 2 or 3 contents context context purpose (Art. 29 Data Protection Working Party, Opinion 4 / 2007 by 20.06.2007, WP 136). The text of the law is that reasoning by law.

Ad 3 Further to § 3 para 4 (Term of publishing)

Until now subsumed the provision of personal data to an unlimited number of recipients within the definition of "transmit" (Federal Constitutional Court NJW 1988, 2031, and further evidence for Weichert Däubler / Adhesive / Weddington / Weichert, BDSG, 3rd ed § 3 footnote 46). The application of this transmission concept has meant that the practice of publishing personal data in electronic networks, particularly the Internet, practically a plurality of transmission schemes no longer apply, you do not want to exclude this publication legally complete. This is especially true for the Establishment of automated retrieval procedure (§ 10) and the basic rules of § 29 paragraph 2 to the data processing for the purpose of transfer. The Supreme Court took in reliance on article 5 of the Basic Law in its Spickmich rating this conclusion and reasoned from basic legal considerations, the practical inapplicability of § 29 paragraph 2 in the practically most relevant range of expression on the Internet (BGH NJW 2009, 2888 - Spickmich). This inapplicability is ultimately the transmission rules into question. The introduction of the concept of publishing This form of data processing is now subject to a separate regime and conceptually from the "Submit" separately. The European Court of Justice (ECJ) has solved the problem of practical unenforceability of the transfer rules in that it in Internet publications, the applications of the term transfer denied, but without deriving a self-control (ECJ RDV 2004, 16). With the creation of the new § 29a this gap is filled.

Monday, October 25, 2010

Blisterskin Turning Black

air rights - Remember New Zurich Newspaper




Have just learned that my article entitled "The published room" now after publication in the Austrian Standard 22 9. has also appeared in the New Zurich Zeitung (on 5 Oct 2010). Given that active in the meantime, 3% of all households affected by the deletion in Germany in Google Street View have requested (deadline 15 Oct. 2010), there are no more excuses to act effectively at last! So -

Dear Mr. Thomas de Maizière: "PLEASE READ"

Sunday, October 24, 2010

Does Walgreens Mi Paste

The aural space






















"Childhood is one in golden light bathed landscape. not for everyone. Not always. It is located in a country that moves with age into the distance, well protected by a thicket of memories. A return is impossible. Some stories just fade or lose their shape. But what always remains is a feeling, a mood that is reminiscent of Andrei Tarkovsky 'remark that the only thing you remember in a film, the light was.
The kindergarten in the Senft Straße in Munich receives a golden tent in which reflected the sun. The Court of kindergarten, which is predominantly inhabited by "children with migration background" is so immersed in golden light. In this golden light every interpretation is not important whether it is could act to the object and the tip of a submerged church or minaret. In this golden light, it is also every interpretation irrelevant whether this object is nomadic in now or not. In this light. In this golden light. "Stephan Doesinger


After considerable technical difficulties, the golden tent was finally completed. The official opening and handover will take place tomorrow on 26 October in the Senftenauerstr. 25 in Munich.

location: Senftenauerstr. 25 in Munich
Client: City of Munich
clothing and tent construction: textile construction Link
membrane lining: Darmstaedter
Note November 2010. The Tent is damaged due to a bad film Kaschierungder Darmstaedter by the company and must be renewed after a few days - but then .. with another company!
Goldbedampfung: RoWo Coating Link
Interior: Bänfer Link

A special thanks to the team of textile construction and especially to Mr.. Gühne.
thanks to Hr. Bow and Hr. Carbon from the construction department of the city of Munich,
and to the kindergarten management and last but not least, the children
for your patience.

May the light of this tent gladden the hearts of the children (and adults)!

Friday, October 1, 2010

Hot Spot For Gay Men In Nj

Lesetoff the Bronze Age

















Munich / Wiesbaden (world-of-Bronze Age) - On "GRIN for academic texts" are numerous printed brochures and e-books in PDF format available from cultures from the Bronze Age. These are chapters from the book "Germany in the Bronze Age" in old German spelling. These titles can be purchased at "GRIN" at the address http://www.grin.com the web. They are also available at more than 1,000 online bookstores as well as in any good bookstore. Below Summaries of these books and e-books: The Eagle Mountain

culture
The Bronze Age is more than 2000-800 BC as the first and longer of the Metal Ages in Europe. During this time, tools, weapons and ornaments made of bronze were made. In some areas of the Bronze Age had a different time period. So they began in southern Germany before about 2300 BC and ended around 800 BC In northern Germany, however, it lasted from about 1600 to 500 BC The spread of the Bronze Age cultures in Germany is the eagle mountain culture. She was from about 2100 1800 BC, the Upper Rhine Valley in Rhineland-Palatinate (Rheinland, Pfalz), Hesse and parts of Baden-Wuerttemberg (North York) disseminated. It is certainly emerged from the Neolithic Beaker culture. put it bluntly, it is "is a" Beaker-Beaker culture without. For these two cultural phenomena were in regards to the burial customs, bow and arrow and her identical settlement very close. The text on the eagle mountain culture comes from the print book "Germany in the Bronze Age" (1996) Science of the Wiesbaden author Ernst Probst old German spelling and corresponds to the standard of knowledge. Other cultures of the Bronze Age from Germany will also be presented in separate publications.
orders: http://www.grin.com/e-book/114062/die-adlerberg-kultur

The Unetice culture
The Bronze Age is more than 2000-800 BC as the first and longer of the Metal Ages in Europe. During this time, tools, weapons and ornaments made of bronze were made. In some areas of the Bronze Age had a different time period. So they began in southern Germany before about 2300 BC and ended around 800 BC In northern Germany, however, it lasted from about 1600 to 500 BC The spread in Germany Cultures of the Bronze Age culture Unetice heard before about 2300 to 1600/1500 BC, which is named after the cemetery of Unetice (Aunjetitz) in Bohemia (Czech Republic). She was in the early stage of Bohemia, Moravia, the south-western Slovakia, spread Silesia, Lower Austria, Thuringia, Saxony-Anhalt and in the late stage in the eastern Lower Saxony and Brandenburg and in the South West of Poland. The text on the Unetice culture comes from the print book "Germany in the Bronze Age" (1996) Science of the Wiesbaden author Ernst Probst old German spelling and corresponds to the standard of knowledge. Other cultures of the Bronze Age from Germany will also be presented in separate publications.
orders: http://www.grin.com/e-book/93103/die-aunjetitzer-kultur-eine-kultur-der-bronzezeit-vor-etwa-2300-bis-1600-1500

The
Bronze Age The Bronze Age more than 2000 to 800 BC is considered the first and longer of the Metal Ages in Europe. During this time, tools, weapons and ornaments made of bronze were made. In some areas of the Bronze Age had a different time period. So they began in southern Germany before about 2300 BC and ended around 800 BC In northern Germany, however, it lasted from about 1600 to 500 BC The term "Bronze Age" in 1836 in a museum catalog by the Danish archaeologist Christian Jürgensen Thomsen (1788-l865) from Copenhagen introduced. The text of the book on the Bronze Age comes from the print works "Germany in the Bronze Age" (1996) Science of the Wiesbaden author Ernst Probst old German Spelling and corresponds to the standard of knowledge. Ernst Probst published the books "Germany in prehistoric times" (1986) and "Germany in the Stone Age" (1991).
orders: http://www.grin.com/e-book/93300/die-bronzezeit

The Barrow-culture
The Bronze Age more than 2000-800 BC is longer than the first and The Metal Ages in Europe. During this time, tools, weapons and ornaments made of bronze were made. In some areas of the Bronze Age had a different time period. So they began in southern Germany before about 2300 BC and ended around 800 BC In northern Germany, however, it lasted from about 1600 to 500 BC The spread of the Bronze Age cultures in Germany, the Barrow-cultural ago as 1600 to 1300/1200 BC According to current knowledge, the Barrow-culture of eastern France (Alsace) and was spread to Hungary (Carpathian Basin). It is identical in this area with the Middle Bronze Age and can be divided into numerous local groups. The concept of Barrow-culture based on the fact that about 1600 BC across much of Europe, the burial customs radically changed: instead of the dead in the Early Bronze Age in shallow graves to bury, poured it now often over the graves of one to two meters high grave mound and then placed on often other deceased is at. The text on the Barrow-culture comes from the print book "Germany in the Bronze Age" (1996) Science of the Wiesbaden author Ernst Probst old German spelling and corresponds to the standard of knowledge. Other cultures of the Bronze Age from Germany will also be presented in separate publications.
orders: http://www.grin.com/e-book/93208/die-huegelgraeber-kultur

The Lusatian culture
The Bronze Age is more than 2000-800 BC as the first and longer of the Metal Ages in Europe. During this time, tools, weapons and ornaments made of bronze were made. In some areas had the Bronze Age a different time period. So they began in southern Germany before about 2300 BC and ended around 800 BC In northern Germany, however, it lasted from about 1600 to 500 BC One of the most important Bronze Age cultures of Central Europe was v. by about 1300 to 500 BC . Lusatian culture. Its distribution area extended in the west to the Saale in central Germany, while in the southern North Bohemia, North Moravia, and the north-western Slovakia included. In the north-west was the southern Brandenburg to the east and formed the present-day Polish province of Posen (Poznan) the border. The prehistory distinguish between an eastern, western, Moravian-Silesian, Upper Silesian-Polish, Silesian and a medium-Lausitz-Saxon Group. For the western group reckoned that once, especially in the Lausitz, Brandenburg and Saxony in the southern resident Lausitz-Saxon group. The term "Lusatian culture" in 1880 marked the then acting in Berlin pathologist Rudolf Virchow (1821-1902). The text of the Lusatian culture comes from the print book "Germany in the Bronze Age" (1996) Science of the Wiesbaden author Ernst Probst old German spelling and corresponds to the standard of knowledge. Other cultures of the Bronze Age from Germany will also be presented in separate publications.
orders: http://www.grin.com/e-book/93341/die-lausitzer-kultur

The Lüneburg group in the Bronze Age, the Bronze Age
more than 2000-800 BC is longer than the first and the Metal Ages in Europe. During this time, tools, weapons and ornaments made of bronze were made. In some areas of the Bronze Age had a different time period. So they began in southern Germany before about 2300 BC and ended around 800 BC In northern Germany, however, it lasted from about 1600 to 500 BC The spread of the Bronze Age cultures in Germany, the Lüneburg group includes the older Bronze Age (about 1500 to 1200 BC), the Lüneburg group in the Middle Bronze Age (about 1200 to 1100. BC) and the Lüneburg group in the early Bronze Age (about 1100 to 800 BC). From the "Lüneburg Bronze Age," said the first time in 1939 in Munich working archaeologist Friedrich Holste (1908-1942). The now common term "Lüneburg group coined 1971, at the time at the museum Lüneburg working archaeologist Frederick Laux, which is dedicated to this publication, in gratitude for his valuable support. The texts of the Lüneburg group are from the print book "Germany in the Bronze Age" (1996) Science of the Wiesbaden author Ernst Probst old German spelling and comply with the standard of knowledge. Other cultures of the Bronze Age from Germany are also presented in separate publications.
orders: http://www.grin.com/e-book/93504/die-lueneburger-gruppe-in-der-bronzezeit

The Nordic Bronze Age The Bronze Age
more than 2000-800 BC . is considered the first and longer of the Metal Ages in Europe. During this time, tools, weapons and ornaments made of bronze were made. In some areas of the Bronze Age had a different time period. So they began in southern Germany before about 2300 BC and ended around 800 BC In northern Germany, however, it lasted from about 1600 to 500 BC The spread of the Bronze Age cultures in Germany include the Nordic Bronze Age and Early Bronze Age of the Nordic group (such as 1800-1500 BC), the Northern Early Bronze Age (about 1500 to 1200 BC), the Nordic Middle Bronze Age (about 1200 to 1100. BC) and the Nordic Late Bronze Age (about 1100 to 800 BC .). The Swedish archaeologist Oscar Montelius of the (1843-1921) derived term "Nordic group" based on the intrinsically-sized development of northern regions of Europe. The texts of the Nordic Bronze Age date from the print book "Germany in the Bronze Age" (1996) Science of the Wiesbaden author Ernst Probst old German spelling and comply with the standard of knowledge. Other cultures of the Bronze Age from Germany are also in individual publications presented.
orders: http://www.grin.com/e-book/93450/die-nordische-bronzezeit

The Stade group in the Bronze Age, the Bronze Age
more than 2000-800 BC, as is The first and longer of the Metal Ages in Europe. During this time, tools, weapons and ornaments made of bronze were made. In some areas of the Bronze Age had a different time period. So they began in southern Germany before about 2300 BC and ended around 800 BC In northern Germany, however, it lasted from about 1600 to 500 BC The spread of the Bronze Age cultures in Germany, the Stade group are in the older Bronze Age (about 1500 to 1200 BC), the Stade group in the middle Bronze Age (about 1200 to 1100. BC) and the Stade group in the early Bronze Age (about 1100 to 800 BC). The term "Stader group has used 1981, the archaeologist Arne Lucke in his Hamburg dissertation for the first time for a local group of the early Bronze Age. In contrast, use of the Hamburg archaeologist Friedrich Laux called "Stader group," he mentioned in 1987 at a lecture in Bad Stuer and which he in 1991 in an essay back, reached for a group that in the older, middle and late Bronze Age claimed. The texts of the Stade group are from the print book "Germany in the Bronze Age" (1996) the Wiesbaden science author Ernst Probst old German spelling and comply with the standard of knowledge. Other cultures of the Bronze Age from Germany will also be presented in separate publications.
orders: http://www.grin.com/e-book/93578/die-stader-gruppe-in-der-bronzezeit

The Straubinger culture
The Bronze Age more than 2000-800 BC . is considered the first and longer of the Metal Ages in Europe. During this time, tools, weapons and ornaments made of bronze were made. In some areas of the Bronze Age had a different time period. So they began in southern Germany before about 2300 BC and ended around 800 BC In northern Germany, however, it lasted from about 1600-500 BC The spread in Germany, the cultures of the Bronze Age culture Straubinger ago about 2300-1600 BC, was in southern Bavaria (Lower Bavaria, Upper Bavaria, and partly in the Upper Palatinate and Swabia) disseminated. Runners held their own in Upper Austria, in Salzburg and Kufstein in space in Northern Tyrol. The Straubinger culture is the oldest culture of the Early Bronze Age in the eastern southern Germany. Their metal craftsmen have produced in the early stage, also products of unalloyed copper and only in the late stage of bronze. The text on the Straubinger culture comes from the print book "Germany in the Bronze Age" (1996) of the Wiesbaden science writer Ernst Probst old German spelling and corresponds to the standard of knowledge. Other cultures of the Bronze Age from Germany will also be presented in separate publications.
orders: http://www.grin.com/e-book/113962/die-straubinger-kultur

the urnfield culture
The Bronze Age is more than 2000-800 BC as the first and longer of the Metal Ages in Europe. During this time, tools, weapons and ornaments made of bronze were made. In some areas of the Bronze Age had a different time period. So they began in southern Germany before about 2300 BC and ended around 800 BC In northern Germany, however, it lasted from about 1600 to 500 BC The spread in Germany Cultures of the Bronze Age is the urnfield culture from about 1300/1200 to 800 BC It is valid in Europe as one of the major cultures of the Late Bronze Age and could be from the northern Balkan countries on the Danube to the Upper Rhine region spread. In Germany it was in Baden-Wuerttemberg, Bavaria, Saarland, Rhineland-Palatinate, Hesse, North Rhine-Westphalia parts (Lower Rhine Basin) and south home of the Thuringian Forest. The term urnfield culture based upon the time that the dead burned at the stake and then often dumped their ashes or bones in clay urns and buried in graves were fire. Occasionally formed the cremations extensive urnfield with dozens or hundreds of funerals. The text on the urnfield culture comes from the print book "Germany in the Bronze Age" (1996) Science of the Wiesbaden author Ernst Probst old German spelling and corresponds to the standard of knowledge. Other cultures of the Bronze Age from Germany will also be presented in separate publications.
orders: http://www.grin.com/e-book/93166/die-urnenfelder-kultur