Word: reward
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...site - for a total fine that could easily reach $250 million. The award was considerably less severe than it could have been; as the judge was happy to remind MP3 defendants, he weighed fining the company up to $150,000 per CD, but chose a lower number to reward MP3 for their responsible behavior, relative to other music sites. What would this guy have done to Napster...
Gore's proposal would have a narrower impact, and is harder to understand, but count on this: those it would affect are solidly low- and middle-income people. Essentially, Gore would reward them with tax credits and refunds for government-approved good behavior: sending children to college, caring for an elderly relative or setting up certain kinds of savings accounts. It's social engineering via the tax code--something the Clinton Administration has been doing for years, and the sort of federal meddling that drives conservatives and libertarians crazy. It's a long way from the Bush approach of just...
...produce credible evidence for their unsupported and thus irresponsible accusations. Greek police have worked for many years to track down terrorists and bring them to justice. Those efforts have recently been intensified in collaboration with the FBI and Scotland Yard. The government of Greece has also increased the reward for information leading to the dismantling of the 17 November group to $4.25 million. It has established hot lines through which individuals can anonymously pass on information about terrorist activities and has introduced a witness-protection program to help convict terrorists. The Greek government has given the highest priority to fighting...
...said. Even the New Democrats were urged to preach the new doctrine: "Being pro-growth and being aggressive at protecting consumers," running mate Joe Lieberman told TIME, "I think they go together." At Team Gore's convention-planning meeting on Wednesday morning, campaign chairman Bill Daley offered the ultimate reward: 100 floor passes to anyone who could get former Treasury Secretary and gazillionaire Robert Rubin to utter the mantra, "Fight for working families." It was meant jokingly, using Rubin as a symbol of Wall Street power...
Clark also wanted to reward Stanford, whose labs he used while engineering the chip for his Silicon Graphics workstations. And this was the sort of philanthropic gesture that would still leave him time to have fun running companies, building yachts and flying helicopters...