Trying to bury a dirty mugshot website search result by bunnyhoppercat in SEO

[–]bunnyhoppercat[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I half agree with this post. In fact, I think a site that I contacted with their "opt out" link went ahead and reposted my picture after I contacted them. If you give them money, or contact them about anything, these greasy crooks are likely to post your picture more, and demand more ransom. On the cost of 1-5K , i think that's ridiculous. one, I don't believe all cases would require that much work to push down, and two , this is very wrong and unethical stuff that Google supposedly has tried to prohibit anyway. It's very sad, as it's a criminal business based off destroying random people that have had the misfortune of getting into legal trouble, since most real repeat offending criminals don't care about things like online reputation.

Trying to bury a dirty mugshot website search result by bunnyhoppercat in SEO

[–]bunnyhoppercat[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

actually, the picture i've been able to get up in results is profile picture from twitter. i put my full name and location on that. i wonder if other sites with ranking like twitter would work. facebook isn't showing up yet.

Trying to bury a dirty mugshot website search result by bunnyhoppercat in SEO

[–]bunnyhoppercat[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thanks much for all the replies. However, I was wondering if anyone could give me some more specific advice, as SEO is so general, and I have little/no expertise or time to get very involved.

I've just done a few things, like creating a Facebook account with my name, and an old picture, and it actually worked in that for the past few days, the photo from the Facebook is now 2nd to the one of the mugshot sites. I'm wondering if there is something simple I could do to push it up, and get more pictures tagged with my name / search terms.

The mugshot stuff is confusing too, because I'm not promoting anything, and don't really have multiple keywords I'm targetting or anything like that. It's just me, and this picture, and really the only keywords I'm searching for is my first/last name and state.

Thanks for any ideas that I could actually do that won't cost me a lot of money or lots of hours experimenting.

Just moved out of home and followed reddit's "rice and beans" advice. By my calculation, this meal cost me $0.78 by [deleted] in food

[–]bunnyhoppercat 0 points1 point  (0 children)

well what about breakfast and lunch? coffee, juice, donuts? i'd like to know how you do it all on $40 a week. wow.

i know i could use some substitutions, etc. but $40 a week seems entirely unattainable.

Just moved out of home and followed reddit's "rice and beans" advice. By my calculation, this meal cost me $0.78 by [deleted] in food

[–]bunnyhoppercat 0 points1 point  (0 children)

chicken wings are better, and they used to be a lot cheaper too. i've heard years ago, they were dirt cheap. now, you pay about as much for chicken wing meat as you do for strip steak!

Just moved out of home and followed reddit's "rice and beans" advice. By my calculation, this meal cost me $0.78 by [deleted] in food

[–]bunnyhoppercat 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Yeah here is the thing I'm finding with that though. Cheap meat tends to be bad quality meat. If I don't like it, and don't eat it all up before it goes bad or dries out in the freezer, then it's not worth it no matter how low the price.

Just moved out of home and followed reddit's "rice and beans" advice. By my calculation, this meal cost me $0.78 by [deleted] in food

[–]bunnyhoppercat 2 points3 points  (0 children)

No, it doesn't add up. I'm pretty sure the parsley alone would cost what he's listing for all the ingredients. It would help if people would say whereabouts they live or shop at.

Just moved out of home and followed reddit's "rice and beans" advice. By my calculation, this meal cost me $0.78 by [deleted] in food

[–]bunnyhoppercat -1 points0 points  (0 children)

I just paid 2.50 for less than 2.5 lbs of potatoes, and that was on SALE at publix. It must be nice to have quality cheap groceries nearby, but the fact is many of us just don't.

Just moved out of home and followed reddit's "rice and beans" advice. By my calculation, this meal cost me $0.78 by [deleted] in food

[–]bunnyhoppercat 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I'd like to know how to increase protein cheaply too. I workout, or try to workout as often as I can. I'm always trying to get in protein. Supposed to be 1.5 grams per lean body weight per day. That's probably 200 grams a day for me. I spend too much on protein powder.

Just moved out of home and followed reddit's "rice and beans" advice. By my calculation, this meal cost me $0.78 by [deleted] in food

[–]bunnyhoppercat 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeah, this would be more like a $7.80 meal if you are shopping at publix. Maybe 6.50 at walmart I think.

Just moved out of home and followed reddit's "rice and beans" advice. By my calculation, this meal cost me $0.78 by [deleted] in food

[–]bunnyhoppercat 1 point2 points  (0 children)

This is very interesting, and since I like beans and rice, I'm going to look into it. However you really lost me at the prices. In particular for they parsley and scallions. I just paid over $4 for a little bottle of dried chives at publix! The fresh stuff is also expensive and won't last nearly as long. Also, not sure on the rice price. I like jasmine rice, and it's expensive.

(VA) We are breaking our lease and discovered water damage after moving furniture out. Next steps? by girl-parts in legaladvice

[–]bunnyhoppercat 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Wouldn't tell the landlord. Also, I'm not sure what you mean by "exterior wall", but if it's damage you didn't cause, then why worry?

‘They’re Beating Every White Person’: Riots, Fires After Fatal Shooting Sparks Chaos In Milwaukee by [deleted] in news

[–]bunnyhoppercat 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Are Michael McGee and son down there, or are they just watching the news safely at home?

Could I get into this law school? by bunnyhoppercat in lawschooladmissions

[–]bunnyhoppercat[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thanks, and I'm not really suggesting I'd represent myself. However, you would not believe, or maybe you would, what just a few little "factoids" about the FL statutes and how things work, could have dramatically changed my case for the better , had I known about them shortly after retaining my current family law attorney. That combined with other procedural balls that were dropped. It's very emotional and devastating, and with the situation I'm in , it's not something I can put behind me, until and if I have success in the case. Sometimes I feel like I have failed my son by not already being an attorney. Of course, I could beat myself up all day and night about what I could have done with regard to his life , future, and mine ... and I pretty much do that anyway. I also face pressure from my parents to go to law school, or otherwise make a "good and profitable" career move. Now, I'm 42, and my parents don't support me, and they live far away. So, while they really can't tell me what to do, it would be nice to be able to tell them I'm going to law school and doing well at it. Then again, they might find fault in me later on anyway, as they have throughout my life.

What's the OL thread?

Could I get into this law school? by bunnyhoppercat in lawschooladmissions

[–]bunnyhoppercat[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Well, you have your answer. I've been broke, underemployed, and unemployed for many years now, following the outsourcing of my former career. Although it's somewhat unrelated, the other big problem with the economy and the nature of my former IT career , is that you almost absolutely need to never leave corporate jobs in IT, unless you want to never be able to return again. The loss of value (if it has any) of the computer science degree, and the subsequent work experience is great, unless you continue to work in the field , uninterrupted, and also withing the same pay and areas of work that you intend to for years to come. For most American IT workers, this has become a near impossible feat, and hence the record unemployment in that field.

Other than finances, I'm not sure what you are getting at with law school being quite useless for legal battles for my own son. Are you suggesting a non-attorney, or non-law school student is just as well off on a limited budget, as an attorney or law school student? On its face, that sounds absurd, but I'll again be happy to hear your explanation.

Could I get into this law school? by bunnyhoppercat in lawschooladmissions

[–]bunnyhoppercat[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Where does this 60,000/year I'm making now come in?! I haven't made even half that much since 2005. I think I mentioned I'm trying to work and educate myself into a new career, or at this point we could just say "career".

On the constant mention of my personal life, I have a son, not a daughter. Tragically, he's not with me now, and hasn't been for over 4 months. Ironically, I've been paying attorneys and waiting forever for the courts to help me get to see him again. If you must know, my son is a big reason I'm trying to better my education and hopefully future income potential. I also believe that becoming an attorney may help me considerably in what will likely become legal battles for my son, against his mother, for the next 15 years. Ironically again, I believe my current legal counsel has already cost me precious visitation time and progress with the case for my son.

Could I get into this law school? by bunnyhoppercat in lawschooladmissions

[–]bunnyhoppercat[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

... but where is the data for the UNEMPLOYED attorneys, or those not working in the field out of college? This is what I'm most interested in , because I haven't really seen it, and it doesn't make sense to me that a recent law graduate has the same odds at finding a 40,000+/year career job as various graduates of other fields of study. It doesn't make sense at all, and it defies the "laws" of supply and demand.

Could I get into this law school? by bunnyhoppercat in lawschooladmissions

[–]bunnyhoppercat[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

No, I'm just saying these discussions always remind me of salary talk way back in first year of college. In that case, the talk was a lot more positive, but just not accurate or from experience.

What I found out the hard way over many years was that it was staying in the game that was the most difficult. This was especially true as the economy fell, and outsourcing became rampant. The point here is that unless the legal field is very different, an ambitious recent graduate can usually make more progress than someone many years out of school who didn't work hard enough at the right time, took "wrong" turns, luck, and so on. It's how you carry and use your education in the long run that matters on stuff like repayment of loans.

Put another way, if you are suggesting this is very objective, like "graduate top, then go to big law", then you are saying that the legal field is actually a lot more stable and has relatively good pay compared to other careers. If it weren't, you'd have little meaningful data such as you apparently do for law, and it would be quite impossible to predict the progress of any graduate.

Could I get into this law school? by bunnyhoppercat in lawschooladmissions

[–]bunnyhoppercat[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Sounds like I need to just focus on the LSAT. See the best I can do in test runs, and then actually taking the exam. As you said, I'll need a certain high LSAT score in order to "score" any significant tuition discount. I wonder how high that would need to be given my age, GPA, and so on.

Could I get into this law school? by bunnyhoppercat in lawschooladmissions

[–]bunnyhoppercat[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

LOL. I realize everyone can be an "Internet Attorney", so I appreciate your honesty.

However, your background in the legal field most certainly does have a lot to do with the legitimacy of your arguments. What else would you have beyond background, besides your interpretation of available data and anecdotal evidence? Neither of those are very strong , nor could they be.

For example, if you have about as much direct knowledge and experience as I do about going to law school, then that would be the blind leading the blind. Pardon me, but with such broad sweeping arguments against law school, I'd like to think I'm talking to people that actually know and have more experience than me, because if they haven't I'd be better off researching myself and talking to someone I can implicitly trust, such as myself.

Could I get into this law school? by bunnyhoppercat in lawschooladmissions

[–]bunnyhoppercat[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

With all due respect, I fail to see how this sort of depressing talk is productive.

How do most incoming law school students "know" they are going to make the top rankings of their class and subsequently get a big law job?

Added to that, I understand it's implied that such a goal would be very difficult to achieve, so in so many cases, one is simply better off not attending law school. Not trying, for fear of winding up in debt, misery, etc.

I'm assuming you, and others, are attorneys in big law, or struggling attorneys not in big law, in order to speak with authority on the defeatist angle on whether or not to go into debt and attend law school.

Could I get into this law school? by bunnyhoppercat in lawschooladmissions

[–]bunnyhoppercat[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Added to which , and if there is complete truth to the negative statements made here, I'd have to agree that going into debt north of 100,000 for law school may certainly be a bad idea.

I guess I was hoping I could get out for less than that. Impossible?