Definitions
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.
- noun Plural form of
blacklist .
Etymologies
Sorry, no etymologies found.
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Examples
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These have all been lists -- commonly referred to as blacklists or whitelists -- containing names and personal information with the expressed and unapologetic intent of punishing and striking fear.
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These have all been lists -- commonly referred to as blacklists or whitelists -- containing names and personal information with the expressed and unapologetic intent of punishing and striking fear.
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It might be harder to create such offensive programs if one never manually defines data - no URLs, no word blacklists, no specific colors or tunes - and additionally never has manual results quality evaluations, though it's still not impossible.
Google Blogoscoped 2009
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By and large, I am against the idea of blacklists because they are often not fast enough to purge non-malicious actors from their databases.
SecurityFocus News 2009
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By and large, I am against the idea of blacklists because they are often not fast enough to purge non-malicious actors from their databases.
SecurityFocus News 2009
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The Labour government has been criticised for passing a law banning the practice of so-called blacklists in 1999, but then, in a U-turn, deciding not to take the final step of implementing the law on the grounds that "there was no hard evidence that blacklisting was occurring".
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The Labour government has been criticised for passing a law banning the practice of so-called blacklists in 1999, but then, in a U-turn, deciding not to take the final step of implementing the law on the grounds that "there was no hard evidence that blacklisting was occurring".
Personal finance and money news, analysis and comment | guardian.co.uk 2009
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The Labour government has been criticised for passing a law banning the practice of so-called blacklists in 1999, but then, in a U-turn, deciding not to take the final step of implementing the law on the grounds that "there was no hard evidence that blacklisting was occurring".
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The Labour government has been criticised for passing a law banning the practice of so-called blacklists in 1999, but then, in a U-turn, deciding not to take the final step of implementing the law on the grounds that "there was no hard evidence that blacklisting was occurring".
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Some counterterrorism officials say the blacklists are a vital, if imperfect, tool in fighting al-Qaeda and other groups -- particularly the U.N. sanctions program, which is the only one that governments and banks are compelled to enforce worldwide.
PrairiePundit 2008
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