Legal Crud

Middle English crud, quark (usually plural cruddes, croddes, curddys) “coagulated milk, any substance thickened, dregs, dregs” – more below the input quark 1 We also agree with the principle of individual redress, which requires that individuals have the right to assert legally enforceable rights against data collectors and processors who do not comply with the law. This principle requires not only that individuals have enforceable rights against data users, but also that individuals can turn to the courts or a government agency to investigate and/or prosecute violations committed by data processors. Note: The word crud in the sense of “quark” is a regional and dialectal variant in the British Isles (see note under entry 1 of the quark). It has also been little recorded in the United States, generally as a brut plural in reference to cottage cheese, next to cruddle for curd and cruddy either as a noun (“curd”) or as an adjective “curd coagulant”; The Dictionary of American Regional English, Vol. 1 (Cambridge, MA: 1985) describes crude oil as “obsolete” in the sense of the term. However, the word displays a number of informal or colloquial meanings apparently derived from American English, such as “deposit of dirt”, “physical disorder” and “despicable person”; None of them appear to have been attested before the 1930s. In part, these meanings may be regressions of the adjective cruddy. This word in a pejorative sense is attested much earlier as parallel meanings of crud in The Molly Maguires and the Detectives (New York, 1877), one of a series of books with Allan Pinkerton`s name on the first page that claim to be detective working memoirs and were almost certainly written by ghosts. In the text, cruddy appears three times, in combination or in dialogue from Irish. It is difficult to judge the degree of contact that the unknown author had with the Irish language; In any case, rude in the pejorative sense does not seem to be attested in Hiberno-English. These sample phrases are automatically selected from various online information sources to reflect the current use of the word “crud”.

The views expressed in the examples do not represent the views of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us your feedback. Note: Also compare the Norwegian regional krodde (male) “dregs”, (female) “boiled cheese”. The hypothesis of an iterative derivation with a result of Kluge`s law comes from G. Kroonen, Etymological Dictionary of Proto-Germanic (Brill, 2013). The Oxford English Dictionary, Third Edition (2019), as well as earlier dictionaries, treat the Middle English verb as a derivative of the noun crud, curd (see quark entry 1), although the noun must be secondary if Kroonen is correct. Oxford editors consider the name to be either derived from an unconfirmed nominal derivative of Old English from *krÅ«dan- (with an unexplained u as the vowel of the stem) or as a borrowing from Scandinavian (based on Norwegian evidence). Kroonen considers that the meaning of “curd” may be secondary, given the meaning of “dregs” of the Norwegian Krodde, which would rule out an often suggested relationship between crude/curd oil and Middle Irish gruth “quark, cheese”. Middle English crudden, crodden, curd “coagulate or coagulate (from milk), coagulate, freeze”, perhaps back in Germanic *kruttÅn-/*krudÅn- (hence the regional Norwegian krota “coagulate, squeeze”, kroda “press”), iterative derivation of *krÅ”dan- “push, advance” – more at public entrance 1 As a practical use case, I read an article a few weeks ago about a legal dispute between two US law firms. The article describes how, after resigning and moving to the defendant`s office, a former partner in the plaintiff`s office left a laptop behind a locked door in the plaintiff`s office and connected to a file sync and sharing solution in the public cloud. The lawsuit alleges that the partner used File Sync and Share as a corporate spying tool to stay informed about the case after leaving the plaintiff`s company. Believe me when I say that this is neither the first nor the last time this will happen.

CRUD Meaning: CRUD is an acronym originating in the world of computer programming and refers to the four functions considered necessary to implement a persistent storage application: create, read, update, and delete. Persistent storage refers to any data storage device that is powered after the device is turned off, such as a hard drive or SSD. In contrast, memory and internal caching are two examples of volatile memory: they contain data that is erased when it loses power. We use cookies to: • store and process items in the shopping cart. • Keep track of advertising. • Collect aggregated data about website traffic and interactions in order to provide better website experiences and tools in the future. We may also use trusted third-party services that track this information on our behalf. We implement a variety of security measures when a user places an order to ensure the safety of your personal information. The create feature allows users to create a new record in the database. In the SQL Database relational application, the Create function is called INSERT. In Oracle HCM Cloud, this is called create.

Remember that a record is a row and columns are called attributes. A user can create a new row and populate it with data for each attribute, but only an administrator can add new attributes to the table itself. Google, as a third-party provider, uses cookies to serve ads on our website. Google`s use of the DART cookie enables us to serve ads to our users based on their visit to our website and other websites on the Internet. Users may opt out of the use of the DART cookie by reviewing the Google Ads and Content Networks Privacy Policy. All transactions are processed by a gateway provider and are not stored or processed on our servers. The problem is that all this corporate data now exists in the file sync and share cloud. Law firms, financial services firms, consulting firms and more – their clients` and their company`s data is available somewhere, whether they admit it or not. What if we could get IT to take our work data from the cloud, wrap it in something that we, the business users, actually want to use, in a sanctioned and approved form – what would that service look like? What do we really expect from an enterprise file sync and share solution? How does our website handle “Do Not Track” signals? We respect Do Not Track signals and do not track, set cookies or use advertising if a Do Not Track (DNT) browser mechanism is in place.

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