Most big businesses in Russia work with grey schemes. One of the reason not so many foreign companies here, as they forbidden to pay bribes. Yet most people get payed in white. Some hire people by contracts as invidial…
Dmitriy Potapenko sounded this number, when were interviewed about taxation in Russia and Czech Republic. And he owns big retail networks, restaurants and etc. For example McDonalds to cut taxes is working as shops, not…
In Russia if you don't minimize taxation with tricks and do it straight, you pay like 1,2$ for each 1$ your company makes. So mostly companies aims for super profitable niches, like selling chinese shit with 1000-5000%…
They just burning money, it'll collapse before 2015. Probably trying to bloat the cost of the company for the successful exit.
I block ads cause i don't want to deceive advertisers :) i never buy anything through banners.
I'm surprised software catalogs are still alive :D Especially when you can get literally everything you need from torrents with keygens/cracks.
I've worked in Moscow ^.^ all tech staff has been outsourced to different countries - Germany, Russia, India and etc.
It's just my humble opinion as an internet marketer :) i'm not related to CNET atm, worked there as tech for some time. And i think it's really an ingenious idea with wrapper, maybe not so good with all that toolbars.…
Pff i just know the kitchen as i worked there for some time :) It's not a trojan or malware for sure. 3/43, http://www.virustotal.com/file-scan/report.html?id=cb2428c76... Some crappy adware? probably :)
They do not injecting it, it's just a small downloader that helps to download applications even with bad connection. And potentially may use a p2p distribution, as for example some game developers upload their game…
Everything on CNET is being tested manually with VirusTotal. If it gets at least 4 positives/false positives from 43 antivirus engines they don't publish it or work with it, until developers get things settled down with…
Most big businesses in Russia work with grey schemes. One of the reason not so many foreign companies here, as they forbidden to pay bribes. Yet most people get payed in white. Some hire people by contracts as invidial…
Dmitriy Potapenko sounded this number, when were interviewed about taxation in Russia and Czech Republic. And he owns big retail networks, restaurants and etc. For example McDonalds to cut taxes is working as shops, not…
In Russia if you don't minimize taxation with tricks and do it straight, you pay like 1,2$ for each 1$ your company makes. So mostly companies aims for super profitable niches, like selling chinese shit with 1000-5000%…
They just burning money, it'll collapse before 2015. Probably trying to bloat the cost of the company for the successful exit.
I block ads cause i don't want to deceive advertisers :) i never buy anything through banners.
I'm surprised software catalogs are still alive :D Especially when you can get literally everything you need from torrents with keygens/cracks.
I've worked in Moscow ^.^ all tech staff has been outsourced to different countries - Germany, Russia, India and etc.
It's just my humble opinion as an internet marketer :) i'm not related to CNET atm, worked there as tech for some time. And i think it's really an ingenious idea with wrapper, maybe not so good with all that toolbars.…
Pff i just know the kitchen as i worked there for some time :) It's not a trojan or malware for sure. 3/43, http://www.virustotal.com/file-scan/report.html?id=cb2428c76... Some crappy adware? probably :)
They do not injecting it, it's just a small downloader that helps to download applications even with bad connection. And potentially may use a p2p distribution, as for example some game developers upload their game…
Everything on CNET is being tested manually with VirusTotal. If it gets at least 4 positives/false positives from 43 antivirus engines they don't publish it or work with it, until developers get things settled down with…