There it was, the reality of this column, until this criminal started committing criminal acts.
This morning, I was working on reprinting a chapter about my alma mater out of the more than 150,000 articles I’ve written on Goo to the Hatena blog, which I recently set up for a fee.
I wrote yesterday that one day around 2019 when the offender in question was released from prison after serving his nearly 3-year sentence for fraud, he severely falsified the graphs of Goo’s access analysis and the number of searches and visitors.
Today, we will post the actual situation of this criminal tampering with the access analysis blurb.
There must be some readers around the world who recognize the tampering techniques used by this man.
NTT Resonant, Goo’s former operator, could not figure it out.
Docomo (NTT), which merged with the company in July of this year, is still unifying its organization and should not have a system to clarify this technique.
If any of our readers know of this trick, please e-mail Docomo (NTT) and tell them about it.
During the process described at the beginning of this article, we discovered a chapter that clearly shows the reality of the search counts in Goo’s access analysis while the offender was incarcerated.
It had been seven years, so I had completely forgotten about it.
There it was, the reality of this column, until this criminal started committing criminal acts.
Since seven years had already passed, of course, I had forgotten all about it.
This result is not surprising.
Because, until I was severely blocked by this criminal, even in 2011, a search for “the turntable of civilization” yielded more than 20 million results, from page 1 to page 70.
From page 1 to over 70 pages were filled with chapters in various languages in which I had published.
My followers on Twitter were pouring in from all over the world, and in no time, I had over 10,000 followers.
Here is the chapter
Though it has taken longer than it should have to inform the world of the most crucial discovery the world needs to know,
May 22, 2016
There was once a shipbuilding scandal in Japan.
*The shipbuilding scandal was a bribery case involving a petition to enact the “Interest Subsidy Law for Oceangoing Shipbuilding” to reduce interest in planned shipbuilding in post-World War II Japan, with a mandatory investigation launched in January 1954. Many suspects from the political, business, and bureaucratic worlds were arrested, and this was one of the incidents that led to the downfall of the Shigeru Yoshida Cabinet at the time. (Wikipedia)
I was born in Yuriage, Natori City, Miyagi Prefecture, with a natural gift from God.
In English, it says that those God loves are given many trials and tribulations.
I lived my life as it should be.
As a result, I am still single, to my great regret.
The other day, I called my best friend, who is working hard at a major Japanese company, for the first time in five years, and he replied with their unique wit, “Even though you are still old…” I laughed out loud.
I have been thinking about this a lot lately.
Life is different for each person.
It is impossible to say what is happy and what is unhappy.
Everything is life.
I will write about the beginning of this article and the rest of it in due course, but what my God-given brain kept thinking about found its answer about 30 years ago while I was in Rome.
That is the turntable of civilization.
Forced to choose a life as an industrialist, I suffered great hardship in the face of Japan’s loss of 20 years.
That alone makes me angry when I think the Asahi Shimbun newspaper also brought this great hardship to Japan.
Such is the case for Asahi,
It has taken longer than it should have to inform the world of the most crucial discovery the world needs to know, though,
I had no choice but to appear on the Internet in this way in July 2010 about the North Yard in Umeda, Osaka, which is a continuation of the beginning of this article.
Now, I am a person who, while attending Sendai Niko High School, one of the leading high schools in Japan, used to turn my English-Japanese dictionary bright red with a red pencil so I could manage to speak English.
I don’t usually use English, so I will have to live among English-speaking people for a while to become fluent in it.
I have almost 100% no problem conveying the gist of my editorials for free.
One day, I noticed Google Translate.
The majority of Google’s employees are from Stanford University.
It would not be an exaggeration to say that they are the equivalent of Japan’s University of Tokyo, Kyoto University, Osaka University, Tohoku University, etc.
At the same time, the origin of the English language is Latin, so the wording of European countries that have Latin as their origin language will not be off the mark as long as the English language is correct.
I intuited that the only problem would be masculine and feminine nouns.
Filipino (Tagalog) is highly compatible with English because Tagalog is based on English, the language of the former suzerain state of the United States.
Similarly, this must be why Korean is so compatible with Japanese.
At first, I was surprised that the Arabic translation was almost perfect, but I figured it would be soon.
I soon realized that the most critical regions for the U.S. after the war were the Arab countries where oil was calculated (the fact that there was no Japan is evident from the translation from Japanese to English).
The following is a list of “yesterday’s popular pages” that received more than 1,000 searches yesterday, although I am sure the number should be much higher.
I don’t have these items because I don’t accept comments or trackbacks.