Test. Test. Test. Test. They were kind of happy to show off the fishing. It was a pretty big fishing business there. It had been there for about a decade. And in the beginning they were happy to show those guys around, but they constantly had a government minder with them. So you can go to look at the factory, but were going to come with you. And i kind of broke off at that point and pretended like i was more interested in teaching english at the school and visiting the market, going around the islands. I was free and they were stuck with the government minders. At a certain point when my colleagues wanted to follow up what i had come across, like the graveyard or whatever and would disappear for a few hours, the government minders started getting really nervous and angry and basically kicked us off and then i was left alone. My burmese colleague came. We were okay for a few days, but after a while they really hated us as well and started, you know thats when they kind of chased after
E-Book Lending Boom In US Pits Publishers Against Libraries menafn.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from menafn.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
The “Netflix model” of leasing e-books to public libraries is expensive, full of limitations, and potentially a boon for censorship, librarians say. It’s a growing business model that shifts power to publishers and makes access harder for patrons.