Sunday, June 30, 2013

Washington Post reveals new PRISM slides, offers greater clarity into the US' surveillance operation

Washington Post reveals new PRISM slides, offers greater clarity into the US surveillance operation

PRISM: The surveillance story that started with four leaked slides from the Washington Post, today gets a bit clearer. The publication has revealed four more annotated slides about the once-secret NSA operation, along with detailing the various levels of scrutiny from the FBI and NSA that happen before, during and after approved wiretaps take place. It seems that many of the measures make sure the warrantless data mining of US citizens occurs to the smallest extent possible and that FISA rules are followed -- still unsettling, nonetheless.

Detailing the process further, NSA analysts perform checks with supervisors to be certain intended targets are foreign nationals who aren't on US soil; approval is provided by way of "51-percent confidence" in assessments. During a "tasking process" search terms are entered, dubbed "selectors," which can tap into FBI gear installed within the private properties of participating companies -- so much for those denials. For live communications, this data goes straight to the NSA's PRINTAURA filtering system, while both the FBI and NSA scan pre-recorded data independently. Notably, live surveillance is indeed possible for the likes of text, voice and and instant message-based conversations, according to a slide that details how cases are notated. It's also worth mentioning that much of the collected metadata comes from programs outside of PRISM, as WP points out.

PRINTAURA is an overall filter for others, like NUCLEON for voice communications and MAINWAY for records of phone calls. Another two layers beyond that, called CONVEYANCE and FALLOUT, provide further filtering. Again, all of these checks apparently fine-tune results and help make sure they don't match up with US citizens. Results that return info about those in the US get scrapped, while those that have info about foreign targets mixed with US citizens get stored for up to five years. A total number of 117,675 active targets were listed as of April 5th, but the paper notes this doesn't reflect the amount of data that may also have been collected on American citizens. If you haven't already, now might be a great time to catch up on this whole PRISM fiasco to learn about how it might affect you. You'll find all the new slides and more detailed analysis at the source links.

Comments

Source: The Washington Post (1), (2)

Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/SK2-WcCpfe0/

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A mathematical ranking classifies tennis players by assessing their play

June 28, 2013 ? Researchers from the Miguel Hern?ndez University of Elche have used mathematical techniques and the game statistics from the Association of Tennis Professionals (ATP) to rank tennis players based on assessing their play and thus complement the ATP ranking obtained on the basis of matches won during the competition.

The Association of Tennis Professionals (ATP) ranking reflects tennis players' competition performance, and the ranking is based on the total tournaments and tournament rounds won over the year as a whole. Researchers from the Miguel Hern?ndez University of Elche wanted to go further and so prepared a ranking system based on mathematical techniques and the player data provided by the ATP to see which tennis players play best.

"The results have shown, in particular, that Rafa Nadal has the highest score when assessed by the patterns of play of the most efficient tennis players. This has earned him first place in our ranking, followed by Djokovic and Federer," explains Jos? Luis Ruiz, from the Miguel Hern?ndez University, co-author of the study.

It is worth remembering that in 2009, the year analysed by the study, Federer achieved first place on the ATP ranking; therefore we can draw the conclusion from this study that, although the assessment of Nadal's and Djokovic's play comes out higher than Federer's, Federer competed better.

"The ranking proposed in this study is also obtained from the players' play statistics put together by ATP, such as the percentage of points won on the first serve, break points converted, games won returning a serve, etc. With this information we can find out, in particular, who is the best player in each of these scenarios in the match. However, the ATP does not provide a ranking that reflects player performance in all aspects of play at the same time," Ruiz notes.

To obtain these placings from ATP data, the experts used two mathematical techniques: the Data Envelopment Analysis (DEA) and Cross-efficiency Evaluation. As the researcher explains, when a player is assessed using the DEA technique, a mathematical model on the computer assigns each feature of play the significance most relevant to this player, bearing in mind the particular features of his play.

"Following this procedure we obtain a scoring which we can interpret as that which results from assessing him with the pattern of play that is most in his favour. This 'self-evaluation' is performed for each player, such that those who receive the highest scores are considered the most efficient players, while the remainder are classed as inefficient," he highlights.

Thus, the researchers have identified the weaknesses of the most inefficient players and compared them to the play of some of the efficient players chosen as 'referents'. "In this way we can suggest possible avenues for these players to improve their play compared with that of the other referents," the researcher concludes.

The ranking of the 10 most efficient tennis players by their play are: Nadal, Dojokovic, Federer, Murray, Verdasco, Davydenko, Gonzalez, Soderling, Roddick, del Potro.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/computers_math/information_technology/~3/s3ApiVO8S3E/130628091953.htm

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How to download photos from Dropbox directly to your iPhone or iPad camera roll

How to download photos from Dropbox directly to your iPhone or iPad camera roll

If you use Dropbox to store photos and save space on your iPhone or iPad, there may come a time when you want to share those photos to a social network or with a friend. In order to do so, you'll most likely have to save them to your camera roll first.

As it happens, Dropbox gives you an easy way to do this. Here's how:

  1. Launch the Dropbox app from the Home screen of your iPhone or iPad.
  2. Find the photo that you'd like to download to your camera roll in your Dropbox app.
  3. Click on the Download button in the lower right hand corner.
  4. Now tap on the option for Save to Photo Library.
  5. The photo will export directly to your iPhone or iPad camera roll.

Once the export is done you can hop right into your Photos app and upload it to whatever service you'd like.

    


Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/TheIphoneBlog/~3/z_gPubTzkvY/story01.htm

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Saturday, June 29, 2013

Fed's Williams: 'still too early' to reduce QE3

By Ann Saphir

ROHNERT PARK, California (Reuters) - The Federal Reserve should not yet cut back on its massive bond-buying stimulus program, a top Fed official said on Friday, despite a stronger-than expected U.S. recovery and indications that the job market will continue to improve.

"Is it time to act? My answer is that it's still too early," San Francisco Federal Reserve President John Williams said in remarks prepared for delivery to the Sonoma County Economic Development Board.

The remarks were a turnaround for the centrist policymaker, who in May said that if the recovery continued to improve as expected, the Fed could start trimming its $85 billion-a-month bond-buying program by summer, and end it before the year is out. The purchases are designed to drive down long-term borrowing costs and encourage growth and hiring.

"For one thing, we need to be sure that the economy can maintain its momentum in the face of ongoing fiscal contraction," Williams said, citing the drag from Europe as a second risk to the U.S. recovery. "And it is also prudent to wait a bit and make sure that inflation doesn't keep coming in below expectations, possibly signaling a more persistent decline in inflation."

On Friday, Williams largely reiterated his forecast from May, saying he expects unemployment to fall to about 7.25 percent by the end of this year and to 6.75 percent by the end of next year, helped by inflation-adjusted growth in GDP of 2.25 percent this year and 3.25 percent next year.

Inflation, he predicted, will gradually rise from well below the Fed's 2-percent target now to about 1.75 percent in 2015.

"Looking ahead, if this forecast holds true, then at some point it will be appropriate to scale back our purchase program and eventually end it," Williams said.

By omitting a time frame for a dial-down of the Fed's asset purchases, Williams is no longer publicly at odds with the view set out last week by Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke, who said the U.S. central bank could start reducing the bond buys later this year and end them by mid-2014.

That relatively near-term timeline for the end of the Fed's third round of quantitative easing, or QE3, sent bond yields rising as investors began pricing in an earlier end to low interest rates.

Williams used his speech to fend off that notion, saying that any end to bond-buying stimulus would not change the Fed's promise to keep rates low until unemployment falls to at least 6.5 percent, as long as inflation stays contained.

He also reiterated the Fed's view that reducing bond purchases does not mean the Fed is tightening policy, and its vow to change its plans to reduce the program if economic data falls short of expectations.

"The good news is that the economy is on the mend," he said. When the time comes for the Fed to stop adding stimulus by buying long-term bonds, "I am confident that we can make this change without jeopardizing the recovery, while working toward our goals of maximum employment and price stability."

(Reporting by Ann Saphir; Editing by Chizu Nomiyama)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/feds-williams-still-too-early-reduce-qe3-193144980.html

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Google Expands Search Field Trial To Include Data From Your Gmail Contacts

google-field-trialGoogle announced that users who participate in its?Gmail and Google.com search field trial?are now able to also see results from their Gmail contacts from Search. This, the company explains, means you'll be able to ask Search things like "what's?Brittney's?address?" or you can simply say "Joanna's phone number," for instance, in order to query your address book from Google.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/XOWrTHnVn6I/

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This Building By Luxe Auto Designer Pininfarina Looks Like a Ferrari

This Building By Luxe Auto Designer Pininfarina Looks Like a Ferrari

Pininfarina: you may know it as the high-end Italian firm that designs fast, expensive cars like Ferraris. Now, for the first time, its designers are branching out into residential design with a condominium in Singapore. And it looks like the cars they design.

Many architects have designed cars, including Frank Gehry, Bucky Fuller, and Le Corbusier. But very few car designers have designed buildings. Pininfarina's plan for the 104-unit, 335-foot-high condominium quite obviously harnesses many aesthetic features of a luxury automobile. The lines of the towering red building compliment those of the body of a pricey Porsche. And the warm wooden interior of the building echoes that of a sleek woodgrain dash. For example, this is a 2006 Pininfarina Ferrari P4/5:

This Building By Luxe Auto Designer Pininfarina Looks Like a Ferrari

And this is a Maserati Birdcage 75th, a concept Pininfirina designed in 2005:

This Building By Luxe Auto Designer Pininfarina Looks Like a Ferrari

And this is a render of the building:

This Building By Luxe Auto Designer Pininfarina Looks Like a Ferrari

Either of those cars would fit right in the garage of this Singapore residence. It makes sense that a luxury car designer would design a luxury condo. Hell, the people who are buying Pininfarina-designed Maseratis would clearly be in the market for a big, showy building to call home. Now they can have the car and the condo to match.

It turns out that Pininfarina has quite the corner on the luxury living market?it's designed not just fancy cars, but also yachts and private planes. Real rich people stuff! One thing's for sure?these guys definitely know their audience. [DesignBoom]

Source: http://gizmodo.com/this-building-by-luxe-auto-designer-pininfarina-looks-l-608338157

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Friday, June 28, 2013

Best Practices to Grow Your Consulting Business - Tip # 11 - Focus ...

About Deborah Siegle

Deb Siegle, principal of Strategic Marketing Solutions, is an insightful marketing leader with a talent for aligning a company?s products, solutions and messages with the customer?s needs. Deb listens to the voice of the customer, analyzes what she hears, and creates a vision, strategy, and direction for her clients. She delivers actionable marketing results that increase customer loyalty and revenues.

Deb is a recognized consumer and business marketing leader, problem solver and communicator who is an authority in market research, strategy, and customer loyalty and experience.

Deb assists clients with strategic research, branding, positioning and messaging, market and product development and launch, technology and competitive analysis, and customer loyalty and experience projects. She helps clients ?get it right - the first time?. Deb helps clients improve their bottom line with each ?right step? ? to deliver the right products and services - using the right message - to the right people - in the right market - with the right experience. She quickly identifies and addresses core issues, developing actionable strategies and tactics that make a measurable difference to her clients.

Deb has more than 25 years of marketing, customer service, and sales experience in public and privately-held companies in high tech, healthcare/biotech/wellness, sustainability, and professional services. She brings a unique combination of strategic and tactical skills developed through hands-on line management experience at fast-growing companies.

Prior to founding Strategic Marketing Solutions, Deb held senior level positions in customer satisfaction and service, marketing, product management, and market development. She has also held leadership positions in various industry associations, and is currently president of WiT and a board member of WIC.

Deb is a popular speaker and has been featured in executive pod- and web-casts on "Customer Voice?, ?Building Customer Loyalty,? "The Power of Retention Marketing,? and ?How Research Can Reveal New Insights into Your Customers, Your Product, & Your Brand.?

Source: http://blog.womeninconsulting.org/running-a-consulting-business/best-practices-to-grow-your-consulting-business-tip-11-focus-on-what-builds-the-business/

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Ritalin shows promise in treating addiction

June 27, 2013 ? A single dose of a commonly-prescribed attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) drug helps improve brain function in cocaine addiction, according to an imaging study conducted by researchers from the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai. Methylphenidate (brand name Ritalin?) modified connectivity in certain brain circuits that underlie self-control and craving among cocaine-addicted individuals.

The research is published in the current issue of JAMA Psychiatry, a JAMA network publication.

Previous research has shown that oral methylphenidate improved brain function in cocaine users performing specific cognitive tasks such as ignoring emotionally distracting words and resolving a cognitive conflict. Similar to cocaine, methylphenidate increases dopamine (and norepinephrine) activity in the brain, but, administered orally, takes longer to reach peak effect, consistent with a lower potential for abuse. By extending dopamine's action, the drug enhances signaling to improve several cognitive functions, including information processing and attention.

"Orally administered methylphenidate increases dopamine in the brain, similar to cocaine, but without the strong addictive properties," said Rita Goldstein, PhD, Professor of Psychiatry at Mount Sinai, who led the research while at Brookhaven National Laboratory (BNL) in New York. "We wanted to determine whether such substitutive properties, which are helpful in other replacement therapies such as using nicotine gum instead of smoking cigarettes or methadone instead of heroin, would play a role in enhancing brain connectivity between regions of potential importance for intervention in cocaine addiction."

Anna Konova, a doctoral candidate at Stony Brook University, who was first author on this manuscript, added, "Using fMRI, we found that methylphenidate did indeed have a beneficial impact on the connectivity between several brain centers associated with addiction."

Dr. Goldstein and her team recruited 18 cocaine addicted individuals, who were randomized to receive an oral dose of methylphenidate or placebo. The researchers used functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) to measure the strength of connectivity in particular brain circuits known to play a role in addiction before and during peak drug effects. They also assessed each subject's severity of addiction to see if this had any bearing on the results.

Methylphenidate decreased connectivity between areas of the brain that have been strongly implicated in the formation of habits, including compulsive drug seeking and craving. The scans also showed that methylphenidate strengthened connectivity between several brain regions involved in regulating emotions and exerting control over behaviors -- connections previously reported to be disrupted in cocaine addiction.

"The benefits of methylphenidate were present after only one dose, indicating that this drug has significant potential as a treatment add-on for addiction to cocaine and possibly other stimulants," said Dr. Goldstein. "This is a preliminary study, but the findings are exciting and warrant further exploration, particularly in conjunction with cognitive behavioral therapy or cognitive remediation."

Additional co-authors included Nora D. Volkow, MD, the Director of the National Institute on Drug Abuse; Dardo Tomasi, the MR director at BNL; and Scott J. Moeller, PhD a postdoctoral fellow in psychiatry at Mount Sinai.

This research was supported by grants from the National Institute on Drug Abuse (grants 1R01DA023579 and 1F32DA030017-01) and the Intramural Research Program of the National Institute for Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism, divisions of the National Institutes of Health.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/~3/qOFIq-NRB_g/130627151646.htm

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Defense challenges testimony of woman on phone with Trayvon Martin

By Barbara Liston

SANFORD, Florida (Reuters) - A woman who was on the phone with unarmed black teenager Trayvon Martin moments before he was shot by a volunteer watchman rejected attempts by a lawyer in a Florida court to depict Martin as the aggressor in a struggle that ended in his death.

During an argumentative cross-examination on Thursday at the trial of George Zimmerman, a defense lawyer also suggested to the witness, 19-year-old Rachel Jeantel, that she had embellished her account of the conversation with Martin after news coverage portrayed the shooting as "a racial thing."

In earlier testimony in Seminole County criminal court on Wednesday, Jeantel said that shortly before Martin was fatally shot, he complained about a "creepy" man who seemed to be hunting him down as he walked back to the house where he was staying with his father.

Jeantel repeatedly denied embellishing her story and said she never watched the news.

Zimmerman, 29, was a neighborhood watch volunteer in the Retreat at Twin Lakes community in the central Florida town of Sanford at the time of the February 26, 2012 shooting. He has pleaded not guilty to second-degree murder and could face life imprisonment if convicted.

In court, Jeantel rejected defense attorney Don West's attempts to depict Martin as the aggressor in the fight that ended with his death, a portrayal that would support Zimmerman's claim that he fired in self defense.

West asked whether the noises Jeantel heard on the phone call could have been Martin smashing Zimmerman in the face or Martin getting ready "to sucker punch someone."

"You ain't get that from me," Jeantel said.

She refused to agree with West that Martin hid and approached Zimmerman. "Trayvon told me the man was behind him and kept being close by him," Jeantel said.

She suggested Martin would have ended the phone call first if he was preparing to attack Zimmerman.

ATTENTIVE JURY

The jurors paid close attention to Jeantel's testimony, taking notes and asking several times for her testimony to be repeated because they could not hear her soft-spoken, sometimes mumbled, words.

Jeantel has acknowledged she lied about her age and about her reason for skipping Martin's funeral, and that she signed her mother's name rather than her own in a letter she sent to Martin's mother. Jeantel said she was merely seeking anonymity and never imagined she would be called as a witness.

Jeantel, with whom Martin had been friends since elementary school in Miami, told the court in sometimes emotional testimony on Wednesday that Martin tried to run away and thought he had lost the stranger, until he reappeared.

She said she heard Martin ask the man, "Why are you following me?" Then she heard "a bump," and Martin saying, "Get off!, Get off!" before the line was cut.

Martin was a student at a Miami-area high school and a guest of one of the homeowners. He was returning after buying snacks at a convenience store when he was shot in the chest during a confrontation with Zimmerman.

The case triggered civil rights protests and debates about the treatment of black Americans in the U.S. justice system, since police did not arrest Zimmerman, who is part Hispanic, for 44 days.

Prosecutors say Zimmerman profiled Martin, suspecting him of being up to no good, and killed him in an act of vigilante justice. The defense says Zimmerman was out doing his job as part of the neighborhood watch and simply trying to investigate something that he perceived as suspicious.

Zimmerman does not deny killing Martin. He says he did so only after he was attacked and Martin smashed his head repeatedly into a concrete sidewalk.

The prosecution faces a tall order to win a conviction for second-degree murder, and under Florida law must convince all six jurors that Zimmerman acted with "ill will" or "hatred" and "an indifference to human life."

Under Florida's Stand Your Ground law, which was approved in 2005 and has since been copied by about 30 other states, people fearing for their lives can use deadly force without having to retreat from a confrontation, even when it is possible.

Earlier this week jurors heard testimony from residents of Twin Lakes who heard or saw the struggle between Zimmerman and Martin on a dark and rainy night. Two female residents described how they saw what they believed was Zimmerman sitting on top of Martin and heard the 17-year-old cry for help. But under cross-examination both women admitted they could not be absolutely certain what they saw and heard.

(Writing by Jane Sutton and David Adams; Editing by Grant McCool)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/defense-seeks-undermine-key-witness-trayvon-martin-case-100606050.html

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Thursday, June 27, 2013

WRITING ON THE ETHER: Let's Review Criticism | Porter Anderson

Porter Anderson, PorterAnderson.com, Writingon the Ether, Ether for Authors, London on the Ether, Jane Friedman, Ed Nawotka, Philip Jones, Publishing Perspectives, The Bookseller, books, ebooks, author, agent, Amazon, publishing, The FutureBook

  1. More Critics Than You Can Shake a Fist At
  2. Art vs. Entertainment / Criticism vs. Reviewing
  3. Why Ask Why?

?

Do you follow tennis? Observe the shaking of the fist.

Most of the world-class athletes at the All-England Club right now (including those being sent home alarmingly early) are not fistfight folks. But have a look: fist pumps.

In almost any Wimbledon match, male or female, you?ll find the players shaking their fists,?normally after winning points. As if at any moment, they might deck their opponents or punch out the ball kids.

Nobody follows these athletes more happily than I do. But that pumping of the fist looks showy at best on these immaculate, gifted, hard-working, smart people. It?s largely a ritual, a mannered iteration of a once-genuine gesture. It?s what you do with the hand not holding the racket. On one, it looks more like he?s shaking dice. On another, it looks like she?s grabbing fireflies. And, hey, it looks no better on the fans in the stands, these lovely, mild-mannered, bespectacled, brolly-toting rain dodgers?fist pumping?

It?s a cultural affectation. The shaking of the fist.

Could that be what?s become of literary criticism, too?

A significant disadvantage of the world of book recommendation is that we never hear about books that don?t live up to their promise. The bad books. Yes, I?ve heard the ?We don?t have time for bad books? argument, and while that works for recommending titles to genteel associations, it stinks when it comes to creating and maintaining a lively culture.

Porter Anderson, PorterAnderson.com, Writingon the Ether, Ether for Authors, London on the Ether, Jane Friedman, Ed Nawotka, Philip Jones, Publishing Perspectives, The Bookseller, books, ebooks, author, agent, Amazon, publishing, The FutureBook

Bethanne Patrick

In?Why Literary Criticism Still Matters?at Virginia Quarterly Review, ?Bethanne Patrick?begins asking some important questions to which we?re paying too little attention these days.

Think of literary criticism as a round robin of matches being played on the outer courts of the big tournament. The industry! the industry!?is fixated on its Centre Court melodrama.?While we watch traditional major players slip and slide, fall on their grass and suffer mortifying injuries, we aren?t focused on what?s happening to literary criticism.

Patrick?s good questions lie under the header ?Internet democratization.? Many good things have accrued from the digital dynamic. But the recommendation culture, in and of itself, may not be one of them, not entirely, if it?s allowed to replace real criticism.

Patrick, a critic, herself (as am I), writes:

This isn?t necessarily a problem for publishers. Publishing is a business, not an arts collective. This is a problem for authors and readers. If we want to have a balanced and literate literary culture, we have to be ready to name good books and bad books?and even to name the good and the bad within a single book, which is what the best book critics do on a regular basis.

Let?s look at a couple of changes that you and many others might have noticed only in sidelong glances on our way to the larger, central debates of the disruption.

Back to Table of Contents

?

It?s not uncommon for some readers to be adamantly put out with me when I bring up entertainment as distinct from what I call more ?serious? work.

I?m perfectly happy for you to dive now to the comments section to tell me off, simply for having raised the topic. I might as well have just yelled ?pull!? on a skeet shoot. The next sound you?ll hear is the guns going off and clay pigeons exploding.

It may help if I offer you a graphic provided by Jane Friedman, the former Writer?s Digest publisher who now is VQR?s digital editor and host of Writing on the Ether. In teaching university media studies courses, Friedman has found it useful to include this diagram from the textbook Media & Culture: An Introduction to Mass Communication?by Richard Campbell, Christopher R. Martin, and Bettina Fabos.

The intent of this diagrammatic representation of various influences in culture is to flatten them onto one plane, so entertainment-oriented elements are no ?lower? than elements that might be classified as classical, ?serious? elements. This view categorizes cultural inputs as ?familiar,? ?unfamiliar,? ?comforting,? ?challenging,? ?conventional,? and ?innovative.? It has some useful points of connection for those who normally chafe at suggestions that one cultural influence is more valuable or ?higher? than another.

And if you want to hold your fire, however, I?ll tell you a bit more of what I mean and why I bring it up.

  • By ?serious,? I mean material intended to help us explore meaningful, life-defining elements of our experience. Most of the time, I prefer serious work in all forms, from television to film and books and music, visual art, dance, the works.
  • By ?entertainment,? I mean material the primary purpose and intent of which is to create a feel-good experience?perhaps through humor, pathos, nostalgia, etc. It usually trades in populist values and idioms. One reality show begets five others.

?

There was a useful phrase used for many years around Broadway theater. A musical comedy was said to be ?for the tired businessman.? And it was entertainment.

This was an age in which tired businesswomen were woefully overlooked, I?m afraid. Hence the gender reference. But the understanding was that the tired business person was the primary audience for long lines of beautiful women wearing fishnet hose and singing ?We?re in the Money? while kicking their right legs in perfect unison. And the crowd loved it.

Next door, a usually smaller Broadway house might have a production of Medea. The people attending that one, provided it was Eurpides? doing of the story, saw the titular character kill her own children as an act of vengeance against her feckless husband Jason. The tired business person, it was assumed, would either be asleep by the time the kids were tossed over the parapet, or, if awake, would want to be next door watching women kicking their right legs instead.

?

Over time, let?s say since the middle of the last century, there has been a trend in all forms, not just theater, toward more entertainment, less serious work. Many exceptions everywhere, of course. But in time, and in virtually all media, the drift toward more entertainment-oriented work has been bolstered by the digital dynamic.

As I?ve written many times, digital is about distribution. Its energy seeks the widest distribution possible, through new-media technology. And this is one reason why entertainment offerings usually find bigger audiences than serious-art offerings: there?s a wider audience for the distribution of entertainment. ?


A couple of decades ago, a parallel turning point arrived for criticism. Those of us who were working in news media as critics were asked to start using star ratings, thumbs up or down, cartoons of little people jumping up and down or sulking, whatever?graphic representations of the gist of critical reviews.

This was the digital dynamic arriving in criticism. Just as art and entertainment were starting to grow farther apart, real criticism and ?reviewing? began to divide.

?Reviewing? became heavily consumer-oriented. How many thumbs up?

?

Critics found, of course, that many readers stopped reading their reviews. They just counted the thumbs ?way up,? the stars, etc. Reviewers were asked to tell their readers to ?go? or ?don?t go? to a film or concert, to ?read? or ?don?t read? a book.?

Actual criticism never seeks to tell users what to do. Instead it takes the work at hand and analyzes it in terms of what its creator(s) intended to do. What did this author mean to achieve? Did he or she achieve it??how? how not? how well?. VQR As Bethanne Patrick writes, emphasis mine:

Showing that books can contain good and bad but still be worth reading is just one of the ways in which critics benefit the reading public, and they also help readers place books in context. Is this book the next Holy Bible? The next Great American Novel? A blockbuster thriller? Yes, no, maybe? And why? What makes it so?

The user of criticism is then left to decide whether the analysis makes the work worth looking into. And he or she then decides whether the work is ?good? or otherwise. Criticism asks you to think for yourself, not be told to ?read this? or ?don?t read that.? Of course, this is why some people don?t care for it. They like others to do the thinking and tell them what to do. ?


Much as our culture neglected to nail the distinction between a ?cinema? and a ?theater??and thus we talk of going to a ?theater? to see a film?we didn?t do a very good job of distinguishing criticism from consumer reviewing.

In the same way that some authors rankle when told they?re working in entertainment while another set of authors is closer to art, there are consumer reviewers who don?t care for a clear understanding of what they do and how it differs from what true critics do.

I believe that what Patrick is writing about in her piece, ?Why Literary Criticism Still Matters,? helps us acknowledge a more recent and different divide opening up at our feet: criticism/reviewing vs. recommendation.

?

Patrick seems to pull critics and consumer reviewers closer together: they?re both surrounded, after all, by the recommendation culture. I think the functions of critics and reviewers remain different. ?I do think that she has an important point to make about the recommendation culture: It is unrelievedly biased toward the happy, the upbeat, the enthusiastic.

And it seems to be forming a third energy. As usual, we?ve eschewed giving this the clear terminology we need. We?re calling people of the recommendation culture ?reviewers,? too.

If the tired business person provided his or her opinion of Medea?s Greek chorus or the sequins on the synchronized legs? shoes, would we name those tired business people ?reviewers?? Probably. We?re like that. We wouldn?t want the tired business people to feel they were any less deserving of a career title than someone who?d actually made a career of it?even though they were less deserving, of course. And we?d never think of going the opposite direction and calling critics business people. ?


So now we have three things, all called ?reviewers.? They are:

(a) literary critics;

(b) consumer reviewers; and

(c) recommend-ers, the customer-appraisers.

Patrick writes:

If we don?t have reviews that tell us the truth?alongside recommendations that provide enthusiasm?then we have less information about how to spend our wild and precious reading lives. You can?t read every book, but even the small bits you read about as many books as possible increase your worldview.

What she?s describing?aside from ?our wild and precious reading lives,? which I love?is the fulfillment of yet another old line from ?legitimate? criticism: ?Everybody?s a critic.?

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Thanks to that Internet ?democracy,? everybody can (and on many days, it seems, does) weigh in with his or her opinion. About everything. Everything. The usefulness of the customer recommend-er is perfectly clear.

The patron who has tried the vacuum cleaner and gives it some stars and adds comments that only another vacuum cleaner shopper could love is performing a community and retail service.?There is a genuine place and purpose for the customer?s appraisal, the recommendation culture at work, no question. Porter Anderson, PorterAnderson.com, Writingon the Ether, Ether for Authors, London on the Ether, Jane Friedman, Ed Nawotka, Philip Jones, Publishing Perspectives, The Bookseller, books, ebooks, author, agent, Amazon, publishing, The FutureBook

Many see hope in the Amazonian?acquisition of Goodreads because the problems Amazon has had with falsified customer reviews in the past may be, to some degree, ameliorated if Goodreads-vetted reviews from that avid community of 18 million recommending people are surfaced onto Amazon sales pages (with each member?s permission, of course).

Customer appraisal is all but required for decent online sales. It has a place and purpose. Nothing except sock puppetry need be held against it as a cautionary concern. It?s also about as far from actual literary criticism as my frolics around a badminton net are from what those fist-pumping tennis pros do at Wimbledon.

Back to Table of Contents ?

?

?

So, to review, we seem to have managed to divide all this galling opinion-slinging into three parts:

(a) literary criticism;

(b) consumer reviewing; and

(c) recommendation, customer-appraisal.

That being the case, one of the most disturbing issues Patrick?s piece raises is found in this question:

Where does book reviewing end and book marketing begin?and does this question even still matter to the business of publishing?

?

?

For her, this is the fundamental issue, and it?s a good one. What is one form of reviewing or another, and what is merely salesmanship?

For me, however, the real question in her addendum is this: does this question still matter to the business of publishing??

If anybody?s putting together a list of Worst Moments in the Digital Disruption, I?d vote for the long, slow realization for journalists that diluted and starred reviews were just fine with the public, along with glitzy, hairsprayed ?Live-Action Eyewitness (as opposed to Earwitness?) News You Can Use.? The dumbing down of current affairs.


Many of us in the news media once believed that the population supported fair reporting and in-depth investigation. So, as our corporate executives reconfigured our newsrooms to respond to the Live-Action Nosewitness commercial interests of advertisers, we watched the windows, waiting for the pitchforks. Many of us felt sure the users would soon rise up, toss the hairspray over the parapet after Medea?s brats, and liberate us to return to journalism?s traditional separations of editorial and advertising. With this rescue, we felt sure, would come a restoration of rigorous literary criticism.

The cavalry never came over the hill.

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We learned, in fact, that the wider public, for the most part, were not concerned about the principles of genuine journalistic performance. There?s a good chance, we know now, that they never even understood the concept of a truly free press.

And as digital news-you-can-use shallowed out into chit-chatty info-tainment, we had to concede that the public, in fact, doesn?t care. Info-tainment is ?good enough.? Just make a fist and shake it bit, and that?s ?good enough? as a faint reflection of what once was a fight.

?

In book publishing, what Patrick is asking gets at the worrisome center of the same issue: do readers today care whether they have access to criticism? Or even to consumer reviews? Or is the recommendation culture ?good enough?? She writes:

In a world of recommendations only, we don?t have to worry about conflicts of interest. Books are not pharmaceuticals or food; we don?t need a federal agency to vouch for their contents or effects?No one is going to get hurt if a book recommendation is based solely on the recommender?s love for the author.

She?s saying, then, that fair play and the disinterested stance once prized and protected by critics, their editors, and, surely, a handful of discerning readers, no longer are a concern.

Porter Anderson, PorterAnderson.com, Writingon the Ether, Ether for Authors, London on the Ether, Jane Friedman, Ed Nawotka, Philip Jones, Publishing Perspectives, The Bookseller, books, ebooks, author, agent, Amazon, publishing, The FutureBook

Jacob Silverman

In his earlier VQR piece, The Art of the Negative Review, Jacob Silverman wrote that self-assigning critics are automatically likely to produce positive criticism because they?re choosing works they feel are valuable to bring to their readers? attention. He includes, for example, Time magazine?s Lev Grossman, writing:

Grossman pointed out that he?is?the books desk at?Time?magazine?no one else writes or edits books coverage there?so he feels a sort of obligation to champion good literature and chooses his review subjects accordingly.

And regardless of how reviews might be assigned, the best news is that in some cases, real criticism, of course, still is published at all.

Porter Anderson, PorterAnderson.com, Writingon the Ether, Ether for Authors, London on the Ether, Jane Friedman, Ed Nawotka, Philip Jones, Publishing Perspectives, The Bookseller, books, ebooks, author, agent, Amazon, publishing, The FutureBook

Emily St. John Mandel

I?m always glad to recommend the work of Emily St. John Mandel at The Millions, not only because her voice as a critic is so amply informed by her experience as an author, herself, but also because the character of her review work is distinctive?given to the work at hand, yet set within the context of a thoughtful point of view.

And here is where I?ll disagree, respectfully, with Bethanne Patrick. When, in her first line, she writes of ?objective literary criticism,? she?s naming a unicorn.

Porter Anderson, PorterAnderson.com, Writingon the Ether, Ether for Authors, London on the Ether, Jane Friedman, Ed Nawotka, Philip Jones, Publishing Perspectives, The Bookseller, books, ebooks, author, agent, Amazon, publishing, The FutureBookNo journalist is objective, least of all the critic,?whose job it is to form and promulgate an opinion. I?m guessing Patrick means fair. Experienced critics are adept at giving work a full hearing, at starting from what the author intends and evaluating the results on the terms of the attempt. They?re never objective. They?re trained, however, to be fair. You can see this at work in the critical writings of Mandel, too.

Porter Anderson, PorterAnderson.com, Writingon the Ether, Ether for Authors, London on the Ether, Jane Friedman, Ed Nawotka, Philip Jones, Publishing Perspectives, The Bookseller, books, ebooks, author, agent, Amazon, publishing, The FutureBook

Kyle Minor

Or see Kyle Minor?s?criticism of the critics,?Today in silly book reviews: Let?s all fight about Alice Munro at Salon. In that piece, bisected as it is by a Drugstore.com ad, Minor writes:

The critic of the sainting sort might shower the writer with unqualified praise, declare her a genius, and ignore or explain away the writer?s shortcomings ? or declare them to be virtues. The other kind of critic might decide that the surest path to deflating the balloon of hyperbole isn?t merely letting a little air out the bottom. No, it might be more satisfying ? and attention-grabbing ? to spray it with a flamethrower.

Porter Anderson, PorterAnderson.com, Writingon the Ether, Ether for Authors, London on the Ether, Jane Friedman, Ed Nawotka, Philip Jones, Publishing Perspectives, The Bookseller, books, ebooks, author, agent, Amazon, publishing, The FutureBookThis is critic-on-critic action, rhinos clashing on the veld, the sweaty and purposeful shaking of a ranking fist at another. In fact, Minor gets in some jabs at just about all of us. For example:

Martin Amis, in a New Yorker review of a story collection by Don DeLillo, said: ?When we say that we love a writer?s work, we are always stretching the truth: what we really mean is that we love about half of it. Sometimes rather more than half, sometimes rather less.?

By the time you finish Minor, Wimbledon will be over. (The Salon piece is longer even than an Ether post, I?m pleased to tell you.)

But you?ll know more than you did when you started, about literary criticism, its zip-line way of sailing down one theme and back up another, its pile-ups of preferred phrasings, an art performed on an art. You?ll know a bit more about what we?re losing, about what?s being given away in our shrugging acceptance of terms, like ?reviewing,? applied to marketplace jargon and shopping-cart flattery.

?

And most of all, you?ll know a bit more about the lack of consciousness that characterizes so many changes in our culture on digital drive-time.

We?re generally unaware of these cultural slips and slides on the grassy court of our progress?this value brought to its knees, that tradition flat on its ass, something important retired in early-round competition. It doesn?t matter, get out of the way. We?re?mobile. We?re social. We?re subscribing. And we?re trying to get a few more ?likes? onto the page before somebody drops a one-star in the locker room and runs.


If you asked one of these tennis champions I like so much? He might not even remember. ?Shake my fist? I did? Come on. Show me the tape.??

One of the things literary criticism does?hell, consumer reviewing might even manage from time to time?is??make us aware of a trend, a surprise, a turn taken, a discovery made.

But mostly, we just shake a little recommendation at it.

What do you think? Is that really good enough??

Back to Table of Contents

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Main image: iStockphoto ? BuddyM

Source: http://janefriedman.com/feeder/?FeederAction=clicked&feed=Articles+(RSS2)&seed=http://janefriedman.com/2013/06/27/writing-on-the-ether-96/&seed_title=WRITING+ON+THE+ETHER:+Let&%238217;s+Review+Criticism

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Wednesday, June 26, 2013

Ireland to pay $45M to Catholic laundry workers

DUBLIN (AP) -- Ireland will pay several hundred former residents of Catholic-run Magdalene laundries at least 34.5 million euros ($45 million) to compensate them for their years of unpaid labor and public shame, the government announced Wednesday following a decade-long campaign by former residents of the workhouses.

Justice Minister Alan Shatter apologized to the women ? an estimated 770 survivors out of more than 10,000 who lived in the dozen facilities from 1922 to 1996 ? that it had taken so long for them to receive compensation. The move marked the latest step in a two-decade effort by Ireland to investigate and redress human rights abuses in its Catholic institutions.

Shatter's decision came four months after a government-commissioned probe found that women consigned to the laundries were broadly branded "fallen" women, a euphemism for prostitutes. The investigation found that few actually were, while most instead were victims of poverty, homelessness and dysfunctional families in a state lacking the facilities to care for them.

In remarks to former Magdalenes, some of them in the press-conference audience, Shatter said he hoped they would accept the compensation plans as "a sincere expression of the state's regret for failing you in the past, its recognition of your current needs, and its commitment to respecting your dignity and human rights as full, equal members of our nation."

And in a challenge to the four orders of nuns that ran the workhouses, Shatter called on them to help pay the bill.

The orders ? the Sisters of Mercy, the Sisters of Our Lady of Charity of Refuge, the Sisters of Charity, and the Good Shepherd Sisters ? all issued statements welcoming the payments plan. None offered any pledge to contribute and insisted their staff had done the best they could at the time, given the state's own inability to care for the women.

The nuns noted that they still were providing homes to more than 100 former laundry workers who chose to remain in church care when the last of the laundries closed, while virtually none of the nuns involved in running the workhouses was still alive today.

"We wish we had provided a better and more comprehensive service and shown more empathy, but we were also part of a system that had little comprehension or understanding of how to truly care for these women," said the Good Shepherd Sisters, who ran four laundries in Cork, Limerick, Waterford and Wexford. "We always acted in good faith and many of our sisters dedicated their entire lives to this work."

Shatter said the total cost of payments could reach 58 million euros ($75.5 million) if the maximum number of eligible women worldwide applies. The tax-free payments would range from 11,500 euros ($15,000), for women who spent less than three months working in a laundry, to up to 100,000 euros ($130,000) for those who spent 10 years or more there.

As part of the plans, former Magdalenes also will receive state-funded retirement pensions and free medical care at state-funded facilities.

Activists representing the so-called "Maggies" had demanded justice and state compensation since 2002, when a previous government launched a compensation fund for people abused in Catholic-run orphanages and workhouses for children.

Former Magdalene residents were declared ineligible, as the government contended that the laundries were privately run institutions with negligible state involvement. Taxpayers since have paid more than 1 billion euros ($1.3 billion) to more than 13,000 people who suffered sexual, physical and psychological abuse in the children's residences.

A government-commissioned investigation in February found that the state was legally responsible for overseeing the laundries, too. Prime Minister Enda Kenny offered an official apology for what he called "a cruel, pitiless Ireland" that had abused the women with " untrue and offensive stereotypes."

Investigators trawling through decades of the laundries' residency records found that more than a quarter of women were directly committed to the laundries by public officials, such as judges or truancy officers, and all residents spent their days in menial labor without access to education.

Most did laundry for hotels, hospitals and prisons, while others scrubbed floors or made rosary beads for the church's profit.

The report found that the average length of stay was just seven months, not the lifetime imprisonment commonly depicted in fictional works. It said 14 percent stayed more than five years, and 8 percent more than a decade.

Many hundreds checked into the facilities repeatedly for short periods, reflecting their poverty and the Irish state's inadequate facilities for homeless women. And until the 1970s, judges often ordered women guilty of crimes ranging from shoplifting to infanticide into the laundries rather than Ireland's male-dominated prison system.

The report did dispute depictions in popular culture of physical beatings in the institutions, noting that many Magdalene residents had transferred there as teenagers from Catholic-run industrial schools where such violence was common, and some survivors in their adult recollections failed to distinguish between the two. It found no evidence of such attacks in the nuns' care and, specifically, no complaints of sexual abuse by the nuns.

___

Online:

Ireland's compensation plans, http://bit.ly/19Ce2vt

Magdalene Laundries report, http://www.idcmagdalen.ie/

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/ireland-pay-45m-catholic-laundry-152955390.html

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Ouya and Shield: Android consoles are about potential, not gaming ...

The Ouya has hit store shelves, and after a small delay, Nvidia?s Shield will release as well. As the two pioneers of the Android gaming console market, the Ouya and Shield have taught us all one thing: Android gaming consoles are about the potential of the Android platform, not the quality of Android gaming as it exists today.

Along with the Kickstarted GameStick, the Ouya and the Shield compose the initial triumvirate of Android gaming consoles. Each are going about it their own way. Nvidia?s Shield is a portable gaming device ? in the sense that it?s like a 3DS or PS Vita ? that is focused on top-of-the-line hardware using Tegra 4, a very pretty screen, and other high-end specs all at the high-end price of $299. The Ouya, on the other hand, is going for cheap and easy. For only $99, you get a tiny Tegra 3 console complete with wireless gaming controller, 1GB of RAM, and 1080p HDMI output. The GameStick lands somewhere between the Ouya and Shield. It is a standard MHL stick which can plug into a displa, but also be carried everywhere more easily than something with a bunch of wires sticking out of it.

The devices all have their pros: the Shield has fancy hardware, the Ouya is cheap and has exclusives, and the GameStick is even cheaper ($79) and more portable. They also all have their cons: the Shield is only $100 less than a brand-new PS4, the Ouya is buggy and has a limited games library, the GameStick doesn?t yet exist in any tangibly marketable way. They all share one unique con: they?re Android gaming consoles. However, what makes that disadvantage interesting is that it could morph into a major advantage.

Nvidia Shield streaming

Giving the Shield?s PC streaming capabilities a go.

Now, this isn?t to say that Android games aren?t good, or that Android game developers haven?t put their heart and soul into creating the best game they could. The real issue is that Android in its current state just isn?t the platform for top-tier video game experiences. For better or worse, iOS is the mobile platform where prominent mobile games reside and the 3DS and PS Vita are where even richer portable gaming experiences lie.

The PC is as open ? if not more open ? a gaming platform as Android, yet provides more in-depth experiences. Nintendo, Sony, Microsoft, and PC consoles are where the big budget, triple-A titles live. Android, in its current state, is just not where people go to play ? or to publish ? today?s best games.

Nvidia Shield, running AndroidWhen listening to the Shield, Ouya, and GameStick PR spiels, the one running theme is that Android gaming could be set to explode thanks to the open platform. That?s completely correct. However, ?could be? doesn?t mean ?will.? In the Ouya?s case, $99 seems like a fair price for a speculative purchase. However, if Android gaming doesn?t fulfill its potential, that $99 could have bought you Naughty Dog?s?The Last of Us?or an entire year of an MMO subscription. Both of those purchases would do more for you than a Android console that might sit around and occupy an HDMI port ever would.

So, if there aren?t enough (or any, perhaps) top-tier video game experiences on the Android platform, surely filling the market with consoles would attract developers, which in turn would lead to the development of some top-tier games, right? While that is potentially true ? as it is with Steam for Linux?? that still means Android gaming consoles are focused on what may happen down the line, not what is happening now.

As the Wii U is currently proving, if there aren?t any games people want they simply won?t buy the console. As the Wii?s massive hardware success but third-place software sales taught us, potential only gets you so far, especially if it?s never fulfilled. The record-breaking success of the PlayStation 2 showed us that, despite subpar hardware specs, the hardware doesn?t make the console, the games do. At the moment, the Android gaming platform simply doesn?t have the titles to compete with every other gaming platform that?s out there. You?re buying into the hope that it one day will.

Now read:?This is why Nvidia?s Shield will fail.?Alternatively read:?Why Nvidia?s Shield will succeed

Source: http://www.extremetech.com/gaming/159739-ouya-and-shield-android-consoles

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Officials: 3 dead in Afghanistan palace assault

Afghan soldiers stand guard as smoke rises from the gate of the presidential palace in Kabul, Afghanistan, Tuesday June 25, 2013. The Taliban said they have hit one of the most secure areas of the Afghan capital with a suicide attack, as a series of explosions rocked the gate leading into the presidential palace. (AP Photo/Ahmad Jamshid)

Afghan soldiers stand guard as smoke rises from the gate of the presidential palace in Kabul, Afghanistan, Tuesday June 25, 2013. The Taliban said they have hit one of the most secure areas of the Afghan capital with a suicide attack, as a series of explosions rocked the gate leading into the presidential palace. (AP Photo/Ahmad Jamshid)

Afghan policemen stand guard near the entrance gate of the presidential palace in Kabul, Afghanistan Tuesday, June 25, 2013 following an attack. Suicide attackers blew up a car bomb and battled security forces outside Afghanistan's presidential palace Tuesday after infiltrating one of the most secure areas of the capital. The Taliban claimed responsibility for the attack that came as reporters were gathering for a news event on Afghan youth at which President Hamid Karzai was expected to talk about ongoing efforts to open peace talks with the militant group. (AP Photo/Ahmad Jamshid)

Afghan national security arrive near the entrance gate of the presidential palace in Kabul, Afghanistan Tuesday, June 25, 2013. Suicide attackers blew up a car bomb and battled security forces outside the presidential palace Tuesday after infiltrating one of the most secure areas of the capital. The Taliban claimed responsibility for the attack, which came as reporters were gathering for a news event on Afghan youth at which President Hamid Karzai was expected to talk about ongoing efforts to open peace talks with the militant group. (AP photo/Rahmat Gul)

Afghan security force members investigate nearby the entrance gate of the presidential palace in Kabul, Afghanistan Tuesday, June 25, 2013. Suicide attackers blew up a car bomb and battled security forces outside Afghanistan's presidential palace Tuesday after infiltrating one of the most secure areas of the capital. The Taliban claimed responsibility for the Kabul palace attack, which came as reporters were gathering for a news event on Afghan youth at which President Hamid Karzai was expected to talk about ongoing efforts to open peace talks with the militant group. (AP Photo/Rahmat Gul)

Afghan national security arrive near the entrance gate of the presidential palace in Kabul, Afghanistan Tuesday, June 25, 2013. Suicide attackers blew up a car bomb and battled security forces outside the presidential palace Tuesday after infiltrating one of the most secure areas of the capital. The Taliban claimed responsibility for the attack, which came as reporters were gathering for a news event on Afghan youth at which President Hamid Karzai was expected to talk about ongoing efforts to open peace talks with the militant group. (AP photo/Rahmat Gul)

(AP) ? Afghan officials say a brazen Taliban assault on the presidential palace in Kabul has left three guards dead.

The militant group had earlier said that all eight attackers died in the early Tuesday attack on one of the most secure parts of the Afghan capital.

Militants with false papers and military-style uniforms bluffed their way through two checkpoints on their way to the palace before jumping out of their explosives-packed vehicle and opening fire on security personnel. Another carload of Taliban fighters got stuck between two checkpoints and detonated their own car bomb.

The Interior Ministry said a fourth guard was wounded.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2013-06-25-Afghanistan/id-1b62f835f44641c0be3ce935de3891b2

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Tuesday, June 25, 2013

10 Things to Know for Today

Your daily look at late-breaking news, upcoming events and the stories that will be talked about today:

1. RUSSIA CALLS DEMAND FOR EXTRADITING SNOWDEN 'UNACCEPTABLE'

Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov lashed out at the U.S. for warning negative consequences if Russia doesn't turn over the NSA leaker.

2. SEARCHING FOR SNOWDEN

Lavrov says Snowden hadn't crossed the Russian border. He didn't board a Cuba-bound flight he was registered on in Moscow and the country where he sought asylum doesn't know where he is.

3. ATTACK ON AFGHAN PRESIDENTIAL PALACE

Taliban militants with military-style uniforms infiltrated one of the most secure areas of the capital; all eight attackers died. It wasn't clear whether Karzai was at the palace.

4. INTERNET SHUTDOWN ON KOREA ANNIVERSARY

Major websites in both North and South Korea crashed for hours on the 63rd anniversary of the start of the Korean war.

5. WHAT PROSECUTORS WANT ZIMMERMAN JURY TO HEAR

They will ask a judge today to allow phone calls the ex-neighborhood watchman made to police about suspicious people in his neighborhood.

6. OBAMA'S CLIMATE CHANGE PLAN

The president will propose the first-ever carbon dioxide emission limits on new and existing power plants at a speech today.

7. IMMIGRATION TEST CLEARS WAY FOR SENATE VOTE

Senate passage of the overhaul that allows millions a chance at citizenship is likely this week, but House Republicans have shown little support.

8. WHY THE WEATHER IS SO EXTREME

The AP's Seth Borenstein says the jet stream that generally rushes from west to east in a straight line has been wobbly and going north and south.

9. ANOTHER BUSINESS DROPS PAULA DEEN

Smithfield Foods, which sold hams with Deen's name on it, ended its relationship with the food celebrity after she admitted using racial slurs.

10. LAST-MINUTE GOALS POWER CHICAGO TO STANLEY CUP

Brian Bickell and Dave Bolland each scored 17 seconds apart to give the Blackhawks a 3-2 win over the Boston Bruins and its second Cup in four years.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/10-things-know-today-101340019.html

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Roadside bomb hits Iraqi minibus carrying pilgrims

BAGHDAD (AP) ? Iraqi officials say a roadside bomb has hit a minibus carrying Shiite pilgrims to the holy city of Karbala, killing three.

Police and hospital officials say the bus was struck Tuesday about 55 kilometers (35 miles) south of Baghdad while it was traveling between the towns of Musayyib and Iskandariyah. They say another 15 were wounded.

Tens of thousands of Shiites are massing in the holy city of Karbala, 80 kilometers (50 miles) south of Baghdad, for the annual festival of Shabaniyah marking the anniversary of the birth of the ninth-century Shiite leader known as the Hidden Imam.

The officials spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to release the information to journalists.

Iraq is weathering its deadliest outburst of violence since 2008.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/roadside-bomb-hits-iraqi-minibus-carrying-pilgrims-101417133.html

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Testing Investors' Tolerance

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Source: http://feeds.nbcnews.com/c/35002/f/653351/s/2dc26b7b/l/0Lvideo0Bmsnbc0Bmsn0N0Cid0C5230A4327/story01.htm

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HP announces Slate 21 AIO, 21.5-inch Android tablet with Tegra 4

HP launches Slate 21 AIO, 215inch Android tablet with Tegra 4

What do you do if your home turf of PC sales is being eroded by tablets? If your answer is "sell tablets as desktops," then you're on Meg Whitman's wavelength. At an event in Beijing, HP announced a 21.5-inch, Android-powered tablet that's expressly designed as a desktop unit. The HP Slate 21 AIO comes with a full-HD touchscreen and NVIDIA's Tegra 4 internals, running Android 4.2.2. Prospective owners won't need to purchase an artists' easel, however, as there's a handy rear kickstand that'll let you stand it upright or at a 30-ish degree angle (pictured after the break), making us hope that its digitizer is sensitive enough for pen-based drawing. There's no word on pricing or availability, but there's a press release, translated from Chinese, after the break, if you'd like to know more.

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Comments

Via: CNET

Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/sia1qfaWZck/

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Monday, June 24, 2013

Send him back: US urges nations to return Snowden

Light shines through a cabin window on seat 17A, the empty seat that an Aeroflot official said was booked in the name of former CIA technician Edward Snowden, shortly before Aeroflot flight SU150 takes off from Moscow to Havana, Cuba, Monday, June 24, 2013. Snowden, who has admitted to leaking National Security Agency secrets, was expected to fly from Russia to Cuba and Venezuela en route to possible asylum in Ecuador, but AP reporters on the flight never saw him get on board. (AP Photo/Max Seddon)

Light shines through a cabin window on seat 17A, the empty seat that an Aeroflot official said was booked in the name of former CIA technician Edward Snowden, shortly before Aeroflot flight SU150 takes off from Moscow to Havana, Cuba, Monday, June 24, 2013. Snowden, who has admitted to leaking National Security Agency secrets, was expected to fly from Russia to Cuba and Venezuela en route to possible asylum in Ecuador, but AP reporters on the flight never saw him get on board. (AP Photo/Max Seddon)

President Barack Obama, right, sit across from Steve Case, right, Chairman and CEO, Revolution LLc, and other CEOs, business owners and entrepreneurs during a meeting in the Roosevelt Room of the White House in Washington, Monday, June 24, 2013, to discuss immigration reform. Obama hosted the meeting to discuss the importance of commonsense immigration reform including the Congressional Budget Office analysis that concludes immigration reform would promote economic growth and reduce the deficit. (AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais)

Graphic shows the geographical career path and recent travels of former NSA contractor Edward Snowden; 3c x 5 inches; 146 mm x 127 mm;

White House press secretary Jay Carney gestures during the daily press briefing at the White House in Washington, Monday, June 24, 2013. Carney said the U.S. assumes that Edward Snowden is now in Russia and that the White House now expects Russian authorities to look at all the options available to them to expel Snowden to face charges in the U.S. for releasing secret surveillance information . (AP Photo/Evan Vucci)

A TV screen shows a news report of Edward Snowden, a former CIA employee who leaked top-secret documents about sweeping U.S. surveillance programs, at a shopping mall in Hong Kong Sunday, June 23, 2013. The former National Security Agency contractor wanted by the United States for revealing two highly classified surveillance programs has been allowed to leave for a "third country" because a U.S. extradition request did not fully comply with Hong Kong law, the territory's government said Sunday. (AP Photo/Vincent Yu)

WASHINGTON (AP) ? The U.S. grasped for help Monday from both adversaries and uneasy allies in an effort to catch fugitive National Security Agency leaker Edward Snowden. The White House demanded that he be denied asylum, blasted China for letting him go and urged Russia to "do the right thing" and send him back to America to face espionage charges.

Snowden was believed to be in Russia, where he fled Sunday after weeks of hiding out in Hong Kong following his disclosure of the broad scope of two highly classified counterterror surveillance programs to two newspapers. The programs collect vast amounts of Americans' phone records and worldwide online data in the name of national security.

Snowden had flown from Hong Kong to Russia, and was expected to fly early Monday to Havana, from where he would continue on to Ecuador, where he has applied for asylum. But he didn't get on that plane and his exact whereabouts were unclear.

The founder of WikiLeaks, the secret-spilling organization that has embraced Snowden, said the American was only passing through Russia on his way to an unnamed destination to avoid the reach of U.S. authorities. Julian Assange said Snowden had applied for asylum in Ecuador, Iceland and possibly other countries.

Despite its diplomatic tough talk, the U.S. faces considerable difficulty in securing cooperation on Snowden from nations with whom it has chilly relations.

The White House said Hong Kong's refusal to detain Snowden had "unquestionably" hurt relations between the United States and China. While Hong Kong has a high degree of autonomy from the rest of China, experts said Beijing probably orchestrated Snowden's exit in an effort to remove an irritant in Sino-U.S. relations. President Barack Obama and Chinese President Xi Jinping met earlier this month in California to smooth over rough patches in the countries' relationship, including allegations of hacking into each other's computer systems.

Secretary of State John Kerry urged Moscow to "do the right thing" amid high-level pressure on Russia to turn over Snowden.

"We're following all the appropriate legal channels and working with various other countries to make sure that the rule of law is observed," Obama told reporters when asked if he was confident that Russia would expel Snowden.

Obama's spokesman, Jay Carney, said the U.S. was expecting the Russians "to look at the options available to them to expel Mr. Snowden back to the United States to face justice for the crimes with which he is charged."

Carney was less measured about China.

"The Chinese have emphasized the importance of building mutual trust," he said. "And we think that they have dealt that effort a serious setback. ...This was a deliberate choice by the government to release a fugitive despite a valid arrest warrant, and that decision unquestionably has a negative impact on the U.S.-China relationship."

Snowden has acknowledged revealing details of top-secret surveillance programs that sweep up millions of phone and Internet records daily. He is a former CIA employee who later was hired as a contractor through Booz Allen to be a computer systems analyst. In that job, he gained access to documents ? many of which he has given to The Guardian and The Washington Post to expose what he contends are privacy violations by an authoritarian government.

Snowden also told the South China Morning Post that "the NSA does all kinds of things like hack Chinese cellphone companies to steal all of your SMS data," and is believed to have more than 200 additional sensitive documents.

Assange and attorneys for WikiLeaks assailed the U.S. as "bullying" foreign nations into refusing asylum to Snowden. WikiLeaks counsel Michael Ratner said Snowden is protected as a whistleblower by the same international treaties that the U.S. has in the past used to criticize policies in China and African nations.

The U.S. government's dual lines of diplomacy ? harsh with China, hopeful with the Russians ? came just days after Obama met separately with leaders of both countries in an effort to close gaps on some of the major disputes facing them. Additionally, State Department spokesman Patrick Ventrell said the U.S. has made demands to "a series of governments," including Ecuador, that Snowden be barred from any international travel other than to be returned to the U.S.

Ventrell said he did not know if that included Iceland. Icelandic officials have confirmed receiving an informal request for asylum conveyed by WikiLeaks, which has strong links to the tiny North Atlantic nation. But authorities there have insisted that Snowden must be on Icelandic soil before making a formal request.

Ecuador's president and foreign minister declared that national sovereignty and universal principles of human rights ? not U.S. prodding ? would govern any decision they might make on granting asylum to Snowden.

Ecuador has rejected some previous U.S. efforts at cooperation and has been helping Assange avoid prosecution by allowing him to stay at its embassy in London.

Formally, Snowden's application for Ecuadoran asylum remains only under consideration. But Foreign Minister Ricardo Patino made little effort to disguise his government's position. He told reporters in Hanoi that the choice Ecuador faced in hosting Snowden was "betraying the citizens of the world or betraying certain powerful elites in a specific country."

President Rafael Correa said on Twitter that "we will take the decision that we feel most suitable, with absolute sovereignty." Correa, who took office in 2007, is a frequent critic of U.S. foreign policy in Latin America and is an ally of leftist president Evo Morales of Bolivia. Correa also had aligned himself with Venezuela's late leader, Hugo Chavez, a chief U.S. antagonist in the region for years.

In April 2011 the Obama administration expelled the Ecuadorean ambassador to Washington after the U.S. envoy to Ecuador, Heather Hodges, was expelled for making corruption allegations about senior Ecuadorean police authorities in confidential documents disclosed by WikiLeaks.

American experts said the U.S. will have limited, if any, influence to persuade governments to turn over Snowden if he heads to Cuba or nations in South America that are seen as hostile to Washington.

"There's little chance Ecuador would give him back" if that country agrees to take him, said James F. Jeffrey., a former ambassador and career diplomat.

Steve Saltzburg, a former senior Justice Department prosecutor, said it's little surprise that China refused to hand over Snowden, and he predicted Russia won't either.

"We've been talking the talk about how both these counties abuse people who try to express their First Amendment rights, so I think that neither country is going to be very inclined to help us very much," said Saltzburg, now a law professor at George Washington University in Washington. "That would be true with Cuba if he ends up there."

The United States formally sought Snowden's extradition but was rebuffed by Hong Kong officials who said the U.S. request did not fully comply with their laws. The Justice Department rejected that claim, saying its request met all of the requirements of the extradition treaty between the U.S. and Hong Kong.

Snowden had been believed to have been in a transit area in Moscow's airport where he would not be considered as entering Russian territory. Assange declined to discuss where Snowden was but said he was safe. The U.S. has revoked his passport.

___

Associated Press writers Julie Pace, Eileen Sullivan, Kimberly Dozier and Robert Burns in Washington, Lynn Berry, Vladimir Isachenkov and Max Seddon in Moscow, Kevin Chan in Hong Kong and Sylvia Hui in London contributed to this report.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/386c25518f464186bf7a2ac026580ce7/Article_2013-06-24-NSA-Surveillance/id-3f33ce5f606846baa5f169a1608da32f

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