Tuesday, August 13, 2013

E.ON profits fall on slow demand, renewables

FRANKFURT, Germany (AP) ? German gas, electric and water utility E.ON says net profit fell 22 percent in the second quarter as it faced weak demand for power in Europe and increased competition from subsidized renewable energy.

Net income was 919 million euros ($1.22 billion), down from 1.18 billion in the April-June period a year ago.

Despite the fall in profit, CEO Johannes Teyssen reaffirmed the company's earnings forecast for the year. But he also said Tuesday that the regulatory and business environment for the company's legacy power generation business was tough and that "no recovery is in sight."

Last month E.ON said it was mothballing a 2 ?-year old gas-fired plant in Slovakia because it was unprofitable and Teyssen said unless things change more shutdowns were "unavoidable."

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/e-profits-fall-slow-demand-renewables-065136463.html

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New Battery from Apple and now decreased time remaining??

Quote:

I had my 2010 13" MBP's battery replaced by Apple yesterday and now I'm showing I have like 3:45 remaining on a full charge. I looked around online and it says I should be getting up to 10 hours. I'd be fine if it said I have 8 hours remaining but

Do these take a few days or something to calibrate? I know they're supposed to be precalibrated but when they're replaced is there something it needs to go through?

I'll call up AppleCare in a few days and see what they say.

Calibrate the battery and the battery estimate depends on what processes you are doing at the time, brightness, etc. Apple usually does tests with half brightness, so if your brightness is turned up really high it would show a lot less.
When they say "up to 10 hours", thats all it is. Under a light load at medium brightness, you can get 10 hours. But with wifi on, brightness high, and some intensive processing this decreases dramatically. For example, I can get 4-5 hours out of my (old) battery with brightness down to a minimum, wifi off, and only quicktime running. But I only get an 1.5 hours or so with 3/4 brightness, Chrome running with 40+ tabs, wifi on, mail running, itunes, etc.

What kind of battery time did you used to get?

Source: http://forums.macrumors.com/showthread.php?t=1621793&goto=newpost

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Vin Diesel May Be Voicing Groot In 'Guardians Of The Galaxy'

After a cryptic picture of a meeting at Marvel got people thinking he?d be starring in Avengers 2, Fast and Furious star Vin Diesel posted a picture to Facebook Sunday that seemed to indicate his adventures in the Marvel cinematic universe will be a bit more? galactic.

That picture was of Groot, the tree-like alien from Planet X who and member of the Guardians of the Galaxy. The scuttlebutt now is that Diesel may be the voice of the character, who in recent years has limited his speaking to nothing more than the phrase, ?I am Groot.?

This wouldn?t mark the first time Diesel has voiced an alien with a somewhat limited grasp of language. He did the voice of The Iron Giant in the film of the same name, and in that he gave one of his best, most heartfelt performances. It?s really an amazing movie. So it?s clear he can do a lot with that one phrase.

So far, we know a good many of the principal cast members of the James Gunn-directed film set for release August 1, 2014. Chris Pratt is Star-Lord, Zoe Saldana will handle the role of Gamora, Dave Bautista is Drax the Destroyer, Karen Gillan is Nebula, Michael Rooker will be Yondu, Benicio del Toro is The Collector, Lee Pace will be Ronan the Accuser, John C. Reilly is Rhomann Dey and Glenn Close will be Nova Prime.

[Via ScreenCrush]

Source: http://comicsalliance.com/vin-diesel-may-be-voicing-groot-in-guardians-of-the-galaxy/

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South Africa's Square Kilometre Array project has struck an agreement with the N...

Sorry, Readability was unable to parse this page for content.

Source: http://www.facebook.com/photo.php?fbid=10151833659474524&set=a.10151349968624524.544146.72161074523&type=1

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Madonna HD Wallpaper for Android

Born into a large Italian-American family, Madonna studied dance at the University of Michigan and with the Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater in New York City in the late 1970s before relocating briefly to Paris as a member of Patrick Hernandez?s disco revue. Returning to New York City, she performed with a number of rock groups before signing with Sire Records. Her first hit, ?Holiday,? in 1983, provided the blueprint for her later material?an upbeat dance-club sound with sharp production and an immediate appeal. Madonna?s melodic pop incorporated catchy choruses and her lyrics concerned love, sex, and relationships?ranging from the breezy innocence of ?True Blue? (1986) to the erotic fantasies of ?Justify My Love? (1990) to the spirituality of later songs such as ?Ray of Light? (1998). Criticized by some as being limited in range, her sweet, girlish voice nonetheless was well-suited to pop music.Disclaimer:

Creating an app takes time and money, In order to keep creating great (and free!) apps, we are using a new search service to monetize our apps. With this service we are able to create more great apps for you guys. This option bundles a few search points (icon, bookmark and homepage) for you to use. You can erase these easily and with no effect to our app. Thanks!

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/androidzoom/LastGamesAndApplications/~3/gHpe63zGN6I/madonna-hd-wallpaper_hknpr.html

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Monday, August 12, 2013

New Windows Phone 8 GDR3 update in testing


While Windows Phone 8 GDR2 update rollout is picking pace, rumours of its possible successor, GDR3 update, have started surfacing. According to a report by TheVerge, Microsoft is testing a General Distribution 3 (GDR3) update. This update will be made available for newer devices initially and come with features such as rotation lock, certain UI changes to Live Tiles and a driving mode option for cars.

Windows Phone 8 during its launch

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The rotation lock feature will allow users to disable the auto-rotation of the screen. Though it may sound like a basic feature, it isn?t available for Windows Phone 8 devices yet. The GDR3 update is expected to bring in some changes to the UI and update Live Tiles for 1080p devices. A post on Reddit has listed some possible changes that will come with the GDR3. Reportedly, Microsoft also plans to sync text messages from Windows Phones to PCs and the web.? The feature would allow Windows Phone users to view text messages on the web and on PCs, negating the need to view them on the handset. However, this feature is likely to not make it in time for the GDR3 release.

The GDR3 update is expected to be finalised in mid-September. Around the same time, a new large-screen Nokia device is also said to be announced. Initially, the update will be available for the Nokia phablet and newer devices, and then to the other existing devices before the year ends. In 2014, Microsoft is expected to come with its big announcement - the highly anticipated Windows Phone 8.1 Blue update.

Source: http://tech2.in.com/news/windows/new-windows-phone-8-gdr3-update-in-testing/910782

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Research on which gender pays for dates shows change and resistance from convention

Research on which gender pays for dates shows change and resistance from convention [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 12-Aug-2013
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Sheri Ledbetter
sledbett@chapman.edu
714-289-3143
Chapman University

This research examines the extent to which people embrace or reject chilvalry and egalitarian notions after nearly 50 years of feminism

ORANGE, Calif. Chapman University's David Frederick will present new research at the 108th Annual Meeting of the American Sociological Association that examines men's and women's beliefs about who should pay for dates during courtship, and how couples actually go about splitting expenses. The paper, Who Pays for Dates? Following versus Challenging Conventional Gender Norms, contains survey data from more than 17,000 participants; a quarter of whom also provided written commentaries to explain their beliefs and actions regarding paying for dates.

"The motivation for the study was to understand why some gendered practices are more resistant to change than others; for example, the acceptance of women in the workplace versus holding onto traditional notions of chivalry," said Frederick, who co-authored the study with Janet Lever, of California State University, Los Angeles, and Rosanna Hertz, of Wellesley College.

Conventional notions of chivalry dictate that on a "date," the man pays, whereas egalitarian ideals suggest gender should not determine who pays for the entertainment expenses. This research examines the extent to which people embrace or reject these competing notions after nearly 50 years of feminism. It is known that most marriages (8 in 10) today are based on sharing the breadwinner's burden, so one question was whether that role is shared prior to marriage and, if so, how early in the dating process.

Consistent with conventional norms, most men (84 percent) and women (58 percent) reported that men pay for most expenses, even after dating for a while. Over half (57 percent) of women claim they offer to help pay, but many women (39 percent) confessed they hope men would reject their offers to pay, and 44 percent of women were bothered when men expected women to help pay. Nearly two-thirds (64 percent) of men believed that women should contribute to dating expenses, and many feel strongly about that: Nearly half of men (44 percent) said they would stop dating a woman who never pays. A large majority of men (76 percent), however, reported feeling guilty accepting women's money.

In terms of behavior, 4 in 10 men and women agreed that dating expenses were at least partially shared within the first month, and roughly three-fourths (74 percent of men, 83 percent of women) reported sharing expenses by six months. These data illustrate which people are resisting or conforming to conventional gender norms in one telling aspect of dating that historically was related to the male's displaying benevolent sexism and dominance as a breadwinner. Whereas young men and women in their 20s were the most likely to endorse egalitarian practices, this is a mass culture phenomenon the same basic patterns were seen regardless of daters' ages, income, or education. Although there is evidence of resistance to change, the data suggest that the deep-rooted courtship ritual around who pays is also changing along with the transformation of the material and social power of women and men.

###

The paper, Who Pays for Dates? Following versus Challenging Conventional Gender Norms, was presented on Sunday, Aug. 11, at 2:30 p.m. EDT in New York City at the American Sociological Association's 108th Annual Meeting.

For more information about the study, members of the media can contact Sheri Ledbetter, Public Relations Specialist, Chapman University, at (714) 289-3143 or sledbett@chapman.edu.

Papers presented at the ASA Annual Meeting are typically working papers that have not yet been published in peer reviewed journals.

Consistently ranked among the top universities in the West, Chapman University provides a uniquely personalized and interdisciplinary educational experience to highly qualified students. Our programs encourage innovation, creativity and collaboration, and focus on developing global citizen-leaders who are distinctively prepared to improve their community and their world. Visit http://www.chapman.edu.

Follow us on Facebook at:

Chapman University Facebook
On Twitter at: @ChapmanU
On YouTube at: Chapman University YouTube Channel


[ Back to EurekAlert! ] [ | E-mail | Share Share ]

?


AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.


Research on which gender pays for dates shows change and resistance from convention [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 12-Aug-2013
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Sheri Ledbetter
sledbett@chapman.edu
714-289-3143
Chapman University

This research examines the extent to which people embrace or reject chilvalry and egalitarian notions after nearly 50 years of feminism

ORANGE, Calif. Chapman University's David Frederick will present new research at the 108th Annual Meeting of the American Sociological Association that examines men's and women's beliefs about who should pay for dates during courtship, and how couples actually go about splitting expenses. The paper, Who Pays for Dates? Following versus Challenging Conventional Gender Norms, contains survey data from more than 17,000 participants; a quarter of whom also provided written commentaries to explain their beliefs and actions regarding paying for dates.

"The motivation for the study was to understand why some gendered practices are more resistant to change than others; for example, the acceptance of women in the workplace versus holding onto traditional notions of chivalry," said Frederick, who co-authored the study with Janet Lever, of California State University, Los Angeles, and Rosanna Hertz, of Wellesley College.

Conventional notions of chivalry dictate that on a "date," the man pays, whereas egalitarian ideals suggest gender should not determine who pays for the entertainment expenses. This research examines the extent to which people embrace or reject these competing notions after nearly 50 years of feminism. It is known that most marriages (8 in 10) today are based on sharing the breadwinner's burden, so one question was whether that role is shared prior to marriage and, if so, how early in the dating process.

Consistent with conventional norms, most men (84 percent) and women (58 percent) reported that men pay for most expenses, even after dating for a while. Over half (57 percent) of women claim they offer to help pay, but many women (39 percent) confessed they hope men would reject their offers to pay, and 44 percent of women were bothered when men expected women to help pay. Nearly two-thirds (64 percent) of men believed that women should contribute to dating expenses, and many feel strongly about that: Nearly half of men (44 percent) said they would stop dating a woman who never pays. A large majority of men (76 percent), however, reported feeling guilty accepting women's money.

In terms of behavior, 4 in 10 men and women agreed that dating expenses were at least partially shared within the first month, and roughly three-fourths (74 percent of men, 83 percent of women) reported sharing expenses by six months. These data illustrate which people are resisting or conforming to conventional gender norms in one telling aspect of dating that historically was related to the male's displaying benevolent sexism and dominance as a breadwinner. Whereas young men and women in their 20s were the most likely to endorse egalitarian practices, this is a mass culture phenomenon the same basic patterns were seen regardless of daters' ages, income, or education. Although there is evidence of resistance to change, the data suggest that the deep-rooted courtship ritual around who pays is also changing along with the transformation of the material and social power of women and men.

###

The paper, Who Pays for Dates? Following versus Challenging Conventional Gender Norms, was presented on Sunday, Aug. 11, at 2:30 p.m. EDT in New York City at the American Sociological Association's 108th Annual Meeting.

For more information about the study, members of the media can contact Sheri Ledbetter, Public Relations Specialist, Chapman University, at (714) 289-3143 or sledbett@chapman.edu.

Papers presented at the ASA Annual Meeting are typically working papers that have not yet been published in peer reviewed journals.

Consistently ranked among the top universities in the West, Chapman University provides a uniquely personalized and interdisciplinary educational experience to highly qualified students. Our programs encourage innovation, creativity and collaboration, and focus on developing global citizen-leaders who are distinctively prepared to improve their community and their world. Visit http://www.chapman.edu.

Follow us on Facebook at:

Chapman University Facebook
On Twitter at: @ChapmanU
On YouTube at: Chapman University YouTube Channel


[ Back to EurekAlert! ] [ | E-mail | Share Share ]

?


AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.


Source: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2013-08/cu-row081213.php

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President Obama at the Disabled American Veterans National Convention

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President Obama spoke at the Disabled American Veterans National Convention in Orlando, Florida.?He talked about several priorities of his administration for honoring the nation?s veterans and military families that .. Read More

President Obama spoke at the Disabled American Veterans National Convention in Orlando, Florida.?He talked about several priorities of his administration for honoring the nation?s veterans and military families that included ending the disability claims backlog, delivering health care, educational incentives, helping homeless veterans, and the creation a national mental health research initiative.?He also called on Congress to extend permanently the tax credits for businesses that hire veterans and to pass his Veterans Job Corps proposal.?The president was introduced by first lady Michelle Obama, who spoke about the work she and Jill Biden were doing with veterans and how it inspired them.

42 minutes | 8 Views

Source: http://www.c-spanvideo.org/program/314515-1

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Florida Sit-In Against ?Stand Your Ground?

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Source: topics.nytimes.com --- Monday, August 12, 2013
A group formed after the death of Trayvon Martin remained ensconced in the state?s Old Capitol building, demanding changes to the Stand Your Ground provision of Florida law. ...

Source: http://www.nytimes.com/2013/08/12/us/dream-defenders-arent-walking-out-on-their-florida-protest.html?partner=rssnyt&emc=rss

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Kiffin: Star WR Lee day-to-day with bone bruise

LOS ANGELES (AP) ? Southern California coach Lane Kiffin says wide receiver Marqise Lee has a bone bruise in the area around his right shoulder and is considered day-to-day.

The All-American was banged up Friday at practice and missed the Trojans' morning practice Saturday. He was back for the evening session, though without pads.

Kiffin told reporters Saturday he expected Lee back in action soon and was relieved that it turned out to be not as serious as it looked.

Lee was hurt attempting to catch a long pass from Cody Kessler in coverage during Friday's work outs. He stayed down on the field before USC's medical staff escorted him away.

Lee had 118 receptions for 1,721 yards and 14 touchdowns last year as a sophomore, winning the Biletnikoff Award as the nation's top receiver. He also was the Pac-12's offensive player of the year.

USC has already lost two wide receivers for the season. George Farmer injured his knee during spring practice and freshman Steven Mitchell hurt his knee in June during a voluntary workout with teammates.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/kiffin-star-wr-lee-day-day-bone-bruise-050204350.html

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Sunday, August 11, 2013

Elizabeth Warren vs. Hillary Clinton in 2016: Great for women, the ...

Okay, okay, out with it. You read this title and thought: 1) It's way too early to be talking about 2016. 2) Elizabeth Warren isn't running for president. 3) It's really way too early to be talking about 2016. Of course, it is certainly premature to speculate about the horse race of 2016, about who's in the lead, who's #2 with a bullet, and that sort of nonsense. You may remember that a Gallup poll showed Joe Lieberman (gulp) leading the Democratic field by six points on the eve of the first nationally televised presidential debates in late April 2003. That's not what this post is about.

There have been plenty of articles written in recent days about Sen. Warren's rising electoral prospects thanks to a new Quinnipiac poll showing her as the third "hottest" (based on popularity. What? You thought it was based on something else?) politician in the country, ahead of President Obama and just behind Hillary Clinton, with New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie placing first. If both Warren and Clinton were to run for president it would have a tremendously positive effect on gender equality, on our party, and the country by giving us a race unlike anything America has seen before.

I'm not throwing my support behind Sen. Warren for the nomination here. But I don't mind saying I'm impressed by her credentials, her policy positions, and her political abilities. In addition to her prior career as a law school professor and expert on bankruptcy, she has accomplished a great deal since coming to Washington in November 2008. First, she chaired the Congressional Oversight Panel set up to watchdog the bank bailout known as the Troubled Asset Relief Program, i.e., TARP. Then Warren served as the driving force behind the creation of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. And Sen. Warren has already shown herself to be an active force on the floor of the Senate since arriving there just this January. During her very first meeting of the Senate Banking Committee this February, her statement lamenting the fact that none of the big banks were taken to trial by the Securities and Exchange Commission after the malfeasance that led to the economic collapse of 2008 went viral:

"I'm really concerned that 'too big to fail' has become 'too big for trial."
For more about why a Warren versus Clinton race would be a good thing, please follow me beyond the fold.

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In May Sen. Warren pushed hard for a strongly progressive alternative measure on student loans that would have enabled students to borrow money at the same rate of interest big banks receive from the government. In July she teamed up with Sen. John McCain to propose the reinstatement of the Glass-Steagall Act. And there's this recent little dust-up over at CNBC. Sen. Warren is not a woman to be trifled with. Of course, neither is Hillary Clinton.

The prospect of electing a woman to the presidency is supremely exciting to me, as a citizen and as a father of two daughters. I do, however, remember one aspect of the 2008 race that left me less than excited. Gloria Steinem's January 2008 New York Times op-ed described Barack Obama's accomplishments up through 2004 and then asked readers to honestly consider, if Obama had been female, whether:

This is the biography of someone who could be elected to the United States Senate? After less than one term there, do you believe she could be a viable candidate to head the most powerful nation on earth?

If you answered no to either question, you?re not alone.

Steinem contrasted Obama's biography with the accomplishments of then-Sen. Clinton, and added that another plus for her candidate was that she had "no masculinity to prove." Thus, one key reason for supporting Clinton, according to Steinem, was her gender. Steinem added the observation that gender, not race or poverty, was "probably the most restricting force in American life." Finally, she argued that being a black male candidate offered an advantage over being a female candidate "because racism stereotyped black men as more 'masculine' for so long that some white men find their presence to be masculinity-affirming (as long as there aren?t too many of them)."

The destructive and divisive effect of what Steinem did was not hard to predict. In fact, Steinem herself, only 11 months earlier, had rejected this kind of identity politics in another op-ed in the very same newspaper. She noted then that "most Americans are smart enough to figure out that a member of a group may or may not represent its interests," and added "forcing a choice between race and sex only conceals what?s really going on." In the end, after a long and difficult race, candidates Obama and Clinton actively sought to heal the rifts that remained, and any reasonable assessment would acknowledge their strong success on that front.

On the other hand, a race that included both Elizabeth Warren and Hillary Clinton, one that would in all likelihood end up with those two as the leading candidates, would avoid the whole matter of whether to "vote for the woman." Think about what it would do for young women?and for women of any age?to see not only one strong female candidate, but a race that came down to the two strongest candidates, both of them women. Think about what it would say that Hillary Clinton?or Elizabeth Warren?won the nomination despite not being the only woman in the race. Such a development would be tremendous for gender equality in this country.

How about for the Democratic Party? Equally tremendous. The biggest fight right now in our party is an ideological one, most easily summed up as left versus center-left. Without opening the question of accuracy or fairness, Hillary Clinton is generally seen as more of a center-left than a left-liberal Democrat, thanks to her association with the now defunct Democratic Leadership Council (DLC).

Elizabeth Warren, on the other hand, has quickly become the standard bearer of more progressive Democrats, those who reject the DLC's "Third Way" approach. Although she has not asked for it, she has become the primary focus of attention among Democrats and liberals angry at Barack Obama for supposedly being not liberal enough on a host of matters, but mostly relating to economic/social spending policies. ?

This conflict is as substantive and serious as any around which a campaign for a major party's presidential nomination could center. It is, in fact, the core conflict within the Democratic Party, one that we have revisited in each presidential nominating campaign since at least 1976.

It would be terrific to have that debate without the two wings of the party being represented by candidates of a different gender. It would be especially terrific for more progressive Democrats to be free of the conflict over whether to vote for an obviously well-qualified woman in Hillary Clinton in order to break the ultimate glass ceiling, or for a male candidate with whom they agree more often on the issues. Democrats would benefit from avoiding that kind of gut-wrenching decision, especially if Clinton ultimately lost to a male progressive running to her left. Would it destroy the party? Of course not. But a race that included both Warren and Clinton would render such a conflict moot.

In 2008 Gloria Steinem said that if Barack Obama won the nomination, it would be due in part to his gender. To put it simply?whether Hillary Clinton or Elizabeth Warren were to win the nomination in 2016?wouldn't it be great if none of her detractors could say that about her?

Source: http://www.dailykos.com/story/2013/08/11/1229123/-Elizabeth-Warren-vs-Hillary-Clinton-in-2016-Great-for-women-the-Democratic-Party-and-America

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Before purchasing this vehicle, it is your responsibility to address any and all differences between information on this website and the actual vehicle specifications and/or any warranties offered prior to the sale of this vehicle. Vehicle data on this website is compiled from publicly available sources believed by the publisher to be reliable. Vehicle data is subject to change without notice. The publisher assumes no responsibility for errors and/or omissions in this data the compilation of this data and makes no representations express or implied to any actual or prospective purchaser of the vehicle as to the condition of the vehicle, vehicle specifications, ownership, vehicle history, equipment/accessories, price or warranties. 2013 Kia Baltimore, MD 2013 Kia Glen Burnie, MD 2013 Kia Annapolis, MD

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Working women that quit for motherhood: was their decision wrong ...

I?m a stay at home mom. I don?t regret not having a career or feel stifled by my choice in the least. The only time that I have felt that way is when prodded to by working women.

The following piece entitled: Are We Really Screwed If We Leave Work To Raise Babies? is a look into the lives of 22 women and their experiences after leaving corporate America.

This week, The New York Times published a story titled ?The Opt-Out Generation Wants Back In? ? a heartbreaking look at what happened to a lot of women who ?opted out,? leaving their jobs to raise their children, full-time, in the early aughts. Ten years later, these women are looking at divorce, depression, difficulty reentering the workforce, and jobs that pay a fifth of their earlier salaries.

It?s a bit confusing, because on the whole, author Judith Warner confirms: ?The 22 women I interviewed, for the most part, told me that the perils of leaving the work force were counterbalanced by the pleasures of being able to experience motherhood on their own terms.? And also that, ?a certain number of these women ? the superelite, you might say, the most well-off, with the highest-value name-brand educational credentials and powerful and well-connected social networks ? found jobs easily after extended periods at home.? And yet, each of the anecdotes she shares are about women disappointed with their current situations ? women who were coaxed into leaving work by husbands who later left them; women who felt real inequality in their relationships, after a few years of staying at home; and women who felt real financial crunches they hadn?t previously anticipated.

It?s a story worth telling, certainly, but it feels a bit uneven to us. Partially because it seems like something of a judgement on women who do find happiness staying at home with their kids. Partially because we never get to hear from the women who re-acclimated relatively easily into the workforce after a few years, as planned. And partially, because the story doesn?t really address the issue of workplaces that don?t offer working mothers (and fathers) any middle ground but to leave the workforce, if they want to spend more time at home. It?s a nuanced conversation that requires many more column inches than we have here, but certainly one that?s worth continuing to have.

To that end, we checked in with a few young mothers who are currently struggling around the ideas of leaving work or adjusting their hours, to find balance ? and gauged their reactions to the Times story.

Amanda*, 31 an expecting mother who?s hoping to come back to her investment banking job post-maternity leave and work out a job-share situation, has one main concern: ?You can?t put people in buckets like that ? and there?s a lot to every story that isn?t in these articles?? She says, ?I just think everyone has their own set of circumstances (financial/career/relationship/family) ? and while it?s helpful to hear others? viewpoints and experiences, at the end of the day I?m probably somewhere in between leaning in and opting out. But, it?s nice to have the luxury of choice.?

Similarly, Nadia*, 29, who just this summer, left her finance job to stay at home with her two-year-old, doesn?t read about these women and feel fear regarding her own future (in which she does hope to eventually return to work). Rather, her main concern is around the anecdotes the story chose to highlight, and the bias they represent. ?It?d be nice to see a real academic study rather than what feels like fairly ad hoc interviews to get a better sense of the picture. I have a tough time believing they could find only one mom who quit work to stay home and ended up with a happy, fulfilled life.?

She continues: ?I think they chose a sensationalist way to say that it is important to continue to do things to personally fulfill and improve yourself beyond just family and home, when you stay at home. I think that?s why these women said they lost their sense of self-worth.?

That said, she admits that there are some serious issues she grapples with in her transition to saying at home. ?I?ve found it hard to adjust my definition of ?success? after years of defining it through my progress at work. It?s difficult to feel like my ?contributions? are the same as my husband?s now, since I no longer make any money. But, that?s just part of my adjustment.?

But, she agrees that the most critical piece of this discussion is around the changes that need to be made at the workplace. An issue the likes of Anne-Marie Slaughter has delved into in a much more in-depth fashion, Nadia reminds us that there were some serious problems in the workplace that probably wouldn?t have been addressed if she hadn?t left. She says, ?I?ve actually gotten positive feedback from other moms in my group [at work] who think that me leaving (and the other mom who subsequently left) made our bosses more sensitive to the demands that come with motherhood and even more willing to adjust workloads.?

Ultimately though, Amanda sums it up best: ?The conclusion that I?m coming to with the whole Sheryl Sandberg/ Anne Marie Slaughter / ?Can Women Really Have It All? debate really comes down, once again, to the wise words of Cher Horowitz: It?s a personal choice that every woman has got to make for herself.? The wisdom of Clueless ? always relevant, right?

I see the choice of working outside the home or working as a full time mother as a privilege that is best weighed carefully with my spouse. Having done so I look upon the past 14 years with joy. I wouldn?t change a thing.

Source: http://stacyontheright.com/2013/08/11/working-women-that-quit-for-motherhood-was-their-decision-wrong/

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NFL Football Picks - New Orleans Saints 2013 Win Total Odds and Preview

The New Orleans Saints will not only have Payton back as head coach they will have a new defensive coordinator in Rob Ryan. He should immediately improve a very poor defensive unit. The additions of Keenan Lewis and first round pick Kenny Vaccaro will also help. If the defense can make some strides in 2013 then this should be a very good team because we know that Drew Brees and the offense will put up a lot of points.

New Orleans Saints 2013 Schedule Analysis

The home opener against the Atlanta Falcons should be a dandy and will give one of the two teams an early leg up in the division. The New Orleans Saints have a winnable game at the Tampa Bay Buccaneers and then two home games they should win against the Arizona Cardinals and Miami Dolphins. I think they could start 4-0 before two tough road games at the Chicago Bears and at the New England Patriots.

They should win their next two though at home against the Buffalo Bills and at the New York Jets. They then have the Dallas Cowboys and San Francisco 49ers at home before the rematch in Atlanta. They have a tough road game at the Seattle Seahawks but the closing schedule isn?t too bad as they host the Carolina Panthers, visit the St. Louis Rams and Carolina Panthers and close at home against the Tampa Bay Buccaneers.

I think the total on the New Orleans Saints is definitely too low. I think it should be at least 9.5 if not 10. This team won 7 games last year and they were a mess. I think they win at least 10 this season so I will play the over in NFL football picks.

Source: http://www.betdsi.com/articles/football/nfl/nfl-football-picks-new-orleans-saints-2013-win-total-odds-and-preview-23461

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President Obama Signs Student Loans Bill

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President Obama signed the bipartisan student loans bill, cutting student loan interest rates.

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Source: http://www.c-spanvideo.org/program/314487-1

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The Washington Post, the Concorde?s Heir, and Coke Versus Pepsi

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The Washington Post announced Monday that Amazon.com founder and CEO Jeff Bezos agreed to purchase the paper for $250 million.

Photo by Brendan Smialowski/AFP/Getty Images

?If Anyone Can Save the Washington Post, It?s Jeff Bezos: The newspaper now has an owner who?s a master of finding new ways of selling old things,? by Farhad Manjoo. Although billionaire Bezos doesn?t have the journalistic clout of the Graham family, Manjoo argues that Bezos? patience and willingness to create new business models is exactly what the industry needs. Also in Slate, David Auerbach hypothesizes about how the Kindle could allow for a new kind of personalized newspaper.

?WikiLeaks? Teenage Benedict Arnold: How the FBI used a baby-faced WikiLeaks volunteer to spy on Julian Assange,? by Ryan Gallagher. Sigurdur Thordarson, a 20-year-old from Iceland, was a member of Julian Assange?s inner circle until he betrayed Assange?s trust to pass ?troves? of information on to the FBI. Gallagher takes us through the extraordinary story of how Thordarson went from WikiLeaks volunteer to full-blown FBI informant.

?The Washington _________: Why Slate will no longer refer to Washington?s NFL team as the Redskins,? by David Plotz. Slate is officially scratching the anachronistic and offensive name of Washington?s football team from our style guide, and the New Republic and Mother Jones have decided to join us. Plotz presents the reasoning behind the decision here and explains why matters of diction are far from superficial.

?Ken Cuccinelli?s Sodomy Obsession: The frightening legal implications of the Virginia politician?s crusade against oral and anal sex,? by Dahlia Lithwick. Virginia Attorney General Ken Cuccinelli is trying to reinstate an anti-sodomy law by promising that the law, which is written to outlaw all anal and oral sex, is constitutional if interpreted to apply only to 16- and 17-year-olds. Lithwick explains how Cuccinelli?s push has worrisome legal implications that have been largely overlooked by those too busy snickering at the attorney general?s apparent fixation with oral and anal sex.

?No, You Shouldn?t Fear GMO Corn: How Elle botched a story about genetically modified food,? by Jon Entine. Elle published a story last week that reignited the debate on genetically modified foods. Entine argues that most of the article?s claims are unsubstantiated, and he explains why anecdotes like that one should not shape our attitude toward GMOs.

?The Concorde?s Cousins: Why there hasn?t been a successor to the aviation world?s greatest engineering marvel and probably won?t be any time soon,? by Jeremy Stahl. Ten years after the Concorde?s retirement, there?s still no viable replacement. Stahl explains why with a look at contenders for aviation?s ?new Concorde? and why none of them will work?at least, not for now.

?Sweet Sorrow: Coke won the cola wars because great taste takes more than a single sip,? by Matthew Yglesias. As part of Slate?s series on rivalries, Yglesias takes us through the history of Coke versus Pepsi. Yglesias recounts Pepsi?s 1980s campaign, the Pepsi Challenge, which sought to solve the Coke-Pepsi conundrum though a famous double-blind experiment. Researchers found that despite Coke?s predominance in the marketplace, Pepsi consistently came out on top in the lab. Yglesias sets out to explain why Coke trumps Pepsi despite that curious phenomenon.

?Your Flight?s Delayed!: Here are 11 ways?several of which are very sneaky?to get home faster,? by Amy Webb. Frequent travelers, rejoice! Here?s a list of ways to play the (airport) system in order to avoid flight delays and cancellations.

?Cry of the Republican Male Senator: Nina Pillard is Obama?s choice for D.C. Circuit Court judge. Nina Pillard is a liberal woman. Ergo Nina Pillard is a radical feminist,? by Dahlia Lithwick. During Nina Pillard?s confirmation hearing this week for the D.C. Circuit Court, right-wing lawmakers and media lambasted her for her radical feminism. Not an altogether surprising reaction from Republicans, except that Pillard?s work toward gender equality can in no way be described as ?radical.? Lithwick describes the way Senate Republicans have branded Pillard an ?out of the mainstream? feminist and why her career has no evidence for these ridiculous charges.

?Buying a Car Online: You should do it. Especially if you?re a woman,? by Libby Copeland. Why deal with a pushy car salesman when you just can buy your car online? Copeland, who just purchased her own car online, expounds on the many benefits of virtual auto purchases and explains why this option is particularly beneficial to women.

Source: http://www.slate.com/articles/briefing/cocktail_chatter/2013/08/the_washington_post_the_concorde_s_heir_and_coke_versus_pepsi_the_week_s.html

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Florida man allegedly kills wife, posts confession, photo of body on Facebook

By Dave Alsup and Ben Brumfield, CNN

updated 7:02 PM EDT, Fri August 9, 2013

STORY HIGHLIGHTS

  • Derek Medina posts a picture of his dead wife's body to Facebook
  • Online, he tells his "friends" that they will hear about him in the news
  • He asks for their understanding for what he has done
  • People react in disgust, but share the photo over and over

(CNN) -- People confess to a lot of things on Facebook: their frustrations, bad habits, secret longings and new loves. A Florida man confessed to something much more sinister Thursday. He said he killed his wife.

Derek Medina, 31, posted a picture of Jennifer Alfonso's blood-stained body -- collapsed and contorted on the kitchen floor -- to his Facebook feed with a note, according to authorities.

"Im going to prison or death sentence for killing my wife love you guys miss you guys takecare Facebook people you will see me in the news," he purportedly wrote.

Medina, who lives in South Miami, drove to see his family, to tell them what he did. Then he turned himself in to police, according to his arrest affidavit.

He is being held without bond on a preliminary charge of first degree murder, the Miami Dade State Attorney's Office spokesperson told CNN. The court has 21 days to formally charge Medina.

Facebook friends commented on the photo in shock.

"That is my friend there."

"What happened???? derek."

"WHAT??????"

Other Facebook users reacted with disgust to the posting of the picture of his wife's corpse. She was 26.

"this is crazy omg ... guy kills his wife post pic in facebook."

The disgust did not prevent the commenters from sharing Medina's photo. Again and again.

When evidence goes viral

The gruesome image stayed online and was passed along for at least five hours. Facebook was notified of the content and employees removed the picture and disabled Medina's page and that of his deceased wife, according to Facebook.

In his note, Medina accused his wife of abusing him and asked his friends for their understanding for what he did to her because of it.

The police report with his confession cast a more detailed light on the course of events.

This was Medina's account to Miami Dade police:

He and his wife argued. He pulled a gun on her. She threatened to leave him. He put the gun away and followed her. She unloaded a volley of punches on him. He fetched the gun again. She pulled a knife. He wrestled it out of her hands. She punched him again.

Then he shot her "multiple times."

Opinion: The dark side of social media

He felt certain she was dead. He did not call 911, the affidavit states. He changed clothes, and after seeing his family, went to a police station and began the process of confessing.

After he gave police his address, they drove to the scene, where they found the body.

The couple's 10-year-old daughter was also still in the house, police said. She was physically "unharmed."

Medina self-published self-help books and maintained a website called EmotionalWriter.com. His books claim to be about "effective communication" and "marriage counseling tips," according to the website.

"Derek Medina is an emotional writer. His goal is to save people's lives thru his books he has published," the website says. "My goal is for you, the readers, to open up your eyes and change for the better."

Hours before the slaying, Medina posted a picture of his wife, his daughter and himself having dinner together outdoors at a marina.

They were all smiling.

CNN's Katie Caperton, Nick Valenica and Ryan Marylynn contributed to this report.

Source: http://rss.cnn.com/~r/rss/cnn_mostpopular/~3/yMN9p9l-VAo/index.html

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Mayor McGinn will hold Monday town hall to discuss NE 65th Street

NE-65th-StIn the whole Bicycle Master Plan update, the idea of a protected bike lane of some kind on NE 65th Street has proven to be the most controversial.

But it also one of the projects with the most promise, both as a way to increase access to the future light rail and the commercial center of the neighborhood, but also as one of the only ways to cross I-5 and safely travel from Green Lake to the northeast Seattle neighborhoods.

Opinions about bike lanes on 65th are all over the board, and there is definitely a lot of misinformation floating around about the city?s plans and some misunderstanding about what the Bicycle Master Plan is. We covered this briefly in our analysis of plans for NE Seattle recently.

Mayor McGinn will hear from neighbors and discuss the street in a town hall Monday evening, 6:45 p.m. at the Ravenna-Eckstein Community Center.

More details from Ravenna Blog:

According to the Cascade Bicycle Club?s blog, the Seattle Department of Transportation ?received more comments on the NE 65th Street protected bike lane than any other project proposed in the draft Bicycle Master Plan Update.?

Not a surprising observation to hear, especially after a less-than-stellar open house on the BMP Draft on June 13 at Roosevelt High School, and a ?small business owners/residents meeting? held on June 23 at the Varsity Restaurant on NE 65th St.

We think it is a fair point to make, for all sides of the issue of NE 65th Street?s place in the BMP Update, that there is a lot of confusion around the issue.

Source: http://www.seattlebikeblog.com/2013/08/09/mayor-mcginn-will-hold-monday-town-hall-to-discuss-ne-65th-street/

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Saturday, August 10, 2013

Why Spam Works - Business Insider

One Sunday evening in the spring of?1864, messenger boys employed by the London District Telegraph Company appeared on the doorsteps of several MPs and other prominent figures across the capital. Each boy carried a telegram in a sealed envelope, and an urgent message, at so late an hour, naturally prompted alarm. "Having only arrived from the country on the previous day," one recipient later recalled, "I feared that a fire or some other casualty had occurred subsequent to my departure." But there was no fire, nor any national crisis. As Matthew Sweet tells the story, in his book Inventing The Victorians, the telegram was from Messrs Gabriel, a sketchy firm of dentists and purveyors of a tooth-whitening powder "as used by Her Majesty". The message was a friendly reminder of their opening hours. "I?have never had any dealings with Messrs Gabriel," an anonymous correspondent bellowed in a letter to the Times the next day, "and beg to ask by what right do they disturb me by a telegram which is evidently simply the medium of advertisement?" Today, the letter is included in the archives of the Computer History Museum, in Silicon Valley, and with good reason: that telegram was arguably the first example of what would come to be known as spam.

It's tempting to think of email spam as a largely historical phenomenon, too. Sure, messages touting knock-off V!@gra do still arrive, along with pleas from the daughters of?dictators looking to launder "15,000,000.00 (fifteen million) US Dollars", and wondering if you'll help. But they're intercepted by spam filters, or else easily identified and deleted. (Human vanities don't?evolve much: tooth-whitening products are still a popular topic.) There was a time, in the 1990s, when serious commentators predicted that spam might kill email altogether. But these days, barring the occasional ingenious twist ? what if your friend really did have his wallet stolen at the airport, and needs cash? ? you'd be forgiven for concluding that the era of spam was over. Yet the alarming realisation you come to after meeting Finn Brunton, a New York University academic and author of the new book Spam: A Shadow History Of The Internet, is that it's only just beginning.

Partly, this is down to the law of unintended consequences: the campaign against spam has worked so well that it's no longer an option for ordinary, slightly dodgy marketers; instead, it's the domain of organised crime. But it's also because the basic logic of spam ? that you can foist your message on millions of people, whether they like it or not, at essentially no cost, and that as long as a tiny proportion of them respond, you'll make a profit ? has seeped into the rest of the web. Early in his research, Brunton discovered that defining spam was far harder than he had imagined. Where is the line, exactly, between an unsolicited email or a spam blog comment and "clickbait", those seductive Huffington Post-esque headlines that suck up your attention but don't deliver what they promise? Or branded tweets from Pepsi or Samsung that you never asked to see? Or any form of online advertising? Or, for that matter, the people the writer Merlin Mann calls "personality spammers", endlessly polluting your Facebook feed with their frenzied need for self-expression?

Spending years immersed in spam has given Brunton, who is 32, a degree of sympathy for spammers. "In the early days, being a spammer didn't involve having a lot of technical capacity; it?just meant being able to absorb a lot of hatred," he says. "I wanted to understand what it felt like to be that kind of a loathed figure." His work abounds in genuinely detestable figures, such as Davis Hawke, the up-and-coming neo-Nazi leader who pivoted to full-time spamming after it emerged that his father was Jewish, undermining his prospects as an Aryan supremacist. (He is now on the run from authorities, possibly in Thailand or Belize.) But it's hard not to feel for the more hapless characters in Brunton's narrative: overzealous marketers who didn't grasp how much rage they'd be unleashing among anti-spam activists until they suddenly started receiving stacks of pay-on-delivery pizzas, or automated nuisance phone calls 40 times a night. And it's hard not to admire the ingenuity that led to Pitcairn Island, a?windswept rock in the South Pacific, becoming the world's largest per capita source of spam, not because its 60 or so residents are all spammers, but because their computers have been remotely commandeered by a "botnet" system, which lets criminals elsewhere use the islanders' computing power to?send millions of messages for free.

You could argue that a society is defined by what it deems unacceptable; likewise, Brunton argues, the decisions we've taken about what should count as spam, and what to do about the offenders, make the internet what it is. Ultimately, life online is a struggle to control people's attention. And while the battle against the promoters of bogus Viagra may be nearly over, it's?much less clear who's winning the war.

Spam today accounts for somewhere between 70% and 90% of all email sent, depending on which estimate you trust, and email spam is far from the only variety. Yet it took years for the inventors of the internet to realise that it might be?a problem. Early on, in 1971, an anti-war activist at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology sent?a message to all users of his network, the Compatible Time Sharing System, with a headline in caps ? "THERE IS NO WAY TO PEACE. PEACE IS THE WAY" ? but all he got was a slap on the wrist. ("But this is important!" he protested, when his boss told him off.) It was 35 years ago, in 1978, that the first real spam arrived: a dull invitation to a demonstration of new hardware manufactured by the Digital Equipment Corporation. And it was probably later still, some time in the 1980s, that the word "spam" was first used to describe such messages, a reference not so much to the canned meat as to the Monty Python sketch in which the conversation gradually becomes clogged with repetitive junk.

As the internet exploded, so did spam, and the?challenges it posed weren't merely technical: they prompted a surprisingly deep philosophical dispute about what the net, and the nascent worldwide web, should be. Some of its founding fathers were hippies, dreaming of a new society based on trust, in which policing and government wouldn't be needed; spam threatened that. The growing ranks of home users, meanwhile, resented paying steep monthly phone bills to download what turned out to be newsgroups full of unwanted ads. And they responded with aggression.

Spammers got the aforementioned pizzas and phone calls, floods of retaliatory emails and "black faxes", all-black documents designed to waste the recipients' ink. But such shaming tactics worked only as long as spammers could feel shame. The watershed moment is widely agreed to have occurred in 1994, when two married immigration lawyers from Arizona deluged the Usenet discussion system with a message about green cards, then refused to slink away when confronted. The incident made national headlines, and one of the lawyers gave defiant interviews to newspapers. The geeks were?welcome to their romantic ideas about the net, she said, but what mattered was the law, which couldn't touch the spammers.

Plenty of anti-spam laws did follow, in America and elsewhere, but they always struggled to combat the monumental forces of human vanity and avarice. Spam needs only a minuscule proportion of recipients to be duped in order to be profitable ? even before anti-spam laws, 0.2% was considered an excellent response rate ? and that proportion can be relied upon. In 2003, a security flaw at Davis Hawke's company, Amazing Internet Products, exposed the details of people who'd paid $50 a bottle for a herbal "male enhancement" product called Pinacle [sic], which promised to add "three full inches in length". According to Wired magazine, they included the president of a Californian aeroplane parts firm and the manager of a $6bn investment fund.

Such lapses aside, spammers have always benefited from the fact that people who fall for cons generally don't want to publicise their gullibility (or their insecurity about their genitals). The exceptions have arisen when the sums involved have been too large to brush off. In?2000, Brunton reports, a US businessman named James Adler tried to sue Nigeria's government and central bank after he paid out more than $5m as part of a mail-based 419 scam (the classic "Dear sir, I am a Nigerian prince" advance-fee fraud) in the expectation that he'd someday receive a 40% cut of a far larger sum. It takes a special blend of cynicism and naivete to fall for a 419: on the one hand, the trick feeds off racist assumptions about Africans being corrupt; on the other, it relies on the victim's confidence that the offer being made is wholly honest ? and that, when the funds finally arrive, nobody at the bank will raise an eyebrow. "Which is crazy," Brunton points out. "Banks and law enforcement agencies monitor and investigate unusually large transfers all the time."

Not surprisingly, Adler's case didn't get very far. Three years later, a Czech retiree walked into the Nigerian embassy in Prague to demand assistance in recovering $600,000 that he'd spent on a 419 email fraud, much of it borrowed. When informed that no help would be forthcoming, he pulled a gun on the consul and shot him dead.

The reason this kind of spam is much less of a nuisance these days isn't primarily laws, though. It's the huge advances that have been made in?spam filters, which use complex algorithms to?learn to sift the bad emails from the good. The?systems now in use don't need to rely on identifying especially spammy phrases, such as?"Nigerian prince" or "male enhancement". Instead, by comparing vast corpuses of legitimate email and spam, they're able to determine which combinations of seemingly innocuous words mark a message as suspicious. To use one of Brunton's examples: any of the words "madam", "guarantee", "sexy" and "republic" might appear in legitimate email, but an effective filter will learn that they almost never all arise together except in spam. ("Litspam", those incongruous snippets of old novels one occasionally encounters in spam emails, is an effort to beat this system.) Oddly enough, one person who deserves credit for the relatively unclogged state of your inbox is Kenneth Lay, the late and disgraced chief executive of Enron. Academics who developed spam filters had trouble finding sufficiently large quantities of non-spam email to?study, until US authorities published the 619,000 internal emails they'd seized in the course of investigations.

And yet the decisive blow that filters struck to old-school email spam may only have helped it mushroom elsewhere. Much modern spam isn't designed for consumption by humans at all; instead, it's "robot-readable", created by one non-human entity for the attention of another ? specifically, the "spiders" that crawl the web compiling data for Google ? in the hope of pushing a?junk page higher up the list of search results. Meanwhile, the rise of social networking has seen the growth of numerous new types of?spam, including the creation of vast armies of?fake Twitter followers. If you've ever been suddenly retweeted by scores of obviously fictional accounts, it's because a spammer somewhere is building a stable of fake personas, engaging in plausibly human-seeming online activity, so that he or she can charge someone else money for ostensibly boosting their followership. (And if you're ever tempted to buy?Twitter followers yourself ? there are numerous such services online: ?14 or so will buy?you 20,000 ? you can assume that they're not real people.)

Not that classic spam no longer exists; it has just slipped beyond the reach of law, into the purely criminal world of phishing attacks and online banking fraud. In 2011, researchers analysing the?money trail behind one email, advertising Viagra-style drugs, found that the web domain involved was registered in Russia, hosted in Brazil?and managed in China, taking payments through a Turkish server to an Azerbaijani bank, with the product eventually dispatched from Chennai in India.

Define spam in the abstract way that Brunton prefers, though ? as "[using] information technology to exploit existing gatherings of attention" ? and it becomes easier to see that, in?a?sense, it's everywhere online today. One interesting example: Demand Media, the "content farm" that operates sites such as eHow and Livestrong, pays humans (poorly) to write articles selected on the basis of what web users are searching for. Hence such eHow masterpieces as How To Wear A Sweater Vest and How To Sign Up For A Yahoo Email Account and How To Catch A Horse. Is that spam? The web, Brunton points out, has been colonised by clickbait ? "vast algal?blooms of linked content with catchy titles, top-10 lists about trending topics, wild claims, and needlessly contrarian stances, all delivered with only a few hundred words per article." Are?their publishers spammers? And, if so, why not also "the canny [newspaper] editor who knows that sex, serial killers and how-to stories sell"?

There can't be definitive answers. The point is simply that human attention is a resource, and that it's possible for others to consume yours at little cost to themselves, which means it's a resource that's easily abused. Of course, society couldn't function if people weren't allowed to impinge on your attention to some degree. But how to draw the line between acceptable and unacceptable intrusions, and how to fight the unacceptable ones? Such questions matter, because they end up determining how we spend our attention online, and thus ? in an increasingly connected world ? how we spend our lives. For prompting us to reflect on such things, perhaps the penis-enlargement salespeople of the world deserve our grudging thanks.

This article originally appeared on guardian.co.uk

Source: http://www.businessinsider.com/why-spam-works-2013-8

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Florida murder suspect allegedly posts photo of dead wife on Facebook

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August 9, 2013, 9:51 a.m.

The once-solid lines between the private and public continued to blur on Friday after a South Florida man posted on Facebook what he said was a photograph of his dead wife?s body, then turned himself in to authorities.

Derek Medina, 31, was arraigned on a charge of first-degree murder on Friday, a Miami-Dade police spokeswoman told the Los Angeles Times. Medina is charged with fatally shooting his wife, Jennifer Alfonso, in the couple?s home in South Miami on Thursday morning. Medina then drove to the South Miami Police Department and surrendered.

When police searched the home, Alfonso?s 10-year-old daughter was found unharmed, police said.

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  • Maps
  • South Miami, FL, USA
  • While tragic, the incident, which began as a domestic argument, is all too common in almost every police jurisdiction. What was different, however, was that Medina took time to share his feelings on Facebook.

    ?Im going to prison or death sentence for killing my wife love you guys, miss you guys takecare Facebook people you will see me in the news,? stated a Thursday morning post on Derek Medina's Facebook page. The page has since been taken down, though copies of the post and even the picture of the dead woman went out on the Web.

    Through much of early history there was no distinction between the public and private, but that changed by the time of the Protestant Reformation and accelerated through the technological advances that came with the Industrial Revolution. Whole schools of thought, politics and law are still wrestling with questions devoted to finding the line between personal privacy and governmental action. In the United States, for example, such key issues as abortion rights hinge on that distinction, and rights questions inform such issues as drone attacks and governmental surveillance of private communications.

    The recent wave of technological change, if anything, have accelerated the discussion even as more issues that once remained hidden have bubbled through the Web.

    For example, in June, a Utah man issued status updates on Facebook during a police siege. Just days ago, a Colorado rapper posted a song he had recorded chronicling his version of events during a police raid. He then posted his ad hoc artistic endeavor on YouTube. NPR radio journalist Scott Simon famously posted his mother?s dying days -- what once would have been a private agony -- on Twitter and won acclaim and followers.

    The events in Florida and the posting of the picture of the body appear to be a first. Facebook officials wouldn?t comment on the incident, except in a statement emailed to reporters.

    ?The content was reported to us,? a Facebook spokesperson stated. ?We took action on the profile ? removing the content and disabling the profile, and we reached out to law enforcement. We take action on all content that violates our terms, which are clearly laid out on our site.?

    Police would not discuss the motive for the shooting, which, according to an affidavit, Medina said started as a heated domestic quarrel in the couple?s upstairs bedroom.

    Medina and the woman argued; then the wife left the bedroom, returning later to say she was leaving him. He said he went downstairs and confronted her in the kitchen, when she began punching him. He said he then went back upstairs to get his gun and confronted her again, at which time she grabbed a knife, he told police.

    Medina said he took away the knife and put it in a drawer.

    But then Alfonso began punching him again, so Medina shot her several times, according to the affidavit.

    The first Facebook post went out about 11:11 a.m.

    The post said that his wife was punching him and that he wasn't going to stand any more abuse. The second and last post ? also at 11:11 a.m. and titled ?RIP Jennifer Alfonso? ? was a gruesome photograph showing a woman in black leotards slumped on the floor. The photo was up for more than five hours before Facebook removed the page late Thursday afternoon.

    Police declined comment on the Facebook posts.

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    Arizona lawmakers to consider aiding families of fallen firefighters

    Follow L.A. Times National on Twitter

    Source: http://www.latimes.com/news/nation/nationnow/la-na-nn-florida-murder-facebook-20130809,0,1571678.story?track=rss

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    Hackers switch to new digital currency after Liberty Reserve

    4 hours ago

    Preet Bharara, United States Attorney for the Southern District of New York, describes charges against Costa Rica-based Liberty Reserve, one of the wo...

    ? Mike Segar / Reuters

    Preet Bharara, United States Attorney for the Southern District of New York, describes charges against Costa Rica-based Liberty Reserve, one of the worlds largest digital currency companies and seven of it's principals and employees for allegedly running a $6 billion money laundering scheme at a news conference in New York, May 28, 2013.

    NEW YORK (Reuters) - Three months after a team of international law enforcement officials raided the digital currency firm Liberty Reserve, cyber experts say criminals are increasingly turning to another online currency called Perfect Money.

    Idan Aharoni, the head of cyber intelligence at EMC Corp's RSA security division, said that some online scam artists and thieves are using Perfect Money's digital currency to launder money and conceal profits in much the same way they allegedly did with Liberty Reserve's currency.

    On behalf of their clients, which include major financial institutions, Aharoni and his team monitor Internet forums that hackers use to sell stolen credit card information. After Liberty Reserve was taken down in May, activity on these forums initially slowed and then picked up again, with some hackers saying they would accept Perfect Money for payments, he said.

    "We expected a large migration to another e-currency, and that has happened," said Aharoni, whose RSA unit sells security services to 30,000 corporations and government agencies, including the popular Secure ID tokens that protect access to computer systems.

    Perfect Money, which has been in operation since at least 2007, could not be reached for comment. A request submitted through its website failed to elicit a response, and the company does not list a phone number for its offices or identify any management or employees.

    Reuters could not determine who owns Perfect Money. Its website says it is based in Panama, but the Panamanian government said in a statement in January that Perfect Money does not have offices in the country and has not been issued any licenses by securities regulators to operate there.

    Law enforcement agencies in the United States and around the world have expressed concerns that digital currencies, which are not tied to any particular government, are emerging as vehicles for hackers, cyber criminals and drug dealers to launder money.

    Currencies like Perfect Money are governed by a single company or entity that administers the transfer of units between customers. Once a user obtains an account, he or she can transfer Perfect Money units to other users inside the system. These units can be redeemed for cash or bank credit by third-party exchange services, which are separate businesses not under control of the currency's operator.

    Online vendors of all kinds can choose to accept digital currencies like Perfect Money as payment for their goods and services. But the feature that makes some digital currencies ideal for money laundering is anonymity. User identities can be kept hidden, both from each other and, with varying degrees of effort, from the currency operator itself through false names and locations.

    U.S. prosecutors in May accused Liberty Reserve's Costa Rica-based operations of laundering some $6 billion in illicit profits over about seven years. Authorities arrested Liberty Reserve's principals and shuttered the firm.

    Seth Ginsberg, a lawyer for former Liberty Reserve principal Mark Marmilev, who has pleaded not guilty to money laundering charges, said it is not fair for the authorities to punish his client because some customers use Liberty Reserve to hide their illicit activities.

    "It's my understanding that Liberty Reserve was designed to compete with mainstream financial providers. The fact that it may have been misused by various customers should not reflect on the company," said Ginsburg.

    "There is a legitimate need for alternatives to the mainstream financial market, so the fact that there's another company out there filling the void left by Liberty Reserve is not surprising."

    A spokesman for the U.S. Secret Service, the U.S. law enforcement agency that focuses most closely on cyber attacks on financial institutions, declined to comment.

    Virtual money
    Venture capitalists and free market advocates have voiced strong support for online currencies such as Bitcoin, saying they are alternatives to conventional monetary systems that can burden the poorest people in the world with transaction fees.

    The more due diligence that currency operators perform on their customers, mostly by verifying the personal information they submit when signing up for an account, the harder it is for criminals to use them to launder money.

    According to its website, Perfect Money performs an identity check on each customer to try to identify the computer used to enter the account. It said the company collects information about each customer's online activity and monitors transactions for signs of suspicious activity.

    Perfect Money is not the only payment system that cyber criminals use, experts said. Stefan Savage, a computer science professor at the University of California, said he had observed several different currencies, including Bitcoin, being used by people selling stolen credit cards in Internet hacker forums.

    "Perfect Money is certainly one that comes up a lot," Savage said. "There are tons of these payment systems out there."

    Patrick Murck, general counsel for The Bitcoin Foundation, declined to comment. The Foundation is a non-profit group of software developers and entrepreneurs that helps promote the use of Bitcoin as a currency. Bitcoin exists through an open-source software program and is not managed by any one company. Its supply is controlled through a computer algorithm.

    A Reuters review of postings on Internet message boards for digital currencies found hackers offering to sell stolen credit cards are open about accepting Perfect Money as payment.

    "If it was expected at first that the Liberty Reserve takedown would have a long-lasting, substantial effect on the level of fraud, that's not true," Aharoni said.

    Tyler Moore, an assistant professor at Southern Methodist University, said a 2011 study he conducted with two other academics found that Liberty Reserve and Perfect Money were two of the most widely accepted digital currencies for online Ponzi schemes. Of 1,000 websites that linked to Perfect Money, they found 70 percent that were Ponzi schemes.

    "Perfect Money seems to be a very popular choice among this subculture," Moore said.

    (Reporting By Emily Flitter; Editing by Matthew Goldstein, Tiffany Wu and Leslie Gevirtz)

    Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters.

    Source: http://feeds.nbcnews.com/c/35002/f/663301/s/2fc3e78a/sc/24/l/0L0Snbcnews0N0Ctechnology0Chackers0Eswitch0Enew0Edigital0Ecurrency0Eafter0Eliberty0Ereserve0E6C10A883530A/story01.htm

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