শুক্রবার, ৩০ নভেম্বর, ২০১২

Gus Van Sant Working on Superhero Movie

bio img gvs 546x360 Gus Van Sant Working On a Martial Arts Superhero Script

Gus Van Sant has been fairly quiet in the past few years, with his only directorial feature being Restless,?which was pretty big flop. Recently though, with the hype building for?Promised Land,?it seems that Van Sant may again be as relevant as he once was. To follow up?Promised Land,?he has an interesting project in the works: a martial arts superhero film.

Movie Line?reports the director is currently working on the script of a Stephen Chow (Kung Fu Hustle)?inspired film. From what we know, the story focuses on a group of normal citizens who develop the skills to take on crime.

The story has an extremely specific location, Hollywood Boulevard and Gower, near the Pep Boys sign, which is where?Van Sant says he got the inspiration for the film. He was standing next to a frail old woman holding an armful of bags, when he had the following thoughts.

?I thought, Oh my God, she?s going to get hit, and then I thought that maybe she has more going on than I think. Maybe I should give her more credit. Maybe she could kick my ass.?

So is this a film about the elderly martial arts experts of Los Angeles? Not quite, but it will be normal people who set out to clean up a small area of the city, meaning there probably won?t be a sinister?super-villain?setting out to destroy the world. But then again, it sounds like the story still could undergo drastic development.

Van Sant says the script is nowhere near ready for shooting, but he?s been creating some watercolor paintings of the characters on Hollywood Boulevard, that he hopes will inspire the eventual shoot. Writing, directing, and painting? Quite the?renaissance?man.

What do you think of Gus Van Sant taking on this genre? Are you interested in his martial arts superhero film? Share your thoughts in the comments section below.


Did you enjoy this article? If so, we?d love to hear your thoughts in the comments below. It would be great if you subscribed to our RSS feed, followed us on Twitter or liked us on Facebook. There?s lots more where this came from! If you're interested in writing for us, feel free to submit an application.Hot Stories From Around The Web

Source: http://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/1926349/news/1926349/

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South Africa's Motlanthe "agonizing" over ANC leadership bid

PRETORIA (Reuters) - The ANC in South Africa's richest province backed Deputy President Kgalema Mothlanthe on Friday as its choice for leader of the ruling party, keeping him in the hunt for a position that would tee him up to be president of Africa's biggest economy.

However, Motlanthe refused to immediately seize on the support of African National Congress (ANC) members in Gauteng, the province that includes Johannesburg and Pretoria, as the chance to launch a formal challenge to President Jacob Zuma.

Zuma is firm favorite to win re-election to the helm of the ANC at a party leadership conference next month, despite a slew of scandals and sluggish economic growth in the three years since he won the national presidency in elections.

He has also been criticized for his handling this year of three months of violent labor unrest in the mining sector that included the police killing of 34 striking platinum miners on August 16. The labor strife dented South Africa's image with investors and led to downgrades by credit ratings agencies.

Speaking to the foreign media in Pretoria, Motlanthe said he felt "neutral" about the Gauteng backing, adding that he was yet to make up his mind whether or not to run against Zuma.

"I'm still agonizing over it," he said.

Besides Gauteng, KwaZulu Natal - the province with the biggest voting clout in the December ANC election - has come out in support of Zuma, as has the smaller Free State.

South Africa's remaining six provinces are due to reveal their decisions later on Friday and - barring any last minute surprises - all the signs point to Zuma securing enough backing at the Dec 16-20 conference to win re-election.

Zuma himself became leader of Nelson Mandela's 100-year-old liberation movement in 2007 after spearheading a grassroots internal campaign to unseat then president Thabo Mbeki, who was seen by many ANC members as aloof and too pro-business.

(Reporting by Ed Cropley; Editing by Pascal Fletcher)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/south-africas-motlanthe-agonizing-over-anc-leadership-bid-131844073--business.html

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বৃহস্পতিবার, ২৯ নভেম্বর, ২০১২

Bankruptcy Lawyers Service For Financial Troubled Business | www ...

It is sad when to say not every business can reach its success and create profit for themselves. Because of numerous reasons the business cannot generate good amount of sales to finance themselves and having troubles in paying their loans installment requirement or bills to their creditors such as banks and suppliers. When a business is facing this type of trouble, they may want to consider hiring a professional bankruptcy lawyer?s service to solve their financial troubles.

Some of the common financial problems that are faced by a business to file bankruptcy are; tax problems, assets repossessions, debts and creditors payments, and lawsuits.

Bankruptcy lawyers? function?

The purpose of bankruptcy lawyers are to guide their clients to file bankruptcy according to the procedures that are set by the law and represent their clients in court. There are many experience bankruptcy lawyers service that is available. The most important is to find reputable and reliable service such as phoenix bankruptcy lawyers.

The bankruptcy lawyers? service will help and support the business financial problem with their advice and legal procedures, paperwork and formalities. Therefore a business will have the chance to discharge from debts obligation, renegotiate their debts payment terms to their creditors and settle their debts. Therefore the business with the financial troubles can have a fresh start.

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Source: http://www.auralfusion.net/bankruptcy-lawyers-service-for-financial-troubled-business.html

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Senate panel OKs Obama choice for US commander

(AP) ? The Senate Armed Services Committee has approved President Barack Obama's choice to be the top commander in Afghanistan.

By voice vote Thursday, the panel cleared the way for the full Senate to vote on Gen. Joseph Dunford, the assistant commandant of the Marine Corps who had directed combat forces in Iraq.

Dunford would replace Gen. John Allen, the current commander in Afghanistan who has been nominated to take charge in Europe.

Allen's nomination is suddenly on hold as he's ensnared in the sex scandal that had led to the resignation of CIA director David Petraeus.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2012-11-29-US-Afghanistan%20Commander/id-0cd25beb44304eb2baf95e60a4c70ab1

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The WITCH Is Back: 61-Year-Old Computer Alive & Well

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In today?s world of mobile computing with devices that fit in your pocket, the notion that the first computers ever made occupied entire rooms and weighed several tonnes is hard to remember. It seems almost ridiculous too. Weren?t they just in the imagination of Hollywood producers of B-grade science fiction movies? Nope, they were real, and the WITCH is back.

The WITCH computer became the ?world?s oldest original working digital computer? recently when a museum in the UK refurbished the machine and fired it up. The scene must have been akin to a cheesy sci-fi film since unlike today?s computers, the WITCH was beeping, flashing and clunking like nobody?s business. And it read software off paper tape with holes punched into it. The only thing it was missing was those magnetic tape reels, but alas, they appeared in later, more ?advanced? models.

The WITCH isn?t particularly useful anymore outside of its attraction as a museum piece. It can store 90 numbers, so it?s effectively a room-sized calculator. It used flashing valves instead of binary code to store numbers, and it could take five to ten seconds to multiply two numbers together. It was used in atomic research up until 1957 and then as a teaching device until 1973 when it was renamed the Wolverhampton Instrument for Teaching Computation from Harwell (ie WITCH!). In its time, the WITCH was only one of about a dozen state of the art computers in the world.

Given the WITCH was used for several decades without an upgrade, the mammoth computer marks a stark contrast with today?s computing devices which can be swapped out for an upgrade every 12 months (and in some cases even sooner). It would also be hard to see today?s devices working 60 years after their original build date. It can be easy to take our access to cheap computing technology for granted these days. It?s a great thing that a computer like the WITCH is still functioning since it?s a fascinating window into the beginnings of the computer age.

the-witch-is-back

Via: [CNN] Image Credits: [The Verge] [CNN]

Author: Ben Warner

Ben is an independent filmmaker, writer, and online content developer. He currently co-hosts and produces the weekly vodcast ?FiST Chat,? dedicated to bringing insightful and entertaining discussions on all things film, science and technology. You can also see Ben as the co-host of the web series ?Food Discoveries,? exploring various culinary experiences from around the world. Ben is the founder of production companies Digicosm and Small Wave Films, and has produced and directed numerous short films, feature films and documentaries since the late 1990s. When he?s not working, Ben indulges his love of traveling, food, technology, cinema, and music.

Source: http://www.bitrebels.com/technology/witch-is-back-61-year-old-computer/

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বুধবার, ২৮ নভেম্বর, ২০১২

Ask The Expert: The Cross-Channel Impact of Online Banner Ads ...

Ask The Expert: The Cross-Channel Impact of Online Banner Ads


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By: John Faris, Director of Cross-Channel Marketing at Red Door Interactive
Featured in Transworld Business
November 22, 2012

When allocating digital marketing budgets across channels, it is certainly important to dedicate an appropriate amount of budget to ?closer? channels such as affiliate, search, and email. These channels are often the last ones that a consumer touches, prior to converting.

However, maintaining a significant spend in display advertising (also known as online banner advertising) is just as important. Banner ads introduce consumers to the brand, and influence people?s brand preference along the path to purchase, both online and offline. Furthermore, display advertising provides volume and scalability that other digital channels don?t have.

It is well known that banner ad click-through rates are obismal. Even the most compelling banner ads on the Internet aren?t clicked on by 99% of people who see them. This often scares marketers away from display advertising, because the immediate value isn?t obvious. However, it is important to understand that even when consumers are exposed to display ads, but don?t click, these ads can still have a significant impact on website traffic and retail foot traffic.

This makes sense, when you think of the context of banner ads, and how consumers behave. A person who is just browsing their favorite information, news, or entertainment website (i.e., business.transworld.net) usually doesn?t have an active intent to purchase something at the moment. But once they see a display ad several times, they consciously (or sub-consciously) associate the advertiser?s brand with a product category, or at least reinforce an existing association they?ve made. That can happen whether they click the ad or not. When the consumer eventually does have a need that the advertiser?s product can solve, they remember that association, and go directly to that website by typing in the url, or by searching for the brand name on a search engine like Google. In fact, a 2010 study from comScore and Valueclick Media showed that highly targeted ad buys, such as retargeting or audience targeting, can result in 500%-1,000% increase in the number of brand name searches that consumers conduct on search engines for the advertised brand.

The same study showed overall website visitation is lifted significantly through display advertising too ? by at least 250%. Because brand search and direct traffic are typically the top conversion sources for a brand website, driving incremental clicks from these sources can be a highly effective way to increase digital ROI.

Display ads can influence offline behavior too, in a similar way to how print ads, circulars, TV, and radio all drive people to retail. A recent study by Google and a leading US retailer compared retail sales in test markets saturated with online media, versus those in control markets that had no online advertising. The results showed that, when combined with search ads, display advertising created a 1.6% increase in offline sales and a 1000% return on investment. In this case, online ads performed at least as good as circulars did for the same brand.

Another great advantage to display is that the inventory is virtually limitless in comparison to other digital channels. Email campaigns are limited by the number of subscribers you have in your database. Search campaigns are limited by the number of people actively searching for your brand or other relevant keywords. And social campaigns are limited by the number of followers/fans that you have. But display campaigns are only limited to one thing ? the size of your target audience online. Given that ad networks like Google Display Network, AOL, and Value Click are able to reach upwards of 97% of the global Internet population, chances are that you can serve billions of impressions to consumers in your target market, and still have room to spend more.

As more marketing dollars shift to digital, action sports brands that want to scale their spend will need to move beyond solely investing in direct response channels. Ad clicks and ecommerce conversions are highly valued, and rightly so. But it?s a mistake to focus all of your effort on closer channels, while ignoring the opportunity that display advertising presents.

Source: http://www.reddoor.biz/ask-the-expert-the-cross-channel-impact-of-online-banner-ads

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Video: O?Neal fights university for Fawcett?s Warhol portrait

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

Source: http://video.today.msnbc.msn.com/today/49977250/

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Rhino killings for horns rapidly rise in S. Africa

(AP) ? By the time ranchers found the rhinoceros calf wandering alone in this idyllic setting of scrub brush and acacia, the nature reserve had become yet another blood-soaked crime scene in South Africa's losing battle against poachers.

Hunters killed eight rhinos at the private Finfoot Game Reserve inside the Vaalkop Dam Nature Reserve this month with single rifle shots that pierced their hearts and lungs. The poachers' objective: the rhinos' horns, cut away with knives and popped off the dead animals' snouts for buyers in Asia who pay the U.S. street value of cocaine for a material they believe cures diseases.

That insatiable demand for horns has sparked the worst recorded year of rhino poaching in South Africa in decades, with at least 588 rhinos killed so far, their carcasses rotting in private farms and national parks. Without drastic change, experts warn that soon the number of rhinos killed will outpace the number of the calves born ? putting the entire population at risk in a nation that is the last bastion for the prehistoric-looking animals.

"This is a full-on bush war we are fighting," said Marc Lappeman, who runs the Finfoot reserve with his father Miles and has begun armed vigilante patrols to protect the remaining rhinos there. "We here are willing to die for these animals."

Unchecked hunting nearly killed off all the rhinos in southern Africa at the beginning of the 1900s. Conservationists in the 1960s airlifted rhinos to different parts of South Africa to spread them out. That helped the population grow to the point that South Africa is now home to some 20,000 rhinos ? 90 percent of all rhinos in Africa.

From the 1990s to 2007, rhino poachings in South Africa averaged about 15 a year, according to a recent report by the wildlife trade monitoring network TRAFFIC. In 2008, however, poachers killed 83 rhinos and by 2009, the number hit 122, the report says.

The killings grew exponentially after that: 333 in 2010, 448 in 2011 and as of Tuesday, at least 588 rhino killed this year alone, according to South Africa's Department of Environmental Affairs.

"That the year-on-year rhino poaching losses have continued to grow in the face of heightened awareness, constant media attention and concerted law enforcement effort is testament to just how pervasive and gripping the rhino crisis in South Africa has become," TRAFFIC wrote in its August report. "If poaching continues to increase annually as it has done since 2007, then eventually deaths will exceed births and rhino numbers in South Africa will start to fall."

Most of the killings, according to government statistics, occur in South Africa's massive Kruger National Park, covering 19,400 square kilometers (7,500 square miles) in the country's northeast abutting its borders with Mozambique and Zimbabwe. There, the impoverished slip across the park's borders, largely from Mozambique, to kill and dehorn rhino, earning the equivalent of months' wages in a single night of hunting. South Africa has deployed soldiers in the park with dogs to sniff out poachers, but their small force can't sufficiently cover a park that's roughly the same size as New Jersey.

The horns are sold by criminal gangs and smuggled into Asia. While poachers have been shot dead and hundreds of suspects arrested this year, the rhino killings continue unstopped largely because the trade is transnational and worth millions of dollars, said Julian Rademeyer, a journalist in South Africa who wrote "Killing for Profit," a book on rhino poaching that came out this month.

"The problem with law enforcement strategies is they end where our border ends," Rademeyer said.

And law enforcement can't always be trusted in South Africa, where corruption eats away at the nation. There have been several cases of rangers assigned to guard parks being arrested for aiding poachers.

With both South Africa and Swaziland allowing rhino to be hunted legally, criminal gangs have obtained hunting licenses under false pretenses. Gangs have hired prostitutes and the poor from Asia and Eastern Europe to pose as big game hunters with licenses to kill a single rhino apiece, Rademeyer said. Their "trophies" end up shipped back to Asia, where the horns are removed and sold.

Rhino horn is made of keratin, a tough protein found in human fingernails. Doctors have repeatedly said the material has no medical value. In Asia, however, demand for rhino horn has jumped dramatically. Experts blame it partly on a widespread rumor in Vietnam that rhino horn cures cancer, though some elite Vietnamese grind up horn and take it as a hangover cure or as a fever reducer.

The ever-increasing demand saw Vietnamese poachers kill the last of Vietnam's rare Javan rhinoceros last year for its horn. The World Wildlife Fund ranked Vietnam as the worst country for wildlife crime in Asia and Africa in July. The country is seen as having lax laws on importing horns. Diplomats at the Vietnamese Embassy in South Africa's capital Pretoria have also been linked to trafficking. Earlier this month, a South African court sentenced a Thai national to 40 years in prison for selling rhino horns.

With high-level officials involved and a strong demand, Rademeyer said poaching "will probably get a lot worse before it gets any better."

Rhino poachers have gone beyond Kruger and are targeting private farms and reserves. Poachers likely watched the Finfoot Game Reserve, which breeds rhino for game viewing, for days, Lappeman said. Workers caught a man in ragged clothes lurking around the park with more than 1,000 rand ($115) in crisp hundred rand bills and a new mobile phone in his pocket around the time of the killings, Lappeman said.

The poachers fired on the rhino far from the game lodge, probably moving methodically closer as no one came to investigate the shots, he said. Lappeman said he and his father only found the dead rhinos the day after seeing the lost calf.

One wounded mother rhino walked all the way to the property's edge, finally dying on a dirt road to be found first thing that morning.

"She had physically come to the road to die, to say, 'I'm dying, come fetch my calf,'" Lappeman said.

___

Jon Gambrell can be reached at www.twitter.com/jongambrellAP .

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2012-11-28-South%20Africa-Rhino%20Killings/id-abccbea79c5e46b4a1a747f7a15f8568

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Bitter struggle over Internet regulation to dominate global summit

7 hrs.

An unprecedented debate over how the global Internet is governed is set to dominate a meeting of officials in Dubai next week, with many countries pushing to give a United Nations body broad regulatory powers even as the United States and others contend such a move could mean the end of the open Internet.

The 12-day conference of the International Telecommunications Union, a 157-year-old organization that's now an arm of the United Nations, largely pits revenue-seeking developing countries and authoritarian regimes that want more control over Internet content against U.S. policymakers and private Net companies that prefer the status quo.

Many of the proposals have drawn fury from free-speech and human-rights advocates and have prompted resolutions from the U.S. Congress and the European Parliament, calling for the current decentralized system of governance to remain in place.

While specifics of some of the most contentious proposals remain secret, leaked drafts show that Russia is seeking rules giving individual countries broad permission to shape the content and structure of the Internet within their borders, while a group of Arab countries is advocating universal identification of Internet users. Some developing countries and telecom providers, meanwhile, want to make content providers pay for Internet transmission.

Fundamentally, most of the 193 countries in the ITU seem eager to enshrine the idea that the U.N. agency, rather than today's hodgepodge of private companies and nonprofit groups, should govern the Internet. The ITU meeting, which aims to update a longstanding treaty on how telecom companies interact across borders, will also tackle other topics such as extending wireless coverage into rural areas.

If a majority of the ITU countries approve U.N. dominion over the Internet along with onerous rules, a backlash could lead to battles in Western countries over whether to ratify the treaty, with tech companies rallying ordinary Internet users against it and some telecom carriers supporting it.

In fact, dozens of countries including China, Russia and some Arab states, already restrict Internet access within their own borders, but those governments would have greater leverage over Internet content and service providers if the changes were backed up by international agreement.

Amid the escalating rhetoric, search king Google last week asked users to "pledge your support for the free and open Internet" on social media, raising the specter of a grassroots outpouring of the sort that blocked American copyright legislation and a global anti-piracy treaty earlier this year.

Google's Vint Cerf, the ordinarily diplomatic co-author of the basic protocol for Internet data, denounced the proposed new rules as hopeless efforts by some governments and state-controlled telecom authorities to assert their power.

"These persistent attempts are just evidence that this breed of dinosaurs, with their pea-sized brains, hasn't figured out that they are dead yet, because the signal hasn't traveled up their long necks," Cerf told Reuters.

The ITU's top official, Secretary-General Hamadoun Tour?, sought to downplay the concerns in a separate interview, stressing to Reuters that even though updates to the treaty could be approved by a simple majority, in practice nothing will be adopted without near-unanimity.

"Voting means winners and losers. We can't afford that in the ITU," said Tour?, a former satellite engineer from Mali who was educated in Russia.

Tour? predicted that only "light-touch" regulation on cyber-security will emerge by "consensus," using a deliberately vague term that implies something between a majority and unanimity.

He rejected criticism that the ITU's historic role in coordinating phone carriers leaves it unfit to corral the unruly Internet, comparing the Web to a transportation system.

"Because you own the roads, you don't own the cars and especially not the goods they are transporting. But when you buy a car you don't buy the road," Tour? said. "You need to know the number of cars and their size and weight so you can build the bridges and set the right number of lanes. You need light-touch regulation to set down a few traffic lights."

Because the proposals from Russia, China and others are more extreme, Tour? has been able to cast mild regulation as a compromise accommodating nearly everyone.

Two leaked Russian proposals say nations should have the sovereign right "to regulate the national Internet segment." An August draft proposal from a group of 17 Arab countries called for transmission recipients to receive "identity information" about the senders, potentially endangering the anonymity of political dissidents, among others.

A U.S. State Department envoy to the gathering and Cerf agreed with Tour? that there is unlikely to be any drastic change emerging from Dubai.

"The decisions are going to be by consensus," said U.S. delegation chief Terry Kramer. He said anti-anonymity measures such as mandatory Internet address tracing won't be adopted because of opposition by the United States and others.

"We're a strong voice, given a lot of the heritage," Kramer said, referring to the U.S. invention and rapid development of the Internet. "A lot of European markets are very similar, and a lot of Asian counties are supportive, except China."

Despite the reassuring words, a fresh leak over the weekend showed that the ITU's top managers viewed a badly split conference as a realistic prospect less than three months ago.

The leaked program for a "senior management retreat" for the ITU in early September included a summary discussion of the most probable outcomes from Dubai, concluding that the two likeliest scenarios involved major reworkings of the treaty that the United States would then refuse to sign. The only difference between the scenarios lay in how many other developed countries sided with the Americans.

ITU officials didn't dispute the authenticity of the document, which was published by Jerry Brito, a researcher at the Mercatus Center at George Mason University as part of a continuing series of ITU-related leaks.

Tour? said that because the disagreements are so vast, the conference probably will end up with something resembling the ITU's earlier formula for trying to protect children online ? an agreement to cooperate more and share laws and best practices, perhaps with hotlines to head off misunderstandings.

"From Dubai, what I personally expect is to see some kind of principles saying cyberspace is a global phenomenon and it can only have global responses," Tour? said. "I just intend to put down some key principles there that will lay the seeds for something in the future."

Even vague terms could be used as a pretext for more oppressive policies in various countries, though, and activists and industry leaders fear those countries might also band together by region to offer very different Internet experiences.

In some ways, the U.N. involvement reflects a reversal that has already begun.

The United States has steadily diminished its official role in Internet governance, and many nations have stepped up their filtering and surveillance. More than 40 countries now filter the Net that their citizens see, said Ronald Deibert, a University of Toronto political science professor and authority on international conflicts in cyberspace.

Google Executive Chairman Eric Schmidt said this month that the Net is already on the road to Balkanization, with people in different countries getting very different experiences from the services provided by Google, Skype and others.

This month, a new law in Russia took effect that allows the federal government to order a website offline without a court hearing. Iran recently rolled out a version of the Internet that replaced the real thing within its borders. A growing number of countries, including China and India, order sites to censor themselves for political, religious and other content.

China, which has the world's largest number of Internet users, also blocks access to Facebook, YouTube and Twitter among other sites within its borders.

The loose governance of the Net currently depends on the non-profit ICANN, which oversees the Web's address system, along with voluntary standard-setting bodies and a patchwork of national laws and regional agreements. Many countries see it as a U.S.-dominated system.

The U.S. isolation within the ITU is exacerbated by it being home to many of the biggest technology companies???and by the fact that it could have military reasons for wanting to preserve online anonymity. The Internet emerged as a critical military domain with the 2010 discovery of Stuxnet, a computer worm developed at least in part by the United States that attacked Iran's nuclear program.

Whatever the outcome in Dubai, the conference stands a good chance of becoming a historic turning point for the Internet.

"I see this as a constitutional moment for global cyberspace, where we can stand back and say, `Who should be in charge?' said Deibert. "What are the rules of the road?"

(Reporting by Joseph Menn; Editing by Jonathan Weber, Martin Howell and Ken Wills)

(c) Copyright Thomson Reuters 2012. Check for restrictions at: http://about.reuters.com/fulllegal.asp

Source: http://www.nbcnews.com/technology/technolog/bitter-struggle-over-internet-regulation-dominate-global-summit-1C7276578

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Bombs kill four Kurds in Iraq's disputed areas

KIRKUK, Iraq (Reuters) - Bombs targeting ethnic Kurds killed four people on Tuesday in the city of Kirkuk in Iraq's disputed northern territories, where the Iraqi army and troops from the autonomous Kurdistan region have been in stand-off for more than a week.

It was not immediately clear who was behind the attacks although Sunni Islamist insurgents including a local affiliate of al Qaeda continue to strike regularly, killing 144 people across Iraq in October alone.

The latest bomb attacks come after troops from Baghdad and the Kurdistan region moved in last week on the territories over which both the central government and the Kurds claim jurisdiction.

On Tuesday a car bomb exploded meters away from the office of the Kurdistan Democratic Party (KDP) in the contested city of Kirkuk killing two people, police said. A second explosion followed in the same area, killing a third person, according to a security source.

"When the explosion happened, I felt the house was collapsing on us," said 22-year-old Ahmed Germi, a Kurd living in the house adjacent to the KDP's office, whose clothes were stained with blood.

Kurdish residents of Kirkuk were blocking roads with rubbish bins and other obstacles to prevent potential attackers from entering their area, a Reuters reporter said. Police sirens wailed and the smell of smoke, blood and gunpowder filled the air.

A car bomb in another Kurdish district of Kirkuk killed at least one person. The three blasts also wounded 38 people, police and hospital sources said.

"Problems were created by the officials but we are the victims," Germi said through tears.

The military stand-off brings to a head a row over the formation of a new command center for Iraqi troops to operate in the oil-rich disputed areas.

Kurdish officials say the Dijla Operations Command is a threat to them, but Baghdad's Shi'ite Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki says it is necessary for security.

Kirkuk police colonel Yaseen Hassan linked the political crisis with Tuesday's attacks: "they targeted Kurdish areas at a time when there is a crisis between the central government and the (Kurdish) region; it is a proof that they are trying to stir sectarian strife."

Explosions also hit the town of Tuz Khurmato on Tuesday, the site of a clash between Kurdish Peshmerga forces and Iraqi troops last week, which triggered the current military build-up.

There were also blasts aimed at police and the army in the town of Hawija in Kirkuk province, a car bomb wounded several people in the city of Mosul, and a car bomb near Baghdad wounded four people.

(Additional reporting by Aseel Kami; Writing by Isabel Coles; Editing by Greg Mahlich)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/bombs-kill-four-kurds-iraqs-disputed-areas-113839793.html

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মঙ্গলবার, ২৭ নভেম্বর, ২০১২

Sad news for male haters, Crime Against Women decreasing

Why should a decrease in crime against women be sad news ? Well not for
me, but for majority of the anti-male people in the Indian state of
Maharashtra, this fact is very hard to digest. Without the cheap
publicity gimmick of rising crime against women. Many worthless public figures would have little else
to crow about. "Crime Against Women" is constantly used by many
incompetent and corrupt politicians and publicity hungry film actors, to
show that they are doing something good for the society. And how do they do this ? They try to exaggerate facts, distort incidences, and then to show their magnanimity, they help the "victims" of these alleged crime. To project themselves as messiah for women. They propose and create new laws to help these alleged victims. There is a class of people, whose bread and butter depends on the gains they make from the myth of crime against women. These people will loose their money and fame, if the myth of crime against women is busted. The crime statistics of Maharashtra for the year 2011 are available for download.

Below is the trend. Please check the trend of previous years too.

http://cursedmale.blogspot.com/2012/11/sad-news-for-male-haters-crime-against_26.html

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