Thursday, March 28, 2013

Ky. lawmakers override religious freedom veto

Mar 26 (Reuters) - Leading money winners on the 2013 PGATour on Monday (U.S. unless stated): 1. Tiger Woods $3,787,600 2. Brandt Snedeker $2,859,920 3. Matt Kuchar $2,154,500 4. Steve Stricker $1,820,000 5. Phil Mickelson $1,650,260 6. Hunter Mahan $1,553,965 7. John Merrick $1,343,514 8. Dustin Johnson $1,330,507 9. Russell Henley $1,313,280 10. Kevin Streelman $1,310,343 11. Keegan Bradley $1,274,593 12. Charles Howell III $1,256,373 13. Michael Thompson $1,254,669 14. Brian Gay $1,171,721 15. Justin Rose $1,155,550 16. Jason Day $1,115,565 17. Chris Kirk $1,097,053 18. ...

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/ky-lawmakers-override-religious-freedom-131607876.html

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PlayStation 4's Blu-ray drive is 3x as fast as PS3's, PSN friends list cap raised, and other tidbits from Sony's GDC panel

The PlayStation 4's new DualShock 4 controller can be charged even while the PlayStation 4 is turned off. The PlayStation 4's new Eye motion camera has a tilt sensor so it can tell players when its facing the wrong direction or if it's fallen off your TV stand. The PlayStation 4's Blu-ray disc drive is three times as fast as the PlayStation 3's. In case it weren't clear, Sony's PlayStation 4 panel at this week's Game Developers Conference wasn't chock full of major revelations, but it did provide plenty of interesting little details about the PlayStation 4 and its various hardware companions.

For instance, the console's "True Name" social functionality isn't automatic -- you have to opt-in to who will see your real name versus your PlayStation Network ID. That is, unless you find a friend through Facebook or another social network where your real name is already your main ID; in that instance, the console defaults to displaying your actual name. That's not the only change coming to your friends list, either, as the standing 100 friends cap is being raised to an unknown amount.

Additionally, the Gaikai-powered Remote Play functionality between the Vita and PS4 is said to be "much better," according to Sony senior staff engineer Chris Norden. Not only can it display your PS4 games in the Vita's native resolution (960x544), but it can be activated at any given time rather than having to be preset. And unlike Remote Play on PS3, with PS4 the game being pushed to the Vita is mirrored on your television screen. None of this stuff is what we'd call red hot, but we're hungry for PS4 details and this is what Sony's delivering. Here's hoping the company's more forthcoming at E3.

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Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/03/27/playstation-4-gdc-2013-details/

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High court hears case on federal benefits for gays

Wyatt Tan, left and Mark Nomadiou, both of New York City, kiss in front of the Supreme Court in Washington, Wednesday, March 27, 2013, prior to the start of a court hearing on the 1996 Defense of Marriage Act (DOMA). In the second of back-to-back gay marriage cases, the Supreme Court is turning to a constitutional challenge to the law that prevents legally married gay Americans from collecting federal benefits generally available to straight married couples. (AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster)

Wyatt Tan, left and Mark Nomadiou, both of New York City, kiss in front of the Supreme Court in Washington, Wednesday, March 27, 2013, prior to the start of a court hearing on the 1996 Defense of Marriage Act (DOMA). In the second of back-to-back gay marriage cases, the Supreme Court is turning to a constitutional challenge to the law that prevents legally married gay Americans from collecting federal benefits generally available to straight married couples. (AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster)

With the Capitol in the background, supporters of gay marriage carry signs in front of the Supreme Court in Washington, Wednesday, March 27, 2013, before the court heard arguments on the Defense of Marriage Act (DOMA). In the second of back-to-back gay marriage case, the Supreme Court is turning to a constitutional challenge to the law that prevents legally married gay Americans from collecting federal benefits generally available to straight married couples. (AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster)

A group from Alabama prays in front of the Supreme Court in Washington, Wednesday, March 27, 2013, before the court's hearing on the Defense of Marriage Act (DOMA). In the second of back-to-back gay marriage case, the Supreme Court is turning to a constitutional challenge to the law that prevents legally married gay Americans from collecting federal benefits generally available to straight married couples. (AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster)

From left, plaintiffs Sandy Stier, with her partner Kris Perry, and their twin sons Spencer Perry and Elliott Perry, all from Berkeley, Calif., meet with reporters outside the Supreme Court in Washington, Tuesday, March 26, 2013, after the court heard arguments on California's voter approved ban on same-sex marriage, Proposition 8. (AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais)

WASHINGTON (AP) ? In the second of back-to-back gay marriage cases, the Supreme Court turned Wednesday to a constitutional challenge to the law that prevents legally married gay Americans from collecting federal benefits generally available to straight married couples.

A section of the 1996 Defense of Marriage Act says marriage may only be a relationship between a man and a woman for purposes of federal law, regardless of state laws that allow same-sex marriage.

Lower federal courts have struck down the measure, and now the justices, in nearly two hours of scheduled argument Wednesday, will consider whether to follow suit.

A somewhat smaller crowd gathered outside the court Wednesday, mainly gay marriage supporters who held American and rainbow flags. One man wore a rainbow flag as a cape. "Two, four, six, eight, we do not discriminate," a group chanted at one point. "If this isn't the time, when is the time? When does equality come into play?" asked Laura Scott, 43, of Columbia, Md.

The DOMA argument follows Tuesday's case over California's ban on same-sex marriage, a case in which the justices indicated they might avoid a major national ruling on whether America's gays and lesbians have a right to marry. Even without a significant ruling, the court appeared headed for a resolution that would mean the resumption of gay and lesbian weddings in California.

Marital status is relevant in more than 1,100 federal laws that include estate taxes, Social Security survivor benefits and health benefits for federal employees. Lawsuits around the country have led four federal district courts and two appeals courts to strike down the law's Section 3, which defines marriage. In 2011, the Obama administration abandoned its defense of the law but continues to enforce it. House Republicans are now defending DOMA in the courts.

Same-sex marriage is legal in nine states and the District of Columbia. The states are Connecticut, Iowa, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, New York, Vermont and Washington. It also was legal in California for less than five months in 2008.

The justices chose for their review the case of Edith Windsor, 83, of New York, who sued to challenge a $363,000 federal estate tax bill after her partner of 44 years died in 2009.

Windsor, who goes by Edie, married Thea Spyer in 2007 in Canada after doctors told them that Spyer would not live much longer. She suffered from multiple sclerosis for many years. Spyer left everything she had to Windsor.

There is no dispute that if Windsor had been married to a man, her estate tax bill would have been zero.

The U.S. 2nd Circuit Court of Appeals in New York agreed with a district judge that the provision of DOMA deprived Windsor of the constitutional guarantee of equal protection of the law.

Like the Proposition 8 case from California, Windsor's lawsuit could falter on a legal technicality without a definitive ruling from the high court.

The House Republicans, the Obama administration and a lawyer appointed by the court especially to argue the issue were to spend the first 50 minutes Wednesday discussing whether the House Republican leadership can defend the law in court because the administration decided not to, and whether the administration forfeited its right to participate in the case because it changed its position and now argues that the provision is unconstitutional.

If the Supreme Court finds that it does not have the authority to hear the case, Windsor probably would still get her refund because she won in the lower courts. But there would be no definitive decision about the law from the nation's highest court, and it would remain on the books.

On Tuesday, the justices weighed a fundamental issue: Does the Constitution require that people be allowed to marry whom they choose, regardless of either partner's gender? The fact that the question was in front of the Supreme Court at all was startling, given that no state recognized same-sex unions before 2003 and 40 states still don't allow them.

But it was clear from the start of the 80-minute argument in a packed courtroom that the justices, including some liberals who seemed open to gay marriage, had doubts about whether they should even be hearing the challenge to California's Proposition 8, the state's voter-approved gay marriage ban.

Justice Anthony Kennedy, the potentially decisive vote on a closely divided court, suggested the justices could dismiss the case with no ruling at all.

Such an outcome would almost certainly allow gay marriages to resume in California but would have no impact elsewhere.

There was no majority apparent for any particular outcome, and many doubts were expressed by justices about the arguments advanced by lawyers for the opponents of gay marriage in California, by the supporters and by the Obama administration, which is in favor of same-sex marriage rights. The administration's entry into the case followed President Barack Obama's declaration of support for gay marriage.

On the one hand, Kennedy acknowledged that same-sex unions had only become legal recently in some states, a point stressed repeatedly by Charles Cooper, the lawyer for the defenders of Proposition 8. Cooper said the court should uphold the ban as a valid expression of the people's will and let the vigorous political debate over gay marriage continue.

But Kennedy pressed him also to address the interests of the estimated 40,000 children in California who have same-sex parents.

"They want their parents to have full recognition and full status," Kennedy said. "The voice of those children is important in this case, don't you think?"

Yet when Theodore Olson, the lawyer for two same-sex couples, urged the court to support such marriage rights everywhere, Kennedy feared such a ruling would push the court into "uncharted waters." Olson said the court similarly ventured into the unknown in 1967 when it struck down bans on interracial marriage in 16 states.

Kennedy challenged the accuracy of that comment: He noted that other countries had had interracial marriages for hundreds of years.

The justice also made clear he did not like the rationale of the federal appeals court that struck down Proposition 8, even though it cited earlier opinions in favor of gay rights that Kennedy had written.

That appeals court ruling applied only to California, where same-sex couples briefly had the right to marry before the state's voters in November 2008 adopted Proposition 8, a constitutional amendment that defined marriage as the union of a man and a woman.

Reflecting the high interest in the cases, the court planned to release an audio recording of Wednesday's argument shortly after it concludes, just as it did Tuesday.

The Tuesday audio can be found at: http://tinyurl.com/dxefy2a .

___

Associated Press writer Jessica Gresko contributed to this report.

___

Follow Mark Sherman on Twitter at: www.twitter.com/shermancourt

Follow Jessica Gresko on Twitter at: www.twitter.com/jessicagresko

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/89ae8247abe8493fae24405546e9a1aa/Article_2013-03-27-Supreme%20Court-Gay%20Marriage/id-3f7423360f364b45a45d834f8b1fd11b

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Wednesday, March 27, 2013

No Googling, says Google ? unless you really mean it - MSNBC.com

You hear it in movies, TV shows, among your friends and you probably say it yourself: "I Googled her before I called her." "I know because I Googled it." "What's the temperature in Fargo? Google it!"

But Google wants you ? and the world ? to stop using Google as a verb for looking up anything on the Internet ? unless you actually used Google's search engine to do so.

Google's laser focus on how its name is used even extends to Sweden, where the country's Language Council recently wanted to add the word "ungoogleable" to a list of new words as meaning something that can't be found on the Web using a search engine. Note: a search engine ? not necessarily Google's.

Google objected, according to the Associated Press, "asking for changes showing the expression specifically refers to Google searches and a disclaimer saying Google is a registered trademark, the council said Tuesday." The group expressed its "displeasure with Google's attempts to control the language."

Google told NBC News Tuesday it did not ask the council to remove the word, but only wanted some editing of the definition.

With Google as the leading search engine, there's little doubt that we mean Google when we say we Googled something. As comedian Ellen DeGeneres said on her show, talking about technology's impact on our lives, "If you need to know something immediately, you can Google it now .... Ten years ago, if you said you were going to 'Google' someone, you got written up by Human Resources."

So, what's so bad about using "Google" as a verb for saying you looked up information on the Internet?

Ironically, because of Google's "significant brand recognition," the company "has started down the path of becoming synonymous with search engine services and, accordingly, towards the genericization of a trademark," wrote attorney Matthew Swyers, founder of a law firm specializing in trademark rights, in an article for Inc. last year.

And becoming generic is bad because it threatens a company's legal right to a trademark.

"Aspirin was originally a trademark of Bayer AG," Swyers wrote. "Escalator was originally a trademark of the Otis Elevator Company. Even the word Zipper, at one time, was a trademark owned by B.F. Goodrich. Now, because of their respective fame and genericization, they merely refer to classes of products we see every day and do not identify the source of those goods."

Google pointed out its concerns as far back as 2006 in a blog post about the use of Google as a verb:

A trademark is a word, name, symbol or device that identifies a particular company's products or services. Google is a trademark identifying Google Inc. and our search technology and services. While we're pleased that so many people think of us when they think of searching the web, let's face it, we do have a brand to protect, so we'd like to make clear that you should please only use "Google" when you?re actually referring to Google Inc. and our services.

Kory Stamper, associate editor of Merriam-Webster, Inc., told NBC News that the verb "google," as well as "Google" was first added to the Merriam-Webster's Collegiate Dictionary, Eleventh Edition, and to its online dictionary in 2006, "based entirely on its use in edited English prose."

The Merriam-Webster definition of "google" (lowercase or capitalized), "googled" and "googling" is this: "to use the Google search engine to obtain information about (as a person) on the World Wide Web."

There are three criteria for a word making it into the Merriam-Webster dictionary, she said: Widespread usage of a word, "sustained use" and "meaningful use."

"By the time we did the copyright printing of the Collegiate Dictionary for 2006, we had enough evidence in our files to show that the verb 'google' had met all three criteria for entry," Stamper said, adding: "It's worth noting that the verb 'google' dates back to at least 1998, according to recent information we've gathered."

Despite what happened in Sweden, Google says it's not stepping up, but rather just continuing, its ongoing efforts to patrol its trademark.

"While Google, like many businesses, takes routine steps to protect our trademarks, we are pleased that users connect the Google name with great search results," a company spokesperson said in a statement to NBC News Tuesday.

And, perhaps as NBC News' own Internet expert Helen A.S. Popkin noted, "Google as a verb is brand awareness. When Willow used 'google' as a verb on 'Buffy the Vampire Slayer,' everyone knew Lycos and Jeeves and Yahoo were cooked."

Check out Technology, GadgetBox, TODAY Tech and In-Game on Facebook, and on Twitter, follow Suzanne Choney.

Source: http://www.nbcnews.com/technology/technolog/no-googling-says-google-unless-you-really-mean-it-1C9078566

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High court hears case on federal benefits for gays

Wyatt Tan, left and Mark Nomadiou, both of New York City, kiss in front of the Supreme Court in Washington, Wednesday, March 27, 2013, prior to the start of a court hearing on the 1996 Defense of Marriage Act (DOMA). In the second of back-to-back gay marriage cases, the Supreme Court is turning to a constitutional challenge to the law that prevents legally married gay Americans from collecting federal benefits generally available to straight married couples. (AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster)

Wyatt Tan, left and Mark Nomadiou, both of New York City, kiss in front of the Supreme Court in Washington, Wednesday, March 27, 2013, prior to the start of a court hearing on the 1996 Defense of Marriage Act (DOMA). In the second of back-to-back gay marriage cases, the Supreme Court is turning to a constitutional challenge to the law that prevents legally married gay Americans from collecting federal benefits generally available to straight married couples. (AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster)

With the Capitol in the background, supporters of gay marriage carry signs in front of the Supreme Court in Washington, Wednesday, March 27, 2013, before the court heard arguments on the Defense of Marriage Act (DOMA). In the second of back-to-back gay marriage case, the Supreme Court is turning to a constitutional challenge to the law that prevents legally married gay Americans from collecting federal benefits generally available to straight married couples. (AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster)

A group from Alabama prays in front of the Supreme Court in Washington, Wednesday, March 27, 2013, before the court's hearing on the Defense of Marriage Act (DOMA). In the second of back-to-back gay marriage case, the Supreme Court is turning to a constitutional challenge to the law that prevents legally married gay Americans from collecting federal benefits generally available to straight married couples. (AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster)

From left, plaintiffs Sandy Stier, with her partner Kris Perry, and their twin sons Spencer Perry and Elliott Perry, all from Berkeley, Calif., meet with reporters outside the Supreme Court in Washington, Tuesday, March 26, 2013, after the court heard arguments on California's voter approved ban on same-sex marriage, Proposition 8. (AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais)

(AP) ? In the second of back-to-back gay marriage cases, the Supreme Court turned Wednesday to a constitutional challenge to the law that prevents legally married gay Americans from collecting federal benefits generally available to straight married couples.

A section of the 1996 Defense of Marriage Act says marriage may only be a relationship between a man and a woman for purposes of federal law, regardless of state laws that allow same-sex marriage.

Lower federal courts have struck down the measure, and now the justices, in nearly two hours of scheduled argument Wednesday, will consider whether to follow suit.

A somewhat smaller crowd gathered outside the court Wednesday, mainly gay marriage supporters who held American and rainbow flags. One man wore a rainbow flag as a cape. "Two, four, six, eight, we do not discriminate," a group chanted at one point. "If this isn't the time, when is the time? When does equality come into play?" asked Laura Scott, 43, of Columbia, Md.

The DOMA argument follows Tuesday's case over California's ban on same-sex marriage, a case in which the justices indicated they might avoid a major national ruling on whether America's gays and lesbians have a right to marry. Even without a significant ruling, the court appeared headed for a resolution that would mean the resumption of gay and lesbian weddings in California.

Marital status is relevant in more than 1,100 federal laws that include estate taxes, Social Security survivor benefits and health benefits for federal employees. Lawsuits around the country have led four federal district courts and two appeals courts to strike down the law's Section 3, which defines marriage. In 2011, the Obama administration abandoned its defense of the law but continues to enforce it. House Republicans are now defending DOMA in the courts.

Same-sex marriage is legal in nine states and the District of Columbia. The states are Connecticut, Iowa, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, New York, Vermont and Washington. It also was legal in California for less than five months in 2008.

The justices chose for their review the case of Edith Windsor, 83, of New York, who sued to challenge a $363,000 federal estate tax bill after her partner of 44 years died in 2009.

Windsor, who goes by Edie, married Thea Spyer in 2007 in Canada after doctors told them that Spyer would not live much longer. She suffered from multiple sclerosis for many years. Spyer left everything she had to Windsor.

There is no dispute that if Windsor had been married to a man, her estate tax bill would have been zero.

The U.S. 2nd Circuit Court of Appeals in New York agreed with a district judge that the provision of DOMA deprived Windsor of the constitutional guarantee of equal protection of the law.

Like the Proposition 8 case from California, Windsor's lawsuit could falter on a legal technicality without a definitive ruling from the high court.

The House Republicans, the Obama administration and a lawyer appointed by the court especially to argue the issue were to spend the first 50 minutes Wednesday discussing whether the House Republican leadership can defend the law in court because the administration decided not to, and whether the administration forfeited its right to participate in the case because it changed its position and now argues that the provision is unconstitutional.

If the Supreme Court finds that it does not have the authority to hear the case, Windsor probably would still get her refund because she won in the lower courts. But there would be no definitive decision about the law from the nation's highest court, and it would remain on the books.

On Tuesday, the justices weighed a fundamental issue: Does the Constitution require that people be allowed to marry whom they choose, regardless of either partner's gender? The fact that the question was in front of the Supreme Court at all was startling, given that no state recognized same-sex unions before 2003 and 40 states still don't allow them.

But it was clear from the start of the 80-minute argument in a packed courtroom that the justices, including some liberals who seemed open to gay marriage, had doubts about whether they should even be hearing the challenge to California's Proposition 8, the state's voter-approved gay marriage ban.

Justice Anthony Kennedy, the potentially decisive vote on a closely divided court, suggested the justices could dismiss the case with no ruling at all.

Such an outcome would almost certainly allow gay marriages to resume in California but would have no impact elsewhere.

There was no majority apparent for any particular outcome, and many doubts were expressed by justices about the arguments advanced by lawyers for the opponents of gay marriage in California, by the supporters and by the Obama administration, which is in favor of same-sex marriage rights. The administration's entry into the case followed President Barack Obama's declaration of support for gay marriage.

On the one hand, Kennedy acknowledged that same-sex unions had only become legal recently in some states, a point stressed repeatedly by Charles Cooper, the lawyer for the defenders of Proposition 8. Cooper said the court should uphold the ban as a valid expression of the people's will and let the vigorous political debate over gay marriage continue.

But Kennedy pressed him also to address the interests of the estimated 40,000 children in California who have same-sex parents.

"They want their parents to have full recognition and full status," Kennedy said. "The voice of those children is important in this case, don't you think?"

Yet when Theodore Olson, the lawyer for two same-sex couples, urged the court to support such marriage rights everywhere, Kennedy feared such a ruling would push the court into "uncharted waters." Olson said the court similarly ventured into the unknown in 1967 when it struck down bans on interracial marriage in 16 states.

Kennedy challenged the accuracy of that comment: He noted that other countries had had interracial marriages for hundreds of years.

The justice also made clear he did not like the rationale of the federal appeals court that struck down Proposition 8, even though it cited earlier opinions in favor of gay rights that Kennedy had written.

That appeals court ruling applied only to California, where same-sex couples briefly had the right to marry before the state's voters in November 2008 adopted Proposition 8, a constitutional amendment that defined marriage as the union of a man and a woman.

Reflecting the high interest in the cases, the court planned to release an audio recording of Wednesday's argument shortly after it concludes, just as it did Tuesday.

The Tuesday audio can be found at: http://tinyurl.com/dxefy2a .

___

Associated Press writer Jessica Gresko contributed to this report.

___

Follow Mark Sherman on Twitter at: www.twitter.com/shermancourt

Follow Jessica Gresko on Twitter at: www.twitter.com/jessicagresko

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2013-03-27-Supreme%20Court-Gay%20Marriage/id-3f7423360f364b45a45d834f8b1fd11b

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Spotify music streaming coming to LG home cinema gear : Tech Digest

lg-spotify-home-cinema.jpgLG are set to add Spotify music streaming to their connected home cinema systems.

Plenty of LG's web connected Blu-ray players and speaker systems from 2013 will be getting the new Spotfy app, set to launch in April. No word yet however on whether it will hit the company's Smart TV line up too.

The Spotify app joins BBC iPlayer, Netflix, LoveFilm and a host of other web services on the company's ever-growing smart platform.

Craig West, Head of Marketing, LG Consumer Electronics UK, said:

"LG's Smart platform provides unparalleled choice for consumers and the addition of Spotify demonstrates LG's continued commitment to growing the brand's Smart offering for consumers. We are confident that LG Smart media owners will enjoy these latest services, as well as the fantastic updates we have planned for the rest of the year."

"It's our mission to make all the world's music available instantly to everyone, everywhere, so we're delighted to partner with LG to make our music service available on their smart media devices", added Kate Opekar, Director, hardware business development at Spotify.

"Spotify wants to be at the heart of the home entertainment experience, so it's a natural fit to make our music service available on blu-ray players and home cinema systems."

The LG products set to get the Spotify update are the BH9430PW, BH7530TW, BH7430P, BH7130C, BH6730S, BH6430P, BH6230S, BP730, BP630 and the BP530R.

Those looking to use the Spotify app will need to be signed up for a premium account, which will set you back ?9.99 a month and offer unlimited mobile and desktop streaming of Spotify's music catalogue, as well as the ability to download albums as offline playlists.

Source: http://www.techdigest.tv/2013/03/spotify_music_s_1.html

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Sunday, March 24, 2013

This is the New Server (Balloon Juice)

Share With Friends: Share on FacebookTweet ThisPost to Google-BuzzSend on GmailPost to Linked-InSubscribe to This Feed | Rss To Twitter | Politics - Top Stories Stories, News Feeds and News via Feedzilla.

Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/294224998?client_source=feed&format=rss

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Russian businessman Berezovsky dies near London: long-time friend

LONDON (Reuters) - Former Russian oligarch Boris Berezovsky, a fierce critic of President Vladimir Putin, has been found dead at his home near London, a prominent Russian opposition figure said on Saturday. He was 67.

Berezovsky was a Moscow powerbroker under the late President Boris Yeltsin before falling out with Putin and fleeing to Britain in 2001.

"I can confirm he died in his home. I've known him for a long, long time, we have spent a lot of time together. I am shocked. It is the end of an epoch," Andrei Sidelnikov, who was a friend of Berezovsky's, told Reuters.

There were no immediate details about how or when Berezovsky died. Britain's Foreign Office and police had no immediate comment.

One of his London-based spokesmen said she was checking the reports of his death.

Berezovsky lost a high-profile court case against Chelsea Football Club owner Roman Abramovich in London last year after a $6 billion (3.9 billion pounds) legal battle related to the post-Soviet division of Russia's vast natural resources.

Berezovsky, who orchestrated the re-election of Boris Yeltsin in 1996 and played a role in Putin's rise to power, was granted political asylum in Britain in 2003.

(Reporting by Maria Golovnina and Peter Griffiths; Editing by Michael Roddy)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/kremlin-foe-boris-berezovsky-died-britain-reports-172616352.html

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Allied Nevada Gold Says Gold, Silver Production Meeting Expecations

Allied Nevada Gold Corp. (TSX:ANV, AMEX:ANV, NYSE:ANV) reported in their operational updates that production for gold and silver is on track through February 2013.

As quoted in the press release:

Through the first two months of the first quarter of 2013 we placed 6.6 million tons of ore on the leach pads at average grades of 0.010 ounces per ton gold and 0.091 ounces per ton silver, containing approximately 68,100 ounces of gold and approximately 600,300 ounces of silver, as per expectation. For the first two months of the quarter, approximately 27,000 ounces of gold and approximately 156,000 ounces of silver have been, or are available to be, sold.

To view the whole press release, click here.

Source: http://goldinvestingnews.com/33375/allied-nevada-gold-says-gold-silver-production-meeting-expecations.html

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Thursday, March 21, 2013

Beets: Beats Through Ages | Nelson the Adventurer

Don?t you just love beetroot roasted and steamed? Don?t forget its nutrient rich greens in salads. Beet is indeed gained back its popularity in the garden and in the kitchen. Would you believe that beets cultivation was way back second millennium BC somewhere in Mediterranean, spread to Babylonia and later to China? Yes, in fact, beets were important plant in ancient Greek and Romans. The Roman name for the beet plant was ?beta? while the Greeks referred to it as ?teutlion.? Beetroots are known for its red roots although they may also be yellow, pink, or stripped, creating a beautiful effect.

Scientific Name: Beta vulgaris (Amaranthaceae family)

Common name: Beet, beetroot or garden beet, table beet, garden beet, red beet

Common Varieties:
Red Beets, Golden Beets, Chioggia Beets (Striped Beets), Baby Beets

Plant Types: Annual, Biennial, Vegetable

Light: Full Sun

Special Features: Edible

Propagation: Seed

  • Direct sowing is recommended than transplanting due to root disturbance.

harvesting beetroot

  • Beets preferred loose, rich and well-drained soil with neutral pH. Plant them 2 inches apart in all directions.
  • Beets are heavy feeder. Fertilizer: Composted Yard Trimmings, Water Soluble Veggie Plant Food
  • Water regularly. During dry periods, water deeply and regularly.
  • Use mulch to keep of the weed growth and to enhance soil water retention.
  • Harvest beet greens when they?re 4-6 inches tall. Beet roots may be harvested at any time during their development, but roots larger than 1-2 inches in diameter may become woody. When harvesting beet roots, leave an inch of foliage on the beet top to prevent the root from??bleeding? during cooking. Store roots in the refrigerator at 40?F.
  • Pests: Aphids, leaf miners, flea beetles for the leaves and nematodes for the roots.
  • Beets contain small amounts of several vitamins and minerals. Beet greens are a good source of folate, calcium and Vitamin A.
  • Rich in flavonoids, folate, manganese, potassium (glycemic).

Borscht

  • Garden beet is very low in calories (provide only 45 kcal/100 g), and contain zero cholesterol and small amount of fat. Its nutrition benefits come particularly from fiber, vitamins, minerals, and unique plant derived anti-oxidants.
  • Fresh tubers contain small amounts of vitamin-C; however, its top greens are rather excellent sources of this vitamin. Additionally, the top greens are an excellent source of carotenoids, flavonoid anti-oxidants, and vitamin A; contain these compounds several times more than that of in the roots. Consumption of natural vegetables rich in flavonoids helps to protect from lung and oral cavity cancers.
  • The root is also rich source of B-complex vitamins such as niacin (B-3), pantothenic acid (B-5), pyridoxine (B-6) and minerals such as iron, manganese, copper, and magnesium.
  • Since the 16th century, beet juice has been used as a natural red dye, even used to dye hair!
  • In ancient times, the root part was not used for cooking but instead as a medicine for treating painful disorders at that time including headaches and toothaches.
  • The Romans considered beet juice to be an aphrodisiac.
  • Beets are sometimes used to make homemade wine.
  • Some people are susceptible to ?beeturia,? the passing of red colored urine and stools after eating beets. Beeturia is harmless but is often mistaken for the dangerous conditions of blood in the urine or stool.
  • Borscht is an Eastern European soup made from beets that has been an important winter staple in countries like Russia and Poland since the 14th century.
  • In Australia, pickled beets are commonly put on hamburgers.
  • The commercial cultivation of sugar beets began in the 19th century in France and Belgium. Sugar beets are about 20% sugar while beets or beetroot are usually no more than 10% sugar.

Beets is surely proves its worth ages back. This veggie surely deserves a spot in your garden, don?t you think so?

Beets (Better Homes And Gardens)

Vegetable Profiles: Beets (?Grow It Eat It)

25 Facts About Beets (Eat This! Health Diaries)

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Source: http://nelsontheadventurer.wordpress.com/2013/03/20/beets-beats-through-ages/

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Manager: Gaga recovering nicely after hip surgery

FILE - This Dec. 15, 2012 file photo shows singer Lady Gaga performing at the Prudential Center in Newark, N.J. Lady Gaga's manager said in an interview Tuesday, March 19, 2013, that the singer is ?doing wonderful, doing great,? after undergoing hip surgery. Gaga canceled her "Born This Way Ball" tour last month after she'd hurt herself while performing some time ago. (Photo by Evan Agostini/Invision/AP, file)

FILE - This Dec. 15, 2012 file photo shows singer Lady Gaga performing at the Prudential Center in Newark, N.J. Lady Gaga's manager said in an interview Tuesday, March 19, 2013, that the singer is ?doing wonderful, doing great,? after undergoing hip surgery. Gaga canceled her "Born This Way Ball" tour last month after she'd hurt herself while performing some time ago. (Photo by Evan Agostini/Invision/AP, file)

FILE - This Dec. 15, 2012 file photo shows singer Lady Gaga performing at the Prudential Center in Newark, N.J. Lady Gaga's manager said in an interview Tuesday, March 19, 2013, that the singer is ?doing wonderful, doing great,? after undergoing hip surgery. Gaga canceled her "Born This Way Ball" tour last month after she'd hurt herself while performing some time ago. (Photo by Evan Agostini/Invision/AP, file)

NEW YORK (AP) ? Lady Gaga's manager says the pop star is "doing unbelievable" a month after she had hip surgery that caused her to cancel her U.S. tour.

Vincent Herbert said in an interview Tuesday the 26-year-old Grammy winner is "doing wonderful, doing great."

Gaga, whose real name is Stefani Germanotta, canceled her "Born This Way Ball" tour last month. She'd hurt herself while performing some time ago.

Herbert says Gaga is finishing her new album, "ARTPOP," and is "ready to get back to work."

He calls the new album "very, very refreshing" and says the "Born This Way" singer continues to "push the envelope."

Herbert adds: "I can't wait for the world to hear her new music and see her come back healthy, strong and better than ever."

___

Online:

http://www.ladygaga.com/

___

Follow Mesfin Fekadu on Twitter at http://twitter.com/MusicMesfin

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/4e67281c3f754d0696fbfdee0f3f1469/Article_2013-03-20-US-People-Lady-Gaga/id-26e0e5ee35974bc8a5bd95241d38eeed

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Wednesday, March 20, 2013

Researchers create map of 'shortcuts' between all human genes

Tuesday, March 19, 2013

Some diseases are caused by single gene mutations. Current techniques for identifying the disease-causing gene in a patient produce hundreds of potential gene candidates, making it difficult for scientists to pinpoint the single causative gene. Now, a team of researchers led by Rockefeller University scientists have created a map of gene "shortcuts" to simplify the hunt for disease-causing genes.

The investigation, spearheaded by Yuval Itan, a postdoctoral fellow in the St. Giles Laboratory of Human Genetics of Infectious Diseases, has led to the creation of what he calls the human gene connectome, the full set of distances, routes (the genes on the way), and degrees of separation, between any two human genes. Itan, a computational biologist, says the computer program he developed to generate the connectome uses the same principles that GPS navigation devices use to plan a trip between two locations. The research is reported in the online early edition of the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

"High throughput genome sequencing technologies generate a plethora of data, which can take months to search through," says Itan. "We believe the human gene connectome will provide a shortcut in the search for disease-causing mutations in monogenic diseases."

Itan and his colleagues, including researchers from the Necker Hospital for Sick Children, the Pasteur Institute in Paris, and Ben-Gurion University in Israel, designed applications for the use of the human gene connectome. They began with a gene called TLR3, which is important for resistance to herpes simplex encephalitis, a life-threatening infection from the herpes virus that can cause significant brain damage in genetically susceptible children. Researchers in the St. Giles lab, headed by Jean-Laurent Casanova, previously showed that children with HSE have mutations in TLR3 or in genes that are closely functionally related to TLR3. In other words, these genes are located at a short biological distance from TLR3. As a result, novel herpes simplex encephalitis-causing genes are also expected to have a short biological distance from TLR3.

To test how well the human gene connectome could predict a disease-causing gene, the researchers sequenced exomes ? all DNA of the genome that is coding for proteins ? of two patients recently shown to carry mutations of a separate gene, TBK1.

"Each patient's exome contained hundreds of genes with potentially morbid mutations," says Itan. "The challenge was to detect the single disease-causing gene." After sorting the genes by their predicted biological proximity to TLR3, Itan and his colleagues found TBK1 at the top of the list of genes in both patients. The researchers also used the TLR3 connectome ? the set of all human genes sorted by their predicted distance from TLR3 ? to successfully predict two other genes, EFGR and SRC, as part of the TLR3 pathway before they were experimentally validated, and applied other gene connectomes to detect Ehlers-Danlos syndrome and sensorineural hearing loss disease causing genes.

"The human gene connectome is, to the best of our knowledge, the only currently available prediction of the specific route and distance between any two human genes of interest, making it ideal to solve the needle in the haystack problem of detecting the single disease causing gene in a large set of potentially fatal genes," says Itan. "This can now be performed by prioritizing any number of genes by their biological distance from genes that are already known to cause the disease.

"Approaches based on the human gene connectome have the potential to significantly increase the discovery of disease-causing genes for diseases that are genetically understood in some patients as well as for those that are not well studied. The human gene connectome should also progress the general field of human genetics by predicting the nature of unknown genetic mechanisms."

###

Rockefeller University: http://www.rockefeller.edu

Thanks to Rockefeller University for this article.

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Source: http://www.labspaces.net/127355/Researchers_create_map_of__shortcuts__between_all_human_genes

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Fixing the Worst Law in Technology: Aaron Swartz and the ...

On the opening day of this year?s South by Southwest festival, in Austin, an audience gathered in a giant conference hall to remember the life and tragic suicide of Aaron Swartz. Tim Berners-Lee, the inventor of the World Wide Web, spoke of Swartz?s curious and restless mind. Swartz?s girlfriend Taren Stinebrickner-Kauffman described him as a man who was constantly asking whether what he was doing was the most important thing that he could be doing. The proceedings were yet another reminder that Swartz?s suicide was heartbreaking beyond belief, and that something must be done about the law that he was aggressively prosecuted under, the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act.

As if to underline the point, last Thursday, federal prosecutors indicted that Matthew Keys, a social-media editor at Reuters, under the same law for helping with an online prank. Keys helped hackers vandalize a news story on the Web, messing with the contents of the article and changing a headline to read ?PRESSURE BUILDS IN HOUSE TO ELECT CHIPPY 1337??which was an inside joke. The damage was trivial, yet he is threatened with two hundred and fifty thousand dollars in damages and up to twenty-five years in prison.

These prosecutions have brought a rare moment of public attention to the breadth and severity of this law. Congress could change the law, but everyone knows that waiting for congressional action nowadays is a fool?s game. The Obama Administration can, and should, set things right by changing its enforcement policy. And if the Justice Department declines to act, President Obama, as the ultimate enforcer of the law, should step in and set things right.

The Computer Fraud and Abuse Act is the most outrageous criminal law you?ve never heard of. It bans ?unauthorized access? of computers, but no one really knows what those words mean. Orin Kerr, a former Justice Department attorney and a leading scholar on computer-crime law, argues persuasively that the law is so open-ended and broad as to be unconstitutionally vague. Over the years, the punishments for breaking the law have grown increasingly severe?it can now put people in prison for decades for actions that cause no real economic or physical harm. It is, in short, a nightmare for a country that calls itself free.

It wasn?t always this way. The act was born, in 1984, as a narrow statute enacted for the reasonable goal of combating malicious hackers: people who break into computer systems and steal valuable data (like credit-card numbers) or do real economic damage. But it is in the nature of law to mutate and expand beyond the original justification. Over the years, Congress expanded the statute five times, adding private rights of action and making misdemeanors into felonies. Both private litigants and the Justice Department began to use the law against not only hackers but also otherwise legitimate users who violate the ?terms of service? policies that come with nearly ever piece of software and service we use on computers today.

What are terms of service? Remember the last time you signed up for a Web site and clicked through several pages of fine print? Yep, that was it. Chances are, you didn?t read it, and didn?t think that it might be a federal felony to violate the provisions that it contained. The Justice Department has repeatedly taken the position that such violations are felonies. In the prominent cyberbullying case Lori v. Drew, a federal prosecutor asserted that violating MySpace?s terms of service would be a federal felony. Similarly, the indictment threatening Aaron Swartz with thirty-five years in prison depended, in part, on a terms-of-service violation: when Swartz tried to download thousands of academic articles, he did so as an authorized guest user of the M.I.T. network. He didn?t actually ?hack? or ?break? into the network; he violated the terms of service for guests by downloading too much stuff.

The broadest provision, 18 U.S.C. ?1030(a)(2)(c), makes it a crime to ?exceed authorized access, and thereby obtain? information from any protected computer.? To the Justice Department, ?exceeding authorized access? includes violating terms of service, and ?any protected computer? includes just about any Web site or computer. The resulting breadth of criminality is staggering. As Professor Kerr writes, it ?potentially regulates every use of every computer in the United States and even many millions of computers abroad.? You don?t have to be a raving libertarian to think that might be a problem. Dating sites, to borrow an example from Judge Alex Kozinski, usually mandate that you tell the truth, making lying about your age and weight technically a crime. Or consider employer restrictions on computers that ban personal usage, like checking ESPN or online shopping. The Justice Department?s interpretation makes the American desk-worker a felon.

When judges or academics say that it is wrong to interpret a law in such a way that everyone is a felon, the Justice Department has usually replied by saying, roughly, that federal prosecutors don?t bother with minor cases?they only go after the really bad guys. That has always been a lame excuse?repulsive to anyone who takes seriously the idea of a ?a government of laws, not men.? After Aaron Swartz?s suicide, the era of trusting prosecutors with unlimited power in this area should officially be over.

What can be done? Congresswoman Zoe Lofgren has drafted a bill that attempts to curtail the act?s sprawling breadth. But even in the best of times, Congress rarely scales back criminal laws?and we have the do-nothingest Congress in history. The problem is compounded by industry resistance. At a recent White House meeting, Oracle and other companies made clear their suspicion of Lofgren?s bill. Big data firms prefer the law just the way it is, and why wouldn?t they? If you?re a prosecutor or a firm with lots of data, the law is just about perfect. It?s just too bad for the rest of us.

The Lofgren bill is a worthy effort, but betting on this Congress to pass a law that is opposed by industry and that diminishes prosecutorial authority is to bet on the political version of an inside straight. The memory of Swartz?s suicide will fade, and we will be left with the sword of Damocles dangling. There needs to be a better way.

There is a much more immediate and effective remedy: the Justice Department should announce a change in its criminal-enforcement policy. It should no longer consider terms-of-service violations to be criminal. It can join more than a dozen federal judges and scholars, like Kerr, who adopt a reasonable and more limited interpretation. The Obama Administration?s policy will have no effect on civil litigation, so firms like Oracle will retain their civil remedies. President Obama?s DREAM Act enforcement policy, under which the Administration does not deport certain illegal immigrants despite Congress?s inability to make the act a law, should be the model. Where Congress is unlikely to solve a problem, the Administration should take care of business itself.

All the Administration needs to do is to rely on the ancient common-law principle called the ?rule of lenity.? This states that ambiguous criminal laws should be construed in favor of a defendant. As the Supreme Court puts it, ?When choice has to be made between two readings of what conduct Congress has made a crime, it is appropriate, before we choose the harsher alternative, to require that Congress should have spoken in language that is clear and definite.? So far, at least thirteen federal judges have rejected the Justice Department?s interpretation of the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act. If that?s not a sign that the law is unclear and should be interpreted with lenity, I don?t know what is.

If neither the Justice Department nor the Attorney General will budge, it falls to the President, who bears ultimate public responsibly for law enforcement, to do what is right. The Computer Fraud and Abuse Act is egregiously overbroad in a way that has clearly imposed on the rights and liberties of Americans. With just one speech, the President can set things right.

Photograph by Fred Benenson/Wikimedia Commons.

Source: http://www.newyorker.com/online/blogs/newsdesk/2013/03/fixing-the-worst-law-in-technology-aaron-swartz-and-the-computer-fraud-and-abuse-act.html

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Tuesday, March 19, 2013

'Premium' is subjective for YouTube's big networks

NEW YORK ? Machinima, the sprawling digital gaming network, could hang a McDonald?s-like sign outside its Los Angeles headquarters: More than 37.4 billion videos served.

That?s how many views the Machinima network has generated. And it all started with one video.

Allen DeBevoise and his brother, Philip, acquired Machinima Inc. in 2005, but didn?t start developing it on the then-nascent YouTube until 2007. One of its first series came from a user named ?SodaGod.? The series, ?Inside Halo,? served as a center for enthusiasm for the popular science fiction video game franchise. Six years later, Machinima has grown into one of the most successful networks on YouTube, a gamer hub composed of a little expensively-produced original programming, and a whole lot of user-generated videos.

While the land rush to stream ?premium? original content is drawing an increasing number of video professionals to the Web, YouTube?s swelling multi-channel networks are finding success ? and enormous scale ? with a more organic, bottom-up approach.

?The programming model of the future, where I think Machinima plays in, is in connecting that whole relationship, where we don?t think of it as either being user-generated or as being traditionally made by a professional creator,? says DeBevoise, chief executive of Machinima. ?We think it?s a continuum and they both co-exist in the same world.?

Machinima, Maker Studios, Fullscreen and others have assembled broad networks each encompassing thousands of YouTube creators. They?re dependably ranked among the most-viewed destinations on YouTube in comScore?s monthly online video rankings. In February, Fullscreen drew 36.8 million unique viewers, 30.5 million tuned into Maker, and Machinima, with a leading 61.4 minutes per visit, had 21 million viewers. Each network averages around 2 billion views a month.

You could say that they?re like the NBC, CBS and ABC of YouTube, but the more appropriate comparison might be to media parent companies. Only rather than having a few dozen cable networks under their global umbrella, they have 5,000 to 10,000 YouTube channels.

?We see ourselves as kind of the next-gen Viacom,? says George Strompolos, founder and chief executive of Fullscreen, a company with 150 employees founded in 2011. ?We think we?re at the beginning of the opportunity to build a large-scale, sustainable new media business on the Internet.?

Much of the conversation about online video has lately been dominated by Hollywood digital productions. But for every ?House of Cards? on Netflix, there are dozens of less noteworthy attempts to bring television-style content to online video. These upper-echelon YouTube networks are interested in high-quality programming, too, but their model is more of a hybrid that places pricier productions atop a pyramid of user-generated videos.

?We feel like ?premium? is so subjective,? says Danny Zappin, chief executive and co-founder of Maker Studios, which uses two production studios and 300-plus employees to assist YouTubers in production and marketing. ?What is premium? For us, we feel like it?s an engaged audience who has a personal connection to the person they?re watching. To us, that?s more premium or more valuable than, say, high production value or a mainstream celebrity. You can?t have just one or the other. You?ve got to have both to really work on YouTube.?

Maker, Machinima and Fullscreen operate in different ways, but they and a growing number of YouTube networks all take the philosophy that there?s strength in numbers. By gathering thousands of channels together, all ? at least theoretically ? benefit from shared production tools, greater exposure and ultimately, hopefully larger advertising dollars.

?The difficult thing about YouTube and producing content for YouTube is when it?s just for one channel, it?s hard to reach a level of scale of viewership to make economic sense,? says Zappin.

The most-watched network on YouTube is VEVO, the music video venture from Sony Music and Universal Music. In many ways, VEVO filled the gap for a music video network left by MTV?s programming shift toward reality television. Last week, VEVO made that comparison explicit by launching VEVO TV, a 24/7 broadcast stream of videos that effectively makes it a TV station sent through Internet and mobile phone pipes.

Machinima similarly benefits from television?s oversight: With no competitors on TV, it?s the most powerful gaming network around, and a major draw for 18- to 34-year-old males.

Premium episodic series (the $10 million five-part series ?Halo 4: Forward Unto Dawn? was watched 26 million times in just over a month last year) are pooled in its Machinima Prime channel. Thousands of channels from gamers around the world contribute to the network, aiming to benefit from the network traffic and potentially rise in Machinima?s ranks.

DeBevoise expects to soon make one or more of Machinima?s channels paid for by subscription. It recently signed a deal with Ridley Scott, director of ?Blade Runner? and ?Gladiator,? to produce a dozen short sci-fi films.

DeBevoise believes the YouTube networks will mature rapidly ?just because of how technology is moving so quickly.?

?The Makers, the Fullscreens, the Machinimas, the VEVOs, the StyleHauls, the DanceONs, all these types of companies that are evolving on YouTube ? will evolve into people?s consciousness much faster than anybody expected,? he says.

Whereas specific genres or audiences are targeted by networks like Machinima, StyleHaul (fashion), DanceON (dance) and AwesomenessTV (tweens), networks like Maker Studios, Fullscreen and Big Frame more broadly aggregate YouTube creators. Founded in 2009 by early YouTubers Zappin and Lisa Donovan who thought it best to share resources, Maker Studios raised $36 million in financing led by Time Warner in December.

Google Inc.? YouTube doesn?t officially endorse any multi-channel network, or MCN, though Google is an investor in Machinima. It cautions creators to consider the benefits and financial arrangements before signing a contract with a network. Some squabbles over contracts have occasionally spilled onto YouTube, like when celebrity YouTuber Ray William Johnson last year acrimoniously parted ways with Maker Studios. (Machinima, Maker and Fullscreen declined to share revenue information.)

?The emergence of networks is a sign of a maturing ecosystem and we see a lot of variety in terms of the services each provide, from rights management to production support to marketing to collaboration,? Alex Carloss, head of entertainment partnerships for YouTube, said in an e-mail. ?More resources in the market is good for creators and YouTube overall.?

The biggest networks of YouTube may not have big-name talent, but they nevertheless have big-time reach.

?These are animators, they?re filmmakers, they?re musicians, they?re video gamers, they?re moms who make videos, they?re young, they?re old,? says Strompolos, who worked in partner development at YouTube before founding Fullscreen. ?There?s high quality, there?s medium quality, and there?s low quality.?

Source: http://www.azcentral.com/business/consumer/free/20130318premium-subjective-youtubes-big-networks.html

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Cyprus parliament delays vote on deposit levy to Monday

By Michele Kambas

NICOSIA (Reuters) - Cyprus's parliament has postponed until Monday an emergency session to vote on a levy on bank deposits after signs that lawmakers might block the surprise move agreed in Brussels to help fund a bailout and avert national bankruptcy.

In a radical departure from previous aid packages, euro zone finance ministers want Cyprus savers to forfeit up to 9.9 percent of their deposits in return for a 10 billion euro ($13 billion) bailout to the island, which has been financially crippled by its exposure to neighboring Greece.

The decision, announced on Saturday morning, stunned Cypriots and caused a run on cashpoints, most of which were depleted within hours. Electronic transfers were stopped.

The move to take a percentage of deposits, which could raise almost 6 billion euros, must be ratified by parliament, where no party has a majority. If it fails to do so, President Nicos Anastasiades has warned, Cyprus's two largest banks will collapse.

One bank, the Cyprus Popular Bank, could have its emergency liquidity assistance (ELA) funding from the European Central Bank cut by March 21.

A default in Cyprus would threaten to unravel investor confidence in the euro zone that has been fostered by the European Central Bank's promise last year to do whatever it takes to shore up the currency bloc.

A meeting of parliament scheduled for 10.00 a.m. ET on Sunday was postponed for a day to give more time for consultations and broker a deal, political sources said. The levy was scheduled to come into force on Tuesday, after a bank holiday on Monday.

BREAKS A TABOO

Making bank depositors bear some of the costs of a bailout had been taboo in Europe, but euro zone officials said it was the only way to salvage Cyprus's financial sector, which is around eight times the size of the economy.

European officials said it would not set a precedent.

In Spain, one of four other states getting euro zone help and seen as a possible candidate for a sovereign rescue, officials were quick to say Cyprus was a unique case. A Bank of Spain spokesman said there had been no sign of deposit flight.

The crisis is unprecedented in the history of the Mediterranean island, which suffered a war and ethnic split in 1974 in which a quarter of its population was internally displaced.

Anastasiades, elected only three weeks ago, said he had no choice but to accept the euro zone's aid terms.

"We would either choose the catastrophic scenario of disorderly bankruptcy or the scenario of a painful but controlled management of the crisis," Anastasiades said in a statement.

With a gross domestic product of barely 0.2 percent of the bloc's overall output, Cyprus applied for financial aid last June, but negotiations were stalled by the complexity of the deal and reluctance of the island's previous president to sign.

International Monetary Fund Managing Director Christine Lagarde, who attended the meeting, said she backed the deal and would ask the IMF board in Washington to contribute to the bailout.

RUSSIANS, EUROPEANS

The proposed levies on deposits are 9.9 percent for those exceeding 100,000 euros and 6.7 percent on anything below that.

They would be compensated with shares in the banks. A political source told Reuters that, as a sweetener, Anastasiades would offer depositors equity returns, guaranteed by future natural gas revenues.

"Half of the value of the haircut will be guaranteed by natural gas proceeds," the source told Reuters.

Cyprus is expecting the results of an offshore appraisal drilling this year to confirm the island is sitting on vast amounts of natural gas worth billions.

Those affected will include rich Russians with deposits in Cyprus and Europeans who have retired to the island, as well as Cypriots themselves.

"I'm furious," said Chris Drake, a former Middle East correspondent for the BBC who lives in Cyprus. "There were plenty of opportunities to take our money out; we didn't because we were promised it was a red line which would not be crossed."

"I've lost several thousand," he told Reuters.

British finance minister George Osborne told the BBC on Sunday that Britain would compensate its about 3,500 military personnel based in Cyprus.

Anastasiades's right-wing Democratic Rally party, with 20 seats in the 56-member parliament, needs the support of other factions for the vote to pass. It was unclear whether even his coalition partners, the Democratic Party, would fully support the levy.

Cyprus's Communist party AKEL, accused of stalling on a bailout during its tenure in power until the end of February, was likely to vote against the measure. The socialist Edek party called EU demands "absurd".

"This is unacceptably unfair and we are against it," said Adonis Yiangou of the Greens Party, the smallest in parliament but a potential swing vote.

Many Cypriots, having contributed to bailouts for Ireland, Portugal and Greece - Greece's second bailout contributed to a debt restructuring that blew the 4.5 billion euro hole in Cyprus's banking sector - are aghast at Europe's treatment.

Cyprus received a "stab in the back" by its EU partners, the daily Phileleftheros said.

But it and another newspapers highlighted the danger of plunging the banking system into further turmoil if lawmakers sat on the fence.

"Even if the final agreement is wrong, if this is not approved by parliament the damage will be even greater," Politis economics editor Demetris Georgiades said in an editorial.

($1 = 0.7654 euros)

(Editing by Sonya Hepinstall and Will Waterman)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/cyprus-parliament-postpones-session-discuss-bank-levy-084016362--business.html

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Dry weather in Ivory Coast dashes hopes for bumper cocoa harvest

By Ange Aboa

SAN PEDRO (Reuters) - Ivory Coast is unlikely to harvest a bumper cocoa crop this year as dry and hot weather hampers the development of the upcoming mid-crop in the world's biggest producer, farmers and exporters said on Friday.

Output from the current October-to-March main crop was down around 6 percent by March 10 compared to the same period last season, according to exporters' port arrivals estimates. Traders had been expecting a large harvest from the mid-crop, which opens April 1 and runs through September, to help offset the deficit.

May cocoa future on ICE was down $13, or 0.6 percent, at $2,117 a tonne, after recovering from a nine-month low of $2,034 on March 7 largely on optimism for the West African light crop harvest.

But many of the flowers and small pods that will become the pods harvested in the early stages of mid-crop were killed by extremely hot and dry conditions during the dry season that is now ending, exporters said.

"People have been talking about 450,000 to 500,000 tonnes for the mid-crop, but I don't believe it, simply because we're not seeing it on the trees," said the director of an Abidjan-based export firm.

"We should hit 350,000 or even 400,000, which is Ivory Coast's normal (mid-crop) production level, but I don't see it above that," he said.

Though the last two seasons have seen harvests of 1.51 million and 1.47 million tonnes, Ivorian cocoa output over the past decade has averaged around 1.3 million tonnes, with around 350,000 tonnes coming from the mid-crop.

Other exporters and pod counters contacted by Reuters also projected output for the April-to-September mid-crop at around 350,000 tonnes if current weather conditions hold, with estimates rising above 400,000 with improved rainfall.

"I don't yet see the record season we were expecting for the mid-crop. The rains arrived late, and the heat killed lots of flowers and cherelles," said Ben Sylla, a cocoa merchant based in the western town of Duekoue.

LATE FLOWERING

The marketing season for the mid-crop opens on April 1, but growers are predicting a late start to harvesting.

A Reuters reporter who visited the Ivory Coast's principal growing regions saw that crops had yet to attain the level of development typically seen at this stage in the season.

While trees on plantations in most regions were flowering and cherelles were visible on many trees, mid-sized pods were largely absent, an indication that the mid-crop peak will likely not be reached before late July or early August, a month later than normal.

Cocoa flowers require around 22 weeks to develop into ripe pods.

The main cocoa producing regions of Daloa, Vavoua, Bouafle and San Pedro, all exhibited an abundant setting of flowers and cherelles, according to the Reuters reporter. Total seasonal output in Daloa and Vavoua averages around 250,000 to 280,000 tonnes.

"We can't really talk much about the harvest yet," said Adou Kouadio, who farms 4 hectares in Meagui, around 50 km (32 miles) north of San Pedro.

"We'll need to wait until May or June to see what pods we have on the trees to have a real idea. It's not yet clear. The flowers could still fall off if we don't get good rains," he said.

The western region of Duekoue, with seasonal output averaging 250,000 tonnes, and the southwestern region of Soubre, which produces 300,000 to 320,000 tonnes, showed more advanced mid-crop development and some mid-sized pods were visible.

"There are some pods that we will harvest at the end of April, but not many, just a few," said Augustin Koffie, who works five hectares of cocoa in Fengolo, about 5 km (3 miles) north of Duekoue.

"It will be in July and August that we will see more, because it's only now that the flowers and cherelles are coming out," he said.

Exporters said a lack of plantation maintenance could also impact production, particularly on older plantations in the country's east where ageing trees are less resistant to harsh weather and disease.

Seasonal output from Abengourou and Aboisso, the two principal eastern growing regions, averages between 125,000 and 150,000 tonnes.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/dry-weather-ivory-coast-dashes-hopes-bumper-cocoa-113124851--finance.html

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Monday, March 18, 2013

In Twitter era, pope not a social media maven

Twitter

5 hours ago

Pope Francis speaks during a meeting with the media at the Pope VI hall, at the Vatican, Saturday, March 16, 2013. Pope Francis offered intimate insig...

AP

Pope Francis speaks during a meeting with the media at the Pope VI hall, at the Vatican, Saturday, March 16, 2013.

BUENOS AIRES, Argentina ? Pope Francis has 1.2 billion followers in the Roman Catholic Church, but he's not following a single one of them on Facebook or Twitter.

In a fast-paced, globalized world in which billions send emails, share photos on smartphones and get their instant news online, the newly elected pope still uses a typewriter for work. On his time off, he follows the games of his favorite soccer club on the radio.

Yet, even though he's not busy chatting, poking and commenting online, the pope recognizes the importance of technology in today's world.

As a cardinal, Francis had a Facebook account, although he didn't manage it himself, and he blessed the creation of a virtual parish where many could join in prayer online.

"The cardinal didn't understand any of that but I explained it to him. I showed him the computer screen ... he looked at the site and authorized us to pray to the Holy One, online," said Guillermo Marco, the pope's former spokesman.

"He's a man who likes to listen," Marco said. "As cardinal, many would ask to get an audience with him. They'd talk for 45 minutes straight and he'd stay quiet. Then, he'd say three phrases. In modern terms you could say that he's very Twitter-like."

Francis seems likely to follow the Vatican's social media strategy to help with missionary outreach. In a 2012 interview with veteran Italian Vatican journalist Andrea Tornielli, then-Cardinal Jorge Mario Bergoglio said the church in Argentina knew well that digital outreach was necessary to reach the faithful.

"We try to make contact with families that don't come to church. Rather than being a church that welcomes and receives, we try to be a church that goes outside to men and women who don't come to us, who don't know us or are indifferent to us," he said.

Organizing masses in public squares is part of that, but there's more.

"We also try to reach those farther away by digital means, using the Web and brief (text) messages," he said.

Pope Benedict XVI joined the Twittersphere late last year tweeting from a personal account along with the world's celebrities, leaders and ordinary folk. Many were expecting Francis to take over his Twitter handle, but few knew that he wasn't tech savvy.

Even if he takes the account, it is unlikely that Francis himself will type his punchy one-liners about reaching out to the poor and ending corruption into 140-character bites. The 85-year-old Benedict, who didn't carry a cellphone and wrote longhand, left that job to one of his aides.

Associated Press writers Luis Andres Henao in Buenos Aires, Argentina, and Nicole Winfield at Vatican City contributed to this report.

? 2013 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Source: http://www.today.com/tech/twitter-era-new-pope-not-social-media-maven-1C8907810

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