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Fox & Friends lash out at News of the World critics

Sun, 2011-07-17 17:36
People keep accusing Fox of running a blackout on the bad news befalling Rupert Murdoch's news empire. Not true! In fact, it just had on a PR man, Bob Dilenschneider, to explain how News of the World is the real victim, subjected to an inexplicable "piling on" by its enemies. Bob: The NOTW is a hacking scandal, it can't be denied. But the real issue is, why are so many people piling on at this point? We know it's a hacking scandal, shouldn't we get beyond it and deal with the issue of hacking? Citicorp has been hacked into, Bank of America has been hacked into, American Express has been hacked into, insurance companies have been hacked into, we've got a serious hacking problem in this country, and the government's obviously been hacked into, 24,000 files. So we've got to figure out a way to deal with this hacking problem. Host: The company has come forward to say that it happened a long time ago, at a tabloid, in London, someone did something really bad and the company reacted. They closed the newspaper, all those people got fired, even though 99 percent of them didn't do anything. Bob: And if I'm not mistaken. Murdoch, who owns it, has apologized, but for some reason, the public and the media going over this, again and again. Host: The piling on! Bob: It's a little bit too much. The bigger issue is really hacking and how we as the public going to protect our privacy and deal with it. I would also say, by the way, Citigroup, great bank. Bank of America, great bank. Are they getting the same attention for hacking that took place less than a year ago, that News Corp is getting today. [They recap other news; China, martians, debt default, etc.] Host: ... We're teetering on default, and what to they do? They're talking about this. Bob: ... and we're dealing with something that happened in London over a decade ago. I don't quite understand it. Indeed not. But I'm happy to explain it to you, Bob. Murdoch's newspaper, the News of the World, was the perpetrator in its hacking scandal, whereas the Pentagon and the banks were victims in theirs. Whereas the Pentagon hack is claimed to be an example of state-sponsored espionage conducted by foreign spies, the News of the World's hack was a simple caller ID spoofing trick used to listen in on a murdered child's voicemail messages; one among countless similar events so exploited. Though we all use the term "hacking" broadly, punching in a default PIN number isn't quite the same thing as the skills required to hack into banks and governments. You can't pretend these are the same class of problem, unless you're happy being ignorant of the crisis management issues on which you are being presented as an expert. Also, it's about more than "someone who did something really bad", and it did not end "over a decade ago." These are the specific lies, told to investigators, that have now ensnared Murdoch executives. The discovery that these claims are untrue is why the scandal flared up again! It's why three former editors of the newspaper (forgive me if I have lost count) have been arrested. Fox's smarmy whitewashing of its sister company's escapades will get a lot of flack, but Bob also embodies an approach to PR that's failed Murdoch so spectacularly these last few weeks: "All the right things have been done from a crisis point of view," he says, so immaculately clueless that you have to wonder if Murdoch's fall, such as it is, was precipitated by spending too much time in rooms full of Bobs. Video Link [Newshounds] More evidence about News Corp. on News Corp. [Washington Post via The Atlantic]

Categories: Odds 'n' Endz

Rebekah Brooks arrested

Sun, 2011-07-17 14:58
Rebekah Brooks, fresh from resigning as chief executive of News International, was arrested today and remains in police custody. The BBC's news editor described it as an "extraordinary development," but also points out that this may make her unavailable to attend her scheduled public grilling in parliament. How about that.

Categories: Odds 'n' Endz

1970s NASA video about colonizing space

Sun, 2011-07-17 12:59
[Video Link] More from the Ames Research Center's mid-1970s gathering of artists and academics, tasked with designing space colonies able to accomodate 10,000 people. Scientific optimism wears tinted shades indoors. [SpaceRip via Metafilter] Previously: Totally awesome space colonies

Categories: Odds 'n' Endz

The problem with RIM

Sun, 2011-07-17 02:45
I was drawn to Forbes' article about BlackBerry maker RIM by author Eric Jackson's use of the phrase "When I speak to Research In Motion (RIMM) Bulls, they tell me...", which places it in the category of cryptozoology. But this quote, from RIM co-CEO Jim Balsillie, is what remains: He was asked about the recent letters from employees that have appeared in the press, complaining about all the problems with the company that have led to the current low stock price - 80% below its 5 year high. He growled: "Nobody ever wrote us letters saying thank you for the first $20 billion in revenue." Balsillie to anyone who has invested in his company since 2007: "Go fuck yourself."

Categories: Odds 'n' Endz

Obama meets with Dalai Lama: US "does not support independence for Tibet"

Sat, 2011-07-16 21:32

President Barack Obama meets with His Holiness the XIV Dalai Lama in the Map Room of the White House, Saturday, July 16, 2011. (Official White House Photo by Pete Souza)

China strenuously objected to US President Barack Obama's private meeting today with the Tibetan spiritual and political leader, saying any dialogue with the Dalai Lama "damaged the Sino-American relations."

China has little to worry about, it seems: the White House issued a statement in which Obama stressed the U.S. policy that "Tibet is a part of the People's Republic of China and the United States does not support independence for Tibet." But the Dalai Lama himself does not propose "independence," per se, which makes the president's statement seem all the more like an attempt to placate China.

In a statement released after the 45-minute meeting, White House spokesman Jay Carney said Obama also "underscored the importance of the protection of human rights of Tibetans in China," and "commended the Dalai Lama's commitment to nonviolence and dialogue with China."

More at CNN, Reuters here, here's a New York Times piece, and here is the Xinhua item.



Categories: Odds 'n' Endz

Dubstep mime

Sat, 2011-07-16 21:27

[Video Link]. A lot more where that came from: here's the guy's channel, esoterradubstep. The music is Big Boss, by Doctor P.

(thanks, Tara McGinley)

Categories: Odds 'n' Endz

Ethan Nadelmann responds to DEA claim that marijuana has no accepted medical use

Sat, 2011-07-16 21:21

[Video Link] Tony Papa of the Drug Policy Alliance says: "Ethan Nadelmann, executive director of the Drug Policy Alliance, responds to the recent decree by the Drug Enforcement Agency (DEA) that marijuana has no accepted medical use. The decision by the DEA comes almost nine years after medical marijuana supporters asked the government to reclassify cannabis to take into account a growing body of research that shows its effectiveness in treating certain diseases. For more on this subject please go the July 14 LA Times piece titled 'Medical marijuana: A science-free zone at the White House' by DPA's Bill Piper and Stephen Gutwillig.

LA Times: Medical marijuana: A science-free zone at the White House

Categories: Odds 'n' Endz

Muslim hate crime victim asks TX court to spare life of white supremacist who shot him

Sat, 2011-07-16 21:21
Rais Bhuiyan, a devout Muslim who emigrated from Bangladesh to the United States, is one of the victims of a white supremacist who went on a "9/11 revenge" killing spree and murdered two people, one of whom was Hindu.

At left, Mr. Bhuiyan after he was shot.

CNN has more. Mark Anthony Stroman shot all of his victims while they were working at gas stations and convenience stores in Dallas, Texas. Unless there is an intervention, the still-unrepentant killer will be put to death by the state of Texas on July 20.

But Bhuiyan believes that the man who shot him should not be killed, and has created the worldwithouthate.org project to urge Texas to spare his life.

From Bhuiyan's website:

It was Friday 12:30pm, September 21, 2001. A man with a gun entered the gas station where I was working. He asked me, "Where are you from?"

The question seemed strange to ask during a robbery, which certainly this was -- the man wore a bandana, sunglasses and a baseball cap, and aimed the gun directly at my face as I stood over the gas station register. "Excuse me?" I asked. As soon as I spoke I felt the sensation of a million bees stinging my face, and then heard an explosion. Images of my mother, my father, my siblings and my fiancé appeared before my eyes, and then, a graveyard. I didn't know if I were still alive. I looked down at the floor and saw blood pouring like an open faucet from the side of my head. Frantically, I placed both hands on my face, thinking I had to keep my brains from spilling out. I heard myself screaming, "Mom!" The gunman was still standing there. I thought, "If I don't pretend I'm dead, he'll shoot me again." NPR had an earlier story here. Bhuiyan wrote an op-ed in the Dallas Morning News, here. The paper's editor wrote more here. Related item at ACLU.org here.

Categories: Odds 'n' Endz

Bazooka conversion for fireworks artillery rounds

Sat, 2011-07-16 21:10

[Video Link] These folks did an attractive bazooka conversion for fireworks artillery rounds using PVC and parts made on a 3D printer. You can download the 3D models at Thingiverse.

Categories: Odds 'n' Endz

Prince Charles with his margarine tub ukuele

Sat, 2011-07-16 20:54

Prince Charles looks badass wielding this margarine tub ukulele. (Via Ukulelia)

REUTERS/Andrew Lloyd

Categories: Odds 'n' Endz

TED2012 Fellowship Applications

Sat, 2011-07-16 20:05

"The search is on for the next class of TED Fellows. The Fellows program is looking for 20 outstanding multidisciplinary innovators from around the world – techies, entrepreneurs, artists, scientists, bloggers, filmmakers, musicians, activists,  and more. "

I've met a lot of TED fellows from around the world, and they are always doing incredibly interesting work.

Apply for the TED Fellows Program through July 25, 2011

Categories: Odds 'n' Endz

Adam Savage reviews The Practical Pyromaniac

Sat, 2011-07-16 19:50
Adam Savage reviewed William Gurstelle's fun-with-flammables book, The Practical Pyromaniac: Build Fire Tornadoes, One-Candlepower Engines, Great Balls of Fire, and More Incendiary Devices , for The Wall Street Journal. I have proof that we are not so far advanced as we would like to imagine, we humans. We may drive to work in hybrid, air-conditioned cars, eat hydroponically grown tomatoes on our salad and have the ability to instantly listen to any song in the history of music, but we are not as far from the roving bands on the veldt as we hope. My evidence: fire.

You need only see humans' reactions to fire, in every form, to comprehend its import to us on a cellular level. Somewhere deep in our amygdalas we know how powerful our mastery over this primal force is, and how much that mastery separates us from all other living things. Children are especially connected to this fascination. I see my boys (12-year-old twins) playing with dinner candles just as I did at their age, with the same rapt fascination. I tell them to stop, just like my parents did—it's in the rulebook.

Read an excerpt from The Practical Pyromaniac.

Adam Savage: Young Men and Fire

Categories: Odds 'n' Endz

Summertime Caturday

Sat, 2011-07-16 19:50

* Actually, all week has been a cavalcade of animated GIFs over on Google+. Follow me if you're into this sort of thing.

Categories: Odds 'n' Endz

A geek's journal, 1976

Sat, 2011-07-16 14:00
"What if there had been blogs in 1976? I would most definitely have had one and this might well have been it. This blog is based on my actual journal kept in 1976."

Categories: Odds 'n' Endz

Brooklyn Buzzers (photo, Boing Boing Flickr Pool)

Fri, 2011-07-15 22:24

(Image: EEM01-13, a Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial (2.0) image contributed to the BB Flickr Pool from macdawg's photostream)

Categories: Odds 'n' Endz

China: artist Ai Weiwei detained in tiny cell under harsh conditions

Fri, 2011-07-15 22:21

The sister of artist and dissident Ai Weiwei says that during his time in jail, Ai was not tortured and received food and his medications regularly. But he was kept in a tiny cell, 6 cell tiles wide in either direction, and under conditions that amounted to psychological pressure. When he paced inside that tiny cell, she said, he was followed by two guards, who accompanied him everywhere, all the time. From a Washington Post interview: "The room light was on 24 hours every day," she said. "The only furniture in the room was a bed. Except for the bed, there was nothing else in the room, no chair, no desk. They didn't offer Ai anything-- no book, no newspaper, no TV, no radio, not even a piece of paper or a pen."

Gao said the two guards watched him constantly, never speaking; the officers changed shifts every three hours.

"They stared at him without ever moving their eyes," she said, adding that they stood close by even while he used the toilet. "And when he took a shower, they just stood right next to him, even though they were getting totally wet.

"Can you imagine the feeling of having four eyes always on you, no matter what you do?" Gao said. "If you lie down and go to sleep, they just stand at the side of the bed and look at you without a blink of the eye. When he had a walk in the room, they also followed him. These measures were designed to destroy people's minds," she said.More here.



Categories: Odds 'n' Endz

Naked body scanners are just fine, no "constitutional arguments," court rules

Fri, 2011-07-15 19:00
David Kravetz in Wired News: "A federal appeals court on Friday unanimously declined to block the government from using airport body scanners across airports nationwide, saying it is 'not persuaded by any of the statutory or constitutional arguments' against them."

Categories: Odds 'n' Endz

Man calls police to report pot theft

Fri, 2011-07-15 18:52
Max Fleck, 20, of Chicago, Illinois, called police to report that three men robbed him of two pounds of marijuana. The police arrived, found more drugs, and arrested Fleck. According to investigators, Fleck had invited one of the three men to his home and instead all three came. The five spent about an hour at the apartment before one of the men punched Fleck and broke a bottle over his companion's head...

When officers and paramedics arrived Fleck declined medical attention. As the officers spoke to him about the robbery, they saw various other drugs "in plain view." "Man reports drug robbery to cops, gets arrested"

 



Categories: Odds 'n' Endz