Monday, October 31, 2011

South Sudan rebels threaten Warrap state, call for evacuation (Reuters)

JUBA (Reuters) ? A rebel group in South Sudan threatened on Saturday to attack Warrap state to bring down the local government and called on the United Nations and residents to leave within three days.

The South Sudan Liberation Army, one of several rebel groups in South Sudan, said it would turn its attention to the state after earlier attacking Mayom town in neighboring oil-producing Unity state, also on the border on Sudan.

"Within few days, the people of Warrap will be liberated from abject poverty, corruption and abuse of human rights," it said in a statement.

"We would also advise the civilians to evacuate all towns and move to villages in order to be safe," it said.

The United Nations mainly runs humanitarian operations for food deliveries and aid to local people and Southern Sudanese coming from the north.

South Sudan became independent in July after a 2005 peace deal with Khartoum that ended decades of civil war, but the new nation has been struggling to end tribal and rebel violence that has killed around 3,000 people this year.

Rebel and tribal violence undermine stability in South Sudan struggling to build up state institutions. Several rebel militias are fighting government forces in remote parts of the country, which is roughly the size of France.

Officials in South Sudan said earlier on Saturday the SSLA had killed 15 people, including nine soldiers, and wounded 18 when attacking Mayom in the morning.

"We got attacked in Mayom town today by the militias from 6 to 7 a.m. The militia attacked the town, killed 15 and wounded 18," Unity state Information Minister Gideon Gatpan Thoar said. "More than 60 militiamen were killed."

Army spokesman Philip Aguer said: "It was indiscriminate, they didn't differentiate between civilians and the army. The killing included a doctor."

Aguer said Mayom was now under army control but the SSLA rejected that, adding in its statement: "Within four hours, SSLA forces also managed to capture Tomor town and they are now advancing toward Bentiu town."

(Reporting by Hereward Holland; Writing by Ulf Laessing; Editing by)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/africa/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111029/wl_nm/us_sudan_south

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Sunday, October 30, 2011

Siri port now talking to Apple servers, avoiding Cydia


A little cajoling from a clever developer got Siri talking to the iPhone 4 and the iPad, but Apple's tight-lipped servers kept the conversation effectively one-sided. The last-gen port was still missing something, and developer Steven Troughton-Smith knew where to find it: a jailbroken iPhone 4S. In an interview with 9to5mac, Troughton-Smith said that getting Siri to talk to Cupertino's data servers only took ten minutes after he had all of the pieces in place. Ready for your personal assistant port? Hold the phone, the process is a bit dodgy -- our hacking hero said that getting Siri on the older device is a 20-step process, and it requires files from the iPhone 4S that he says aren't his to distribute. When asked about distributing the hack over Cydia, Troughton-Smith said it was something he couldn't be a part of. On Twitter he suggested that a release would "anger the hive," but promised to post detailed notes on the hack after a iPhone 4S jailbreak drops.

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Siri port now talking to Apple servers, avoiding Cydia originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 30 Oct 2011 03:34:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/aMnvEqQ61Dw/

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Americans stay put amid economic downturn

Yet another symptom of the economic downturn: Americans aren't moving.

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Young adults are staying put, often with their parents. Older people aren't able to retire to beachfront or lakeside homes.

U.S. mobility is at its lowest point since World War II.

New information from the Census Bureau highlights the continuing impact of the housing bust and unemployment on U.S. migration, after earlier signs that mobility was back on the upswing. It's a shift from America's long-standing cultural image of ever-changing frontiers, dating to the westward migration of the 1800s and more recently in the spreading out of whites, blacks and Hispanics in the Sun Belt's housing boom.

Rather than housing magnets such as Arizona, Florida and Nevada, it is now more traditional, densely populated states ? California, Illinois, Massachusetts, New York and New Jersey ? that are showing some of the biggest population gains in the recent economic slump, according to the data released Thursday.

Residents have been largely locked in place. Families are stuck in devalued homes and young adults are living with parents or staying put in the towns where they went to college.

"The fact that mobility is crashing is something that I think is quite devastating," said Richard Florida, an American urban theorist and professor at the University of Toronto's Rotman School of Management. He described America's residential movement as an important element of its economic resilience and history, from development of the nation's farmland in the Midwest to its coastal ports and homesteading in the West.

"The latest decline shows we are in a long-run economic reset and that we never really recovered ? we've just been stagnating along," Florida said.

About 11.6 percent of the nation's population, or 35.1 million, moved to a new home in the past year, down from 12.5 percent in the previous year. The current level of low mobility comes after the recession technically ended in mid-2009, beating a previous low of 11.9 percent in 2008.

It is the lowest in the 60-plus years that the Census Bureau has tracked information on moves, dating to 1948.

The share of people moving has been declining for decades, due in part to increases in two-income families that are more tied down by jobs and to an aging population that is less mobile. The peak for U.S. mobility came in 1951, when it hit 21.2 percent. The rate had leveled off at around 13 percent before falling off notably in 2008 during the recession.

Among young adults 25 to 29, the most mobile age group, moves fell to 24.1 percent from 25.9 percent in the previous year.

Longer-distance moves, typically for those seeking new careers in other regions of the country, remained largely flat at 3.4 percent.

The biggest drop-off occurred in local moves, down to 15.4 percent from 17.7 percent in 2010. It's a sign that young adults in the prolonged slump weren't even willing to venture outside their counties, continuing instead to live with relatives or on college campuses.

People most often cite a desire to live in a new home as the main reason for moving, as well as reasons of family or economy such as marriage or a new job. But analysts say with many young adults delaying marriage while struggling to find employment and aging baby boomers expressing financial worries about retirement, the current mobility freeze could continue for several more years.

An Associated Press-LifeGoesStrong.com poll this month found that more than half of baby boomers born between 1946 and 1964 say they are unlikely to move somewhere new in retirement; about 4 in 10 say they are very likely to stay in their current home throughout all of their retirement.

The annual growth of retirement-destination counties, typically in Sun Belt states such as Florida, Arizona and New Mexico, has fallen sharply since the recession that began in late 2007. It's down nearly half compared with the period 2000-2007, according to recent census data.

In all, the mid-decade housing boom and subsequent bust took a toll on virtually all age and race groups.

Homeownership declined in 47 states and the District of Columbia while the national ownership rate fell by its largest amount since the 1930s. Hispanics who moved and purchased homes in new destinations in the Southeast were hit especially hard, with bigger drops in average income and increases in poverty after low-wage construction jobs dried up in states such as South Carolina, North Carolina, Alabama, Kentucky and Tennessee.

In contrast, middle-class blacks from the North who migrated to Southern states such as Georgia, Florida and Texas fared better, maintaining higher incomes than African-Americans who remained in declining industrial centers such as Michigan and Ohio.

Other bright spots in the housing bust included urban, high-tech college meccas that are proving to be a draw for young, college-educated adults of all races and ethnicities.

The data covering 2008-2010 show that Raleigh, N.C.; the Texas cities of Austin, San Antonio and Houston; Denver; Pittsburgh; and Baltimore and Washington, D.C., had some of the biggest gains in residents. All of them tend to promise specialized tech jobs and hip lifestyles.

William H. Frey, a Brookings Institution demographer who reviewed the education and race data, said many of these cities will continue to attract new residents after the economy fully recovers. He said other cities must seek ways to diversify their industries, draw new investment and build partnerships with local universities to attract young talent, much like Pittsburgh has been striving to do after the collapse of its steel industry.

"Right now, the 'cool' cities are serving as way stations for the small number of adventurous young people who are willing to move in a down economy. But when the broader economy picks up, a much larger group of people will move to wherever the jobs spring up," Frey said, noting that people are staying put for now because they have to, not because they want to.

"We are now just in a lull, albeit a hyperextended one," he said.

Other findings:

?Texas posted increases in average income across all race groups even after the housing bust. The District of Columbia had the biggest overall gain in average income between 2005-2007 and 2008-2010 time periods, increasing 9 percent to nearly $60,000. Thirty-six states had declines.

?The district, New York, Connecticut, Louisiana, Mississippi, Texas, Alabama and California have levels of income inequality that rise above the national average. Broken down by large metropolitan areas, New York City, Miami, Los Angeles, Houston, Memphis, Tenn., New Orleans, San Francisco, and Birmingham, Ala., each had wider-than-average gaps between rich and poor.

?Across smaller areas of geography, Fountainhead-Orchard Hills, Md., just north of Hagerstown, had the greatest measured income inequality. Country Knolls, N.Y., near Albany, registered the least.

?Suburban and rural homeowners were more likely to stay put than others. Some 93.5 percent of the suburban and 93.7 percent of the rural population in owner-occupied units are residing in the same house as one year ago, up from the 2005-2007 time period, according to Kenneth Johnson, senior demographer at the University of New Hampshire.

?Renters were more mobile: Overall, 68.8 percent lived in the same rental unit one year ago.

John R. Logan, a sociology professor at Brown University, described consequences for mostly minorities should U.S. mobility stay frozen for extended periods. His research on neighborhood segregation has found that the average black or Hispanic household earning over $75,000 lives in a poorer neighborhood than the average white resident earning under $40,000.

"Being locked into place has its most severe effects on blacks and Hispanics, who are often segregated into disadvantaged neighborhoods regardless of their own incomes," he said. "Many middle-class homeowners in these neighborhoods have lost home equity, making it harder to move to communities with better schools and safer streets. Even the slow decline in black-white segregation that we've seen in the last 20 years will be hard to maintain under these conditions."

The census findings were based on the Current Population Survey as of March 2011, as well as comparisons of the 2005-2007 and the 2008-2010 American Community Survey to provide a snapshot of every U.S. community with at least 20,000 residents. Figures on income inequality come from a census analysis of survey data from 2005-2009.

___

Online:

www.census.gov

Copyright 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/45064895/ns/us_news-life/

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Saturday, October 29, 2011

Contracts to buy homes fell 4.6 percent in Sept.

(AP) ? The number of Americans who signed contracts to buy homes fell for the third straight month in September after the spring-and-summer peak buying season failed to entice new buyers.

The National Association of Realtors said Wednesday that its index of sales agreements fell 4.6 percent last month to a reading of 84.5.

A reading of 100 is considered healthy. The last time the index reached that high was in April 2010, the final month that buyers could qualify for a federal tax credit that has since expired.

Contract signings are usually a reliable indicator of where the housing market is headed. There's typically a one- to two-month lag between a contract and a completed deal.

But the Realtors group said a growing number of buyers have canceled contracts after appraisals showed that the homes were worth less than the buyers had bid. A sale isn't final until a mortgage is closed. That means more "pending" sales aren't turning into final sales.

"It is especially troubling given the big August decline in long-term interest rates," said Pierre Ellis, an analyst at Decision Economics.

Homes are the most affordable they've been in decades. Long-term mortgage rates are hovering at record lows near 4 percent. Prices in some metro areas have been cut in half. Still, sales in most areas remain weak.

In part, that's because loans are harder to get. Many lenders are requiring 20 percent down payments and strong credit scores to qualify.

Sales for previously occupied homes are on pace to match last year's 4.91 million sold, the fewest since 1997. In a healthy economy, Americans would buy roughly 6 million homes each year.

In September, sales of new homes rose after four straight monthly declines. But that was largely because builders had cut their prices in the face of depressed demand. This year is shaping up as the worst for new-home sales on records dating to 1963.

The number of people who signed home contracts had risen in both May and June before falling 7 percent over the past three months.

Contract signings fell across the U.S. September's index fell 2.1 percent in the West, 4.7 percent in the Northeast, 5.5 percent in the South and 6.2 percent in the Midwest.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/f70471f764144b2fab526d39972d37b3/Article_2011-10-27-Pending%20Home%20Sales/id-c1e338d7452d4aaebee3c1a4691f4fe8

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Yeast model connects Alzheimer's disease risk and amyloid beta toxicity

Thursday, October 27, 2011
Using yeast cells, a team of Whitehead scientists in the lab of Whitehead Member Susan Lindquist investigated the harmful effects of amyloid beta (A?), a peptide whose accumulation in amyloid plaques is a hallmark of AD. Work by the lab indicates that A? disrupts normal cellular trafficking, with clathrin-mediated endocytosis being specifically vulnerable. Under normal conditions, the membrane bound receptor Ste3 (green) is subject to clathrin-mediated endocytosis and is trafficked to the cell?s vacuole (left). In A? expressing yeast cells, Ste3 is not localized to the vacuole, but is dispersed in foci throughout the cell, indicating that endocytic trafficking is perturbed (center). Expression of the yeast homolog of PICALM, one of the most highly validated human AD risk factors, restores normal trafficking in A?-expressing yeast, and Ste3 is again localized in the vacuole (right). Credit: Courtesy of Science/AAAS

In a development that sheds new light on the pathology of Alzheimer's disease (AD), a team of Whitehead Institute scientists has identified connections between genetic risk factors for the disease and the effects of a peptide toxic to nerve cells in the brains of AD patients.

The scientists, working in and in collaboration with the lab of Whitehead Member Susan Lindquist, established these previously unknown links in an unexpected way. They used a very simple cell type?yeast cells?to investigate the harmful effects of amyloid beta (A?), a peptide whose accumulation in amyloid plaques is a hallmark of AD. This new yeast model of A? toxicity, which they further validated in the worm C. elegans and in rat neurons, enables researchers to identify and test potential genetic modifiers of this toxicity.

"As we tackle other diseases and extend our lifetimes, Alzheimer's and related diseases will be the most devastating personal challenge for our families and one the most crushing burdens on our economy," says Lindquist, who is also a professor of biology at Massachusetts Institute of Technology and an investigator of the Howard Hughes Medical Institute. "We have to try new approaches and find out-of the-box solutions."

In a multi-step process, the researchers were able to introduce the form of A? most closely associated with AD into yeast in a manner that mimics its presence in human cells. The resulting toxicity in yeast reflects aspects of the mechanism by which this protein damages neurons. This became clear when a screen of the yeast genome for genes that affect A? toxicity identified a dozen genes that have clear human homologs, including several that have previously been linked to AD risk by genome-wide association studies (GWAS) but with no known mechanistic connection.

With these genetic candidates in hand, the team set out to answer two key questions: Would the genes identified in yeast actually affect A? toxicity in neurons? And if so, how?

To address the first issue, in a collaboration with Guy Caldwell's lab at the University of Alabama, researchers created lines of C. elegans worms expressing the toxic form of A? specifically in a subset of neurons particularly vulnerable in AD. This resulted in an age-dependent loss of these neurons. Introducing the genes identified in the yeast that suppressed A? toxicity into the worms counteracted this toxicity. One of these modifiers is the homolog of PICALM, one of the most highly validated human AD risk factors. To address whether PICALM could also suppress A? toxicity in mammalian neurons, the group exposed cultured rat neurons to toxic A? species. Expressing PICALM in these neurons increased their survival.

The question of how these AD risk genes were actually impacting A? toxicity in neurons remained. The researchers had noted that many of the genes were associated with a key cellular protein-trafficking process known as endocytosis. This is the pathway that nerve cells use to move around the vital signaling molecules with which they connect circuits in the brain. They theorized that perhaps A? was doing its damage by disrupting this process. Returning to yeast, they discovered that, in fact, the trafficking of signaling molecules in yeast was adversely affected by A?. Here again, introducing genes identified as suppressors of A? toxicity helped restore proper functioning.

Much remains to be learned, but the work provides a new and promising avenue to explore the mechanisms of genes identified in studies of disease susceptibility.

"We now have the sequencing power to detect all these important disease risk alleles, but that doesn't tell us what they're actually doing, how they lead to disease," says Sebastian Treusch, a former graduate student in the Lindquist lab and now a postdoctoral research associate at Princeton University.

Jessica Goodman, a postdoctoral fellow in the Lindquist lab, says the yeast model provides a link between genetic data and efforts to understand AD from the biochemical and neurological perspectives.

"Our yeast model bridges the gap between these two fields," Goodman adds. "It enables us to figure out the mechanisms of these risk factors which were previously unknown."

Members of the Lindquist lab intend to fully exploit the yeast model, using it to identify novel AD risk genes, perhaps in a first step to determining if identified genes have mutations in AD patient samples. The work will undoubtedly take the lab into uncharted territory.

###

Whitehead Institute for Biomedical Research: http://www.wi.mit.edu/index.html

Thanks to Whitehead Institute for Biomedical Research for this article.

This press release was posted to serve as a topic for discussion. Please comment below. We try our best to only post press releases that are associated with peer reviewed scientific literature. Critical discussions of the research are appreciated. If you need help finding a link to the original article, please contact us on twitter or via e-mail.

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Source: http://www.labspaces.net/114701/Yeast_model_connects_Alzheimer_s_disease_risk_and_amyloid_beta_toxicity

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Friday, October 28, 2011

89% The Lion King (In 3D)

All Critics (95) | Top Critics (15) | Fresh (95) | Rotten (10) | DVD (53)

The story line is a Joseph Campbell hero-quest so stripped down to its basics as to become dull.

A computer-animated scene featuring a stampede of wildebeest is positively breathtaking.

The Lion King, more than any of the recent wave of Disney animated features, has the resonance to stand not just as a terrific cartoon but as an emotionally pungent movie.

The result is a step toward multiculturalism and ecological correctness, though not without a certain amount of confusion.

A crown jewel of modern Disney animation.

More so than the exuberant movie miracles that came before it, this latest animated juggernaut has the feeling of a clever, predictable product.

It's not hard to understand why The Lion King's good-vs.-evil adventure and high-spirited comic passages haven't lost their appeal. [Blu-ray]

It's an attractive film but altogether less interesting and more conventional than the Pixar productions that now dominate Disney's animated output.

"Hakuna Matata" would mean never having to be subjected to The Lion King ever again, much less having Simba's growing pains coming at your face in 3D.

It does exactly what it says on the tin.

Feel the love tonight. And see the colours, too.

The 3D technology adds some eye-popping moments but the best thing about this reissue is the chance for a new generation to see a modern classic on a cinema screen.

There are no gimmicks and the big emotional moments are almost entirely untouched.

However crass Disney's motivation may have been in rereleasing the film... it's cheering to see that... people still want to see great movies on a big screen with big sound...

Well worth another look, though it's a pity they're saving the newly made bloopers for the upcoming Blu-ray.

It didn't really need the 3D, but it's still a stunning, glorious family film, with the third dimension or otherwise.

While the core ideology behind The Lion King is extremely problematic and stands out even more today than it did in 1994, there is still much to admire about the film.

It's a wonderful treat to revisit and the 3-D is beautifully utilised, but it's perhaps not the classic that Disney purports it to be.

Art History stands out as one of Joe Swanberg's most visually and conceptually accomplished experiments.

Is the 3D version superior to the 2D version? No. Is the film still magnificent? Yes.

While "The Lion King" is one of the best Disney movies of all time, "The Lion King 3D" is a manipulative exploitation to bring paying parents back with their kids merely through the sexiness of today's 3D fad.

More Critic Reviews

Source: http://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/the_lion_king/

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Thursday, October 27, 2011

Fashion Face-Off: Stacy Keibler vs. Julianne Hough


Warning: the following Fashion Face-Off may cause your computer screen to fog up.

Both Stacy Keibler and Julianne Hough walked the red carpet of last night's Hollywood Film Awards held at The Beverly Hilton hotel in Beverly Hills, California and, somehow, the path under these hotties' feet did not catch on fire.

Keibler was on hand as George Clooney's date, while Hough was there to represent her remake of Footloose. Both looked gorgeous. But only one could look the MOST gorgeous. Vote that individual now:

Source: http://www.thehollywoodgossip.com/2011/10/fashion-face-off-stacy-keibler-vs-julianne-hough/

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US setting up online embassy to reach Iranians (AP)

WASHINGTON ? The Obama administration is setting up an Internet-based embassy to reach out to Iranians hoping to broaden their understanding of the United States.

Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton says the "virtual embassy in Tehran" will be online by the end of the year.

She told the BBC's Persian-language service Wednesday the site will aim to answer questions on traveling and studying in the U.S.

Clinton said she wants to increase student visas for Iranians hoping to study at American schools.

The U.S. hasn't had an embassy in Iran since breaking off diplomatic relations shortly after the 1979 Islamic Revolution. Iran, likewise, has no embassy in Washington.

Clinton said reaching out to Iranians made sense because U.S. efforts to reach out to the government haven't been successful.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/internet/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111026/ap_on_go_ca_st_pe/us_us_iran

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Wednesday, October 26, 2011

Cellphones are dangerous / not dangerous: Danish study tilts toward the latter

Chalk one up for the chatterboxes. In a study spanning 18 years and more than 350,000 test subjects, researchers in Denmark have found no connection between cellphone usage and brain cancer. The landmark project, carried out by Denmark's Institute of Cancer Epidemiology, was published online last week in the British Medical Journal, and is just the latest in a series of similarly optimistic studies. Of the 358,403 cellphone owners examined, only 356 were found to have a brain tumor, while 856 were diagnosed with cancer of the central nervous system -- percentages that are comparable to those seen among non-mobile users. Even among long-term cellphone owners (13 years or more), incidence rates were not significantly higher than those observed among the general population. Hazel Nunn, head of evidence and health information at Cancer Research UK, described the study as "the strongest evidence yet that using a mobile phone does not seem to increase the risk of cancers of the brain or central nervous system in adults." The study's authors, however, acknowledge some shortcomings in their work, including the exclusion of "corporate subscriptions" -- people who use their mobile devices for work, and who probably use them more heavily than the average consumer. They also recognized the need for longer-term research and for more child-specific studies. You can check out the article in full, at the coverage link below.

Cellphones are dangerous / not dangerous: Danish study tilts toward the latter originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 25 Oct 2011 06:20:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Source: http://www.engadget.com/2011/10/25/cellphones-are-dangerous-not-dangerous-danish-study-tilts-tow/

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Tuesday, October 25, 2011

New NY trial for scientist in Iran embargo case (AP)

NEW YORK ? A federal appeals court on Monday ordered a new trial for an Ivy League-educated scientist, tossing out his conviction for violating the Iran trade embargo and finding he deserves a second chance to show he wasn't part of an unlicensed money transfer business.

The ruling by the 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Manhattan came too late to spare Mahmoud Reza Banki from serving most of a 2 1/2-year sentence imposed for his conviction in June 2010. The court upheld two false-statement charges against Banki, but the charges most likely would have brought a sentence of less than six months in prison.

The appeals court ruling brought a measure of redemption for Banki, whose lawyers argued at trial that he had the "state of mind of an innocent man" as he patiently submitted to repeated interviews by federal officials investigating his money transfers over an eight-year period.

Banki, 35, was born in the Iranian capital, Tehran, but has been a U.S. citizen since 1996. The appeals court said it threw out his conviction for violating the Iran trade embargo ? which was initiated in 1995 and prohibits U.S. citizens from supplying goods, services or technology to Iran or its government ? because the law clearly states that family remittances are exempt and the law is confusing at best on the subject.

The court ordered a new trial on charges accusing Banki of participating in an illegal money transfer business known as a hawala, which relies on wire transfers, couriers and overnight mail. The case drew fresh attention to hawalas and the dangers they may pose to the United States.

Defense lawyers had argued that Banki only knew he was receiving money from relatives in Iran. The government said Banki, who had worked for a management consulting firm, McKinsey & Co., had about $3.4 million deposited in his bank account. Prosecutors said he bought a $2.4 million Manhattan condominium and made payments on his credit card with much of the money.

Lawyer Kathleen M. Sullivan, who argued the appeal on Banki's behalf, said the ruling was a "major vindication" for her client, who she said had never run a hawala or any other banking business.

"We think it's also a major vindication of the rule of law as applied to transactions on which the Iranian-American community depends," she said.

Sullivan said the case against Banki was the first prosecution in the country of a person for violating the Iran trade embargo when he or she did not run a business.

Banki attended Purdue University and the University of California at Berkeley before getting a doctorate in chemical engineering from Princeton University. One of the sentencing letters written on his behalf came from 2003 Nobel Peace Prize recipient Shirin Ebadi.

At sentencing, defense attorney Baruch Weiss requested leniency, saying Banki wanted to return to his dream of finding ways to finance stem cell research so replacement organs such as kidneys could be produced without the need for donors.

Weiss said Monday he hadn't spoken yet with Banki, who's housed at a federal camp in California.

"This is good news from the appeals court and vindicates the defense position from the outset that this case should never have been brought," Weiss said. "In the long term, he's got to put his life back together. He's extraordinarily accomplished, and I have no doubt that ... he'll ultimately be a terrific success in life."

A hearing has been scheduled for Nov. 9, when defense lawyers will request that Banki be released on bail.

A spokeswoman for prosecutors, Jerika Richardson, declined to comment.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/iran/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111024/ap_on_re_us/us_iran_trade_arrest

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Clinton Campaigns for Obama-Biden (TIME)

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, RSS and RSS Feed via Feedzilla.

Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/152196744?client_source=feed&format=rss

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Monday, October 24, 2011

No bones about it: The McRib is back

By The Associated Press

David Paul Morris / Getty Images

A McRib is seen at a McDonald's restaurant. The sandwich with a cult-like following is about to make a comeback.

?

The McRib, the elusive sandwich that has inspired a cult-like following, is back.

McDonald's Corp. plans to announce Monday that the boneless barbecue pork sandwich that is not always available in stores will be sold at all U.S. locations through Nov. 14.

It's usually up to local franchises to determine when and if they want to sell the McRib, except in Germany, the only place where it's available perennially. But McDonald's said the response was so great last November when it made the McRib available nationally for about three weeks ? the first time it had done so since 1994 ? that it decided to bring it back this year. The company declined to give specific sales numbers.

The sandwich, which is dressed with onions, pickle slices and barbecue sauce, was introduced nationally in 1982. With 500 calories and 26 grams of fat, it's slightly trimmer than the Big Mac, which has 540 calories and 29 grams of fat. And just like the Big Mac, the McRib has become a popular McDonald's offering.

There are Facebook groups like "Bring Back the McRib!!!" There are Twitter tags, where posts range from "Lucky me, the McRib is back" to "If you eat McRibs, you need to re-evaluate what it is you actually want in life." There's even the McRib Locator, a website where true believers can report McRib sightings, and even truer believers can take a road trip when one shows up within driving distance.

If the McRib is so popular, why not just offer it all the time? McDonald's likes to stoke the enthusiasm with an aura of transience.

"Bringing it back every so often adds to the excitement," said Marta Fearon, McDonald's U.S. marketing director, who added that she's not sure if the McRib will reappear in stores every fall.

And how can it be called a McRib if it doesn't have any bones? Said Fearon: "That gives it this quirky sense of humor.".

Source: http://bottomline.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2011/10/24/8464427-no-bones-about-it-the-mcrib-is-back

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Markets take Europe's debt plan delay in stride (AP)

LONDON ? Markets appeared to be not overtly concerned that Europe will not be able to come up with a comprehensive plan to deal with its crippling debt crisis in time for a weekend summit.

Europe's main stock markets all opened higher Friday despite confirmation that Germany and France will not be able to bridge their differences in time for a summit Sunday, forcing them to call a second meeting, by Wednesday at the latest.

Sunday's summit was supposed to deliver a comprehensive plan to finally get a grip on the currency union's debt troubles by detailing new financing for debt-ridden Greece. It also was supposed to produce plans to make Europe's banks fit to sustain worsening market turbulence and further empower the eurozone bailout fund.

It seems that Europe's two biggest economies are at loggerheads over how to make best use of the bailout fund, the so-called Euroepan Financial Stability Facility, or EFSF. While France is proposing to turn into a bank, which would have access to unlimited credit from the European Central Bank, Germany appears reluctant to sanction such a move .

"Considering the importance of the discussions and there potential impact upon the European economy, global capital markets and the future of the EU itself a delay of a few days is neither here nor there in the overall scheme of things," said Gary Jenkins, an analyst at Evolution Securities. "However the suggestions that they are still far apart on how to make best use of the EFSF is of some concern."

What to do about the EFSF doesn't seem to be the only point of contention.

Germany and several other rich countries have been pushing for banks and other private investors to take steeper losses on their Greek bondholdings, before the eurozone can sign off on a second multibillion euro rescue package for the struggling country.

France and the European Central Bank have so far opposed forcing banks to write off more Greek debt, fearing that would destabilize the banking sector and worsen market turmoil.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/eurobiz/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111021/ap_on_bi_ge/eu_europe_financial_crisis

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Sunday, October 23, 2011

Pentagon chief on first trip to Asia

FILE - Defense Secretary Leon Panetta testifies on Capitol Hill in Washington, in this Oct. 13, 2011 file photo, before the House Armed Services Committee. Panetta departs Friday Oct. 21, 2011 and stops first in Bali, Indonesia, to attend a meeting Sunday of defense ministers from the 10-member Association of Southeast Asian Nations. (AP Photo/Cliff Owen, File)

FILE - Defense Secretary Leon Panetta testifies on Capitol Hill in Washington, in this Oct. 13, 2011 file photo, before the House Armed Services Committee. Panetta departs Friday Oct. 21, 2011 and stops first in Bali, Indonesia, to attend a meeting Sunday of defense ministers from the 10-member Association of Southeast Asian Nations. (AP Photo/Cliff Owen, File)

(AP) ? On his first trip to Asia as defense secretary, Leon Panetta intends to stress a U.S. commitment to strengthening ties with key allies and partner countries while keeping a wary eye on China's military buildup.

Panetta was embarking Friday on a weeklong tour, with stops in Indonesia, Japan and Korea. In addition to meetings with government officials, he planned to hold town hall-style sessions with U.S. troops in Japan and Korea, where land, air and naval bases form the core of the U.S. military presence in Asia.

Panetta's trip comes amid a broad effort by the Obama administration to shift more of its national security focus toward Asia. Now that the Iraq war is ending and the administration has set 2014 as the target date for completing its combat mission in Afghanistan, the White House wants to attend more closely to relationships and rivalries in the Asia-Pacific region, where fears of China are on the rise.

President Barack Obama himself plans to visit Bali in November to attend an East Asia summit meeting, following a visit to Australia. He also will host a meeting of Asia-Pacific leaders in Hawaii in November.

In Indonesia, the first stop of his Asia tour, Panetta planned to attend a meeting of defense ministers of the 10-member Association of Southeast Asian Nations. The talks will be held on Bali, the resort island where a terrorist bombing in 2002 killed 202 people, many of them foreign tourists.

Indonesia, a predominantly Muslim nation, has been hit by a string of terrorist attacks since then.

Last year, the United States resumed cooperation with Indonesia's special forces more than a decade after ties were severed over alleged human rights abuses by members of the special forces, known as Kopassus. Panetta on his visit is expected to discuss prospects for further increasing cooperation.

Washington severed all ties with the Indonesian military in 1999 after troops rampaged through East Timor when it voted to secede from Indonesia. The U.S. lifted that overall ban in 2005 but kept its restrictions against the Kopassus.

International rights groups have said members of Kopassus were linked to the disappearance of student activists in 1997 and 1998 and were never held accountable.

In Tokyo, Panetta planned to meet with senior Japanese government officials to discuss a range of defense issues, including a long-stalled plan to move Marine Corps Air Station Futenma on the southern Japanese island of Okinawa to a less-crowded area of the island. Okinawan opposition to even a more dispersed Marine presence has prevented the U.S. from proceeding with plans to move about 8,000 Marines from Okinawa to Guam.

Panetta also is expected to discuss arms sales with Japan. The Japanese had wanted to buy the new U.S. stealth fighter, the F-22, but Congress has banned export sales of that aircraft. Japan remains interested in either the Lockheed F-35 fighter or Boeing's F/A-18 Super Hornet, and a decision is expected soon.

Washington is Tokyo's main ally. Roughly 50,000 U.S. troops are stationed in Japan. Japan's main concerns are China and Russia ? with whom it has longstanding territorial disputes ? along with the threat of North Korean ballistic missiles.

China, whose military has been growing more capable and assertive in the region, recently rolled out its next-generation stealth fighter, the much-touted Chengdu J-20. Though that fighter may be years away from actual operations, it is seen as a rival to the F-22 and far superior to what Japan now has.

Robert Gates, who preceded Panetta as Pentagon chief, used his final Asia trip, in January, to appeal to Japan for help in heading off a military crisis with North Korea. Gates also sought to ease U.S. pressure on Japan over the Futenma issue, which has been a thorn in U.S.-Japan relations for more than a decade.

Panetta is not expected to veer from the Asia course set by Gates, although he has not spoken extensively about his thinking on that region. In a speech Oct. 12, Panetta said, without mentioning China by name, of his concern that "rising powers" are rapidly modernizing their militaries and investing in capabilities to "deny our forces freedom of movement in vital regions such as the Asia-Pacific area."

Japan and South Korea are both treaty allies of the U.S. and are at the center of U.S. security policy in the region.

This is Panetta's third overseas trip since taking office July 1. He visited Iraq and Afghanistan that month, and earlier this month he traveled to Egypt, Israel and Italy and attended a NATO meeting in Brussels.

___

Robert Burns can be reached on Twitter at http://twitter.com/robertburnsAP

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2011-10-21-US-Panetta-Asia/id-a97b6ad376344bc6a77239a633cb0679

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Saturday, October 22, 2011

Galaxy Nexus, Android 4 'Ice Cream Sandwich' revealed

Google unveiled Android 4.0 'Ice Cream Sandwich' as Samsung showed off the Galaxy Nexus, the first Android 4 handset. With the just-announced Droid RAZR, Android enthusiasts have lots to get excited about.

American tech enthusiasts had to stay up late on Tuesday night to catch Google and Samsung?s announcement at the AsiaD conference in Hong Kong, but those who did were well rewarded: Google revealed ?Ice Cream Sandwich,? the highly anticipated fourth iteration of the Android operating system, and Samsung raised the curtain on the first smartphone to run Android 4.0: the Galaxy Nexus.

Skip to next paragraph

Let?s talk about the hardware first. The Galaxy Nexus sports a gargantuan 4.65-inch HD Super AMOLED display and a slightly curved body and face (unlike a certain other phone we could name, that recently debuted with a flat face in spite of rumors to the contrary). It packs a 1.3 megapixel front camera, 5-megapixel rear camera and flash, and according to Samsung's announcement, no shutter lag.

Under the hood, there?s a 1.2GHz dual-core processor, 16 or 32GB of built-in storage space, and a near-field communication (NFC) module ? more on that last feature in a second. We know from published leaks that the Galaxy Nexus will be available on Verizon in the United States; Samsung announced that the handset will be carried by NTT Docomo in Japan as well as Vodafone, O2, and a handful of others in Europe.

Let?s move on now and unwrap Google?s delicious Ice Cream Sandwich. The new Android will undoubtedly become available on other handsets, but for now, the Galaxy Nexus is the only game in town, and the launch event suggests the handset and operating system are optimized for each other. Those who have used Ice Cream Sandwich on the Galaxy Nexus already, including Darren Murph at Engadget, report that it?s a snappy, buttery smooth experience.

What?s been changed in Android this time around? A number of enhancements in Ice Cream Sandwich bring it closer in line with Apple's iOS, including drag-and-drop folders, improved copy and paste, and a more full-featured camera app with a few editing features. There are also some human touches, such as better integration of voice commands and a nifty service that lets your phone recognize your individual face and unlock accordingly.

Those customers on a tiered data plan (so, pretty much all smartphone users in the US) will be pleased with Ice Cream Sandwich?s data usage setting, which lets your phone alert you when you?ve consumed a certain amount of data each month, and cut it off entirely once you hit a certain threshold. It?s a clever way to avoid accidental overage charges. And remember the Galaxy Nexus?s NFC chip that we mentioned earlier? In addition to wireless payments, you?ll be able to use that for Android Beam, a feature that lets you bump two NFC-enabled devices together to exchange contact information, links, maps, and other data.

Between the Galaxy Nexus and the just-announced Motorola Droid RAZR, Android fans have plenty of flagship devices to choose from. What do you think about these new phones? How about Ice Cream Sandwich ? are you excited to sink your teeth in, or holding back to see how things go? Sound off in the comments.

For more tech news, sign up for the weekly BizTech newsletter, which ships every Wednesday.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/87sgWBzUcLI/Galaxy-Nexus-Android-4-Ice-Cream-Sandwich-revealed

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Leaf litter ants advance case for rainforest conservation in Borneo

Leaf litter ants advance case for rainforest conservation in Borneo [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 20-Oct-2011
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Jo Kelly
jo@campuspr.co.uk
44-113-357-2103
University of Leeds

Studies of ant populations in Borneo reveal an unexpected resilience to areas of rainforest degraded by repeated intensive logging, a finding which conservationists hope will lead governments to conserve these areas rather than allow them to be cleared and used for cash crop plantations.

Leaf litter ants are often used to measure the overall ecological health of an area because of the large number of species present and because the health of the leaf litter is a good indication of the overall health of the forest.

It is commonly assumed that repeated logging of rainforests has catastrophic effects on biodiversity. However, studies by Leeds ecologists in northern Borneo, where timber harvests are among the highest globally, have shown that in fact over 80% of ant species found in pristine, unlogged forest were also found in forest that had been logged twice.

The findings have implications for forest conservation as areas of forest where intensive logging has been carried out are typically thought to have little conservation value and are often allowed to be cleared entirely to make way for cash crops such as oil palm.

Keith Hamer, a Reader in Animal Ecology at the Institute of Integrative & Comparative Biology, led the study. He explains: "Rainforests in Borneo are managed through a system called 'selective logging'. In this system, not all the trees are harvested, only the largest, commercially valuable trees. This is supposed to be a sustainable system, but in practice the intensity of harvesting is often too high and areas are then liable to be logged a second time before they have had a chance properly to regenerate.

"These repeatedly logged areas can look awful, with big gaps in the tree canopy which are then invaded by grasses, leading to arguments that such areas are too badly degraded for conservation."

Dr Hamer added: "The logging clearly does have an effect on ant populations but it's not nearly as disastrous as might be expected. These areas are able to support much more diverse communities than oil palm plantations but large areas are still being converted. Preventing this needs to be a priority for policy-makers and conservationists in the region."

The study is part of the Royal Society's Southeast Asia Rainforest Research Programme and is published in a special edition of the Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society. It was supported by a grant from the Leverhulme Trust.

###


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

?


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


Leaf litter ants advance case for rainforest conservation in Borneo [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 20-Oct-2011
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Jo Kelly
jo@campuspr.co.uk
44-113-357-2103
University of Leeds

Studies of ant populations in Borneo reveal an unexpected resilience to areas of rainforest degraded by repeated intensive logging, a finding which conservationists hope will lead governments to conserve these areas rather than allow them to be cleared and used for cash crop plantations.

Leaf litter ants are often used to measure the overall ecological health of an area because of the large number of species present and because the health of the leaf litter is a good indication of the overall health of the forest.

It is commonly assumed that repeated logging of rainforests has catastrophic effects on biodiversity. However, studies by Leeds ecologists in northern Borneo, where timber harvests are among the highest globally, have shown that in fact over 80% of ant species found in pristine, unlogged forest were also found in forest that had been logged twice.

The findings have implications for forest conservation as areas of forest where intensive logging has been carried out are typically thought to have little conservation value and are often allowed to be cleared entirely to make way for cash crops such as oil palm.

Keith Hamer, a Reader in Animal Ecology at the Institute of Integrative & Comparative Biology, led the study. He explains: "Rainforests in Borneo are managed through a system called 'selective logging'. In this system, not all the trees are harvested, only the largest, commercially valuable trees. This is supposed to be a sustainable system, but in practice the intensity of harvesting is often too high and areas are then liable to be logged a second time before they have had a chance properly to regenerate.

"These repeatedly logged areas can look awful, with big gaps in the tree canopy which are then invaded by grasses, leading to arguments that such areas are too badly degraded for conservation."

Dr Hamer added: "The logging clearly does have an effect on ant populations but it's not nearly as disastrous as might be expected. These areas are able to support much more diverse communities than oil palm plantations but large areas are still being converted. Preventing this needs to be a priority for policy-makers and conservationists in the region."

The study is part of the Royal Society's Southeast Asia Rainforest Research Programme and is published in a special edition of the Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society. It was supported by a grant from the Leverhulme Trust.

###


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

?


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


Source: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2011-10/uol-lla102011.php

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Friday, October 21, 2011

Pope names US envoy (AP)

VATICAN CITY ? Pope Benedict XVI on Wednesday named an Italian prelate who has served in Vatican diplomatic missions in Iraq, Britain and Nigeria as the new papal ambassador to the United States.

Archbishop Carlo Maria Vigano, 70, who has been serving as secretary-general of the Vatican city-state, takes the place of Archbishop Pietro Sambi who died in July of complications from surgery.

The Washington post is a key one in the Vatican diplomatic corps both for the importance of the U.S. in world affairs and for its large Catholic population, which is counted on for its financial help to the Holy See and its contributions to papal charities.

The appointment comes during the sensitive time of an election year. Catholics make up about a quarter of the American electorate, but they don't vote as a bloc.

Under Benedict the Vatican has maintained cordial relations with the Obama administration despite deep differences over its support for abortion rights. Some American bishops have taken a harder public stand toward Obama than the Vatican.

Earlier this month, Roman Catholic bishops in the United States released a voter guide for the 2012 election that repeatedly calls abortion "evil" without making revisions that some conservatives had demanded for an even tighter focus on the issue.

Sambi, the late envoy, had helped arrange a meeting between clerical sex abuse victims and Benedict that was one of the focuses of the pope's 2008 visit to the United States.

The Vatican maintains diplomatic relations with 178 countries, most of which maintain two embassies in Rome: one for Italy and one for the Vatican. In addition to normal diplomatic duties, the Vatican envoy to a country plays an important role in the selection of bishops.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/europe/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111019/ap_on_re_eu/eu_vatican_us_envoy

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Thursday, October 20, 2011

Naomi Campbell honored at Gabrielle's Angel Ball (AP)

NEW YORK ? Naomi Campbell put her bad-girl reputation aside as she was honored Monday by the Gabrielle's Angel Foundation.

The supermodel says it meant a lot to be recognized by such an important cause.

Campbell had a few scrapes with the law, and did community service in New York. But on the red carpet, everyone sang her praises. Kim Kardashian called it "very cool," La La Anthony said it was amazing, and Eve blamed the press, saying "the media tries to play her out for something else, but she's a good person."

Former New York Gov. David Patterson empathized, "I've had a whole year of things being positive, it's a lot better on the nerves."

The foundation was created in 1996 by philanthropist Denise Rich after her daughter died of leukemia.

___

Online:

http://www.gabriellesangels.org/

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/celebrity/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111018/ap_en_ce/us_people_naomi_campbell

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Low birthweight infants five times more likely to have autism

Monday, October 17, 2011

Autism researchers at the University of Pennsylvania School of Nursing have found a link between low birthweight and children diagnosed with autism, reporting premature infants are five times more likely to have autism than children born at normal weight.

The children, some born as small as about a pound, were followed for 21 years making this study, published in the prestigious journal Pediatrics, one of the most remarkable of its kind. The infants were born between September 1984 through July 1987 in Middlesex, Monmouth, and Ocean counties in New Jersey at birthweights from 500 to 2000 grams or a maximum of about 4.4 pounds.

"As survival of the smallest and most immature babies improves, impaired survivors represent an increasing public health challenge," wrote lead author Jennifer Pinto-Martin, MPH, PhD, director of the Center for Autism and Developmental Disabilities Research and Epidemiology (CADDRE) at Penn Nursing. "Emerging studies suggest that low birthweight may be a risk factor for autism spectrum disorders."

Links between low birthweight and a range of motor and cognitive problems have been well established for some time, but this is the first study that establishes that these children are also at increased risk for autism spectrum disorders (ASD).

"Cognitive problems in these children may mask underlying autism," said Dr. Pinto-Martin. "If there is suspicion of autism or a positive screening test for ASD, parents should seek an evaluation for an ASD. Early intervention improves long-term outcome and can help these children both at school and at home."

In future studies, Penn researchers will investigate possible links between brain hemorrhage, a complication of premature birth, and autism by examining brain ultrasounds taken of these children as newborns.

The researchers, including a team at The Children's Hospital of Philadelphia, followed 862 children from birth to young adulthood finding that five percent of the children were diagnosed with autism, compared to one percent of the general population in what researchers called "the first study to have estimated the prevalence of ASD . . . using research validated diagnostic instruments."

###

University of Pennsylvania: http://www.upenn.edu/pennnews

Thanks to University of Pennsylvania for this article.

This press release was posted to serve as a topic for discussion. Please comment below. We try our best to only post press releases that are associated with peer reviewed scientific literature. Critical discussions of the research are appreciated. If you need help finding a link to the original article, please contact us on twitter or via e-mail.

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Source: http://www.labspaces.net/114352/Low_birthweight_infants_five_times_more_likely_to_have_autism

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Wednesday, October 19, 2011

Viacom to NY court: Scrap YouTube copyright ruling (AP)

NEW YORK ? A lawyer for Viacom Inc. warned an appeals court panel Tuesday that there will be greater exploitation of copyright material on the Internet if the court lets YouTube get away with a business built on "rampant copyright infringement."

The lawyer, Paul Smith, told a three-judge panel of the 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Manhattan that a lower court judge was wrong to rule that Google Inc.'s popular video service was protected from copyright infringement claims.

"YouTube not only knew there was rampant copyright infringement on the site but welcomed it," Smith said. "These people made this kind of money on somebody else's property."

Google purchased YouTube for $1.76 billion in 2006, comfortable that it was protected by the safe harbor provision of the 1998 Digital Millennium Copyright Act. That provision shields a company from liability if they don't have actual knowledge of copyright infringement. Once notified, the company must eliminate the infringement quickly.

Google attorney Andrew Schapiro countered that YouTube follows the law and always has by taking down video when a copyright owner claims the video infringes its rights.

"There is no evidence, zero, of a single clip in this case that YouTube knew was infringing and failed to take down," he said.

Schapiro said Viacom's chief complaint seemed to be that Google was not screening for copyright violations in the manner Viacom preferred.

"We've done A, B, C and D and plaintiffs are saying, `You should have done E and F,'" he said. "IF we did E and F, they would say, `You should have done G and H.'"

The New York-based Viacom owns popular cable channels such as MTV, Comedy Central and Nickelodeon. In 2007, Viacom brought a $1 billion lawsuit against Google, contending that YouTube was enabling unauthorized viewing of its programming from hits such as "The Daily Show with Jon Stewart."

Google is based in Mountain View, Calif. Viacom is joined in the action with The Football Association Premier League Limited and other plaintiffs.

An appeals ruling could be months away. Through their questions, the judges seemed to be relatively early in the process of deciding what they will do. Sometimes, they asked the most basic questions, such as what the litigants were asking them to do.

"I'm so out of it on these matters," Judge Jose A. Cabranes said when talking about one aspect of the YouTube service.

Since the purchase, YouTube has developed a software program that identifies copyright violations when videos are posted, so much of the litigation relates to whether Viacom should be compensated for what occurred before the program was put in place.

In issuing his ruling last year, Judge Louis L. Stanton noted that Viacom had spent several months accumulating about 100,000 videos violating its copyright and then sent a mass takedown notice on Feb. 2, 2007. The judge said YouTube had removed virtually all of them by the next business day.

The appeals judges seemed open to the idea that some issue in the case might deserve to be heard by a jury, but they also expressed frustration that the possibilities were as limitless as the Internet itself.

Judge Roger Miner asked: "How in the world can damages be computed here?"

Cabranes demanded to know how much damages might be worth.

"The number could be quite large," Smith said.

But when Smith suggested that it could also be not so large, Miner shot back: "Maybe what you're really looking for is a license agreement."

Smith said a license agreement was possible.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/internet/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111018/ap_on_hi_te/us_tec_google_youtube_viacom

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Is It Worth To Get Public Liability Insurance? | vanportlander.com

[unable to retrieve full-text content]Umbrella or Personal Liability Insurance as most companies typically call it offers top degrees of economic reliability and protection to the insurance holder that a standard insurance coverage may not cover.

Source: http://www.vanportlander.com/is-it-worth-to-get-public-liability-insurance/

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