Wednesday 31 July 2013

Hawaii braces as tropical storm crosses islands

HONOLULU (AP) ? Forecasters monitoring a tropical storm crossing Hawaii were still warning residents and tourists on Monday to brace for possible flooding, wind gusts, mudslides and big waves, even as the storm weakened on its journey.

Earlier, local television stations extended morning news, pre-empting syndicated daytime shows to cover the storm's approach.

But Tropical Storm Flossie faded through the morning, thanks to winds that broke layers of the storm apart, said Tom Evans, acting director of the Central Pacific Hurricane Center.

Warnings about the storm didn't stop some tourists from heading to popular beaches, despite urgings from state officials to cancel all beach trips until further notice. In Waikiki, beaches were unusually sparse as those outside contended with overcast skies and rain ahead of Flossie's arrival.

Kelly Tarkington, a college student from Savannah, Ga., got a sunburn from spending eight hours on the beach Sunday but had to take refuge from the rain under a beach umbrella Monday along with her aunt.

"We just came to enjoy the beach ? attempt to at least ? and now it's pouring rain so we're under our umbrella. It's awful," said Tarkington, 21.

But she said the weather was mild compared with back home, so her experience won't stop her from returning to Hawaii.

If it keeps raining, she said, she'll do more shopping.

As of midday, the storm was centered about 65 miles north-northeast of Hilo on the Big Island, and 200 miles east-southeast of Honolulu.

Michael Cantin, warning coordination meteorologist with the National Weather Service in Honolulu, said the storm would likely be downgraded to a tropical depression within 12 hours.

He said it could be downgraded before hitting Maui if it keeps deteriorating at the same rate as much of Monday.

"The weakening happened quite rapidly," Cantin said.

Residents and government officials spent the weekend preparing for the storm's arrival. College campuses and courts were closed Monday on the Big Island, and the Red Cross was gathering volunteers to staff 24 shelters statewide.

The U.S. Coast Guard closed three ports ? two on the Big Island where the storm was expected first, and a third port on Maui. Airports statewide were open Monday but many flights were being canceled.

Even in its weakened state, Cantin said Monday afternoon that Flossie's winds could potentially knock down power lines because of their unusual direction.

Trails and campgrounds also were closed on the Big Island, where state officials warned people to avoid forest areas until Flossie clears.

Officials warned people to finish necessary storm preparations early and leave their homes if asked.

"I woke up to blue skies. It was just a beautiful day out," Ian Shortridge, 22, of Kealakekua, on the west side of the Big Island, said Monday. "It hasn't rained all morning. We are waiting for the rain."

Shortridge said he saw McDonald's employees boarding up windows Sunday. Store shelves were running low of essentials like bottled water and toilet paper, he said.

Hawaii Gov. Neil Abercrombie signed an emergency proclamation that allows the state to use its disaster fund to pay for staff overtime, supplies and other resources. The proclamation also gave state officials the option to call Hawaii National Guard members to duty.

Forecasters said the storm would likely bring rain of up to 6 inches on parts of the Big Island and up to 2 inches on other islands. The storm's 40 mph winds will continue to weaken, Evans said.

Evans said tropical storm warnings will remain in effect for all of Hawaii's islands until Flossie is classified as a depression rather than a storm.

The warnings mean the storm represents a threat to life and property.

Melanie and Ian Jenkins of Portsmouth, England, tried to catch some sun lying on Waikiki Beach but were close to giving up as raindrops fell on the sand.

"The showers are getting colder and colder each time, and I might give up in the next half hour," Melanie Jenkins said.

"It's still warmer than England," her husband said.

___

Oskar Garcia can be reached at http://twitter.com/oskargarcia . Associated Press writers Jennifer Sinco Kelleher and Audrey McAvoy in Honolulu, and Christopher Weber in Los Angeles contributed to this report.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/hawaii-braces-tropical-storm-crosses-islands-012435487.html

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Woman sues Equifax: Are credit report mistakes worth $18 million?

Woman sues Equifax: After spending two years trying to get Equifax to fix mistakes on her credit report, an Oregon woman sued. On Monday, a jury awarded her $18.6 million.

By Associated Press / July 29, 2013

A federal jury in Oregon awarded $18.6 million to a woman who spent two years unsuccessfully trying to get?Equifax?Information Services to fix major mistakes on her credit report.

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Julie Miller of Marion County was awarded $18.4 million in punitive damages and $180,000 in compensatory damages, though Friday's award against one of the nation's major credit bureaus is likely to be appealed, The Oregonian reported.

The jury was told she contacted?Equifax?eight times between 2009 and 2011 in an effort to correct inaccuracies, including erroneous accounts and collection attempts, as well as a wrong Social Security number and birthday. Her lawsuit alleged the Atlanta-based company failed to correct the mistakes.

"There was damage to her reputation, a breach of her privacy, and the lost opportunity to seek credit," said Justin Baxter, a Portland attorney who worked on the case with his father and law partner, Michael Baxter. "She has a brother who is disabled and who can't get credit on his own, and she wasn't able to help him."

Tim Klein, an?Equifax?spokesman, declined to comment on specifics of the case, saying he didn't have any details about the decision from the Oregon Federal District Court.

Miller discovered the problem when she was denied credit by a bank in early December 2009. She alerted Equifax?and filled out multiple forms faxed by the credit agency seeking updated information. She had found similar mistakes in her reports with other credit bureaus, Baxter said, but those companies corrected their errors.

A Federal Trade Commission study earlier this year of 1,001 consumers who reviewed 2,968 of their credit reports found 21 percent contained errors. The survey found that 5 percent of the errors represented issues that would lead consumers to be denied credit.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/C_8a9sJXXmw/Woman-sues-Equifax-Are-credit-report-mistakes-worth-18-million

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Classified ad site Backpage in crosshairs over child sex ads?

sex-crimes

58 minutes ago

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Backpage.com has become the Craigslist of prostitution ads in recent years since that free site stopped running the ads in 2010.

Search for "Backpage.com" on the FBI's main website and up pops eight whole pages of press releases and public announcements naming the classified advertising site as a tool for sex criminals, particularly those selling children, sex and prostitution. And in fact, Backpage was named as one of the sources law enforcement used to help gather evidence needed to coordinate a 70-city raid last weekend that resulted in the rescue of 105 teenagers and the arrest of 159 pimps.

"The fact that they were able to rescue that many children and arrest that many pimps is fantastic," Liz McDougall, counsel for Backpage told NBC News Monday. "We are glad to be a partner with and support law enforcement to make these arrests, and make them in time to rescue these children."

A partner with law enforcement? While Backpage may be the current Craigslist for prostitution ads in the United States, McDougall says the site gladly cooperates with police when they want information about those who place the ads, including the IP, or Internet protocol, address from where the ads originated.

But a new effort by the National Association of Attorneys General wants to change federal law so that Internet service providers and websites like Backpage could be prosecuted by state and local governments for promoting prostitution and child sex trafficking, simply by running such ads.

It's a double-edged sword, some might say: Shutting down online ad venues for criminals and sexual traffickers seems like a good "nowhere to run" idea, but law enforcement looks to such sites to find information about the criminals they're chasing. And some argue that if you shut down one such "offending" site, another pops up anyway. Besides, there's a bigger issue at the heart of this: The same laws that protect the unsavory ads online also protect most Internet providers from liabilities of all kinds.

Backpage is specifically named in a letter from the attorneys' general group, sent last week to members of Congress, seeking an amendment to the Communications Decency Act of 1996:

Every day, children in the United States are sold for sex. In instance after instance, State and local authorities discover that the vehicles for advertising the victims of the child sex trade to the world are online classified ad services, such as Backpage.com. The involvement of these advertising companies is not incidental ? these companies have constructed their business models around income gained from participants in the sex trade.

Federal enforcement by itself has "proven insufficient to stem the growth of Internet-facilitated child trafficking," says the group, with the letter signed by 49 state and territorial attorneys general. "Those on the front lines of the battle against the sexual exploitation of children ? state and local law enforcement ? must be granted the authority to investigate and prosecute those who facilitate these horrible crimes."

It's an effort applauded by the National Center for Missing & Exploited Children, which works with law enforcement on sex trafficking cases.

"Classified-ad websites have made child sex trafficking an easy and profitable business enterprise for pimps," said John Ryan, the center's CEO, in a recent statement. "NCMEC urges all policymakers to explore every avenue available to bring to justice those who profit from the sexual exploitation of children."

Perhaps you're wondering why so many name Backpage and not Craigslist. In 2010, Craigslist, under pressure from more than a dozen individual states' attorney generals, voluntarily banned ads for adult services from the site. When that happened, much of the business moved to Backpage.com. (Village Voice Media, which owns the Village Voice, among other publications, also owned Backpage.com until last fall, when it became a separate company.)

Whether or not Backpage follows suit and ditches adult services, experts argue that the law itself should not be changed in order to make this happen.

Mark Rasch, former head of the Department of Justice's Computer Crimes Unit, and now an independent consultant, told NBC News he is against the proposed change, which would restrict free speech, now a key protection under Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act. He also says it's the "wrong way" to go after those in the child sex trade.

"Sex traffickers use the Internet to sell their wares, use the telephone lines to communicate with customers, use the banking and credit card system to obtain payment for sex services, use highways and local roads to transport minors for sex, use cars and other vehicles for the same purpose," he wrote in a recent blog post. "They use the same infrastructure established to sell toothpaste to sell illicit sex with minors. They need to be arrested and prosecuted for these crimes."

But third parties that might be accused of making those crimes possible ? whether it's ISPs or gas stations ? shouldn't be held criminally liable "for their own participation," he argues. An amendment to the law like this one means that "EBay could be held liable if someone purchased a knife online and then used that knife to kill someone, if a state passed a law making the advertisement of knives that are used for such purposes a crime."

Matthew Zimmerman, senior staff attorney for the Electronic Frontier Foundation, a digital civil liberties organization, told NBC News that with the "proliferation of user-generated speech online over the past decade," the proposed amendment would be "extraordinarily harmful."

The EFF successfully defended both Backpage and the non-profit Internet Archive in a suit against the state of Washington, which in 2012 passed a law that essentially made it a crime to "knowingly" publish or display any ad for a commercial sex act, including the depiction of a minor. The EFF said that the new state law considered both sites publishers, contrary to the provisions of the Communications Decency Act. A federal court agreed, and blocked the law.

Zimmerman says it's not only "lawful speech" that would be hurt by letting states prosecute service providers and websites. "This could also lead to the loss of critical tools that law enforcement could use to investigate these and other crimes," he told NBC News.

McDougall of Backpage agrees. The arrests over the weekend are "something that wouldn't be possible if you didn't have a domestic, cooperative website involved," she said. "That's why it's important to not drive this content to offshore websites, which won't cooperate and don't have to cooperate with U.S. law enforcement. It would make law enforcement's job exponentially more difficult."

Still, there are many who'd argue that giving child traffickers one less avenue would be a win for the good guys. It's not known yet what, if any, action Congress will take on changing the Communications Decency Act. The issue is sure to be debated in the months to come.

Check out Technology and TODAY Tech on Facebook, and on Twitter, follow Suzanne Choney.

Source: http://feeds.nbcnews.com/c/35002/f/663301/s/2f50eec7/sc/23/l/0L0Snbcnews0N0Ctechnology0Cclassified0Ead0Esite0Ebackpage0Ecrosshairs0Eover0Echild0Esex0Eads0E6C10A789250A/story01.htm

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Monday 29 July 2013

Dolphin rights: The world should follow India?s lead

The government of India has officially recognized the ?personhood? of dolphins, a move that will force the closure of planned dolphin parks across the country.

After Hungary, Costa Rica and Chile, India is now the fourth country in the world to ban the capture and importation of dolphins for commercial entertainment. India?s move is in accordance to the Declaration of Rights for Cetaceans conceived by a number of scientists and philosophers, which affords cetaceans (whales, orcas, dolphins, etc.) with the same ethical considerations as human beings.

Choosing to be ethical in the face of great potential profits is an admirable decision, as there were plans for dolphin parks in Mumbai, Delhi and Kochi. Dolphin tanks are now officially illegal in India.

Wild dolphins, New Zealand. Pic: Corscri Daje Tutti (Flickr CC)

A leading Indian voice in the struggle for cetacean rights, Puja Mitra of the Federation of Indian Animal Protection Organizations (FIAPO), is quoted in a report by Deutsche Welle:

The majority of dolphins and whales in captivity have been sourced through wild captures in Japan,in Taiji, in the Caribbean, in the Solomon Islands and parts of Russia. These captures are very violent. They drive groups of dolphins into shallow bay areas where young females whose bodies are unmarked and are thought to be suitable for display are removed. The rest are often slaughtered.

(See this post for more about the human-related threats that dolphins face.)

It has also recently come to light that, like humans, dolphins have names for each other. Research by St. Andrews University in Scotland shows that dolphins use unique whistles in order to identify members of their pod. Researchers recorded the ?name whistles? for members of a dolphin group and then played them back for the group along with other name whistles for dolphins from other pods.

From BBC News:

The researchers found that individuals only responded to their own calls, by sounding theirwhistle back.

The team believes the dolphins are acting like humans: when they hear their name, they answer.

As scientific findings and a more enlightened attitude towards cetaceans are spreading throughout much of the globe, in Japan the trend is worryingly to the contrary. According to the findings of animal welfare groups Elsa Nature Conservancy and Help Animals, Japan is the world leader in the number of dolphin aquariums and in the amount of captive dolphins in a country. That?s a total of 600 captive dolphins held in 65 different facilities. By comparison the US is home to 30 facilities, but that number has declined by 14 over the past 20 years, which seems to be the general trend on an international level.

From the Japan Times:

The United Kingdom closed all its dolphinariums back in 1993 and more than 23 other nations, including Australia, Mexico, Thailand and Croatia, have either banned the catching or trade of wild dolphins, or keeping them in captivity. This is mainly due to a growing belief that to do so constitutes a form of animal abuse.

Orcas or ?killer whales? are also a species of dolphin. The recent documentary ?Blackfish? explores the mistreatment and exploitation of Orcas as well as the danger to their handlers in the planet?s most famous marine park, Sea World.

A dolphinarium in Kyoto, Japan. Pic: Antti T. Nissinen (Flickr CC)

Source: http://asiancorrespondent.com/111205/dolphin-rights-the-world-should-follow-indias-lead/

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Could You Imagine a Real Life Version of This Giant Lego Crawler Town?

Could You Imagine a Real Life Version of This Giant Lego Crawler Town?

That's the premise of Crawler Town, an entire town mounted in a gigantic platform that looks pretty much like an enormous version of NASA's crawler or the Jawa Sancrawler, which is pretty much the same thing but for tiny people.

Read more...

Source: http://godofbricks.kinja.com/survive-the-lego-apocalypse-with-crawler-town-946553338/949293541

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Friday 26 July 2013

Apple beats Wall Street forecasts on hot iPhone

Apple beat Wall Street earnings expectations on Tuesday with help from strong sales of iPhones, boosting a share price weighed down by concerns the company was losing its game-changing cutting edge.

Quarterly profit of US$6.9 billion was down 22 percent from a year ago, but translated to US$7.47 per share, well ahead of analysts? forecasts.

The California tech giant reported revenues of US$35.3 billion in the quarter ending June 30, powered by sales of 31.2 million iPhones, a record for the June quarter.

However, the quarterly data showed iPad sales disappointing at 14.6 million, compared with 17 million in the same period a year ago.

Apple shares jumped more than 3 percent in after-hours trade to US$434.60, lifting a stock that has tumbled from last year?s high above US$700.

NEW PRODUCTS PLANNED

?I feel really good about where we are,? Apple chief executive officer Tim Cook said during an earnings call with analysts. ?We we have more than one tool in the tool box. We are working on some things we are really proud of and we will announce things when we are ready.?

Apple is poised to release new versions of its operating systems for mobile devices and Macintosh computers and is ?laser-focused and working hard on some amazing new products that we will introduce in the fall and across 2014,? Cook said.

Rumors of new Apple unveilings include an ?iWatch? wrist computer; an improved Apple TV and lower-priced version of its iPhone for developing markets, such as China.

Apple is expected to roll out smartphones and tablets in the coming months with bigger screens in a move analysts say is an attempt to catch up with a trend set by its major rival, Samsung.

Recent unconfirmed reports indicated that Apple and its Asian suppliers are testing smartphone screens larger than four inches and tablet screens slightly less than 13 inches.

Apple generated US$7.8 billion in cash flow from operations in the recent quarter and paid stockholders US$18.8 billion through dividends and repurchasing shares, Apple chief financial officer Peter Oppenheimer said.

Apple forecast that revenue in the current quarter would total between US$34 billion and US$37 billion and that its gross margin would be about 36 or 37 percent.

Brian White at Topeka Capital Markets said Apple?s results were mixed, but that the company is poised to come out with new products soon that will fuel growth.

?We believe fiscal 2013 will prove to be a year to forget, but fiscal 2014 will prove to be a year of new product innovations, which we believe will prove positive for the stock price,? he said in a note. ?We believe Apple will trade higher into this new product cycle in fiscal 2014.?

During an earnings call with analysts, Cook said that key catalysts for growth at Apple remain new products and services, including innovations targeting new categories.

CHINA OPPORTUNITY

Cook was adamant that there is tremendous opportunity for Apple in China, despite the lackluster showing there in the quarter, and said he does not ?get discouraged over a 90-day kind of cycle that can have economic factors and other things in it.?

Source: http://libertytimes.feedsportal.com/c/33098/f/535603/s/2f1ba289/sc/2/l/0L0Staipeitimes0N0CNews0Cbiz0Carchives0C20A130C0A70C250C20A0A35680A83/story01.htm

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Monday 1 July 2013

Climbing the social ladder is strongly influenced by your grandparents' class

July 1, 2013 ? For the first time, a study has suggested that the position of grandparents in the British class system has a direct effect on which class their grandchildren belong to. It has long been accepted that parents' social standing has a strong influence on children's education, job prospects, and earning power. However, this study by researchers from the University of Oxford and Durham University shows that even when the influence of parents has been taken into account, the odds of grandchildren going into professional or managerial occupations rather than unskilled manual occupations are at least two and a half times better if their grandparents were themselves in professional-managerial positions rather than unskilled manual occupations.

This latest research, published in the American Sociological Review, finds that the social advantages and disadvantages that are transmitted across generations are a lot more durable and persistent than previously thought. It establishes a statistically significant association between grandparents' and grandchildren's class positions, even after the parents' education, income, and wealth (such as whether they are home-owners) are taken into account.

The researchers analyzed data collected in three nationally representative surveys of over 17,000 Britons born in 1946, 1958, and 1970 respectively. For the studies, cohort members were asked to reveal their occupation as well as the occupation of their father and grandfather. The researchers found that among men with both parents and grandparents in the professional-managerial class, 80% stayed in those advantaged positions. But among men with long-range upwardly mobile parents (i.e., grandparents in unskilled manual occupations and parents in professional-managerial occupations), only 61% managed to stay there. For women, this "grandparents effect" was less strong at 66% and 51% respectively.

Where grandparents were from a high social class and the parents experienced downward social mobility, the "grandparents effect" appeared stronger, pushing the grandchild back up the social ladder. The study says in such cases there was "a higher level of counter mobility" as though grandparents' class background is correcting the "mobility mistake" made by the parents.

Researcher Dr. Tak Wing Chan, from the Department of Sociology at the University of Oxford, said: "The 'grandparents effect' in social mobility is found to operate throughout society and is not restricted to the top or bottom of the social class structure in Britain. It may work through a number of channels including the inheritance of wealth and property, and may be aided by durable social institutions such as generation-skipping trusts, residential segregation, and other demographic processes. Further investigation needs to be done to establish the precise mechanisms by which the grandparents effect endures, but our study of 17,000 Britons reveals that grandparents have a substantial effect on where their grandchildren end up in the British class system."

Researcher Dr. Vikki Boliver, from the School of Applied Social Sciences at Durham University, said: "Numerous studies have demonstrated that social origins strongly predict social destinations, but almost all social mobility studies to date have only examined two generations, parents and children. Although a handful of studies have looked at social mobility patterns of three generations, this is the first time that researchers have found that an individual's fortunes may depend on the attributes and experiences of more distant ancestors such as grandparents."

The researchers say cross-national comparative research is under way to explore whether the grandparents effect in social mobility is also found in other countries.

Notes

* The study found that the social class position of the maternal grandfather had a slightly stronger influence on the class position of grandchildren than the paternal grandfather.

* The paper cites other studies showing that in Britain around half of all grandparents of very young grandchildren see them at least once a week; and around one third of all families with working mothers rely on grandparents for childcare. Beyond the grandchildren's formative years, wealthy grandparents might make financial transfers to help pay for their grandchildren's education and well-connected grandparents might use their network to help secure jobs for their grandchildren, suggests the study.

* The three birth cohort studies followed large and nationally representative samples of British born men and women from birth into adulthood. The first, the National Study of Health and Development, follows a sample of those born in one week in March 1946. The second study, the National Child Development Study, follows individuals born in one week in March 1958. And the third, the British Cohort Study, follows people born in one week in April 1970.

* The study uses the UK Register General social class scheme to categorize the different social classes.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/top_health/~3/wkkt98TnNhk/130701135129.htm

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89% In the House

All Critics (71) | Top Critics (24) | Fresh (63) | Rotten (8)

The film treats imagination-and talent-in certain hands as an almost mystical force.

Ozon and the script move a little too far afield and hold on a bit too long as the film approaches its end. Still, "In the House" has enough trippy truth to it to grab your interest and shake your mind.

It's fiction about life that becomes fiction that might be life - and the viewer happily dives in.

The expected punch line... never materializes, so I guess this must be a drama after all.

Savor In the House for its meta-exploration of adolescence, class resentment and suppressed desire, but don't expect much more.

The seductions of storytelling drive "In the House," a cleverly structured comic thriller rich with narrative trickery and macabre humor.

A cinematic bouquet of surprising left turns and addictive story hooks. Strongly recommended.

Provocative, playful, entertaining and audacious, In the House is a writer showing us the inner workings of writing, complete with its power to subvert, to imagine and to deceive

Occasionally too clever for its own good, the film may go one step too far, but Ozon manages the hybrid of genres beautifully and ultimately it is his superb cast that sells the nuances and the concept

A sly, stylish blend of melodrama and suspense that's also a cunning commentary on the seductiveness and danger inherent in storytelling itself.

Director/scriptwriter Francois Ozon knows his Hitchcock well. He employs him effectively, but the clutter is his own.

An almost perverse delight, an egghead thriller that slyly shell-games its truer purpose as an inquiry into the construction -- and deconstruction -- of fiction. Scratch deconstruction: Make that tear-the-house-down demolition.

It's partly real and partly a fable, full of events that might have happened or could never have happened, with intrigues that defy us to take them seriously.

In the House is a structurally solid thriller that is both inventive and absolutely seductive in nature.

Inviting photography and a relentless pace complement Claude's unfolding narrative, but the big thrills are in the deftly drawn characters...and the incisive satire...

A slick psychological thriller that veers into dark comedy the more absurd it gets, "In the House" demonstrates the dangers of addiction -- not to sex or drugs, but to story.

Captures why we do what we do, and the extent to which stories reflect both the writer and the reader.

It's amusing and unexpected, capturing the compulsive spirit of writing with wit and attention to mischief that keeps it unpredictable to the very end.

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Source: http://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/in_the_house_2013/

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