Monday, June 20, 2011

Online journalism: I want to elevate the article, not denigrate it

Jeff Jarvis responds to Fr�d�ric Filloux's criticism of his blogpost questioning the orthodoxy of the article

Fr�d�ric Filloux wilfully misrepresents me so that he may uphold the orthodoxy of the article. He will be disappointed to learn that we agree more than he wishes. Here is what I am really saying about the article.

First, far from denigrating the article, I want to elevate it. When I say the article is a luxury, I argue that using ever-more-precious resources to create an article should be taken seriously and before writing and editing a story we must assure that it will add value. Do most articles do that today? No. Go through your paper in the morning and tell me how much real value is added and how much ink is spilled to tell you what you already know (whether that is facts you learned through Twitter, the web, TV, radio, et al or background that is reheated more often than a stale slice in a bad New York pizzeria).

How many articles are rewritten from others' work just so a paper and a reporter can have a byline? How many predict the obvious (every story about an upcoming storm, holiday, press conference, or election)? How often do you see a local TV story with any real reporting and value instead of just someone standing where the news happened 12 hours ago telling you what you and he both read online already? Too many articles passing themselves off as professional journalism are crap and I say we can't afford to do that any more. I say we should treat articles with veneration as a luxury.

Second, I am also promoting rather than devaluing background when I say it is best linked to. The background paragraphs in an ongoing story generally do one of two things: they bore and waste the time of people who have followed the story or they underinform the people who have not been following the story. Background graphs were a necessity of print but online we can improve background immensely, investing the effort in truly valuable and long-lasting content assets that give richer and more helpful background on a story. I've worked with smart folks at news companies imagining how we could provide multiple paths through background: here's the path to take if you're coming to the story as a virgin; here's a track to take if you've missed a week; here's a track from one perspective; here's one from another. If someone else did a great job explaining the story or elements of it, we should link to them. Filoux calls that oursourcing. I call that linking. We do that nowadays. This is why I'm eagerly watching Jay Rosen's project in creating explainers, which is an even richer form of background.

Third, in this entire discussion of the article, I am valuing reporting higher than repetitive retyping. As our resources become ever-scarcer, I say that we must devote more of them to reporting than to articles that add little: asking the questions that haven't been asked and answered, finding people who can add information and perspective, fact-checking.

But I have angered the gods, first Mathew Ingram, now Filoux, who also misquotes me when he says I say that: "Tweeting and retweeting events as they unfold is a far more superior way of reporting than painstakingly gathering the facts and going through a tedious writing and editing process." I say no such thing and dare him to show me where he thinks I say that with a direct quote. That sentence could stand a little painstaking editing itself. I do say that while an event is underway, tweeting is an amazing new tool to hear directly from witnesses, to question them, to debunk rumors, to manage collaborative reporting (that's what Andy Carvin does in the Arab Spring). It is part of the reporting process. It contributes to articles later in the process (that's what Brian Stelter was asking his desk to do when he covered a tornado).

The point is that there are many new ways to accomplish journalistic goals to cover news and gather and share information: Twitter, blogs, data, visualization, multimedia?. Jonathan Glick wrote a much more constructive answer to the question I raised about articles, saying that now that they are freed from the drudgery of reporting infobits of news ? the things we have already been told sooner and by other means ? then the article can concentrate on adding true value: context, explanation, education, commentary, further reporting, fact-checking?.

That is the sense in which I say that the article is or often should be a byproduct of the news process. Once the public is informed of the facts through faster means, once we put digital first and print last (� John Paton), then we also no longer need to build the infrastructure and process of news around writing articles. We have to break out of that expensive, inefficient, archaic stricture. We can instead architect news around helping communities organize their information and themselves (that is my definition of journalism) and we have new ways to do that, including new ways to report news and write articles.

I dare to question the assumptions about the forms of news and journalism. That's my job. Some ? including apparently Filoux ? might argue that it is the job of a university to impart orthodoxy: This is the way we have always done it, thus that's the right way to do it, and that's the way you will do it, students. I abhor that view.

I believe it is my job, especially in a university, to challenge assumptions and to free students to invent new forms. That is one of my hidden agendas behind teaching entrepreneurial journalism: to encourage and support students (and the industry) to break assumptions and invent new forms, because they can, because we must.

I fear Filoux's still upset with me because I could not bear and dared criticise the discussion on a panel he ran at the e-G8 in Paris. It wasn't him I was criticising. It was hearing the same old stuff from the same old people. At a conference on the internet and the future, the past was rehashed once more. I can bear that no more than he apparently can bear my temerity to challenge the holy article.

But in the end, we almost agree. Filoux argues that newspapers should become, say, "biweeklies offering strong value-added reporting and perspectives, and using electronic media for the rest." Hmmm. He's saying, just as I am, that articles should be richer and more valuable and that reporting news bits can be accomplished by other means. So where do we disagree?

Reproduced with permission from Jeff Jarvis's blog BuzzMachine


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Source: http://www.guardian.co.uk/media/pda/2011/jun/13/online-journalism-article-response

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Spotify's latest funding values it at $1bn

European music streaming service likely to announce US rollout within weeks after securing $100m in fresh investment

Spotify has raised $100m (�61m) in a funding round that values the European music streaming service at $1bn ahead of its imminent US expansion.

The Anglo-Swedish company this week sealed its biggest funding round yet with Facebook investor Digital Sky Technologies, Twitter backer Kleiner Perkins and Accel.

The funding round has been interpreted as a sign that Spotify's long-delayed US rollout could be announced within weeks.

Spotify has reportedly finalised deals with three of the four major music labels ? Universal Music, Sony Music and EMI ? with Warner Music apparently close to sealing terms.

Since its 2008 launch, Spotify's free online jukebox has attracted more than 6 million users in the UK and Europe, with more than 1 million customers paying for the service. Numbers of paying customers are understood to have soared recently as Spotify restricted the amount of free listening available to users.

The $1bn price tag comes just days after rival music streaming site Pandora rocketed to a $4.2bn valuation on its market debut on Wednesday. However, Pandora's Wall Street party was short-lived as its shares plunged to $12 ? half the opening day high of $26 and well below the $16 per share price it started its first day of trading.

Spotify's general manager, Jonathan Forster, did little to dampen down the anticipating surrounding the service's US expansion this week. He told an Omnicom conference in London on Tuesday that it would not make the move "before 5 July" ? the first time a Spotify executive has put a firm date on the plans.

Forster also confirmed that deals with the music majors were almost completed. "We're signing the remaining deals as I speak," he said.

Spotify's US challenge has been threatened by the three internet giants ? Apple, Google and Amazon ? which have launched competing cloud music services.

However, unlike Spotify, the US-based services do not allow users to play music that they do not already own.

Only Apple has been able to agree terms with the music majors for its iCloud service, unveiled last week, with Google and Amazon shunning the deals as unnecessary and unduly expensive. Google has not ruled out linking up with the music majors in the future.

It is thought that Spotify's freemium business model ? in which about 15% of its active users actually pay for the service ? has hindered negotiations with the labels.

The most recent audited annual accounts for Spotify, for 2009, show it lost �16.6m in the UK on revenues of �11.3m.

Spotify declined to comment.

? To contact the MediaGuardian news desk email editor@mediaguardian.co.uk or phone 020 3353 3857. For all other inquiries please call the main Guardian switchboard on 020 3353 2000. If you are writing a comment for publication, please mark clearly "for publication".

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Source: http://www.guardian.co.uk/technology/2011/jun/17/spotify-funding-value

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The 'Shrek virus'? Have pity for the pretty | Tanya Gold

An ugly 'malfunction' on a dating website offers a parable about the misery and loneliness of beauty

The walls were breached, but not for long. It was reported today that due to a software malfunction nicknamed Shrek, 30,000 ugly people managed to join the dating website Beautiful People. Normally all applicants to Beautiful People are vetted by a panel of already Beautiful People and, if they are ugly, they are not allowed to join. But due to a "disgruntled former employee" the site broke ? like a toenail! ? and the ugly stormed in, in an angry ooze of big thighs and swastika-shaped eyebrows.

It must have been terrible for the Beautiful People, like watching their hero Cheryl Cole being inserted upside down in a Chernobyl bog. Now the ugly have been thrown out again because, as the managing director Greg Hodge says: "We can't just sweep 30,000 ugly people under the carpet." I suspect that Hodge is a psychopath, because they are being offered counselling instead.

This is a parable about the misery and the loneliness of beauty. It reminds me of the famous ad from the 1980s in which Birds Eye attempted to sell frozen vegetables using, of all things, snobbery. It featured a country club based on the old American country clubs ? no blacks, Jews, dogs or Marx brothers ? that left the old, ugly frozen vegetables weeping at the gates while the younger, prettier frozen vegetables bounced happily towards the freezers of the working classes. They were soon to be consumed, while the ugly ones escaped. It was a concentration camp for vegetables and the metaphor was clear. Society feasts on beauty. It may have been a tasteless cartoon with a jolly song ? "You just can't join our club!" ? played out against the demise of apartheid, which made it all the more horrific, but the irony stayed with me for years.

I am certain that Shrek is a stunt, although Beautiful People deny it. Golden Goose PR looks after Beautiful People, and in 2009 they arranged for Beautiful People to expel 5,000 members for getting fat over Christmas. The campaign was called Festive Fatties. The result of Festive Fatties was that 48,000 idiots applied to Beautiful People within 24 hours, and Golden Goose won best global public relations campaign at the CIPR Excellence Awards in 2010, all for making 5,000 formerly Beautiful People rip out their hair extensions and commit mass GBH on chihuahuas. It was a terrible act of cruelty, even towards consumers, but Beautiful People did it anyway ? and to their own clients, because this is the beautiful jungle. And then there is the quotation about Shrek from a Beautiful People employee: it was planted "like an evil Easter egg". That is surely a quotation told down a telephone by someone trying not to laugh.

But whether Shrek exists or not, the existence of Beautiful People exposes the pain and paranoia of the professional narcissist, defined only by its separate features ? eye, nose, hair, nose-hair. When I log on to Beautiful People and watch the symmetrical faces and good haircuts ? many of them from Luton ? seeking to mate with equally symmetrical faces and equally good haircuts, I feel only pity. They do not seem to know or care that sexual attractiveness and small, photogenic features are entirely unrelated.

Would Orson Welles make it on to Beautiful People? When he made Jane Eyre he was so fat he had to wear a corset. Would Gerard Depardieu, whose nose looks like all of the vegetables banned from the Birds Eye country club, and in just one face? The Beautiful People have locked themselves in a cage containing only nightmare images of themselves. How dull.

The pity runs both ways. I still remember a tiny Russian model who stared at her reflection throughout our interview and seemed genuinely baffled because I look normal but have forgotten to commit suicide. (Fashion is possibly the greatest crime the beautiful commit against the ugly ? until now.)

She will get her comeuppance on the dot of 35, I trust, and have surgery until she looks deformed, but in that moment we were playing Graham McClintoch and Jenny Bunn in Kingsley Amis's novel Take a Girl Like You. "There is one barrier which no amount of progress or tolerance or legislation can ever diminish," says ugly Graham (me) to Jenny Bunn (beautiful Russian model). "I'm talking about the barrier between the attractive and the unattractive."

But Shrek is dead, and the gates are locked again. We can return to the status quo of mutual incomprehension ? and hate.

? Comments will be switched on at 9am on Tuesday


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Source: http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2011/jun/20/shrek-virus-beautiful-people

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Air passenger data plans in US-EU agreement are illegal, say lawyers

European commission lawyers say scheme allowing check-in data to be held for 15 years takes away a fundamental right

The European commission's own lawyers have warned that a joint US-European agreement to store the personal data, including credit card details, of millions of transatlantic air passengers for 15 years is unlawful.

The confidential legal opinion, passed to the Guardian, says the agreement to allow the US department of homeland security to store airline check-in data is "not compatible with fundamental rights".

The note by the commission's legal service, dated 16 May, says it has "grave doubts" that the passenger name record (PNR) deal, now being finalised, complies with the fundamental right to data protection.

The official legal opinion could prove crucial as the agreement, which has been negotiated by the commission with the US, needs the approval of the European parliament as well as ministers.

Leaked details of an EU ambassadors' meeting last week showed the French, Germans, Italians, Dutch and others are still strongly critical of the proposed deal, with only the British, Irish, Swedes and Estonians supporting it.

Commission officials played down the significance of the official legal opinion, which was provided to negotiators before the deal was finalised, by saying its legality could only be tested in the courts.

The European lawyers say their "most serious concerns" cover the widely-drawn limits on the use of the personal data, the disproportionate storage period of 15 years, the lack of independent oversight and proper access to the courts for those seeking redress over misuse of their details. Their concerns include:

??The US-European PNR database is being built "to prevent and detect terrorism and serious crime" but the lawyers say this definition includes any offence carrying a jail term of more than 12 months: "Given the low maximum penalty, it is likely to include a very large number of crimes which cannot be regarded as serious. This point alone puts the proportionality of the agreement in question."

??The PNR database can also be used "to ensure border security", by identifying people who should be subject to closer questioning on entering or leaving the US. The lawyers say this means the database can be used to investigate minor immigration or customs offences without any link to terrorism or serious crime.

??The 15-year retention period ? four times longer than the current deal ? includes five years on an "active" database, after which information will be archived in a "dormant" database for 10 years, though still accessible to senior law enforcement agents. The lawyers say 15 years goes "far beyond'' the five years in the EU's own proposal for internal European travel, and the five and a half years in a proposed deal with Australia: "The council legal service in its opinion on EU-PNR ... questioned the necessity of a period of more than two years. It appears highly doubtful that a period of 15 years can be regarded as proportional."

??Judicial redress for aggrieved individuals is not guaranteed, the lawyers say: "All redress is made subject to US law, while the forms of redress explicitly guaranteed are administrative only and thus at the discretion of the department of homeland security."

??Oversight to be carried out by homeland security "privacy officers" does not amount to independent oversight, say the European lawyers.

The official legal advice concludes: "Despite certain presentational improvements, the draft agreement does not constitute a sufficiently substantial improvement of the agreement currently applied on a provisional basis, the conclusion of which was refused on data protection grounds by the European parliament."

They add that the use of PNR for border security purposes is a setback from the current agreement. "For these reasons the legal service does not consider the agreement in its present form as compatible with fundamental rights."

Tony Bunyan of Statewatch, which monitors civil liberties across Europe, said the European parliament should refuse to consent to the agreement, as it is allowed to do under the Lisbon treaty. He said it did not meet EU data protection standards, nor provide judicial redress or independent oversight.

"Secret minutes of EU-US meetings since 2001 show that they have always been a one-way channel, with the US setting the agenda by making demands on the EU," said Bunyan. "When the EU does make rare requests, like on data protection, because US law only offers protection and redress to US citizens, they are bluntly told that the US is not going to change its data protection system ? as they were at the EU-US JHA ministerial meeting in Washington on 8-9 December 2010."

Jan Philipp Albrecht, a German Green party MEP and member of the European parliament's civil liberties committee, said the document showed the EU was acting against its own legal advice in pushing ahead with the proposed retention of sensitive passenger data.

"The commission cannot simply continue to stick its fingers in its ears, and it is high time that it dropped its obsession with PNR. This means going back to the drawing board and renegotiating the draft agreements with the US, Australia and Canada on passenger record retention, ensuring these agreements are in line with EU data protection law.

"It also means dropping the proposed legislation on the retention of passenger data within the EU."


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Source: http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2011/jun/20/air-passenger-data-plans-illegal

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Students Create Smartphone App Capable of Detecting Malaria

child testing for malaria
A group of grad students has come up with a way to instantly diagnose malaria, using only a smartphone and some fancy software.

The team, comprised of students from around the nation, developed the prototype using a Samsung Focus smartphone, running Windows 7. After adding a microscopic camera lens to the phone, the students developed software capable of analyzing and scanning blood for malaria parasites. With the app installed on the phone, doctors or nurses could theoretically take a photo of any blood sample, and instantly know whether or not a patient is infected with malaria, and how severe the case may be.

Continue reading Students Create Smartphone App Capable of Detecting Malaria

Students Create Smartphone App Capable of Detecting Malaria originally appeared on Switched on Sat, 09 Apr 2011 09:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Source: http://www.switched.com/2011/04/09/students-create-smartphone-app-capable-of-detecting-malaria/

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Great Moments in Headline Writing

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/JamesFallows/~3/i_YsmeXse7U/click.phdo

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T-Mobile myTouch 4G Slide caught in wild ahead of July 6 release

The incoming T-Mobile myTouch 4G Slide has been caught in the wild once again, only this time around the photos are a whole lot less blurry. The QWERTY-blessed slider,�TmoNews‘ tipster confirms, runs Android 2.3 Gingerbread with HTC Sense and is “much like the Sensation but with some specific myTouch features.” The keyboard comes in for [...]

Source: http://feeds.slashgear.com/~r/slashgear/~3/6jHx0__32SY/

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T-Mobile myTouch 4G Slide caught in wild ahead of July 6 release

The incoming T-Mobile myTouch 4G Slide has been caught in the wild once again, only this time around the photos are a whole lot less blurry. The QWERTY-blessed slider,�TmoNews‘ tipster confirms, runs Android 2.3 Gingerbread with HTC Sense and is “much like the Sensation but with some specific myTouch features.” The keyboard comes in for [...]

Source: http://feeds.slashgear.com/~r/slashgear/~3/6jHx0__32SY/

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Apple Dropping the ?Mac? From ?Mac OS X??

Source: http://www.apple.com/macosx/

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If you like all things cute, you?ll love this: How to Make Panda Nail Art

This cute panda nail design is easy to make and it will instantly brighten up your day. You only need a few items, and it doesn't take too long to master.

Source: http://www.wikihow.com/Make-Panda-Nail-Art

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Facebook app tests theory that first impressions count

Mr Fante's Games of Judgement could tell us a lot about how we're perceived on Facebook

The psychological theory of "thin-slicing" suggests we are adept at forming accurate impressions of new situations, and more importantly, people, within two seconds of being presented with them. There may soon be a lot of data to prove it, thanks to a fascinating new Facebook game.

Launching on Monday after a successful beta run, Mr Fante's Games of Judgement is essentially a much deeper and more refined answer to the early web craze "hot or not", in which internet users could rate images of strangers for physical attractiveness.

Styled as a sort of Victorian sideshow, Mr Fante allows players to try out a series of mini-games in which they have to make snap judgements about other users of the social networking site. These games will get participants to decide whether someone is straight or gay, single or taken, or how old they are. Other quizzes involve whether they have tattoos, dye their hair or work out regularly.

To take part as a subject, users simply have to provide access to their Facebook profile; the game then uses data from inputs such as age, sex and relationship status. Volunteers are given accesss to a range of graphical "O-Meters" that show how they are being rated in the game in terms of age and attractiveness. These animated meters can be posted to your Facebook wall and shared with friends.

Mr Fante is the work of Sheffield-based developer Rattle, which specialises in using data to create products and services for companies like the BBC and Umbro. Director James Boardwell says the studio has been inspired by our very modern relationship with social networking tools, but has also drawn concepts from earlier research.

"The idea stems from the work of American teacher Jane Elliott who, in the 1960s, found that she could judge the life chances of pupils just by looking at them. In an exercise she ran with her class, she found that eye colour could be used to create positive or negative ideas about racial characteristics and from this showed that prejudice was critical to life chances."

Boardwell also mentions Malcom Gladwell's book Blink as an influence. "It's the idea that people make judgements about others within milliseconds and these judgements tend to be more accurate the more experience you have of the experiences that that person has had. So people who were initiated into the Bullingdon fraternity at Oxford, could probably distinguish other Bullingdon members more easily than people who were not part of that group. And so on. This led us to the fundamentals of the game, using profile data as a means to ask questions about people, to see how well you can read people and, conversely, how well you present yourself as you intend to!"

As all Facebook obsessives and fans of the movie The Social Network will realise, this whole concept harks back to the origins of the site, which started out as a method of comparing the attractiveness of students at Harvard University. Mark Zuckerberg originally called his invention FaceMash, and hacked into the university's website to get the images.

The fact that the game tells subjects how others perceive them is likely to be the key attraction. "When we researched the idea, that's what people wanted to know," confirms Boardwell. "They wanted to find out how their Facebook profile presented them to the world."

Of course, there's a narcissistic element to this, but it might also have practical benefits. With more and more employers allegedly combing social networks for information on job applicants, it might prove extremely valuable to get an idea of the kneejerk reactions your Facebook presence instigates.

At the heart of it though, there is a worthwhile experiment about the accuracy of those all-important first impressions ? even though the findings may not be popular.

"Early on we found that judging other people feels morally questionable. People judge others' all the time, often unconsciously, but when asked to do it some felt uncomfortable. From the sample of testers we had, Social Workers particularly, because of their training, thought it was wrong to make presumptions. However, the same Social Workers found the game compelling."

Apparently, Rattle is looking into ways of extending the game element in future iterations of the title, and providing a sense of progression to the experience. For now, willing volunteers should simply brace themselves for the instant judgements of the social networking community. It might not be pretty.

? Mr Fante's Games of Judgement launches on Monday


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Source: http://www.guardian.co.uk/technology/gamesblog/2011/jun/17/games-facebook

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Spotify US launch may be only a few weeks away

Spotify recently inked a deal with Universal Music that would allow the streaming music service access to some of the music that Universal artists make. That deal hinted that the US launch of the service was very close to happening. Spotify general manager Jonathan Forster has said at an ad conference that the music service [...]

Source: http://feeds.slashgear.com/~r/slashgear/~3/FxJL_SSfXsA/

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Sunday, June 19, 2011

Barnes & Noble's new Nook: The anti-iPad

Source: http://rss.cnn.com/~r/fortunebrainstormtech/~3/XxY1Drin8SY/

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Call of Duty: Black Ops ? Annihilation DLC announced

The third Black Ops map pack is coming to Xbox Live on June 28.

Just a quick note to let you know that the third Call of Duty: Black Ops DLC pack has been announced. Entitled Annihilation it'll feature four multiplayer maps ? Hangar 18, Drive-In, Silo and Hazard ? as well as a zombie experience named Shangri-La. According to Treyarch studio head Mark Lamia, the latter is set on, "an exotic and mysterious map filled with deadly traps, dark secrets and innovative gameplay that will challenge even the most daring Zombie hunters." I don't know, we have some pretty daring zombie hunters among the Gamesblog readership...

The pack will hit Xbox Live on June 28 as a timed exclusive. PlayStation 3 owners can expect it a month later. For some reason best known to Bobby Kotick, Activision isn't releasing any screenshots until 6pm (you see, this is what I mean by the obsessive drip-feed of information), but I'll update the story when I'm allowed to show them.

By the way, Activision will also be holding a Double XP weekend, starting Friday July 1. I might even get up to rank 20 at this rate!


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Source: http://www.guardian.co.uk/technology/gamesblog/2011/jun/16/games-ps3

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News of the World pays footballer �70,000 for libel

The newspaper notorious for its sting operations has been the victim of a sting.

The News of the World was hoaxed into believing that a footballer had sent sexually explicit text messages to "a mystery woman".

Under the headline "Ex-Celtic keeper is a real glove rat", the paper claimed he had been deceiving his pregnant fianc�e by sending her "explicit X-rated messages" and "sordid photos."

It published the story, about the Polish international player, Artur Boruc, in its Scottish edition in July last year.

The story was wholly untrue. Boruc sued the paper for defamation and the case had been expected to go to trial.

But the court of session in Edinburgh was told on Friday that the newspaper now conceded that it was in the wrong.

It had therefore agreed, in an out-of-court settlement, to apologise to Boruc and pay him �70,000, which is believed to be a record amount in a Scottish libel case. The paper will also pay all his legal expenses.

According to the News of the World's barrister, Roddy Dunlop QC, the paper had been "the victim of a highly complex deceit by one man."

The court was told the man, identified as Kevin O'Donnell, posed as Boruc's financial adviser and then wove a web of elaborate lies, with many interlinked strands which appeared to corroborate the story.

He set up a fake Facebook page and added bogus comments purporting to come from Boruc's girlfriend.

In one text image, he used a photoshopped picture of a man's torso in order to add a monkey tattoo, similar to one Boruc was known to have.

The scam only unravelled when mobile phone records showed that the calls had been made from a Glasgow hotel at a time when Boruc - who now plays for the Italian team Fiorentina - was on holiday in Sardinia.

Dunlop told the court that the defendants (News Group, the paper's publishers) "accept that they were entirely taken in by this fraud" but he added: "They were not reckless or irresponsible in the beliefs that they held.

Boruc's lawyer told the court that the allegations against his client had been "extremely upsetting." He said footballers "outed for misbehaviour faced being pilloried by rival fans."

PS: Moving on from the court report, and turning to the published story, I note these two paragraphs:

"Last night a friend of the Hoops hero... said: 'This is not a good time for this to come out. Artur's been stupid.'

The pal, who asked not to be named, added: 'He can't remember what he sent her but he should NEVER have done it.'"

In the light of the paper's admission that the story itself was untrue, these quotes are exposed as having been concocted.

It illustrates, once again, how difficult it is to believe anything one reads in the News of the World.

Sources: BBC/STV/The Scotsman


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Source: http://www.guardian.co.uk/media/greenslade/2011/jun/19/newsoftheworld-medialaw

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How the US can win friends and influence people in Pakistan | Bilal Baloch

China has a powerful trade relationship with Pakistan, but Pakistanis have more affinity with the US through social media

In the post-Bin Laden milieu, many musings have been posted and printed about continuing US aid to, or more broadly, a relationship with, Pakistan. It is difficult to convince the populace on either side that this relationship is both vital to US national interest and critical for Pakistani stability and growth. At the heart of the debate lays one, overriding question: what is Pakistan's strategic value to the US?

Perhaps the narrow scope of the "war on terror" has not been able to answer this question sufficiently. So, it may be necessary to take a step back, and look at the larger trends at work in international relations. This is what China has been doing for some time. Their approach, rooted in fueling trade between themselves and the second largest nation in South Asia with a growing youth population, and unrivaled port access, has certainly seen them win Pakistani hearts.

Yet, Pakistani minds remain closer to the US. The American potential to help strengthen civil society, particularly through social media, in Pakistan is immense.

Geopolitical thinkers, notably Robert Kaplan, posit that competition between Asian powers, namely China, and the US will grow fiercely in the near future. Through naval and air power, commerce and communication mainly along sea lines will expand vastly, with the Indian Ocean taking centre stage. A critical geostrategic partner in this region could be Pakistan. A re-evaluation of Pakistan's true strategic value requires re-examining current policy towards that country. Sentiment in the US may well be distrusting of the Pakistani security and political establishment, but civil society in Pakistan is showing signs of strengthening, bringing with it a potential for new and reliable partners in the country. And while the Chinese have successfully pinpointed that trade relations with Pakistan win favour with the populace best, China has little capacity to engage the people of Pakistan on the level of ideas.

China's trade presence in Pakistan has been growing for decades. The steady, indirect approach is something either to marvel at for the emerging superpower's foresight, or to note down for its good fortune. In 2010, trade between the two countries reached a whopping $8.7bn: not bad for a nation wrestling with militancy. Above all else, the Chinese have come to represent reliability in Pakistan in a way that the Americans simply have not ? despite the fact that the US, too, pumps billions of dollars into Pakistan every year.

The Americans, clearly, are not getting the right kind of bang for their buck. China has truly won the hearts of the populace, if not minds; this, in turn, has cultivated trust between the two countries. Yet, for the Chinese to nurture and build connections in Pakistani civil society may be a long way away, as the hyper-politicised people of Pakistan are far removed from the political leanings of the Chinese. Enter, America.

For both legal and security reasons, the US does not carry out extensive trade in Pakistan. After all, without the necessary security for Americans, Pakistan represents a high-risk destination; and of this Pakistanis themselves are perhaps most disadvantaged. But this does not mean that trade relationships in the future should be discounted. Looking at the success of the Chinese approach, a long-term strategy to create jobs and business opportunities for Pakistanis and Americans is plausible. Currently, however, Pakistanis are disenchanted by American foreign policy.

Pakisatani anti-Americanism has always been interpreted as ideological abhorrence of the US. This may be the case for the militant minority that causes the biggest headache, but, in fact, that anti-Americanism may be driven more generally by an asymmetry of information ? and what Pakistanis perceive as US support for a government that does not cater well to the needs of its own people. But the current most significant American exports to Pakistan ? Facebook and Twitter ? have changed the face of communication opportunities available to regular Pakistanis. Some 20 million Pakistanis are frequently online: that's 10-15% of the population. This incidental creation of a virtual civil society has not gone unnoticed: last week, the American consulate organised an international social media summit in Karachi, where internet-savvy journalists and bloggers came together from neighbouring countries and throughout Pakistan to discuss ventures such as "Harass Map" in Pakistan. It's these citizen connections, enabling Pakistanis themselves to build civil society in Pakistan, that can overcome security concerns both locally and internationally.

China may have discovered trade as a key to Pakistan's strategic value; but the US is better-placed to make the relationships that will count.


guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2011 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


Source: http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/cifamerica/2011/jun/19/pakistan-china-us-social-media

QUANTA COMPUTER RESEARCH IN MOTION ROGERS COMMUNICATIONS SAIC SATYAM COMPUTER SERVICES

RIM Announces Layoffs, 500,000 PlayBooks Shipped

Source: http://www.loopinsight.com/2011/06/16/rim-implodes-announces-layoffs-500000-playbooks-shipped/

MEMC ELECTRONIC MATERIALS MICROSOFT MILLICOM INTL CELLULAR MOBILE TELESYSTEMS NANYA TECHNOLOGY

Apple modifies patent compliant against Samsung adding more products and IP rights

The legal battle between Apple and Samsung is escalating. Apple has been granted access to Samsung devices that it alleges violate patents held by Apple and in defeat Samsung decided to try the same tactic. Samsung asked the courts for samples of the iPad 3 and iPhone 5, despite the fact that the devices haven’t [...]

Source: http://feeds.slashgear.com/~r/slashgear/~3/ZoB5-7qqlmI/

KEY JDS UNIPHASE JDA SOFTWARE GROUP JACK HENRY and ASSOCIATES IXYS

One-Man War in Libya: Is Congress Mainly To Blame?

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/JamesFallows/~3/2roAEy7kA_Q/click.phdo

SANDISK SALESFORCE COM SAIC ROCKWELL AUTOMATION RF MICRO DEVICES

Google Will No Longer Collect Street View Photos in Germany

street view carGoogle has decided to stop collecting Street View photos in Germany, where regulators have spent much of the past two years railing against the search giant for violating the privacy of German residents. A company spokesman confirmed the decision in a statement sent to the Register, explaining that the images gathered across 20 German cities will remain available online, but reiterating that Google has "no plans to launch new imagery" in the country.

Google Will No Longer Collect Street View Photos in Germany originally appeared on Switched on Mon, 11 Apr 2011 14:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Source: http://www.switched.com/2011/04/11/google-will-no-longer-collect-street-view-photos-in-germany/

LM ERICSSON LOGITECH INTERNATIONAL MCAFEE MAXIMUS MANTECH INTERNATIONAL

LameXP: A great audio encoder by any other name

By Mike Williams

At first glance an audio encoder called LameXP doesn't look like it'll be the most appealing of products. But beauty is in the ear of the listener -- and this product delivers.



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Source: http://feeds.betanews.com/~r/bn/~3/vzz1jhOnZkQ/1308263706

RADISYS RACKABLE SYSTEMS QUEST SOFTWARE QUANTUM QLOGIC

Saturday, June 18, 2011

Duke Nukem?s PR Firm Threatens to Punish Sites That Run Negative Reviews

Source: http://arstechnica.com/gaming/news/2011/06/duke-nukems-pr-threatens-to-punish-sites-that-run-negative-reviews.ars

MEMC ELECTRONIC MATERIALS MICROSOFT MILLICOM INTL CELLULAR MOBILE TELESYSTEMS NANYA TECHNOLOGY

Facebook IPO: Shares + Likes = $100bn valuation

Report claims social networking firm will be pushed to go public in first quarter of 2012

If companies were valued by hype, then Facebook could certainly claim to be worth $100bn. But is it really worth that in cold, hard cash?

A report from CNBC overnight claims the site is preparing for an initial public offering early next year at an eye-watering valuation of at least $100bn.

A 2012 IPO has been expected for some time. CNBC said a
the company would be obliged to go public in the first quarter of the year because it is likely to reach the 500-shareholder limit in October, and would then be required to release financial results to the US Securities and Exchange Commission every quarter. The first of these would be due in April, prompting speculation of a first quarter IPO just ahead of that.

Further pressure may be coming from within, with some employees pushing for an IPO so that restrictions on cashing in on their stock will be lifted.

We asked Facebook about the report and they declined to comment. But this follows various remarks from chief operating officer Sheryl Sandberg last month when asked about Facebook's IPO. In late May at the Reuters Global Technology Summit, Sandberg described the Facebook IPO as "a process that all companies go through. It's an inevitable process for us, the next thing that happens. No one is buying us, we're going public."

At the POLIS lecture, the Wall Street Journal's Ben Rooney described her answer as non-committal, but she referred to "the IPO" rather than "an IPO", which was seen as further confirmation. And though she joked she'd give out the date, she didn't.

Over the past six months, estimates of Facebook's value have rocketed from $50bn when Goldman Sachs invested $1.5bn in the firm, to $85bn based on trading through private markets such as SecondMarket.

One transaction in January, where a trader bought Facebook shares at $55 each, put the site's value at $124bn ? that's 62 times greater than Facebook's estimated revenues of $2bn last year.

If more concrete evidence emerges of a slowdown in Facebook's growth that would confirm the company is peaking, it makes sense for the company to cash in soon. And it's definitely in the air, with LinkedIn's IPO at $4.3bn and Groupon recently filing for its IPO at a valuation of $750m$15bn.


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Source: http://www.guardian.co.uk/technology/pda/2011/jun/14/facebook-ipo-shares-likes-100bn

VERISIGN VERIFONE HOLDINGS VEECO INSTRUMENTS VARIAN SEMICONDUCTOR EQUIPMENT ASSOCIATES UNITED ONLINE

Obama Is Wrong About Congress and Libya

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/JamesFallows/~3/3nwuDXINfCM/click.phdo

MOTOROLA MOODYS MISCROSOFT OFFICE MICROSOFT MICROSEMI

Always Be Prepared: 10 Tips for Outrunning an Attacker. Pass it on.

The principal rule in self-defense is to engage only when necessary, as a last resort. As part of that rule, running away from an attack is your greatly preferred option rather than seeking to engage and defend yourself; survival in a situation of being mugged, attacked, or caught up in a fight is most certainly not what the movies show, so don't hesitate to protect yourself by getting out of the situation as soon as you can.

Outrunning an attacker is not so much about speed as it is about heeding the moment that you can get away from the situation, and then it's about creating distance and attracting attention. If you cannot remember anything else if attacked, remember the suggestions for running away outlined here; remember that "he that fights to run away, may live to fight another day".

Source: http://www.wikihow.com/Outrun-an-Attacker

NOVELL NETWORK APPLIANCE NETGEAR NCR NATIONAL SEMICONDUCTOR

6 Ways to Freeze Strawberries

If you have ever wanted to preserve that delicious taste of early summer, try freezing strawberries. Frozen strawberries are not only a healthy and delicious snack, they're easy to prepare and store. Also, who dosen't like a nice, healthy treat.
There are various methods, some that enable you to keep the strawberries longer than others; select the one that fits in best with your needs.

Source: http://www.wikihow.com/Freeze-Strawberries

PEROT SYSTEMS PALM OSI SYSTEMS ORACLE OPENWAVE SYSTEMS

LulzSec Denies Sega Pass Hack, Offers Revenge

Sega confirmed this morning that its Sega Pass network was hacked and has been offline since yesterday as the company investigates the extent of the breach. No hacker group has yet to step forward, and the usual suspect LulzSec has surprisingly denied responsibility for the attack. LulzSec has been responsible for a chain of attacks [...]

Source: http://feeds.slashgear.com/~r/slashgear/~3/vFowLunkKHU/

SI INTERNATIONAL SEAGATE TECHNOLOGY SCIENTIFIC GAMES SANDISK SALESFORCE COM

8+ Ways to Cook with Coca Cola

Aside from being a popular softdrink brand, Coke (or any other brand of cola), can be used as a "secret" ingredient for enhancing various dishes. Cooking with cola is a good activity for lazy Sunday afternoons and it's a great way to use up flat cola.

This article has various tried and tested cooking tips for using cola but these are by no means exhaustive; once you're using cola for cooking, you'll undoubtedly find many more ways to enjoy adding it to your food!

Source: http://www.wikihow.com/Cook-With-Coca-Cola

RF MICRO DEVICES RED HAT RADISYS RACKABLE SYSTEMS QUEST SOFTWARE

Man Goes to Prison for Threatening Eric Cantor on YouTube

eric cantorA man named Norman LeBoon is headed to prison after making threats to House Majority Leader Eric Cantor in a video posted to YouTube. In the clip, the 38-year-old LeBoon called the Republican "a liar" and "a Lucifer," and promised to shoot him. LeBoon pleaded guilty to the charges in November, and, on Thursday, was sentenced to two years in prison, along with an additional three years of supervised release.

Man Goes to Prison for Threatening Eric Cantor on YouTube originally appeared on Switched on Fri, 08 Apr 2011 16:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Source: http://www.switched.com/2011/04/08/norman-lebook-prison-for-eric-cantor-threats-on-youtube/

MEMC ELECTRONIC MATERIALS MICROSOFT MILLICOM INTL CELLULAR MOBILE TELESYSTEMS NANYA TECHNOLOGY

Wishful Thinking

Source: http://www.adweek.com/internet-week-blog/rip-apps-132406

ELECTRONIC DATA SYSTEMS ELECTRONIC ARTS ECLIPSYS EASTMAN KODAK CO EARTHLINK

Please Read This Article About the Chinese Navy

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/JamesFallows/~3/k7Z-uXYMUH4/click.phdo

TECHNITROL TAKETWO INTERACTIVE SOFTWARE SYNTEL SYNTAXBRILLIAN SYNOPSYS

How to Draw a Hamburger In Adobe Illustrator

This tutorial will show you how to draw a hamburger in Adobe Illustrator CS3, by using mostly the ??pen tool?? and ??pencil tool??.

Source: http://www.wikihow.com/Draw-a-Hamburger-In-Adobe-Illustrator

ECLIPSYS EASTMAN KODAK CO EARTHLINK DST SYSTEMS DISCOVER FINANCIAL SERVICES

Friday, June 17, 2011

Great Moments in Headline Writing

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/JamesFallows/~3/i_YsmeXse7U/click.phdo

QUANTUM QLOGIC PROGRESS SOFTWARE PLANAR SYSTEMS PEROT SYSTEMS

Apple iCloud: How vs What

Steve Jobs's browser-free version of the cloud should work neatly across interconnected Apple devices

Once a year in San Francisco, Apple summons its third-party application engineers to the World Wide Developers Conference. Since Steve Jobs's return to the company the event has grown in attendance and importance. One turning point was the 2002 introduction of OS X, a genuinely modern Mac OS, built on a Unix foundation. Then there was the 2008 WWDC featuring iPhone native apps and the epoch-making iOS App Store. (Yes, "epoch-making" sounds a bit grand, but it really was the birth of a new era.)

This year's programme was more loaded than usual, offering three main topics: a major OS X release, dubbed Lion, slated for this summer; a new version of the iPhone/iPad/iPod Touch for the autumn (iOS5); and iCloud.

The two-hour keynote is worth your while. Always entertaining, Jobs and his co-presenters convey the massive effort that went into moving Apple's engineering armies on these three fronts ? with a mere 2% of revenue in R&D expenses.

But let's focus on iCloud.

Apple has often been involved in feature-list schoolyard squabbles of the "mine is longer than yours" type. Two years ago, Steve Ballmer, our favourite rhetorician, scoffed that the MacBook is an Intel laptop with an Apple logo slapped on the lid. He might as well have noted that all cars have wheels ? round and black, mostly ? and then gone on to sneer at brands commanding higher prices than your basic Chevrolet. (I've owned half a dozen of the latter.) In the world of cars, the value of the How is well understood: all cubic inches aren't born equal.

For computers, we're getting there. The PC market is in the doldrums: Shipments are stagnant, Apple claims a 1% drop in Q2 2011 vs Q2 2010 while, during the same time period, Mac shipments grew 28%. It can't be the Intel processors, it is How they are driven.

Unsurprisingly, Apple's iCloud announcement has been met with the same type of misunderstanding: 'OK, after all these years, Apple finally makes the plunge into the Cloud. The Cloud is the Cloud. Or, rather, Google is the Cloud. What's the BFD?'

A strong dose of scepticism is warranted. Even Jobs calls MobileMe, his company's previous effort, "Not our finest hour". Both What and How fell frustratingly short of the standards of polish, simplicity and agility Apple is known and financially rewarded for. MobileMe's 2008 vintage was plonk. This led to apologies, subscription extensions and management changes. Improvements followed, including the well-regarded Find My iPhone service.

But both What and How remained deficient.

The feature list barely differentiated MobileMe from other services. Mail, calendar, address book, photo galleries, web hosting, file storage are offered elsewhere on the web by a long list of companies: Google, Yahoo!, Microsoft, DropBox, Flickr? Google, followed by Microsoft and others, also offer Web Apps, Google Docs being the best known example, an "Office Suite" in the Cloud, accessible anywhere, from any computer with a net connection and a decent browser. This led many, yours truly included, to wonder: does dear leader "grok the cloud"? Does Apple have it in its DNA to be a serious participant in the cloud computing revolution?

MobileMe's reliability remained sub-par, often showing evidence of "silos", of poorly interconnected modules, a cloud computing cardinal sin, as recounted in the What I Want for my Mac Monday Note.

Against this tattered backdrop, iCloud walks on stage. The most striking difference with MobileMe and other web-based offerings already mentioned, is the shift away from the browser. I'll use a word-processor document to illustrate. In both cases we'll assume you've already stated your credentials, login and password for Google, Apple ID, and password for iCloud. With Google Docs, you fire up your browser, enter the URL for your service, compose or edit a document, file it in a folder in Google's Cloud, and it's ready for you from any computer anywhere.

With iCloud, you fire up your word processor, Pages for the time being, and compose. No saving, no URL for a web service. You get up and leave. In the queue at the airport you remember something, you fire up Pages on your iPhone and add the brilliant idea that just came to you. But how do you access the Pages document from your Mac at the office? You don't have to "access" it, it's already there on your iPhone, your iPad or, sitting at the gate after security, on your MacBook. Your document was automagically saved and pushed to your device. No hands, the system does it for you ? and propagates the edits you just made.

(This is why, the week before the WWDC, Apple published "universal" ? meaning iPhone + iPad + iPod Touch ? versions of Pages, Numbers, and Keynote. I'm not sure I would want to write this Monday Note on an iPhone but, in a pinch, I can fix a mistake using the small device.)

This is the BFD, this is the How. Such behaviour is available or will be extended to all applications and content.

The Google model sees everything through a browser. Apple's iCloud model uses local apps transparently interconnected through the Cloud. Browsers Everywhere vs Apps Everywhere.

Another important feature is the demotion of the PC as the media hub or, if you prefer, the untethering of our iDevices from the personal computer. From now on, content and apps are purchased, downloaded, updated wirelessly, PC-free. And seamlessly propagated to all devices with the same Apple ID.

The demos look good, the iCloud technical sessions at the WWDC went well. But the full-scale implementation remains to be field-tested. For the document editing example, Apple used an iPad to iPhone and back example, and merely mentioned the Mac as a participant later in the presentation. Annoying details such as iWork file format incompatibilities between Macs and iDevices need closer inspection as they might make reality a little less pristine than the theory.

For developers, the new APIs just released will enable more applications to offer the seamless multi-device updates just demonstrated.

If iCloud works as represented, it will be very competitive ? and the price is right: free for the first 5Gb of documents. (Content such as music or video and apps don't count in those 5Gb.)

The "free" iCloud reminds us of Apple's real business model. They want to sell lots of devices, everything else supports this goal. It seems iCloud's easy, executive-proof How will sell a lot nicely interconnected Apple hardware. For competitors, weaving together a Brand X laptop, a Brand Y smartphone and a Brand Z tablet won't be as easy or inexpensive.

To be continued as competitors take Apple's theory apart and as both developers and the company move the iCloud story into reality.

JLG@mondaynote.com

For further perspective, a few links:
- A prescient (15 April 2011) "Cutting That Cord" piece by John Gruber.
- A 10,000 feet overview by Philip Ellmer-Dewitt, in Fortune's Apple 2.0.
- Pascal-Emmanuel Gobry thinks iCloud annoys Google and humiliates Microsoft.
- John Paczkowski's take in All Things D: iCloud: The Mother of All Halos.
- Business Insider thinks Microsoft had a service "just like iCloud" for Windows Mobile.
- Walt Mossberg's iCloud take, interviewed by Charlie Rose.
- Steve Jobs' "It Just Works", as seen by MG Siegler on TechCrunch.


guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2011 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


Source: http://www.guardian.co.uk/technology/2011/jun/13/apple-icloud

JACK HENRY and ASSOCIATES IXYS ITRON IRON MOUNTAIN INORATED IOMEGA