Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/vwL7GyCobp4/
tracy mcgrady tracy mcgrady mash alec baldwin kicked off plane alec baldwin kicked off plane mumia mumia
Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/vwL7GyCobp4/
tracy mcgrady tracy mcgrady mash alec baldwin kicked off plane alec baldwin kicked off plane mumia mumia
NEW DELHI (Reuters) ? India has asked operators of social media networks, including Facebook and Google, to screen user content and remove any offensive material, the information and telecoms minister said on Tuesday, but denied the move was censorship.
Kapil Sibal met executives at those companies along with Yahoo and Microsoft on Monday to ask them to implement a monitoring mechanism, but no solution was reached, he said.
Sibal said he asked the companies in September to remove images and statements offensive to religious groups but the companies had rebuffed his requests.
"We have to take care of the sensibilities of our people, we have to protect their sensibilities. Our cultural ethos is very important to us," he said at a news conference.
He said companies will not be allowed to say, "we throw up our hands, we can't do anything about this."
"We'll certainly evolve guidelines to ensure that such blasphemous material is not part of content on any platform."
Facebook said it recognized the government's wish to minimize the amount of offensive content on the web. The California-based company said it removes content that violates company rules on nudity and inciting violence and hatred.
"(We) will continue to engage the Indian authorities as they debate this important issue," Facebook said in a statement.
A Google spokeswoman declined to comment, when contacted by Reuters prior to the news conference. Yahoo India could not offer any immediate comments.
India's bloggers and Twitter users poured ridicule on the minister after a New York Times report on Monday said Sibal had called executives about six weeks ago and had shown them a Facebook page that maligned ruling Congress Party chief Sonia Gandhi and told them it was "unacceptable."
The Hindustan Times newspaper said the companies told Sibal that it was impossible to meet his demands given the sheer volume of user-generated content from India.
India now has 100 million Internet users, less than a tenth of the country's population of 1.2 billion, but still the third-largest user base behind China and the United States. It is seen swelling to 300 million users in the next three years.
As part of a broader electronic security crackdown, Indian security agencies last year demanded to intercept communications sent through highly secure BlackBerry devices of Canadian smartphone maker Research In Motion.
Officials had also said Google and Skype would be sent notices to set up local servers to allow full monitoring of email and messenger communications.
Indian authorities were taken aback earlier this year, when an anti-corruption campaign multiplied on Facebook, Twitter and other social networking sites and drew tens of thousands of people to protest sites.
Britain also faced criticism last month for considering curbs on social media after recent riots even as Foreign Secretary William Hague castigated countries that block the Internet to stifle protests.
(Additional reporting by Shilpa Jamkhandikar in MUMBAI; Writing by Anurag Kotoky; editing by Malini Menon)
protect ip act spear of destiny rock hill sc kate middleton pregnant national book awards jessica sutta houston astros
WASHINGTON (Reuters) ? The Federal Reserve looks set to hold off on easing monetary policy for a second meeting in a row as it gauges the impact of Europe's crisis on the U.S. economy and ponders additional transparency steps.
The central bank has signaled it is close to wrapping up a months-long effort to revamp or beef up its communications strategy.
It appears to be closing in on a decision to use its quarterly economic forecasts as a way to tell markets what they see as the likely paths of inflation, unemployment and even interest rates themselves.
But analysts say the policy-setting Federal Open Market Committee has no reason to pull the trigger now given recent data showing moderately stronger economic growth and the fact that its next set of projections is not due until next month.
"The FOMC seems poised to revamp its communications strategy, but we aren't expecting any bold moves at next week's meeting," said Dana Saporta, an economist at Credit Suisse.
There is debate within the central bank as to whether such guidance would actively constitute an easier stance of monetary policy or merely greater clarity as to policymakers' outlooks.
To be sure, if official forecasts for benchmark interest rates prove to be even more dovish than markets now expect, then market-set rates could fall as investors re-price assets to take this new information into account.
As for further asset purchases, another remaining option in the Fed's arsenal, policymakers appear to want to keep their powder dry in case Europe's debt debacle is not resolved and it triggers a credit crunch that cripples U.S. financial markets.
"The scary scenario of course is if there was an implosion of the financial markets in Europe which would freeze funding markets for everyone," Philadelphia Federal Reserve Bank President Charles Plosser told a news conference on Friday.
"There, it's appropriate and important that central banks around the world be prepared to play (their) role as a lender of last resort and keep financial markets functioning," he said.
Global central banks already took coordinated action to address burgeoning funding pressures in the European financial sector, moving last week to lower the cost of dollar funding available to banks.
For now, however, U.S. economic data have proven reliably solid of late, even if a big drop in the jobless rate to 8.6 percent last month was largely due to workers dropping out of the labor force.
The apparent strengthening in the U.S. recovery buys the Fed time to hold pat on policy while it assesses the potential spillover from the crisis in Europe.
"The U.S. economy has remained quite resilient, so the Fed's tools will likely be kept in their tool belt for the time being," said Jason Ware, a market strategist at Albion Financial Group.
Investors were cautiously hopeful a European summit this week would lay a path out of the region's debt morass, but they remain aware that numerous earlier efforts had failed to stem mounting financial pressures.
PARSING LANGUAGE
In the absence of big policy moves, traders will be left with interpreting the tone of the Fed's assessment of the economy.
At their last meeting in early November, officials described the recovery as having "strengthened somewhat" in the third quarter.
But forecasts released after that meeting contained sharp downward revisions to projections for GDP growth in 2012, with the committee's consensus view dropping to a range of 2.5 percent to 2.9 percent from the 3.3 percent to 3.7 percent increase officials had expected in June.
A new communications strategy could include an explicit inflation target, essentially a firming of the Fed's current "longer-run" consensus projection of 1.7 percent to 2 percent.
The central bank could also offer guidance as to where it would like to see the jobless rate go and specific forecasts for the overnight federal funds rate. It currently offers no interest rate projections.
Policymakers could even offer some idea of what they see as the expected size of the central bank's balance sheet over time, given the important role that bond purchases have played in the Fed's unconventional monetary policy push.
"We are considering that," said Plosser, a member of a Fed subgroup on communications. "In some cases unusual times call for unusual communications strategies."
nebraska football online deals leap pad baltimore ravens san francisco 49ers san francisco 49ers lauren alaina
Sandbags frame a 1.8 ton WWII bomb in river Rhine near Koblenz Saturday Dec. 3, 2011. Officials in Germany's western city of Koblenz say some 45,000 residents have to be evacuated because of a World War II era bomb discovered in the Rhine river. City officials said Saturday the massive British 1.8 ton bomb will be defused early Sunday, requiring all residents within a radius of about 2 kilometers (1.2 miles) from the bomb site to leave their homes for the day. The British bomb was found last week alongside a 275 pound bomb dropped there by U.S. forces during WWII. The bombs were discovered in the Rhine after its water level fell significantly amid a prolonged lack of rain. (AP Photo/dapd/ Harald Tittel)
Sandbags frame a 1.8 ton WWII bomb in river Rhine near Koblenz Saturday Dec. 3, 2011. Officials in Germany's western city of Koblenz say some 45,000 residents have to be evacuated because of a World War II era bomb discovered in the Rhine river. City officials said Saturday the massive British 1.8 ton bomb will be defused early Sunday, requiring all residents within a radius of about 2 kilometers (1.2 miles) from the bomb site to leave their homes for the day. The British bomb was found last week alongside a 275 pound bomb dropped there by U.S. forces during WWII. The bombs were discovered in the Rhine after its water level fell significantly amid a prolonged lack of rain. (AP Photo/dapd/ Harald Tittel)
Sandbags frame a 1.8 ton WWII bomb in river Rhine near Koblenz Saturday Dec. 3, 2011. Officials in Germany's western city of Koblenz say some 45,000 residents have to be evacuated because of a World War II era bomb discovered in the Rhine river. City officials said Saturday the massive British 1.8 ton bomb will be defused early Sunday, requiring all residents within a radius of about 2 kilometers (1.2 miles) from the bomb site to leave their homes for the day.The British bomb was found last week alongside a 275 pound bomb dropped there by U.S. forces during WWII. The bombs were discovered in the Rhine after its water level fell significantly amid a prolonged lack of rain. (AP Photo/dapd/ Harald Tittel)
BERLIN (AP) ? Officials in the western German city of Koblenz say tens of thousands of residents have left their homes as experts prepare to defuse a massive World War II-era bomb discovered in the Rhine river.
City officials said Sunday that some 45,000 residents living within a radius of about 2 kilometers (1.2 miles) from the bomb site had to evacuate for the day by 0800 GMT.
It's one of Germany's biggest bomb-related evacuations since the war ended.
The British 1.8 ton bomb could cause massive damage if it exploded. It was found last week alongside a 275-pound U.S. bomb after the Rhine's water level fell due to lack of rain. Both bombs are to be defused.
Finding unexploded bombs dropped by the Allies over Germany is common even more than 60 years after the conflict.
Associated Pressapple update apple update download ios 5 pokey find my mac gumby derrick mason
MOSCOW ? Russians cast their ballots with muted enthusiasm in national parliamentary elections Sunday, a vote that opinion polls indicate could water down the strength of the party led by Prime Minister Vladimir Putin, despite the government's relentless marginalization of opposition groups.
Although Putin and his United Russia party have dominated Russian politics for more than a decade, popular discontent appears to be growing with Putin's strongman style, widespread corruption among officials and the gap between ordinary Russians and the country's floridly super-rich.
United Russia holds a two-thirds majority in the outgoing State Duma. But a survey last month by the independent Levada Center polling agency indicated the party could get only about 53 percent of the vote in this election, depriving it of the number of seats necessary to change the constitution unchallenged.
Putin wants United Russia to do well in the parliamentary election to help pave the way for his return to the presidency in a vote now three months away.
He has warned that a parliament with a wide array of parties would lead to political instability and claiming that Western governments want to undermine the election. A Western-funded election-monitoring group has come under strong official pressure and its Web site was incapacitated by hackers on Sunday.
Only seven parties have been allowed to field candidates for parliament this year, while the most vocal opposition groups have been denied registration and barred from campaigning.
The Communist Party and the liberal Yabloko party complained Sunday of extensive election violations aimed at boosting United Russia's vote count, including party observers being hindered in their work.
In Vladivostok, voters complained to police that United Russia was offering free food in exchange for promises to vote for the party. In St. Petersburg, an Associated Press photographer saw a United Russia emblem affixed to the curtains on a voting booth.
Golos, the country's only independent election-monitoring group, said that in the Volga River city of Samara observers and election commission members from opposition parties had been barred from verifying that the ballot boxes were properly sealed at all polling stations.
Mikhail Kasyanov, a former prime minister when Putin was president, said he and other opposition activists who voted Sunday are under no illusion that their votes will be counted fairly.
"It is absolutely clear there will be no real count," he said. "The authorities created an imitation of a very important institution whose name is free election, that is not free and is not elections."
United Russia's dominance of politics has induced a grudging sense of impotence among many in the country of 143 million. In Vladivostok, voter Artysh Munzuk noted the contrast between the desire to do one's civic duty and the feeling that it doesn't matter.
"It's very important to come to the polling stations and vote, but many say that it's useless," said the 20-year-old university student.
There are around 110 million eligible voters in Russia and turnout in many areas appeared low Sunday. In the Pacific Coast regions of Sakhalin and Kamchatka, turnout was just 45 to 48 percent with two hours to go until the polls closed.
Turnout in some regions appeared high, however. An AP reporter saw a polling station in Moscow's southwest filled with voters, including an unusually high number of young people compared to the previous election.
Putin and President Dmitry Medvedev made final appeals for their party Friday, the last day of campaigning, warning that a parliament made up of diverse political camps would be incapable of making decisions.
The view underlines Russian authorities' continuing discomfort with political pluralism and preference for top-down operation.
As president in 2000-2008, Putin's autocratic leadership style won wide support among Russians exhausted by a decade of post-Soviet uncertainty. But United Russia has become increasingly disliked, seen as stifling opposition, representing a corrupt bureaucracy and often called "the party of crooks and thieves."
A few dozen activists of the Left Front opposition group tried to stage an unsanctioned protest just outside the Red Square on Sunday, but were quickly dispersed by police, who detained about a dozen of them.
In the western city of Bryansk, an unidentified assailant threw a firebomb into the window of the local United Russia's office. No one was hurt and the fire was quickly extinguished, according to local police.
An interim report from an elections-monitoring mission of the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe noted that "most parties have expressed a lack of trust in the fairness of the electoral process."
The websites of Golos and Ekho Moskvy, a prominent, independent-minded radio station were down on Sunday. Both claimed the failures were due to denial-of-service hacker attacks.
"The attack on the site on election day is obviously connected to attempts to interfere with publication of information about violations," Ekho Moskvy editor Alexey Venediktov said in a Twitter post.
Golos has come under strong pressure in the week leading up to the vote.
Its leader, Lilya Shibanova, was held at a Moscow airport for 12 hours upon her Friday return from Poland after refusing to give her laptop computer to security officers, said Golos' deputy director Grigory Melkonyants. On Friday, the group was fined the equivalent of $1,000 by a Moscow court for violating a law that prohibits publication of election opinion research for five days before a vote.
U.S. Ambassador to Russia John Beyrle said in his blog that he called the Golos head Saturday "to express my support for the work they have been doing, and convey the concern of the White House about the pressure they have been experiencing over the last week."
Putin last Sunday accused Western governments of trying to influence the election. Golos is funded by grants from the United States and Europe.
The group has compiled some 5,300 complaints of election-law violations ahead of the vote. Most are linked to United Russia. Roughly a third of the complainants ? mostly government employees and students ? say employers and professors are pressuring them to vote for the party.
____
Lynn Berry and Nataliya Vasilyeva contributed to this report.
maksim chmerkovskiy aurora borealis s.978 larry ellison go ask alice go ask alice nflx
All Critics (134) | Top Critics (37) | Fresh (127) | Rotten (7)
'Hugo': Scorsese's humbling hommage to his favorite art
Thematic potency and cinematic virtuosity -- the production was designed by Dante Ferretti and photographed by Robert Richardson -- can't conceal a deadly inertness at the film's core.
For all the wizardry on display, Hugo often feels like a film about magic instead of a magical film...
I have seen the future of 3-D moviemaking, and it belongs to Martin Scorsese, unlikely as that may sound.
It's a fairy tale for mature viewers, but the airy exterior hides emotional depth.
One of the most magical viewing experiences of the decade so far.
It's possible to see the attraction, but when people break into applause over the credits, some are going to be left cold.
It's a deeply felt piece of work, something which only Scorsese could have brought to the screen...
Beautifully photographed and well acted but the storyline, especially when Kingsley's character takes center stage, is tediously tiring
Martin Scorsese unleashes his devotion to the magic of movies with a zeal that is enchanting.?
For youngsters with a secret sense of wonder about how the world works, Scorsese is offering a golden key to a limitless world of make-believe.
A masterpiece of visual storytelling and a heartfelt homage to the industry that Scorsese has triumphantly made his own.
Beautifully made and superbly acted, Hugo features terrific 3D effects and stands as a charming love letter to silent cinema, but it's let down by a weak central plot and the script never quite connects on an emotional level.
It might be curtains for celluloid, but Scorsese, a boyish 69, clearly isn't leaving the stage any time soon. He directs every film with the passion of his first. And it shows.
Director Martin Scorsese's well-documented affection for all things cinema has never been more evident than in the enchanting and imaginative Hugo.
It sounds a bit strange to say this about the man who gave us Taxi Driver, Raging Bull, and so many other classics of hardcore machismo, but Martin Scorsese's new movie Hugo is delightful.
Scorsese's best film since Goodfellas... a celebration of the transportive joy that comes from watching [movies].
The charming if overly gilded story of an unwanted teenage boy rescued by art and friendship.
Something very rare: a celebration of past achievement that doesn't succumb to nostalgia. Scorsese pays his respects to the past but also demonstrates that the artform Melies loved remains exciting.
This love letter to the movies is something to cherish.
This is a great director's greatest love story.
Scorsese uses 3D to submerge viewers into a glittering storybook world, but all of Hugo's beauty can't make up for the sidetracking of the tale of the orphaned boy living in the train station in favor of a film preservation PSA.
If however, you are not a film scholar or a fan of the period, Scorsese will skillfully turn you into one without you even knowing it.
More Critic ReviewsSource: http://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/hugo/
real housewives of atlanta bernie fine bernie fine matt leinart j.r. martinez cyber monday 2011 cyber monday 2011