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César Albarrán Torres

Chilangos Priístas (chilangosPRI) on Twitter - 0 views

  • chilangosPRI
  • Se enteraron de la ley q se promueve en la ALDF al registro civil para "prohibir" nombres risibles y/o inapropiados???
  • Chilangos cuentenos...sintieron el temblor??? 4.8 grados Richter.
  • ...1 more annotation...
  • Por ejemplo: Inversionistas Japoneses LEEN las declaraciones del Presidente diciendo q ESTAMOS EN GUERRA, creen q invertiran? #fail
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    Mexico will hold presidential elections in 2012. Eight years after it lost the presidential seat to the conservative party PAN, the PRI (which held the "perfect dictatorship" by staying 71 years in power), is gaining momentum and seems to be the clear front-runner. The party has conducted many efforts to engage young voters (those who grew up hearing about the absolutist years of the PRI) with its political agenda. In Mexico. the money that parties invest in campaigns is prone to debate and finger-pointing. How will efforts like this Twitter account be accounted for? Is social media an investment? 
César Albarrán Torres

BBC News - Former Mexico presidential candidate 'missing' - 1 views

  • The BBC's Inma Gil in Mexico City says the disappearance of the man known as "Diego the boss" has sparked all sorts of speculation in a country ravaged by drug related violence.
  • Some local media reported he had been kidnapped, others that he had been killed.
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    Manuel Espino, leader of the PAN, Mexico's conservative party, twitted that Diego Fernandez de Ceballos, the politician who is missing, had been killed. He later said sorry and admited the information was not confirmed/true. But was it? Twitter's immediacy can put politicians in the spotlight even if that is not their intention. 
César Albarrán Torres

Israeli Raid Canceled After Facebook Leak - The Lede Blog - NYTimes.com - 0 views

  • a raid on suspected militants in the West Bank planned for Wednesday was called off by the country’s military because a soldier posted details of the operation on Facebook.
  • This news comes just days after the Pentagon announced a new social media policy that will permit American soldiers to use sites like Facebook, Twitter, YouTube and Flickr to keep in touch with family and friends online
  • he Pentagon, like many employers, says that it wants to reserve the right to put limits on how soldiers use the Web while on the job.
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    Israeli soldier posts the details of an operation on Facebook, and the operation is called off. Ironic: the Internet, originally a military tool, causes trouble in the military. Like with potential victims for kidnapping in Mexico posting personal details online: should basic media literacy education be provided for the use of social media among groups with potential risks?
César Albarrán Torres

Red virtual, banco de datos para plagiarios | Ediciones Impresas Milenio - 0 views

  • Estas páginas no sólo están exhibiendo a una persona, sino que dan información de quién compone la familia, dónde y cómo vive y dónde estudia. Esto crea la posibilidad de un secuestro”, aseguró Eduardo Muriel, investigador privado con más de 40 años de experiencia en el negocio de la seguridad.
  • ¿Fotografías de viaje esquiando en Valle de Bravo, Tequesquitengo o de fiesta en París o Disneylandia?
  • En Venezuela, otro país que atraviesa una crisis de secuestros, la consultora Informática Forense admite que estas redes son un claro riesgo para sus usuarios.
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    In Mexico and other Latin American countries there have been some questions raised on how kidnappers can get precise information of potential victims and their spending power: friends, lifestyle, travels. If social networks like Facebook are a potential tool for criminals, should they be regulated by the government? Is it the media or the government's fault if such a use is being made? I am looking for references in English regarding this problem. 
César Albarrán Torres

Slim Tops Gates and Buffett as World's Richest Man - DealBook Blog - NYTimes.com - 0 views

  • The Mexican billionaire Carlos Slim Helú has taken the top spot in the Forbes annual rankings of the richest billionaires in the world,
  • erives much of his fortune from his telecommunications businesses, including the big wireless operator América Móvil.
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    Two of the three richest men in the world derive their fortunes, in large part, from the information business: Carlos Slim (king of Mexican telecommunications) and Bill Gates (well, we all know what he does). How much power do these two hold over the architecture, policies and whereabouts of the web?  NOTE: the fact that the richest man in the world comes from a country with 80 million poor people is in itself a worthy discussion topic. 
Sandra Rivera

FT.com / UK - Mexico's mobile users face return to telecoms 'stone age' - 1 views

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    The Mexican government approved a law that creates a national registry of mobile phone users, forcing people to provide their private information to associate mobile numbers with a registrated customer. More than 30m citizens are facing the possibility of service disruption if they don't comply with the forced registration.
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    Glad I am here!
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