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Lunettes De Soleil Oakley Il - 0 views

started by descendants1 descendants1 on 18 Mar 14 no follow-up yet
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Indian Supreme Court Lifts Ban on Cryptocurrency Trading - 0 views

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    In a historic verdict passed by the Supreme Court of India, the ban imposed in cryptocurrency trading by the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) has been reversed to the joy of cryptocurrency traders and struck down as unconstitutional.
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Chris Brown 'banned from Life Time fitness center' - 0 views

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    Chris Brown has apparently been prohibited from Life Time fitness center after a claimed push with the New York City branch
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Anshe Chung - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - 0 views

  • In December 2006, while conducting an interview for CNET with Daniel Terdiman on her economic assets, the virtual studio in which the interview took place was bombarded by flying animated penises and copies of a photo of Graef modified to show her holding a giant penis in her arms. The griefers managed to disrupt the interview sufficiently that Chung was forced to move to another location and ultimately crashed the simulator entirely.[18] Video and images of the incident were posted to the "Second Life Safari" section of Something Awful, and the incident received international notice via blogs including Boing Boing and the online edition of the Sydney Morning Herald. Two weeks later, Anshe's husband, Guntram Graef, issued takedown notices under the DMCA, demanding that newspapers and websites remove photos and videos of the incident and claiming that they violated Graef's copyright in her avatar and other virtual creations. YouTube pulled the videos of the incident as a DMCA violation and banned the account of Second Life Safari, bringing objections from legal experts who considered the work "fair use".[19] A Linden Labs spokesperson suggested that the taking of videos and photos in Second Life should be governed by the same rules as in real life,[20] and an attorney for the Electronic Frontier Foundation compared it "to Armani attempting to restrict news photos of a car crash where one of the drivers was wearing an Armani suit."[21]
  • After news of these events and the legal objections spread across a number of sites including Slashdot, YouTube changed its rationale for removing copies of the video to terms of use violation, and in an interview Guntram Graef said that issuing the takedown notices had been a mistake. He referred to the images as 'pornographic material' and said The video and pictures are clearly defaming and constitute a sexual assault. He stated that he had originally tried to have the videos removed as a personal attack and infringement on rights, but later changed to a copyright claim when that didn't produce a response. When he realized the issues of censorship, he dropped the copyright claim.[19] In 2008 Russian opposition leader Gary Kasparov was attacked at a real public event with a flying penis helicopter and what appeared as a real life adaption of the flying penis attack on Anshe Chung. The Kasparov attack was ended within seconds by a guard who destroyed the flying penis aparatus. In contrast CNet and the company Millions of Us who were responsible for securing the event in Second Life had failed to remove the virtual objects for an extended period of time
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    In December 2006, while conducting an interview for CNET with Daniel Terdiman on her economic assets, the virtual studio in which the interview took place was bombarded by flying animated penises and copies of a photo of Graef modified to show her holding a giant penis in her arms. The griefers managed to disrupt the interview sufficiently that Chung was forced to move to another location and ultimately crashed the simulator entirely.[18] Video and images of the incident were posted to the "Second Life Safari" section of Something Awful, and the incident received international notice via blogs including Boing Boing and the online edition of the Sydney Morning Herald. Two weeks later, Anshe's husband, Guntram Graef, issued takedown notices under the DMCA, demanding that newspapers and websites remove photos and videos of the incident and claiming that they violated Graef's copyright in her avatar and other virtual creations. YouTube pulled the videos of the incident as a DMCA violation and banned the account of Second Life Safari, bringing objections from legal experts who considered the work "fair use".[19] A Linden Labs spokesperson suggested that the taking of videos and photos in Second Life should be governed by the same rules as in real life,[20] and an attorney for the Electronic Frontier Foundation compared it "to Armani attempting to restrict news photos of a car crash where one of the drivers was wearing an Armani suit."[21] After news of these events and the legal objections spread across a number of sites including Slashdot, YouTube changed its rationale for removing copies of the video to terms of use violation, and in an interview Guntram Graef said that issuing the takedown notices had been a mistake. He referred to the images as 'pornographic material' and said The video and pictures are clearly defaming and constitute a sexual assault. He stated that he had originally tried to have the videos removed as a personal attack and infringement on rights,
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BBC NEWS | Americas | Pentagon bans Google map-makers - 0 views

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    The US defence department has banned the giant internet search engine Google from filming inside and making detailed studies of US military bases.
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mobiles, human rights, and anonymity - 0 views

  • So that got me wondering: is there a mobile equivalent of Tor? For those of you who aren't familiar with it, TOR is a software project that helps Internet users remain anonymous. Running the TOR software on your computer causes your online communications to bounce through a random series of relay servers around the world. That way, there's no easy way for authorities to track you or observe who's visiting banned websites. For example, let's say you're in Beijing and you publish a blog the authorities don't like. If you just used your PC as usual and logged into your publishing platform directly, they could follow your activities and track you down. With Tor, you hop-scotch around: your PC might connect to a server in Oslo, then Buenos Aires, then Miami, then Tokyo, then Greece before it finally connects to your blogging platform. Each time you did this, it would be a different series of servers. That way, it's really difficult for authorities to trace your steps.
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    Mobile Phones, Human Rights and Anonymity I've been playing around with my new Nokia N95 for the last couple of weeks and quite amazed with its ability to stream live video from the phone to the Internet. Like last weekend when I streamed from the Smithsonian Kite Festival; for around 30 minutes I gave a tour of the festivities and took questions from users as they watched the stream over the Internet. I've also spent some time talking it up with colleagues at NPR, brainstorming the possibilities of what would happen if reporters used these phones - or if their sources did. The example that keeps coming to mind regarding the latter scenario is the rioting in Tibet. While some video has leaked out, it's been limited and often delayed. Imagine if the protestors were able to webcast their protests - and the ensuing crackdowns - live over their phones using China's GSM network? The video would stream live and get crossposted via tools like YouTube, Seesmic and Twitter, spreading the content around so it can't be snuffed. But that raises an obvious question - how long could protestors or dissidents get away with such activities before getting caught? If you were running software on your phone to send live video over a 3G network, like I've been doing on my N95, you'd think it wouldn't take too much effort on the part of the mobile provider and/or government to figure out which phone was sending the signal and its precise location. So that got me wondering: is there a mobile equivalent of Tor? For those of you who aren't familiar with it, TOR is a software project that helps Internet users remain anonymous. Running the TOR software on your computer causes your online communications to bounce through a random series of relay servers around the world. That way, there's no easy way for authorities to track you or observe who's visiting banned websites. For example, let's say you're in Beijing and you publish a blog the authorities don't like. If you just used your PC as
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Why I Ban Laptops in my Classroom - 3 views

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    Professor thinks laptops encourage thoughtless transcription of lectures, give bored students something to do. It's only a matter of time before he goes this far: http://www.ebaumsworld.com/video/watch/80925439/

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started by masquebf on 04 Nov 14 no follow-up yet

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started by descendants1 descendants1 on 03 Nov 14 no follow-up yet

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started by masquebf on 01 Aug 14 no follow-up yet
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Dịch vụ bảo vệ Bình Dương - 0 views

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    Sự phát triển vượt bậc của Bình Dương với nhiều KCN, cụm công nghiệp, các công ty, nhà hàng khách sạn đua nhau mọc lên góp phần chuyển biến tích cực vào sự phát triển kinh tế, xã hội, dân sinh của tỉnh bên cạnh sự phát triển đó thì các vấn đề phức tạp về an ninh trật tự cũng là điều các doanh nghiệp và các ban nghành phải đau đầu
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bảo vệ vạn thiên thành - 0 views

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    Sự phát triển vượt bậc của Bình Dương với nhiều KCN, cụm công nghiệp, các công ty, nhà hàng khách sạn đua nhau mọc lên góp phần chuyển biến tích cực vào sự phát triển kinh tế, xã hội, dân sinh của tỉnh bên cạnh sự phát triển đó thì các vấn đề phức tạp về an ninh trật tự cũng là điều các doanh nghiệp và các ban nghành phải đau đầu
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Microsoft Asserts Clients' Rights in FBI Email Searches Fight - 0 views

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    The magistrate who will resolve whether the case can move ahead said the company's lawyers to be prepared in court to address previous rulings that undercut their fights. At pale is half of Microsoft's case to ban the US from furtively accessing client data stored in the cloud, counting email.

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started by masquebf2 on 23 Sep 14 no follow-up yet

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started by descendants1 descendants1 on 05 May 14 no follow-up yet

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started by masquebf2 on 25 Sep 14 no follow-up yet
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Nameless in Cyberspace: Anonymity on the Internet by Jonathan D. Wallace - 0 views

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    Proposals to limit anonymous communications on the Internet would violate free speech rights long recognized by the Supreme Court. Anonymous and pseudonymous speech played a vital role in the founding of this country. Thomas Paine's Common Sensewas first released signed, "An Englishman." Alexander Hamilton, John Jay, James Madison, Samuel Adams, and others carried out the debate between Federalists and Anti-Federalists using pseudonyms. Today, human rights workers in China and many other countries have reforged the link between anonymity and free speech. Given the importance of anonymity as a component of free speech, the cost of banning anonymous Internet speech would be enormous. It makes no sense to treat Internet speech differently from printed leaflets or books.
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Ajay Devgn Slams Salman and Karan for Supporting Pak Artists - Locality News - 0 views

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    Ajay Devgn is the modern Bollywood celebrity to come out in backing of ban on Pakistani artists work...
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Cách làm trà sữa trân châu cho các bạn teen - 0 views

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    Tra sua tran chau la một thức uống được yêu thích của các bạn teen đặc biệt là các bạn teen Sài Gòn. Nhằm giúp các bạn có thể tự tay pha chế cho mình một ly trà sữa thật ngon và sinh đông chúng tôi xin được hướng dẫn bạn cách làm như sau nhé !
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