Friday, February 22, 2013

How do you like me now? Positivity and the death of Facebook ...

It is eight in the morning and with a sleep-blunted mind I absentmindedly swipe my finger over my phone. It is one-thirty and I?m on the toilet staring at the screen while the work-paid minutes tick by. It is two-thirty; my mind wanders from work and my keys tap in a familiar web address. It?s 6 pm and ignoring the subtle smell of body odour creeping through the bus air, I flick through the news feed. In a moment of clarity, I roll my eyes: what am I doing ? I don?t even like Facebook.

For me, and I suspect, for most of my generation ? those with a smart phone and the ability to use the internet ? Facebook has become a habit. Though our engagement with it is born out of a melange of boredom, curiosity and narcissism, it is not quite an addiction; there is no burning desire, no feeling of release. We (or at least, I) partake in Facebook in a joyless, unthinking haze.

There is a certain irony in this. Despite the ambivalence, ?liking? and Facebook go hand in hand. The ?Like? button is everywhere, tucked in the corner of each post, waiting to be clicked, to fire off notifications to the millions of people that log on each day. It extends beyond Facebook?s pages, populating sites throughout the web, spreading the network?s particular brand of positivity.

Facebook has clearly framed its site around its Like button. Along with the blue and white colour scheme, Like is its calling card, showering the site with positivity and enthusiasm.

At first glance, it seems as though its optimism is infectious; Facebook looks to have the world at its fingertips. There are currently 1.01 billion Facebook users throughout the world, and that number is still increasing. If it were granted statehood, Facebook would be the third most populous country in the world.

Companies flock to the site to advertise their wares, and as a result, it perpetually rakes in money. (Its shaky share offering was a blip in an otherwise steady march towards increased revenue.) Market research firm eMarketer estimated Facebook to make over $5 billion profit in 2012, and $6.6 billion in 2013. In 2011, eighty-five per cent of Facebook?s income was produced through advertising, and this figure remains fairly constant from year to year. Looking at these numbers, it seems a bona fide success: the world, it appears, likes Facebook.

Putting aside its mercantile prosperity, on paper even its raison d??tre is laudable. Behind the innumerable aps and the ceaseless ads, it allows people to interact. On Facebook?s own Facebook page, the social network states its intention without ambiguity: ?Facebook?s mission is to make the world more open and connected.?

This is a noble aim. In a world of political, religious and nationalistic acrimony, of barely contained paranoia and seething dissatisfaction, opening the gates for unhindered communication ? for connection beyond our limited social realms ? has to be a positive thing. To put it in less-grandiose terms: when we can travel with an ease unheard of sixty years ago, when we might never learn the name of our closest neighbour, what is not to like about a social network that has greater reach than most people thought was imaginable?

Despite Facebook?s outwardly sunny disposition, its self-professed mantra of open connectivity and its seemingly relentless stream of users and profits, it is rarely viewed with the same positivity it encourages.

It is criticised by everyone from politicians to pedestrians, columnists and radio commentators, on a daily basis. The media warn of lascivious child predators lurking behind welcoming profiles. It is denounced as the death of privacy. Its facial recognition software is seen as a small step from computer profiling. Every change to its interface is scrutinised for unsavoury practices. It is listed as a major contributor to divorces. Its operators are taken to task for hoarding personal data and using it for mercantile purposes. Every cyber bullying case calls for harsher restrictions on Facebook?s internet reign. People whinge about the ads, the way they seem to track user?s movements around the web. When Facebook?s floated share price began to drop it was seen as indicative of another web company not ready for the real world of business. Memorials on profiles of deceased people are called tacky and inappropriate. Research suggests that it adds stress to people?s lives.

There is an interesting contrast here ? the difference between the negative public sentiment and Facebook?s Like-based structure. This contrast is more than just coincidence. It shines a light on something unsatisfactory about the world?s most popular social network, something that will eventually have people leaving it for something else. Far from an expression of positivity, Like represents everything that is wrong with Facebook. In time, it will prove to be its fatal flaw.

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If one were to bet on the reasons for Facebook?s impending downfall, there would be more obvious culprits to back. One of the most conspicuous would be the website?s use of personal information for pecuniary purposes, which has been a major sticking point for users and commentators alike.

Facebook uses information collected about its users to provide targeted advertising. With the information it has gained about a person?s age, gender, hobbies, websites visited, and a plethora of other indicators (some of it given voluntarily by Facebook account holders, some of it gained through other means), Facebook displays individualised ads that approximate each user?s interests. Theoretically,[1] these ads increase sales, with users more receptive to the advertisements they see. When combined with the website?s massive user base, Facebook is never short of companies keen to advertise.

This practice, which is the core of Facebook?s revenue stream, is attacked in the media for being a breach of privacy and a dishonest use of users? information.

I first became aware of it through the occasional status update from disgruntled ?friends? appearing when I logged in. Over the past year, my news feed has become replete with statuses and comments about the issue. Much of it started as amusement: a screen grab of two advertisements ? one for losing weight, the other for dating services ? together with a pithy comment: ?Facebook knows I?m fat and alone.? Gradually, as the jokes grew old, the updates became broader, questioning more than just the ads: ?Is it just me or has Facebook jumped the shark?? one person asked. Then they became terse: ?THE ADS WON?T STOP FOLLOWING ME,? and ?Remember when every second ?story? wasn?t an ad??

At a less insular level, Facebook?s targeted advertising has drawn the ire of critics around the world, on the basis of privacy concerns and data selling. When the ads were first announced in 2009, Executive Director of the Cyberspace Law and Policy Centre at the University of New South Wales, David Vaile,?made the general feeling of negativity clear: ?It horrifies me in the sense that it?s the final step in selling out their customers? data.?

Vaile expressed concern with Facebook?s methods, arguing that they represented a breach of trust with users. He ended his commentary on a potentially foreboding note: ?Maybe they?ll get away with it. They may not.?

You could not be blamed for envisioning this becoming an issue for Facebook. But if Vaile was predicting targeted ads to be the harbinger of Facebook?s demise, he missed the mark. Years have passed and people continue to log in; despite the periodic outburst of irritation, most people simply ignore the advertisements, filtering them out as they scan their screens.

But Vaile was not far off; he just needed to look at bit deeper. Though targeted advertising is an obvious, outward manifestation of data manipulation, it can only function as a result of the software it is built upon. It was this that Vaile could have turned his mind to if he was searching for a chink in Facebook?s armour. By following targeted advertising back into the software, he might have found the Like button ? the true engine of discontent.

To understand the reasoning behind the Like button?s undesirability, it helps to understand, at least marginally, Facebook?s backend. Facebook is able to work the way it does, in part through its ?social graph? and Open Graph Protocol. Broadly speaking, within Facebook the Social Graph is a method of connecting the various users of the site and then sharing these connections beyond the connected parties. When you post a picture from the night before on your friend?s wall and they Like or comment on it, people not directly involved in the post and response may nonetheless be informed of the interaction. In effect, this creates more room for continued and broadened dialogue and for the sharing of information.

Social graphs are not exclusive to Facebook, but what makes Facebook?s unique is its implementation through the Open Graph Protocol. As Facebook explains, ?The Open Graph Protocol enables you to integrate your Web pages into the social graph ? This means when a user clicks a Like button on your page, a connection is made between your page and the user.? By linking this in the Social Graph, this ?connection? between the page and the user is then made known to other Facebook users. As a result, web pages that exist outside Facebook are nonetheless incorporated into the social network?s broader realm.

The upside for Facebook is that by having other websites link themselves in through the Open Graph, they are able to collect information about user habits beyond the confines of their own pages. Whenever the Like button is clicked, Facebook?s data system receives information about the pages their users frequent. In this way the Like button operate as tendrils, passing data back to a central nervous system. From this data, the many and varied pieces of code that make up the website?s brain can decide how to proceed, often making ads relevant to your previous browsing appear on your screen. The system is extremely fallible, but with time it has become more effective. It will only continue to do so with further improvements to Facebook?s information pool.[2]

How is this a weakness for Facebook? The ingenuity of the Open Graph Protocol is undercut by the way it has been implemented. The Like button is the major conduit of information in Facebook?s social graph. In time this will prove to be a mistake.

It is disingenuous and undesirable, covertly transforming an expression of enthusiasm to mercantile venture. (Of course, one can define like to include wanting something (?I would like that box of sour apples?) but even within this money-related definition, the relationship is a direct one, between the party who likes and the apples/apple vendor). By subtly commodifying the button, Facebook enriches itself as a third party. The information was not found on their site and they have performed no service.

Within Facebook?s utopian vision of an ?open and connected world?, this action rings hollow. No one cares that Facebook makes money, but this method ? using a symbol of positive naivety ? is disingenuous, untrue, and hypocritical. By structuring their information retrieval around the Like button, Facebook have potentially created a great irony, in which their highjacking of positivity results in a swelling discontent, and in time, an exodus.

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To argue that this will cause people to revolt against the site might sound like the curmudgeonly ramblings of a paranoid privacy nut. For users to take this as a reason to revolt, they would need a ?fairly tight handle on Facebook?s inner workings. ?On top of that, the inconsistency is not exactly the kind slight that ignites passions in, and produces petitions from the average user. But this is only one aspect of the Like button, only one of the ways that it is slowly rotting Facebook?s foundations.

In everyday use, people are probably more likely to engage with the button on the actual Facebook site rather than ?Liking? a page in the infinite web. The button is everywhere on the social network?s pages, waiting silently in the top left-hand corner of every post for users to demonstrate their appreciation or approval. Though this seems harmless, this too has a negative side.

Imagine logging on and reading a post by one of your ?friends?. Maybe it is someone you went to school with, or had brief contact with at a part-time job. You got on amicably enough, have run into each other in the street a couple of times, been drunk at a few of the same parties, but you are unlikely to take your relationship to any more-rewarding, level. Though you would never refer to the person as your friend, due to the website?s lack of descriptive choice and some unanalysed feeling of obligation, you remain exactly that on Facebook.

This person has uploaded a photo of a tattoo idea they have been mulling over. The tattoo design is an image of the Southern Cross, with a banner below it that reads ?Australian Born and Bred?. Having strong opinions about the tattoo?s connotations, and not being completely adverse to minor confrontation, you find it hard to simply ignore the image. To this end, Facebook gives you various options for dealing with the photo: Like, Comment, Share, and Report.

This creates a problem. Apart from the rarely used Share and Report buttons, your options are to Like or Comment. This is an uneven choice. By forcing this dichotomy, Facebook requires that any negativity or disapproval must be expressed through a comment. Though you might want to explain to your ?friend? that this tattoo implies a sense of aggressive nationalism coupled with a lack of imagination in the wearer, you feel that a definite ?Dislike? would give the more concrete, unambiguous feedback he or she is seeking. But you cannot. Within the Facebook platform, there is no opportunity, no simple way to express how you feel.

This example might bear no relation to your feelings on Southern Cross tattoos, but it does demonstrate the bias implicit in the website. By simply providing a Like option, without the opportunity to Dislike, Facebook creates a place of relentless, expected positivity. The inherent ease in liking compared to the effort required to comment means that criticism requires additional commitment. Far from the vacuous mouse-flutter of a Like, commenting requires the thud of fingers on a keyboard, the unmoving motive of a durable thought. As a result, within this space, negativity has to be viewed as more negative than positivity is positive; you have made the extra effort to disagree.

The remaining options are few. If you feel negatively towards something, with the inability to Dislike, Facebook implicitly encourages behaviour that does not fly the twin flags of openness and connectivity highlighted in their mission statement.

If you no longer want any part in someone?s updates, in what you perceive to be witless, pedestrian drivel, borderline racism, the relentless enthusiasm of a new parent, mundane whining, or any other irritation that plagues your newsfeed, Facebook provides two methods of dealing with the content. Both of these are artlessly passive aggressive.

The less drastic option is to choose to ?Hide? the person from your newsfeed, simply make them disappear. For you, their updates will cease to exist, but to them, it will be as though nothing has changed.

The more final decision is to ?Unfriend? the person. With a single click, you can remove a person from your social circles. The only thing that achieves the same result in the real world requires a bullet.

Both hiding and unfriending someone are behaviours at odds with Facebook?s ideals of connectivity, and they do not come about through some small oversight. They are the result of the way Facebook is structured ? its insistence on Like. Despite its mantra of connectivity, by its very construction the website discourages any potentially negative communication. Far from being open, it encourages a lopsided, suppressed atmosphere, a smiling, laughing, brainwashed cult. And far from being connected, anyone not wanting to toe the positive line is forced into clandestine, secretive manoeuvres.

This could be fixed with a little sanctioned negativity. Of course, one might argue that allowing for negative expression through a dislike button is potentially damaging to relationships, and thus, to user experience. But Facebook connects ?friends?. There is no such thing as a friendship without room for a bit of even-handed disagreement. Without it, a friendship is the equivalent of small talk at a party ? vacuous, tedious and boring.

As with liking, disliking is a fact of life. Unless we are in a particularly good mood, we do not operate in a Xanax-ridden idyll of ceaseless positivity. We whinge, we complain and we express displeasure. I do it almost constantly. In fact, I am doing it right now.

Facebook does not rid us of easy negativity by only providing the Like button; it simply creates less-desirable, less-honest avenues for expressing it. When combined with Facebook?s use of liking as a conduit for financial gain, there is an undeniable sense that the website is not there for the right reasons. In a world that should be striving for openness and connectivity, it is broken and incomplete.

At a base level, Like is the reason the website fails on its supposed mission to bring a more open and connected world. It hinders and cheapens communication ? or to use Facebook?s nomenclature, ?connection? ? and leaves us wanting more. In this light, it is not surprising that it is ceaselessly criticised. These criticisms are symptoms of a rotten core, something we subconsciously buck against, even if we are unaware of it.

Sooner or later, when we have a spare moment to think, when our phones are placed securely in our pockets and our laptop screens are firmly closed, we will face the truth. Then, there will be nothing left to do but press the ultimate dislike button ? ?Delete My Account?.

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[1] There has been a lot of criticism about the effectiveness of Facebook advertising, with companies including General Motors pulling out millions of dollars in advertising spending, on the basis that fans of the brand did not like the advertisements and did not click on them.

Source: http://overland.org.au/blogs/loudspeaker/2013/02/how-do-you-like-me-now-positivity-and-the-death-of-facebook/

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IP Osgoode ? The Reference to the CJEU in Case C-466/12 Svensson

The European Copyright Society (ECS) was founded in January 2012 with the aim of creating a platform for critical and independent scholarly thinking on European Copyright Law. Its members are renowned scholars and academics from various countries of Europe, seeking to promote their views of the overall public interest.

The Society is not funded by, nor has been instructed by any particular stakeholders.

The ECS wishes to take the opportunity to put on record its views of the issues before the Court in Case C-466/12, Svensson. The importance of this particular reference should be evident to the Court. Although hyperlinking takes many forms and has multiple functions, there can be no doubt that it is the single most important feature that differentiates the Internet from other forms of cultural production and dissemination. Hyperlinking is intimately bound to the conception of the Internet as a network, and hyperlinks constitute paths leading users from one location to another.? As the Supreme Court of Canada has stated ?[h]yperlinks ? are an indispensable part of [the Internet?s] operation.?[1]

The legal regulation of hyperlinking thus carries with it enormous capacity to interfere with the operation of the Internet, and therefore with access to information, freedom of expression, freedom to conduct business,[2] as well ? of course ? with business ventures that depend on these types of linkages. Europe has developed a significant sector of SMEs, many of whose web operations depend on the use and provision of links. The Court must not under-estimate the importance of its ruling in this case.[3]

As Tim-Berners Lee, who is regularly accredited as being an inventor of the World Wide Web , explains a link is nothing more than a reference or footnote, and that the ability to refer to a document is a fundamental right of free speech.[4]

In a similar vein, US Law Professor Jessica Litman states, Digital Copyright: Revising Copyright Law for the Information Age (New York, Prometheus Books, 2001), at 183:

?? the public has always had, and should have, a right to cite. Referring to a copyrighted work without authorization has been and should be legal. Referring to an infringing work is similarly legitimate ? Drawing a map showing where an infringing object may be found or dropping a footnote that cites it invades no province the copyright owner is entitled to protect even if the object is blatantly pirated from a copyrighted work. Posting a hypertext link should be no different.?

The above is an excerpt of an opinion written by the European Copyright Society. For the full piece, including a list of all the signatories, click?here.

[1]See Crookes v Newton, [2011] SCC 47, [2011] SCR 269 per Abella J, at [34].

[2]Jack Balkin, ?The Future of Free Expression in a Digital Age?, (2009) 36 Pepp. L. Rev. 427.

[3] In Intellectual Property Law (Oxford: OUP 2009), Professors Lionel Bently and Brad Sherman state, at 151:

?Most hyper-linking simply makes it easier to locate (and, if desired, access) works which are already available to the public, and it would be unduly constraining to require all links to be authorized.?

[4]Tim Berners-Lee, ?Axioms of Web Architecture. Links and Law: Myths?, at http://www.w3.org/DesignIssues/LinkMyths.html ?See also, Steven Waldman, The Information Needs of Communities: The Changing Media Landscape in the Broadband Age, (FCC) 340.

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Source: http://www.iposgoode.ca/2013/02/the-reference-to-the-cjeu-in-case-c-46612-svensson/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=the-reference-to-the-cjeu-in-case-c-46612-svensson

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Admins - Battlefield Series - =ADK= Gaming Community

I am moving this topic to the BF3 Series section.

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Also, you should know, that smoke is allowed provided you do not kill anyone with it.

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Its not that we police people killing with smoke, its that our No Explosives server has an AutoAdmin that is programmed to kill for explosive use. However due to Dice/EA's inability to produce detailed code for all their weapons, we had to add M320's to the list because there is no way in which to specify explosive rounds from smoke from buck.

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This is also the reason we cannot have the AutoAdmin stop frag rounds in shotguns because there is no code for fragrounds so we would have to ban shotguns altogether. Instead we have to actually police the server often to punish players using frag rounds.

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I hope this makes sense.


Source: http://www.adkgamers.com/topic/23927-admins/

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Wednesday, February 20, 2013

Sabres fire Ruff; name Rolston as interim coach

Ron Rolston has been hired as the Buffalo Sabres interim coach for the remainder of the season in taking over hours after Lindy Ruff was fired amid growing criticism for the team's slow start.

It's a promotion for Rolston, who was in his second season as coach of AHL Rochester, the Sabres' minor-league affiliate.

General manager Darcy Regier said the decision to fire Ruff was reached earlier in the day. It comes a day after the Sabres were booed off the ice during a 2-1 loss to Winnipeg. Regier called the loss _ and the team's performance _ a "tipping point."

The Sabres (6-10-1), who play at Toronto on Thursday, have gone 4-10-1 since opening the season winning their first two games.

With a 571-432-162 record, Ruff was the team's winningest coach.

Source: http://www.stltoday.com/sports/hockey/sabres-fire-ruff-name-rolston-as-interim-coach/article_8bfca86a-5f56-5fc1-93e9-e650103545df.html

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How you can get your hands on Google Glass early (updated with new UI video)

How you can get your hands on Google Glass

So when can you get your very own slice of Google future? Perhaps sooner than you thought. The company's just outlined a competition that will put its Glass device in the hands of non-developer types. Using Twitter or Google+, you'll need to outline what you would do if you had the device -- we're guessing they want to see some big ideas. Applications need to be less than 50 words and tagged with #ifihadglass. Media-wise, you can include photos and even a short video to support your application. Alas, for now at least, the process is only for those over 18 and is currently US-only. The deadline is February 27th and winners will be made a Glass Explorer -- quite the title. The best 8,000 applicants will still have to preorder their own Glass Explorer Edition ($1,500 plus tax) but there'll be special pick-up sessions held in New York, San Francisco and Los Angeles. Until then, Google's offered up a whole new gallery of images to help you imagine how you might look with its high-tech wearable.

Update: Google's crafted a meatier video for the UI within Glass. We've embedded it after the break, but it better outlines how image capture, translation, directions, voice-controlled messages and (naturally) web searches are likely to behave on those frames.

Filed under: ,

Comments

Source: Google+, Google Glass

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/02/20/how-you-can-get-your-hands-on-google-glass-early/

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Operation Support Our Troops, Inc. collecting Easter donations

A local organization that sends care packages to our troops needs your help.

"Operation Support our Troops" is collecting items for Easter packages. Non-perishabe food, eye drops, sunscreen, and Easter cards are just some of the things you can donate.

Volunteers with the non-profit assemble the packages Feb. 23. You can drop off your donations at UPS stores in Shreveport and Bossier City. Here's a link to more information.

Source: http://arklatexhomepage.com/fulltext?nxd_id=303562

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Did NCAA coach go too far?

Mike Montgomery was not about to apologize for this. His method had worked, his team had won.

So, no, the Cal coach did not regret shoving star guard Allen Crabbe during Sunday's win over USC.

"It worked, didn't it?" he told the Associated Press.

All that ever really matters in sports are wins and losses. That's a lesson you can learn over and over and over again watching sports. Coaches get involved in scandals, but for the most part they get fired only if they were losing. Athletes sabotage their coaches, but if the athlete is a good enough player, he won't get cut. Some school gets busted cheating, but the only people who really are outraged are that school's rivals.

Worked, didn't it?

That's the way it is and the way it always will be, and it doesn't sound like there was even a single casualty?as a result of?The Montgomery Shove (we can make it a proper noun for fun, can't we?). After the game, Crabbe described it as water under the? bridge, possibly because he scored 14 of his 23 points in the second half.

"He's my coach; no hard feelings," Crabbe said. "We're just going to keep moving on."

In the heat of the moment, that looked impossible. Teammates got involved. One of them grabbed Crabbe by the jersey. There was a heated discussion in a hallway. It looked chaotic. It would not have been surprising if Crabbe had just gone into the locker room, packed up his stuff, thrown on a pair of headphones and walked out of there for good.

But he did not leave. He came back, and he played better.

Somewhere, there is a line. A punch, for example, clearly would be on the wrong side of that line. The Pac-12 and Cal's AD both reprimanded Montgomery on Monday, and the coach apologized. Does that mean he really crossed the line?

It is clear in this case that the coach knew his player, knew which buttons to push, and the player trusted that his coach was trying to do what's best for him.

But, man, it's a good thing Cal won.

Enough with the Buckeyes

Ohio State is obviously not a Top 25 team. This is obvious because every time Ohio State plays a Top 25 team, it loses.

The Buckeyes are 1-7 against? the Top 25, with that lone win coming against Michigan. And we all know Ohio State-Michigan is one of those "throw out the records" games.

A basic statistical analysis helps us understand this. Ohio State is not particularly good at anything. It is the No. 5 scoring team in the Big Ten, No. 3 in points allowed, No. 4 in field goal percentage and field goal percentage allowed, No. 3 in 3-point shooting, No. 6 in rebound margin.

And so on it goes.

The Buckeyes are a solid team, but really what they are is a matchup team. If you're?the kind of team that relies heavily on your point guard for scoring and don't have a forward athletic enough to play defense inside and out, Ohio State is going? to give you problems, because guard Aaron Craft is the best on-ball defender in college basketball and forward Deshaun Thomas is a matchup nightmare.

But if you're the kind of team that plays through the post (as most Top 25 teams are) and has a couple of athletic 6-foot-7 guys (as most Top 25 teams do), you're not going to be so bothered by the Buckeyes.

The All-Alumni Team

The NBA All-Star weekend got me thinking about this: If you were drawing? from a pool of active NBA players, and you sorted them based on which college they attended, which school would have the best team?

UCLA

C ? Ryan Hollins

F ? Kevin Love

F ? Matt Barnes

G ? Russell Westbrook

G ? Jrue Holiday

Really good team with a weak spot in the paint. That's OK, though. Luc Longley said so.

Kentucky

C ? DeMarcus Cousins

F ? Anthony Davis

F ? Tayshaun Prince

G ? Eric Bledsoe

G ? John Wall

Nobody is scoring on these guys.

Texas

C ? LaMarcus Aldridge

F ? Tristan Thompson

F ? Kevin Durant

G ? Avery Bradley

G ? D.J. Augustin

Anybody who has Durant is going?to be in great shape, especially if you have a reliable post scorer for balance.

North Carolina

C ? Tyler Zeller

F ? Tyler Hansbrough

F ? Danny Green

G ? Vince Carter

G ? Ty Lawson

You'd think North Carolina would have a better team here. Alas, it's the Twin Tylers in the post.

UConn

C ? Emeka Okafor

F ? Andre Drummond

F ? Rudy Gay

G ? Ray Allen

G ? Kemba Walker

That perimeter is not to be trifled with.

Florida

C ? Joakim Noah

F ? David Lee

F ? Cory Brewer

G ? Chandler Parsons

G ? Brad Beal

Beal is not a point guard, but Florida does not have a point guard in the NBA right now. This would be a big problem against UCLA, UConn and Kentucky.

If this were a tournament, I think the finals would be UCLA vs. Kentucky. The Wildcats would get past Texas because Prince would guard Durant, and do about as good a job of that as can be done. Kentucky would own the paint against the Bruins and, as long as Wall kept his head on straight, would win the game.

Hypothetical champ: Kentucky.

Player of the Year Watch

We're done with Mason Plumlee in this space. Seth Curry is the Blue Devils' go-to guy anyway, and Plumlee went 2 for 7 for four points and three rebounds in?Saturday's loss to Maryland. And he played 33 minutes. And he fouled out.

None of the top five teams (Indiana, Miami, Gonzaga, Michigan State and Florida) has a great POY candidate, so this is probably coming back to Trey Burke at Michigan, although Kansas freshman Ben McLemore deserves a mention. He's the second-leading scorer in the Big 12?(16.7 ppg) behind Baylor's Pierre Jackson, and he shoots 51 percent from the field and 43 percent from beyond the 3-point line.

They said it

"If you take Bruce Ellington off our team, you'd probably have the 12 leading candidates for the starring roles in . . . 'The Return of the Living Dead', the zombie movie." ? South Carolina coach Frank Martin after Thursday's 64-46 home loss to LSU.

"I've been doing this for 28 years, nine of which as a junior varsity high school coach. That means I've dealt with 14-year-olds. I've never been more embarrassed to call myself a basketball coach than I am today." ? Martin again. Epic rant.

"Nobody knew that it was the real head until an hour ago." ? Kyle McCay, marketing manager for a North Carolina bookstore, where the stolen head of the Duke mascot turned up hours before the Duke-North Carolina tip-off last week. The head was found impaled at Student Stores the morning of the game. It was soon returned.

Ups and Downs

Up: Kansas

All is right in Lawrence again, as the Jayhawks bounced back from a three-game losing streak to blow out Kansas State and Texas.?However, a?game at the notoriously problematic Gallagher-Iba Arena in Stillwater, Okla., still looms.

Down: NC State

My goodness, what a frustrating team. So talented, so erratic. Three straight losses, then they barely beat Clemson.

Up: Michigan State

Izzo, baby. Izzo. Sparty always comes on strong at the end.

Down: Missouri

When y'all gonna start listening to the Fast Break on these things? Losing to Arkansas is bad.

Up: Gonzaga

I can't believe two people actually voted Gonzaga No. 1. That's preposterous. Totally. I'll give credit where it's due for winning eight games in a row, but Gonzaga has played only three games against Top 25 teams, and lost two of them.

Down: Minnesota

What happened, Gophers? Oh yeah, conference play began. And Minnesota has lost more than half of its Big Ten tests.

Crystal ball

The officials swallow their whistles, making Tuesday's Michigan State-Indiana matchup the most intense, frustrating, hot mess of a college basketball game this season. (That means Michigan State wins).

Wednesday: Kansas always has trouble in Stillwater, Okla., whether the Cowboys are any good or not. This year they're good, and they sweep Kansas and take control of the Big 12 race.

Saturday, Miami is due for a stinker, but Wake Forest just isn't good enough.

Source: http://www.foxsportssouthwest.com/02/18/13/Fast-Break-Hard-lesson-learned-at-Cal/msn_landing.html?blockID=866005&feedID=11017

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Ofcom announces winners of UK 4G spectrum auction, big roll out expected within six months

Ofcom announces winners of UK 4G spectrum auction, big roll out expected within six monthsOfcom has announced the winners of the UK 4G LTE spectrum auction and it hopes that all winners will start rolling out LTE in the UK within six months; which is fantastic news for our UK readers. The auction raised around 2.34 billion pounds which is over a billion pounds less than it expected.

The winners were the expected major networks already present in the UK, namely Vodafone, Everything Everywhere, Hutchison 3G UK, Telefonica, and Vodafone. Niche Spectrum Ventures Ltd which is a subsidiary of BT Group PLC also picked up the smallest share of the spectrum.

Ofcom announces winners of UK 4G spectrum auction, big roll out expected within six months

After more than 50 rounds of bidding, Everything Everywhere Ltd, Hutchison 3G UK Ltd, Niche Spectrum Ventures Ltd (a subsidiary of BT Group plc), Telef?nica UK Ltd and Vodafone Ltd have all won spectrum. This is suitable for rolling out new superfast mobile broadband services to consumers and to small and large businesses across the UK.

The auction has achieved Ofcom?s purpose of promoting strong competition in the 4G mobile market. This is expected to lead to faster mobile broadband speeds, lower prices, greater innovation, new investment and better coverage. Almost the whole UK population will be able to receive 4G mobile services by the end of 2017 at the latest.

Ed Richards, Ofcom Chief Executive, said: ?This is a positive outcome for competition in the UK, which will lead to faster and more widespread mobile broadband, and substantial benefits for consumers and businesses across the country. We are confident that the UK will be among the most competitive markets in the world for 4G services.

The next stage of the auction will take place very soon to decide where in the 800MHz and 2.6GHz bands each winning bidder?s spectrum will be located; this is known as the assignment stage. When that is complete, Ofcom will issue 4G licences which will enable the winners to start the roll out 4G LTE services. It is widely expected that we will see some significant news on widespread availability in the late spring or early summer of this year.

The biggest benefit of 4G LTE will be a huge increase in data speeds on mobile devices however those in areas that have poor fixed line broadband also stand to benefit greatly from 4G. According to Ofcom, 4G coverage will extend way beyond existing 3G offerings and will cover 98% of the UK population indoors and outdoors. This news, if it turns out to be true, will be music to the ears of UK consumers who have had to deal with spotty 3G connections for way too long!

One note of caution, this is slightly different to the 4G services that EE currently offers and the one that Three UK is planning on rolling out very soon too. The auction wins cover spectrum on the 800MHz and 2.6GHz bands which are not currently compatible with the iPhone 5. Because of this, Apple will have to change its radios to match these new bands so an upgrade in hardware to benefit from 4G when it is launched on these frequencies will be needed.

Source: Ofcom



Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/TheIphoneBlog/~3/inii-AP9k_w/story01.htm

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Tuesday, February 19, 2013

Build a giant Android tablet (or kiosk) with an Android TV stick + touch frame

You can take any old Android TV stick, plug it into your TV and add a keyboard, mouse or remote to run Android apps on a big screen. But what if you want to add support for multi-touch so you can really use your big screen like a big tablet?

Peau Productions has put together a PQ Labs Android mini PC and an PQ Labs Touch Frame to create a TV-sized tablet that could be used for digital signage, a kiosk-type setup, or for some heavy-duty Angry Birds sessions on your TV.

PQ Labs iStick with touch frame

The PQ Labs iStick A200 is an Android mini PC with a Rockchip RK3066 dual core processor, Mali 400 quad-core graphics, 2GB of RAM, and 4GB of storage. There?s a USB port on one end and an HDMI port on the other. It sells for about $79 and comes pre-rooted.

The PQ Labs Multi-Touch G4 frame is a ?32 inch or larger overlay frame that you can use with a projector or TV display to add support for multi-touch input.

Prics for the frames start at about $467. So while the iStick A200 won?t put a big dent in your wallet, the whole kit doesn?t come particularly cheap. Still, it?s pretty impressive that you can set up a fully functional touchscreen device that runs Android apps including a web browser, video player, Google Maps, and many other apps.

via CNX-Software

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Monday, February 18, 2013

Immigration reform must also fix legal system - Blogs - Wichita Eagle

Of the major issues that President Obama mentioned in his State of the Union address, comprehension immigration reform might stand the best chance of occurring. Obama outlined reform concepts that have broad support among the public and growing bipartisan support in Congress, including increased border security and a pathway to citizenship. Sulma Arias, executive director of Sunflower Community Action in Wichita, applauded Obama for ?creating a sense of urgency around fixing the broken immigration system.? But Arias said that sending immigrants ?to the end of the line is not a solution, because it assumes that ?the line? is an equitable and a fair process.? She added: ?Hundreds of thousands of people have been waiting for 12 years or more to become citizens. The broken immigration system promotes breaking the law because there is no way to play by the rules.?

Source: http://blogs.kansas.com/weblog/2013/02/immigration-reform-must-also-fix-legal-system/

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Sound Check: Texas roots rocker Wayne Hancock finds his bliss on the ?Ride? WITH VIDEO

Wayne ?The Train? Hancock performs at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday, Feb. 19, at Callahan?s Music Hall, 2015 South Blvd., Auburn Hills. Tickets are $17.50 and $12.50 Call 248-858-9508 or visit www.atcallahans.com.

A couple of years ago, Wayne ?The Train? Hancock was on anti-depression medication ? and, he acknowledges, other mood-enhancing substances.

Then he bought a Harley-Davidson motorcycle, which the rootsy Texas singer-songwriter says not only helped make him healthier but also inspired his upcoming new album, ?The Ride.?

?I joined an MC (motorcycle club) ?cause I found riding motorcycles was better for me than taking all these meds for my depression,? says Hancock, 47, who co-produced ?Ride? with Lloyd Maines. ?I started riding and got off the meds I was on and quit drinkin? and quit smokin? reefer and starting writing music again. And I met a lot of different people, which opened up my world quite a bit.

?So ?Ride,? the title song, is about my motorcycle and riding. The road has always been a place that I can go and get my thoughts together. Everything I write has to do with being on the highway. I love it out there.?

But, Hancock notes, the album ? which comes out Feb. 26 ? could also have been called ?I Miss My Wife,? and it?s chock full of songs inspired by the couple?s separation as he started making it. ?I don?t think riding a motorcycle cost me my marriage ? I just don?t think I was meant to be married to anybody,? Hancock says. But he managed to find some creative gain from the pain.

?When I write songs I tend to write about the situation that I?m in,? he notes. ?But I try to find a happy point in that. Even if I have to lose, I set it to some happy-go-lucky music and see if I can?t find some optimism even in the darkest hours.?

Wayne ?The Train? Hancock and Todd May perform at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday, Feb. 19, at Callahan?s Music Hall, 2015 South Blvd., Auburn Hills. Tickets are $17.50 and $12.50 Call 248-858-9508 or visit www.atcallahans.com.

Source: http://www.theoaklandpress.com/articles/2013/02/18/entertainment/doc511be5ae9158f138179991.txt

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Study: Better TV might improve kids' behavior

SEATTLE (AP) ? Teaching parents to switch channels from violent shows to educational TV can improve preschoolers' behavior, even without getting them to watch less, a study found.

The results were modest and faded over time, but may hold promise for finding ways to help young children avoid aggressive, violent behavior, the study authors and other doctors said.

"It's not just about turning off the television. It's about changing the channel. What children watch is as important as how much they watch," said lead author Dr. Dimitri Christakis, a pediatrician and researcher at Seattle Children's Research Institute.

The research was to be published online Monday by the journal Pediatrics.

The study involved 565 Seattle parents, who periodically filled out TV-watching diaries and questionnaires measuring their child's behavior.

Half were coached for six months on getting their 3-to-5-year-old kids to watch shows like "Sesame Street" and "Dora the Explorer" rather than more violent programs like "Power Rangers." The results were compared with kids whose parents who got advice on healthy eating instead.

At six months, children in both groups showed improved behavior, but there was a little bit more improvement in the group that was coached on their TV watching.

By one year, there was no meaningful difference between the two groups overall. Low-income boys appeared to get the most short-term benefit.

"That's important because they are at the greatest risk, both for being perpetrators of aggression in real life, but also being victims of aggression," Christakis said.

The study has some flaws. The parents weren't told the purpose of the study, but the authors concede they probably figured it out and that might have affected the results.

Before the study, the children averaged about 1? hours of TV, video and computer game watching a day, with violent content making up about a quarter of that time. By the end of the study, that increased by up to 10 minutes. Those in the TV coaching group increased their time with positive shows; the healthy eating group watched more violent TV.

Nancy Jensen, who took part with her now 6-year-old daughter, said the study was a wake-up call.

"I didn't realize how much Elizabeth was watching and how much she was watching on her own," she said.

Jensen said her daughter's behavior improved after making changes, and she continues to control what Elizabeth and her 2-year-old brother, Joe, watch. She also decided to replace most of Elizabeth's TV time with games, art and outdoor fun.

During a recent visit to their Seattle home, the children seemed more interested in playing with blocks and running around outside than watching TV.

Another researcher who was not involved in this study but also focuses his work on kids and television commended Christakis for taking a look at the influence of positive TV programs, instead of focusing on the impact of violent TV.

"I think it's fabulous that people are looking on the positive side. Because no one's going to stop watching TV, we have to have viable alternatives for kids," said Dr. Michael Rich, director of the Center on Media and Child Health at Children's Hospital Boston.

____

Online:

Pediatrics: http://www.pediatrics.org

___

Contact AP Writer Donna Blankinship through Twitter (at)dgblankinship

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/study-better-tv-might-improve-kids-behavior-040719375.html

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Sunday, February 17, 2013

Girls looking at military careers want combat posts open

Sarah Trujillo grew up hearing her dad?s stories of the Marine Corps and dreamed of a military career of her own.

But some posts were off limits to women, a barrier she thought was unfair.

Her father told her things could change by the time she was old enough to serve. She hoped he was right.

Late last month, Pentagon chief Leon Panetta lifted the military?s ban on women serving in combat, opening as many as 230,000 front-line positions.

Some jobs may be open this year. Others may take longer. Any exceptions must be narrowly tailored and based on an analysis of data, defense officials said.

The transition should be complete by 2016.

?I was so excited. I was jumping up and down,? said Sarah, who at 14 still has at least four years before she can sign up.

But the Oxnard High School freshman who compares her dad?s dog tags to ?a beacon of amazingness? said she knows she wants a military career.

?This is really what I want to do,? Sarah said, before falling back into drills in her Junior ROTC class. ?I?ve been wanting to do this for a long time.?

Sarah and her classmates represent a generation of girls for whom military careers will carry far fewer restrictions.

They grew up with the country at war, as troops fought in Iraq and Afghanistan.

When asked recently, they overwhelmingly supported lifting the ban on women in combat.

?We?re passing the torch to a new generation,? said Maj. Dale Weaver, an Air Force veteran who leads the high school program.

?They are the voice of the future that says, ?Let everyone have an equal opportunity.? ?

?Little bit more equal?

Women make up 14 percent, or 202,400, of the U.S. military?s 1.4 million active personnel.

The Department of Defense says hundreds of thousands of women were deployed to recent operations in Iraq and Afghanistan. More than 800 women have been wounded in the two wars and more than 130 have died, according to a congressional report.

Lifting the restrictions likely won?t dramatically change the type of women joining the military, said Stacie Furia, a research sociologist at the Palm Center, a research institute at UCLA.

The move, however, will change women?s experience in the military. Women will get an opportunity to gain experience to grow their military careers in ways they haven?t had before, Furia said.

As more women move into new roles and do so successfully, it also will help people break down stereotypes. As that happens, more women may become interested in military careers, she said.

?Now, it?s more open for everybody to do the job they want to do. And it gives women more jobs in the military,? said Scarlet Schmitz, 17, a senior at Oxnard High who has participated in Junior ROTC for the past four years.

She already planned on a military career, wanting to become a therapist or psychiatrist, most likely in the Navy.

?I don?t want to go into a combat position, but I?m glad women are now considered a little bit more equal to be able to if they want to,? she said.

?I know some women who would be good in that role ? really, really good,? she said. ?They would enjoy it, and they want to go in.?

Reserving judgment

Weaver agrees the ban should be lifted but thinks the shift will bring challenges.

Calling himself a traditionalist, he thinks he might have been overprotective of females in his unit if the change had come while he was serving. ?I probably would have struggled with that at first,? he said.

But once he saw the woman next to him was just as capable, things would change. Like any stereotype, he said, at some point you wonder how you ever thought there would be a problem.

Master Sgt. Stephen Emmons, who served in the Air Force for more than two decades and now teaches in the Junior ROTC program, doesn?t have a strong opinion either way. He said he will reserve judgment until he sees whether the move helps the military in its mission.

?I just hope changes are made for the right reason,? Emmons said. ?The change should be made because it makes us a better fighting force. That really should be the only reason.?

The Pentagon says it will not lower fitness standards for women but is reviewing requirements to see if they match the demands of various jobs.

Lucy Alcantara, 15, a first sergeant in the Junior ROTC program, said the standards should reflect what?s needed for the job, whether it?s a man or woman.

She has wanted to be a flight nurse in the Air Force since the seventh grade. It?s a post that already is open to women, but she still feels strongly about the ban being lifted, saying it gives her more options.

If a man or woman successfully trains to meet those standards, they should earn respect from colleagues, she said. ?If you?re willing to do the work, that?s the person I would want next to me in combat.?

Source: http://www.stripes.com/news/us/girls-looking-at-military-careers-want-combat-posts-open-1.208342

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"?I am wondering if, despite these pieces of evidence, Benedict?s recent entry into Twitter has had..."

Sunday 17 February 2013

?I am wondering if, despite these pieces of evidence, Benedict?s recent entry into Twitter has had anything to do with the seeming abruptness of his announcement. Before you scoff, consider: the pope?s interest in, and support of, the church?s engagement with new media proves he is not exactly out of touch with the world, but when the Benedict finally logged on to Twitter he got to see firsthand the sort of raw, unhinged anti-Catholic hatred so active within social media threads. We who work in new media experience this hatred so regularly it barely registers with us, but for Benedict, or those around him, it must have been a shocking revelation to encounter the vilest expressions of hatred, the intentional voicings of malice and evil hopes, flung squarely at the Holy Father, in real time. Prayer and Penance: Did Twitter Hasten Benedict?s Retirement? ?

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Good Charlotte Singer, Soundwave Festival Organizer Get in Twitter War

Don Arnold, Getty Images

Thanks to the miracle of digital media and Twitter, band and concert promoters/organizers can battle publicly and air their dirty laundry, dragging fans right smack dab into the middle of the drama. That's just what Good Charlotte frontman Joel Madden and Soundwave Festival organizer AJ Maddah did.

Well, it was more like Maddah attacked Madden, who responded once and then deleted it (see it here), only responding again after picking up that dinosaur device known as the phone to call Maddah and hash it out after Maddah's torrent of 140-character assaults.

In the interim, though, Maddah took aim at Good Charlotte's twins ?Joel and his guitarist brother Benji- for their treatment of fans and the fact that they went from PETA supporters to KFC endorsers. Ouch.

It started when Maddah posted a link to Music Feeds' petition, "Get the Madden Brothers Out of Australia."

Fans came to their defense, even though Maddah said they were "money-grubbing cunts with zero principles and disdain for their fans." Yikes.

The trash talk eventually made it to Joel's feed. His reply? "I don't mind you hating on us but Encouraging other people to hate us? Keep talking shit brother it suits you."

Maddah went off, hurling insult after insult, even saying that Madden made fun of an overweight fan. His dislike for the brothers and the band dates back to the 2004 Soundwave, which the band played. We're not quite sure what that's all about, but it's now water under the bridge.

After all this drama, the two spoke on the phone and righted the punk rock ship. Joel even said that they squashed the beef out of respect, talking for the first time in 10 years.

Watch 'Worst Social Media Disasters of 2012' Video

Source: http://www.noisecreep.com/2013/02/15/good-charlotte-joel-madden-twitter-fight/

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FDA clears Argus II 'bionic eye' for sale in the US (video)

FDA clears Argus II 'bionic eye' for sale in the US video

Those in the US suffering from blindness due to retinis pigmentosa (RP) will now be able to regain some vision bionically for the first time ever, thanks to Second Sight's Argus II retinal prosthesis. The device was just approved by the FDA for sale stateside after surmounting the same hurdle in Europe almost two years ago -- though it was first launched long, long before that. RP is a rare genetic disease that inflicts 100,000 or so Americans, destroying photoreceptors in the eye while leaving other cells intact. By implanting a device on the retina that receives a signal from the eyeglass-mounted camera, those cells can be stimulated as if receiving light, causing them to transmit an image to the brain. Due to the limited number of electrodes, patients would only be able to discern light or dark, but most have reported better functionality with the device -- being able to make out the shape of a curb while walking, or discerning between light, grey or dark colored socks, for instance. The Argus II has been certified by the FDA for "humanitarian use," meaning there's "reasonable assurance" that it's safe, and should start popping up in specialized clinics by the end of the year.

[Photo credit: Associated Press]

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Brennan open to special court for drone strikes

WASHINGTON (AP) ? The White House nominee to run the CIA said setting up a special court to oversee deadly drone strikes against American citizens is worth considering but raises difficult questions over how much authority it would have in decisions currently made by the president.

Expanding on his testimony a week ago, John Brennan said the White House and other agencies had discussed the idea, when coming up with the process to determine which al-Qaida targets go on a capture-or-kill lists for the CIA and the military.

"It would raise some novel, and potentially difficult, questions and furthermore would grant courts authority over decisions that have traditionally been exercised principally, if not exclusively, by the executive branch," Brennan said. "Nevertheless, given the stakes involved and the consequence of such determinations...all options are worth considering."

His new comments were included Friday in written answers to the Senate Intelligence Committee.

The panel is considering whether to approve Brennan's nomination for a full Senate vote.

Committee Chairwoman Dianne Feinstein has said she is considering legislation to set up a special court system to regulate drone strikes. It would be similar to the court that signs off on government surveillance in espionage and terrorism cases.

Brennan also said he believes the number of civilians killed in U.S. strikes targeting al-Qaida should be made public, and he described how the U.S. works to determine whether there were civilian casualties in drone strikes, drawing on "human intelligence, signals intelligence, media reports, and surveillance footage.

"In those rare instances in which civilians have been killed, after-action reviews have been conducted to identify corrective actions and to minimize the risk of innocents being killed or injured in the future," he wrote. "Where possible, we also work with local governments to gather facts and, if appropriate, provide condolence payments to families of those killed."

Brennan repeated assertions made by President Barack Obama that drone strikes would not be used by American citizens inside the U.S., and that they are not used if it's possible to capture a suspect.

"This Administration has not carried out drone strikes inside the United States and has no intention of doing so," he said.

Feinstein delayed voting on Brennan's post for roughly two weeks, at the request of lawmakers who want more information on the White House's legal policy governing targeted killing, and last year's terrorist attack that killed the U.S. ambassador and three other Americans in Benghazi, Libya.

Committee members have been given access to only four out of a total of 11 classified legal Justice Department memos justifying the use of targeted killing of terror suspects overseas. The White House would not comment on their request this week.

-------

On the web:

http://intelligence.senate.gov/130207/posthearing.pdf

Dozier can be followed on Twitter at http://twitter.com/KimberlyDozier.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/89ae8247abe8493fae24405546e9a1aa/Article_2013-02-15-US-Brennan-CIA/id-9afbe8d67e6c4e6d88c78c5de214dfa3

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Saturday, February 16, 2013

Are Environmentalists Getting It Wrong on the Keystone XL Pipeline?

Thousands of environmentalists will flock to Washington on Sunday for what's being billed as history's largest rally for climate change action. It will be their third such show of force since mid-2011, an unusually long period of unity in the time since landmark clean air and water laws passed in the 1970s. Climate activists are playing the "outside game" that twice powered President Obama to victory -- and their top target is Keystone?XL,?the $5.3 billion plan to pipe heavy fuel from Canada's oil sands to the Gulf Coast.

"If President Obama is serious about tackling climate change in his second term, we're calling on him to reject Keystone XL once and for all," the green group 350.org?wrote?in announcing the protest.

That demand has moved Democratic donors?to warn of closed checkbooks?and college students?to blockadeoil-company offices. Bill McKibben, 350.org's co-founder, led dozens of fellow anti-KXL activists in?getting arrested?outside the White House on Wednesday. But turning the pipeline into the nation's leading symbol of the greenhouse-gas-emissions threat leads to two significant problems.

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First, the campaign diverts public attention from a more immediate, less well-understood hazard: It's not clear that federal regulators can ensure the pipeline will run safely if it is approved. Moreover, environmentalists' spotlight on Keystone XL could undermine their own goals. Within our borders, Obama can guarantee emissions savings bigger than the pipeline's denial would represent -- while still avoiding congressional gridlock -- by setting the strictest possible pollution standards for new and existing power plants.

At the heart of the case against?KXL,?a project of oil giant TransCanada, is a slippery-slope argument. No one disputes that the fuel it would carry is dirtier than conventional crude, but greens portray the pipeline as a momentous leap toward long-term domination for the fossil-fuel industry, a 36-inch steel glide path to bloated emissions for decades to come. The attack is bearing some fruit, as prices for western Canada's heavy crude have fallen, spooking the government and making oilmen reconsider their plans in the region.

McKibben's team can't guarantee, however, that killing the pipeline will slow the march of oil-sands development for good. Resistance already has prompted oil companies to consider alternative shipment plans, from using railcars and barges to expanding Midwestern pipe networks owned by Enbridge, a TransCanada competitor.?You may remember Enbridge from the costliest?onshore oil spill in?U.S.?history, caused by a corroded Michigan pipe that leaked more than 800,000 gallons of Canadian oil in 2010. The National Transportation Safety Board found that 81 percent of that oil gushed after Enbridge employees misread alarms along their purportedly state-of-the-art system and twice tried to restart the pipeline.

Here's where the safety risks surrounding?KXL?-- the ones that play second fiddle to talk of oil-sands emissions -- come into play. TransCanada's first line of defense is the same technology that failed to stop the Enbridge spill, but even if it works perfectly, as much as 2 percent of the pipeline's daily volume could escape from tiny leaks that are hard to detect. While that number sounds small, a 1-percent leak from?KXL?would gush as many as 8,300 barrels of oil per day and cause a spill three times the size of the Michigan disaster within a week.

The Obama Administration acknowledged that danger in its?thousand-plus-page review?of the project, writing that "although the total volume of a release from a pinhole leak could be relatively large" and might continue "for days or a few weeks ... in most cases the oil would likely remain" close to the pipeline.

When anti-pipeline activists discuss spills, it's usually in the context of still-tenuous claims that heavy fuel wears down pipelines more quickly. But even if?KXL?is no more spill-prone than the average pipeline, leaks are inescapable: The administration projected more than one "significant" spill of at least 50 barrels somewhere along its path every year.

If environmentalists had made safety, not emissions, the centerpiece of their political charge against?KXL?they might have prodded the White House into promoting meaningful new regulations for all oil and gas pipeline operators. Instead, the handful of voices -- led by conservative Nebraskans who gave Obama cover to twice delay a decision -- crying out for more attention to the danger of a spill is lost amid the clamor over the pipeline's contribution to climate change.

Sizing up that contribution demonstrates the second downside of making?KXL?the rallying point for global-warming action. Rejecting the pipeline would save a maximum of about 180 million tons of carbon dioxide per year -- under the questionable assumption that Canadian production would be permanent and not replaced by crude from a developing world where oil demand is rising. In America, the pipeline "is unlikely to have any impact on the amount" of imported oil,?according to?an analysis commissioned by the Department of Energy.

In contrast, strong carbon-emissions rules for existing?U.S.?power plants alone would pay off with guaranteed cuts that grow every year while encouraging industry to invest in cleaner technology and further efficiency measures. By 2020 the total carbon-dioxide savings would reach 563 million tons and push power-industry omissions 26 percent below their 2005 levels, according to the Natural Resources Defense Council.

The same green groups fighting the pipeline are pressing Obama for stricter power-plant pollution standards, and hoped (in vain) that the president might publicly commit to them during his?State of the Union address. Meanwhile, this weekend's protest casts?KXL?as the leading climate-change litmus test for the next four years of an administration. That's a big gamble, since Obama is known to mete out victories and setbacks to fossil fuels in seemingly equal measure. In 2011, for example, the White House?punted onnew ozone standards -- score one for oil and gas -- weeks before?the?EPA?released?tough new mercury rules. Will environmentalists still celebrate if the White House rejects the pipeline, only to delay or weaken power-plant emissions limits?

Of course, climate activists might run the table in Obama's second term, stopping?KXL?and championing strong power-plant rules. Even if they only prevail on the pipeline, they appear prepared to embrace a strategy of emulating Republicans' first-term obduracy against Obama -- saying "no" to almost every fossil-fuel infrastructure plan, from oil sands shipments to coal and natural gas exports.

In that event, Sunday's protest will be just the first of many for American greens. Balancing their demands to say "no" to Keystone XL by offering the president a way to say "yes," an affirmative agenda to speed our transition to cleaner energy technology, will be a challenge.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/environmentalists-getting-wrong-keystone-xl-pipeline-112446194--politics.html

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