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CIA have now admitted to using weird brain drill on United States public show documents

Posted in Politics with tags , , , , , , , , on 22. October 2009 by jamesherrera1960

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Pentagon used psychological operation on US public, documents show

By Brad Jacobson
Wednesday, October 21st, 2009 — 10:12 am
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pentagon old Pentagon used psychological operation on US public, documents showFigure in Bush propaganda operation remains Pentagon spokesman

In Part I of this series, Raw Story revealed that Bryan Whitman, the current deputy assistant secretary of defense for media operations, was an active senior participant in a Bush administration covert Pentagon program that used retired military analysts to generate positive wartime news coverage.

A months-long review of documents and interviews with Pentagon personnel has revealed that the Bush Administration's military analyst program — aimed at selling the Iraq war to the American people — operated through a secretive collaboration between the Defense Department's press and community relations offices.

Raw Story has also uncovered evidence that directly ties the activities undertaken in the military analyst program to an official US military document’s definition of psychological operations — propaganda that is only supposed to be directed toward foreign audiences.

The investigation of Pentagon documents and interviews with Defense Department officials and experts in public relations found that the decision to fold the military analyst program into community relations and portray it as “outreach” served to obscure the intent of the project as well as that office’s partnership with the press office. It also helped shield its senior supervisor, Bryan Whitman, assistant secretary of defense for media operations, whose role was unknown when the original story of the analyst program broke.

Story continues below…

In a nearly hour-long phone interview, Whitman asserted that since the program was not run from his office, he was neither involved nor culpable. Exposure of the collaboration between the Pentagon press and community relations offices on this program, however, as well as an effort to characterize it as a mere community outreach project, belie Whitman’s claim that he bears no responsibility for the program’s activities.

rsilogo Pentagon used psychological operation on US public, documents showThese new revelations come in addition to the evidence of Whitman’s active and extensive participation in the program, as Raw Story documented in part one of this series. Whitman remains a spokesman for the Pentagon today.

Whitman said he stood by an earlier statement in which he averred “the intent and purpose of the is nothing other than an earnest attempt to inform the American public.”

In the interview, Whitman sought to portray his role as peripheral, noting that his position naturally demands he speak on a number of subjects in which he isn’t necessarily directly involved.

The record, however, suggests otherwise.

In a January 2005 memorandum to active members of both offices from then-Pentagon press office director, Navy Captain Roxie Merritt, who now leads the community relations office, emphasized the necessary “synergy of outreach shop and media ops working together” on the military analyst program. [p. 18-19]

Merritt recommended that both the press and community relations offices develop a “hot list” of analysts who could dependably “carry our water” and provide them with ultra-exclusive access that would compel the networks to “weed out the less reliably friendly analysts” on their own.

“Media ops and outreach can work on a plan to maximize use of the analysts and figure out a system by which we keep our most reliably friendly analysts plugged in on everything from crisis response to future plans,” Merritt remarked. “As evidenced by this analyst trip to Iraq, the synergy of outreach shop and media ops working together on these types of projects is enormous and effective. Will continue to examine ways to improve processes.”

In response, Lawrence Di Rita, then Pentagon public affairs chief, agreed. He told Merritt and both offices in an email, “I guess I thought we already were doing a lot of this.”

Several names on the memo are redacted. Those who are visible read like a who’s who of the Pentagon press and community relations offices: Whitman, Merritt, her deputy press office director Gary Keck (both of whom reported directly to Whitman) and two Bush political appointees, Dallas Lawrence and Allison Barber, then respectively director and head of community relations.

Merritt became director of the office, and its de facto chief until the appointment of a new deputy assistant secretary of defense, after the departures of Barber and Lawrence, the ostensible leaders of the military analyst program. She remains at the Defense Department today.

When reached through email, Merritt attempted to explain the function of her office's outreach program and what distinguishes it from press office activities.

“Essentially,” Merritt summarized, “we provide another avenue of communications for citizens and organizations wanting to communicate directly with DoD.”

Asked to clarify, she said that outreach’s purpose is to educate the public in a one-to-one manner about the Defense Department and military’s structure, history and operations. She also noted her office “does not handle news media unless they have a specific question about one of our programs.”

Merritt eventually admitted that it is not a function of the outreach program to provide either information or talking points to individuals or a group of individuals — such as the retired military analysts — with the intention that those recipients use them to directly engage with traditional news media and influence news coverage.

Asked directly if her office provides talking points for this purpose, she replied, “No. The talking points are developed for use by DoD personnel.”

Experts in public relations and propaganda say Raw Story's findings reveal the program itself was “unwise” and “inherently deceptive.” One expressed surprise that one of the program's senior figures was still speaking for the Pentagon.

“Running the military analyst program from a community relations office is both surprising and unwise,” said Nicholas Cull, a professor of public diplomacy at USC’s Annenberg School and an expert on propaganda. “It is surprising because this is not what that office should be doing unwise because the element of subterfuge is always a lightening rod for public criticism.”

Diane Farsetta, a senior researcher at the Center for Media and Democracy, which monitors publics relations and media manipulation, said calling the program “outreach” was “very calculatedly misleading” and another example of how the project was “inherently deceptive.”

“This has been their talking point in general on the Pentagon pundit program,” Farsetta explained. “You know, ‘We’re all just making sure that we’re sharing information.’”

Farsetta also said that it’s “pretty stunning” that no one, including Whitman, has been willing to take any responsibility for the program and that the Pentagon Inspector General’s office and Congress have yet to hold anyone accountable.

“It’s hard to think of a more blatant example of propaganda than this program,” Farsetta said.

Cull said the revelations are “just one more indication that the entire apparatus of the US government’s strategic communications — civilian and military, at home and abroad — is in dire need of review and repair.”

A PSYOPS Program Directed at American Public

When the military analyst program was first revealed by The New York Times in 2008, retired US Army Col. Ken Allard described it as “PSYOPS on steroids.”

It turns out this was far from a casual reference. Raw Story has discovered new evidence that directly exposes this stealth media project and the activities of its participants as matching the US government’s own definition of psychological operations, or PSYOPS.

The US Army Civil Affairs & Psychological Operations Command fact sheet, which states that PSYOPS should be directed “to foreign audiences” only, includes the following description:

“Used during peacetime, contingencies and declared war, these activities are not forms of force, but are force multipliers that use nonviolent means in often violent environments.”

Pentagon public affairs officials referred to the military analysts as “message force multipliers” in documented communications.

A prime example is a May 2006 memorandum from then community relations chief Allison Barber in which she proposes sending the military analysts on another trip to Iraq:

“Based on past trips, I would suggest limiting the group to 10 analysts, those with the greatest ability to serve as message force multipliers.”

Nicholas Cull, who also directs the public diplomacy master’s program at USC and has written extensively on propaganda and media history, found the Pentagon public affairs officials’ use of such terms both incriminating and reckless.

“ use of psyop terminology is an ‘own goal,’” Cull explained in an email, “as it speaks directly to the American public’s underlying fear of being brainwashed by its own government.”

This new evidence provides further perspective on an incident cited by the Times.

Pentagon records show that the day after 14 marines died in Iraq on August 3, 2005, James T. Conway, then director of operations for the Joint Chiefs, instructed military analysts during a briefing to work to prevent the incident from weakening public support for the war. Conway reminded the military analysts assembled, “The strategic target remains our population.” [p. 102]

Same Strategy, Different Program

Bryan Whitman was also involved in a different Pentagon public affairs project during the lead-up to the war in Iraq: embedding reporters.

The embed and military analyst programs shared the same underlying strategy of “information dominance,” the same objective of selling Bush administration war policies by generating favorable news coverage and were directed at the same target — the American public.

Torie Clarke, the first Pentagon public affairs chief, is often credited for conceiving both programs. But Clarke and Whitman have openly acknowledged his deep involvement in the embed project.

Clarke declined to be interviewed for this article.

Whitman said he was “heavily involved in the process” of the embed program's development, implementation and supervision.

Before embedding, reporters and media organizations were forced to sign a contract whose ground rules included allowing military officials to review articles for release, traveling with military personnel escorts at all times or remaining in designated areas, only conducting on-the-record interviews, and agreeing that the government may terminate the contract “at any time and for any reason.”

In May 2002, with planning for a possible invasion of Iraq already in progress, Clarke appointed Whitman to head all Pentagon media operations. Prior to that, he had served since 1995 in the Pentagon press office, both as deputy director for press operations and as a public affairs specialist.

The timing of Whitman’s appointment coincided with the development stages of the embed and military analyst programs. He was the ideal candidate for both projects.

Whitman had a military background, having served in combat as a Special Forces commander and as an Army public affairs officer with years of experience in messaging from the Pentagon. He also had experience in briefing and prepping civilian and military personnel.

Whitman's background provided him with a facility and familiarity in navigating military and civilian channels. With these tools in hand, he was able to create dialogue between the two and expedite action in a sprawling and sometimes contentious bureaucracy.

Buried in an obscure April 2008 online New York Times Q&A with readers, reporter David Barstow disclosed:

“As Lawrence Di Rita, a former senior Pentagon official told me, they viewed [the military analyst program] as the ‘mirror image’ of the Pentagon program for embedding reporters with units in the field. In this case, the military analysts were in effect ‘embedded’ with the senior leadership through a steady mix of private briefings, trips and talking points.”

Di Rita denied the conversation had occurred in a telephone interview.

“I don’t doubt that’s what he heard, but that’s not what I said,” Di Rita asserted.

Whitman said he'd never heard Di Rita make any such comparison between the programs.

Barstow, however, said he stood behind the veracity of the quote and the conversation he attributed to Di Rita.

Di Rita, who succeeded Clarke, also declined to answer any questions related to Whitman’s involvement in the military analyst program, including whether he had been involved in its creation.

Clarke and Whitman have both discussed information dominance and its role in the embed program.

In her 2006 book Lipstick on a Pig, Clarke revealed that “most importantly, embedding was a military strategy in addition to a public affairs one” (p. 62) and that the program’s strategy was “simple: information dominance” (p. 187). To achieve it, she explained, there was a need to circumvent the traditional news media “filter” where journalists act as “intermediaries.”

The goal, just as with the military analyst program, was not to spin a story but to control the narrative altogether.

At the 2003 Military-Media conference in Chicago, Whitman told the audience, “We wanted to take the offensive to achieve information dominance” because “information was going to play a major role in combat operations.” [pdf link p. 2] One of the other program’s objectives, he said, was “to build and maintain support for U.S. policy.” [pdf link, p. 16 – quote sourced in 2005 recap of 2003 mil-media conference]

At the March 2004 “Media at War” conference at UC Berkeley, Lt. Col. Rick Long, former head of media relations for the US Marine Corps, offered a candid view of the Pentagon’s engagement in “information warfare” during the Bush administration.

“Our job is to win, quite frankly,” said Long. “The reason why we wanted to embed so many media was we wanted to dominate the information environment. We wanted to beat any kind of propaganda or disinformation at its own game.”

“Overall,” he told the audience, “we’re happy with the outcome.”

The Appearance of Transparency

On a national radio program just before the invasion of Iraq, Whitman claimed that embedded reporters would have a firsthand perspective of “the good, the bad and the ugly.”

But veteran foreign correspondent Reese Erlich told Raw Story that the embed program was “a stroke of genius by the Bush administration” because it gave the appearance of transparency while “in reality, they were manipulating the news.”

In a phone interview, Erlich, who is currently covering the war in Afghanistan as a “unilateral” (which allows reporters to move around more freely without the restrictions of embed guidelines), also pointed out the psychological and practical influence the program has on reporters.

“You’re traveling with a particular group of soldiers,” he explained. “Your life literally depends on them. And you see only the firefights or slog that they’re involved in. So you’re not going to get anything close to balanced reporting.”

At the August 2003 Military-Media conference in Chicago, Jonathan Landay, who covered the initial stages of the war for Knight Ridder Newspapers, said that being a unilateral “gave me the flexibility to do my job.” [pdf link p. 2]

He added, “Donald Rumsfeld told the American people that what happened in northern Iraq after [the invasion] was a little ‘untidiness.’ What I saw, and what I reported, was a tsunami of murder, looting, arson and ethnic cleansing.”

Paul Workman, a journalist with over thirty years at CBC News, including foreign correspondent reporting on the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, wrote of the program in April 2003, “It is a brilliant, persuasive conspiracy to control the images and the messages coming out of the battlefield and they've succeeded colossally.”

Erlich said he thought most mainstream US reporters have been unwilling to candidly discuss the program because they “weren’t interested in losing their jobs by revealing what they really thought about the embed process.”

Now embedded with troops in Afghanistan for McClatchy, Landay told Raw Story it’s not that reporters shouldn’t be embedded with troops at all, but that it should be only one facet of every news outlet’s war coverage.

Embedding, he said, offers a “soda-straw view of events.” This isn't necessarily negative “as long as a news outlet has a number of embeds and unilaterals whose pictures can be combined” with civilian perspectives available from international TV outlets such as Reuters TV, AP TV, and al Jazeera, he said.

Landay placed more blame on US network news outlets than on the embed program itself for failing to show a more balanced and accurate picture.

But when asked if the Pentagon and the designers of the embed program counted as part of their embedding strategy on the dismal track record of US network news outlets when it came to including international TV footage from civilian perspectives, he replied, “I will not second guess the Pentagon’s motives.”

Brad Jacobson is a contributing investigative reporter for Raw Story. Additional research was provided by Ron Brynaert.

www.myspace.com has started making use of SSD hd's

Posted in Tech with tags , , , , , on 14. October 2009 by jamesherrera1960

MySpace replaces all server hard disks with flash drives

myspace1

MySpace’s new SSD servers use about 1% the power of its hard disk drive predecessors

Computerworld – Social networking site MySpace.com announced today that it has switched from using hard disk drives in its servers to using PCI Express (PCIe) cards loaded with solid state chips as primary storage for their data center operations.

The PCIe cards, from Fusion-io Inc., allow MySpace to replace multiple server farms made up of 2U (3.5-in high) servers that had used 10 to 12 15,000 RPM Fibre Channel drives each with 1U (1.75-in high) servers using a single ioDrive.

“In the last 20 years, disk storage hasn’t kept pace with other innovations in IT, and right now we’re on the cusp of a dramatic change with flash technologies,” said Richard Buckingham, vice president of technical operations for MySpace, in a statement.

MySpace said the solid state storage uses less than 1% of the power and cooling costs that their previous hard drive-based server infrastructure had and that they were able to remove all of their server racks because the ioDrives are embedded directly into even its smallest servers.

“We looked at a number of solid state solutions, using many different kinds of RAID configurations, but we felt that Fusion-io’s solution was exactly what we needed to accomplish our goals,” Buckingham stated.

MySpace’s new servers also replaced its high-performance hosts that held data in large RAM cache modules, a costly method MySpace had been using in order to achieve the necessary throughput to serve its relational databases. MySpace said its new servers using the NAND flash memory modules give it the same performance as its older RAM servers.

Salt Lake City-based Fusion-io claims the ioDrive Duo offers users unprecedented single-server performance levels with 1.5GB/sec. throughput and almost 200,000 IOPS. The system can reach such performance levels because four ioDrive Duos in a single server can scale linearly, which provides up to 6GB/sec. of read bandwidth and more than 500,000 read IOPS.

The cards come in 160GB, 320GB and 640GB capacities. A 1.28TB card is expected in the second half of this year.

“Social networking sites and other Web 2.0 applications are very database dependent. Our 320GB ioDrive can fill a 10Gbit/sec. Ethernet pipe,” David Flynn, CTO of Fusion-io, said in an interview.

U.S. Homeland Security wants to give jobs to Up to 1K Cyber Experts

Posted in Tech with tags , , , , , , , on 6. October 2009 by jamesherrera1960

Job Trends: Homeland Security to Hire Up to 1K Cyber Experts

WASHINGTON – The Obama administration has given a green light to the Homeland Security Department to be more competitive and choosey as it hires up to 1,000 new cyber experts over the next three years, the first major personnel move to fulfill its vow to bolster security of the nation’s computer networks.

The announcement follows a wave of cyber attacks on federal agencies, including a July assault that knocked government Web sites off the Internet and earlier intrusions into the country’s electrical grid.

Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano, who made the announcement on Thursday, said the hiring plan reflects the Obama administration’s commitment to improving cyber security. The move gives DHS officials far greater flexibility to hire whom they want, outside of more stringent federal guidelines. And it will also allow more latitude in pay.

As a result, Napolitano told an audience of cyber industry professionals, the new rules “will allow us to be competitive with you all” in luring quality applicants.

Much of the funding already has been budgeted, but DHS also is working with Congress for more money. Officials refused to say how much money the program would represent.

The hiring push also underscores the administration’s ongoing struggle to better organize and manage the country’s vulnerable digital defense. President Barack Obama vowed in February to tackle cyber issues, but still has not named a cyber coordinator, a job that experts say will be difficult to fill.

Napolitano said her department does not anticipate filling all 1,000 positions, which will include cyber analysts, developers and engineers who can detect, investigate and deter cyber attacks.

The secretary’s announcement marked the start of National Cybersecurity Awareness Month, which reflects the White House goal to draw more public attention to the need for everyday computer users to exercise more diligence in protecting their online security.

In other comments, Deputy Defense Secretary William Lynn said the Pentagon expects to make decisions in the coming weeks on whether to relax restrictions on the use of external computer flash drives and social media Web sites by members of the military and department employees.

The Pentagon banned the use of flash drives last November because of a virus threat officials detected on Defense Department networks.

-

On the Net:

National Cybersecurity Awareness Month: http://www.dhs.gov/files/programs/gc(underscore)1158611596104.shtm

 

Do you get emails that ask for your personal information? I get at least 10 a day, all telling me that I've won something, or that I have some long lost uncle that has passed away leaving me millions, or that some guy died in some other country and they need my help dispursing the funds to the beneficiaries. For most of us, we see right through these emails and delete them. But why do they send them? Obviously cause they are working on some poor sucker out there that doesn't know any better.

Below you'll find some real life examples of emails to watch out for that have actually been received in my email inbox.

EMAIL #1

EMAIL ADDRESS SENT FROM: INFO@DTFTD.COM

PERSON SENT FROM: DESK OF FUNDS TRANSFER DEPARTMENT

SUBJECT LINE OF EMAIL: SCAM VICTIMS COMPENSATIONS PAYMENTS

Desk of Funds Transfer Dept.

Standard Chartered Bank

54 Jermyn Street EC2V 7SB

London United Kingdom

24Hours Payment Online

2007/2008 SCAM VICTIMS COMPENSATIONS PAYMENTS.

PAYMENT DISBURSTMENT DEPARTMENT 2007/2008 SCAM VICTIMS COMPENSATION. This

is to bring to your notice that we are delegated from the UNITED NATIONS

and WORLD BANK to pay 150 victims of scam $450,000.00,USD each. You are

listed and approved for this payment as one of the scammed victims to be

paid this amount,send a copy your response to the Registrar Mr micheal

Anderson.

Name:micheal Anderson

SCAMMED VICTIM/REF/PAYMENTS CODE:SCB/07/M08 FOR $450,000.00,USD.

Send a copy of your response to official email:

Email:scdb02@live.com

Yours Faithfully,

Mr.micheal Anderson .

NOTE: The UN/British Government will decline any other complains of scam

should you fall victim again after this compensations is paid and

transferred to you. So be warned.

The strange case of Google <b>News</b> and its “(blog)” label » Nieman <b>…</b>

Last month, Google <b>News</b> made a small and mysterious change to the way it displays some <b>news</b> sources: We're now visibly marking articles published on a <b>news</b>.

Exclusive Interview: Tokio Hotel on <b>New</b> Album, Tour and the Band's <b>…</b>

Having a <b>new</b> album "Humanoid" coming out across United States on October 6, Tokio Hotel exclusively explain to AceShowbiz how they evolve from their previous effort "Scream" to this <b>new</b> one. They also address 'robotic' theme on the …

Valve to spend $25 million on Left 4 Dead 2 ad campaign // <b>News</b>

An advertising spend of USD 25 million is planned for Valve's upcoming Left 4 Dead 2 as the developer prepares for the ti…

Hotmail accounts 'posted online'

Posted in Tech on 5. October 2009 by jamesherrera1960

 

 

Thousands of Hotmail passwords have been hacked and posted online, BBC News has learnt.

Microsoft, which owns the popular web-based e-mail system, said that it was aware of the claims and that it was “investigating the situation”.

BBC News has seen a list of more than 10,000 accounts, which technology blog Neowin.net said had been posted online.

The blog suggested the accounts had been hacked or had been collected as part of a phishing scheme.

Phishing involves using fake websites to lure people into revealing personal details such as bank accounts or login names and passwords.

'Rapid response'

Neowin claims the details were posted on 1 October to pastebin.com, a website commonly used by developers to share code.

Although the details have since been removed, BBC News and Neowin has seen a list of 10,027 names beginning with the letters A and B.

BBC News has confirmed that the accounts are genuine.

“Most appear to be based in Europe,” Tom Warren, a neowin blogger, wrote on the site.

The list included details of Microsoft's Windows Live Hotmail accounts with email addresses ending hotmail.com, msn.com and live.com.

Microsoft said it had “been made aware of the claims that Windows Live IDs and passwords have been made available on the web”.

“We're actively investigating the situation and will take appropriate steps as rapidly as possible,” a spokesperson said.

Neowin said that it recommended Windows Live Hotmail users to change their “password and security question immediately”.

Hotmail is currently the largest web-based email service.

source

Whilst there have been countless positives that widespread and innovative internet communications have had the world over, many of the issues associated are the same now as they were years ago. The majority of the persistent problems relate to personal security, theft, frauds and internet crime generally. Although many have taken measures to counter abuses of the internet to commit crime, it is still a major problem facing technicians, law enforcement, Internet Service Providers and users. Whilst these measures seem to have come quite a distance, internet crime is still a prevalent issue. Particular aspects of internet crime such as identity theft, child pornography and personal theft have borne a shift in perceived responsibility from users and computer owners, to ISP's and law enforcement agencies. Whilst the responsibility betwixt them may appear balanced; the focus of both legal, and moral responsibility is focused increasingly on ISPs.

The rapid rise of computerised communications has raised very serious questions relating to the safety and security of their use. Just who can and can't read your email, access personal information and even use it themselves; have all become serious problems. With an increasing amount of personal information stored on, or via, the internet in recent times; the security of that information is of paramount concern to consumers generally. Whilst anonymity is the goal for most, in itself it throws up major obstacles for crime prevention. Some suggest that whilst anonymity can aid law enforcement track criminals without alerting them, it can also lead to widespread abuses of file sharing networks. Although these ideas are diametrically opposed, and cannot be easily reconciled, anonymity is nonetheless impossible. Given the amount of information that ISP's collect on their clients activities on-line, information appears readily available. There are major concerns about the vehicle the internet provides for personal snooping, both at a national and international level. The viability, and usefulness of user-end preventative solutions to such misuses of personal information seem lame, compared to the resourcefulness of those wanting to steal it. As early as 2004, the FBI has said that identity theft is the most pervasive and fastest-growing form of non-violent crime. Whether or not this is tacit recognition of the losing battle users may be facing, the need for increased security around personal information could not be as obvious. Some agree that it is entirely understandable that police and the ISP's should wish to develop mutual understanding and support, and to establish working relationships.

Another internet crime that often permeates social agendas and attention is child abuse and pornography. Whether or not because of overwhelming public outrage at offenders, or an inherent sense of responsibility, ISPs take an active role in detection, and prevention of child pornography. Although it is impossible to identify the amount of transmission of child porn that did not occur, one must assume that by demonstrating the ISPs utility in identifying suspected cases, they are reducing the incidents. When such cases are detected, the amount of media attention, and public fury generated are emblematic of a society keen to ensconce responsibility on someone. Whilst the most effective mechanisms to deal with such crimes are probably community based; there is little doubt that as acts of child abuse and victimisation via the Internet become more apparent, the efforts of ISPs will become more aggressive. ISPs certainly don't appear to be shirking their assumed responsibilities vis-à-vis the more heinous abuses of their services.

J. Rapoza, 'Who Am I?' E-Week. Aug 16. 2004. pp. 41
Y. Akdeniz, 'New Privacy Concerns: ISP's, Crime Prevention and Consumers' Rights', International Review of Law, Computers & Technology, Vol. 14(1), pp. 55-61. p.55.
P. Fox, 'ISP's Have to Step Up on Security', Computerworld, Dec 4. 2004, Vol. 38(15) pp. 20-21. p.21.
. Akdeniz, 'New Privacy Concerns: ISP's, Crime Prevention and Consumers' Rights', p.56
K.A. McCabe, 'The Role of Internet Service Providers in Cases of Child Pornography and Child Prostitution', Social Science Computer Review, Vol. 26(2), pp. 247-251. p. 248.
Ibid. p.250.

<b>New</b> Research Strategy for Substance Abuse | Psych Central <b>News</b>

Substance abuse now accounts for one in 14 hospital admissions and billions in health care costs. Accordingly, leading scientists have presented a <b>new</b> research.

Reflections of a Newsosaur: How to sell <b>news</b> on the web: A checklist

Are information seekers looking for targeted local <b>news</b> inclined to search and pay for it online or is this a sector in which local print media (usually in the form of local free papers), sufficient? …

Brothers and Sisters TV Show – Breaking the <b>News</b> – Brothers and <b>…</b>

She takes Nora to the doctor and receives the bad <b>news</b> that she has non-Hodgkins lymphoma. Nora offers to take Evan for the night so Kitty can talk to The Senator about it and they can process the <b>news</b> together. …

Refine your search results with new Search Options

Posted in Tech on 1. October 2009 by jamesherrera1960

Jose Antonio Vargas: Young Voices in The Future of News

It's time for young journalists and, just as important, young technologists to show how news is expanding and being re-defined in a world under Facebook, YouTube and Twitter.

Josh Young: “If News is That Important, It Will Find Me.”

There's one really powerful idea shaping the future of news. It's powerful, sure, and has wide-ranging implications for how citizens inform themselves about the world around them. Powerful and yet perfectly simple.

BNO News Updates Its Great iPhone App, Lets You Harness Stream Of

One of my favorite iPhone applications is BNO News — a lightweight app that lets you receive messages from the BNO newswire. The …

There is not much in life that is free. At least not anything that amounts to anything except free internet advertising and free search engine submission sites. Submitting your content, articles, blogs and websites to the major search engines for free is a sure fire way to get a lot more visitors to your content. The better that your content is optimized, the higher you will find your content in the search engine rankings. Follow these steps for submitting your content to the two major search engines to increase the main exposure to your articles within the search engines.

The Google search engine- Google has quickly become the biggest and most recognized search engine on the internet. Submit all of your content to google as you possibly can. As long as you have well optimized content, google will find,crawl and rank your content well within the first page of the search results and the best part is that it is free. You can use this link to submit all of your content for free to the google search engine:
http://www.google.com/addurl/. Just add your content into the provided box and click the add button and you will have added your content to tthe google search engine.

The Yahoo search engine- The yahoo search engine is the other main search engine that is very well recognized by the whole world and yahoo also finds, crawls and ranks your content about the same way google does. If you can optimize your content very good, then yahoo will rank your content on the very first page of the search results. You cant be that. Visit this link for submitting content to the yahoo search engine for free:
https://siteexplorer.search.yahoo.com/submit

Keep in mind that submitting your content,websites,articles and blogs to the major search engines has a big impact on your article exposure. Every time you want to advertise your content for free to the two major search engines for free, use the two links above. Good luck.

By Daniel Saltman

Refine your search results with new Search Options

10/01/2009 09:00:00 AM

In May, we launched Search Options, a side panel that lets you filter, refine and generate different views of your search results. We've received lots of positive feedback, and we're seeing more and more people using Search Options every day.

Today, we're announcing nine new Search Options tools: past hour, specific date range, more shopping sites, fewer shopping sites, visited pages, not yet visited, books, blogs and news. These features have been rolling out gradually and will be available globally in English by the end of the day. You can try them yourself by searching Google and clicking “Show options” in the blue bar just under the logo.

Past hour and Specific date range: With these tools you can choose to see only the most recent results in our index, or see results from a specific time period. This can be particularly helpful when you're looking for the freshest information, or if you have some idea of when the information you're looking for may have been published to the web.

Click on the image for a larger version

More shopping sites and Fewer shopping sites: Now you can choose “More shopping sites” to show additional commercial pages and display prices from those pages right in the search results. If you're doing product research and are not quite ready to make a purchase, you can choose to see “Fewer shopping sites” to filter out many of the commercial sites.

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Your request is being processed… Bachmann: “Sex Clinics” In Schools Will Result From Health Care Reform (VIDEO)

Posted in Politics on 1. October 2009 by jamesherrera1960

UPDATED BELOW

Last night on the House floor, Rep. Michele Bachmann (R-Minn.) spoke to Congress about “school based health clinics” (SBHC), labeling the clinics discussed in current House health care legislation as “sex clinics.”

The conservative congresswoman suggested that if health care reform passes, the nation's schools might begin offering abortions to students. Bachman's interpretation of the health care reform bill holds that the legislation is designed to bring Planned Parenthood into educational facilities. According to Bachmann,

The bill goes on to say what's going to go on — comprehensive primary health services, physicals, treatment of minor acute medical conditions, referrals to follow-up for specialty care — is that abortion? Does that mean that someone's 13 year-old daughter could walk into a sex clinic, have a pregnancy test done, be taken away to the local Planned Parenthood abortion clinic, have their abortion, be back and go home on the school bus that night? Mom and dad are never the wiser.

WATCH:

Section 2511 of the health care bill referred to by Bachmann, makes no mention of abortion and stipulates,

(i) “SBHC services will be provides in accordance with Federal, State, and local laws governing– (I) obtaining parental or guardian consent; and (II) patient privacy and student records, including section 264 of the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996 and section 444 of the General Education Provision Act;

The concept of “school based health care clinics” was introduced under the notion that students achieve higher academic performance when they are healthy and receive adequate medical attention. According to the National Assembly on School-Based Health Care, if implemented SBHCs would give schools access to physicians “so students avoid health-related absense and get support to succeed in the classroom.”

UPDATE: The nonpartisan fact-checking group PolitiFact rips into Bachmann's claim, rating it a “Pants On Fire” falsehood.

We see no language in the three main versions of the bill that would allow school-based clinics, which have a long history of providing basic health services to underprivileged students, to provide abortions. Nor would the clinics even be new � they have been around for three decades. So we rate the claim Pants on Fire!

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