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October 29, 2007

Hooray for people who get involved!

Shocking story. After all, what kind of monster would attack a woman on crutches anyway? Perhaps if more people WOULD get involved like this (and the mug shot of the guy that you can see if you click on the link shows that they weren't gentle in dealing with the animal) there might be fewer crimes.

Police: Good Samaritans Stop Rape In Progress - News Story - KPTV Portland:


SALEM, Ore. -- Five Good Samaritans stopped a rape in progress in a south Salem neighborhood, according to police.
Officers said a 22-year-old woman on crutches was walking near the intersection of Liberty and Boone streets southeast just before 1 a.m. Saturday when she was attacked and assaulted by 37-year-old Paul Landingham.
According to authorities, a car with five people was driving by, saw what was happening and came to the woman's rescue.
Three men pulled Landingham off the woman and held him until police arrived at the scene.

October 27, 2007

Pit Bulls aren't all nasty doggies who need to die

Nice to see a positive story about the dogs once in awhile.

SJ Prosecutors Credit Dog For Cracking Sexual Assault Case - News Story - KNTV | San Francisco:




Saturday, October 27, 2007, 11:52 amSAN JOSE, Calif. -- San Jose police said a protective pit bull played a part in the arrest of a man accused in the attempted sexual assault and burglary of a San Jose woman.

According to police reports, the 31-year-old single mom had just returned to her home after a birthday celebration in June when she was attacked by a stranger who was already in her home.

The man began strangling her as she tried to stab him with her keys, police said.Then, the woman’s pit bull, Maya, came running in from the other room.


The woman told NBC11 she encouraged her dog to attack the intruder. Maya began to tear and rip at the intruder’s arms, police said. The man tried to fight the dog off with one hand while the other hand was around the woman’s throat. "That's when I grabbed him," said the victim, "where the sun doesn't shine." The attacker let her go and fled, police said.


When police arrived at the scene to help, they discovered that Maya had a smudge of blood above her right eye. Officer Iain Fry believed that the blood could be from the intruder. He wasn’t sure if the blood might provide a DNA sample. "We never thought they would even run them," Fry said of the swabs. "I mean, there's no way -- you are talking about one drop of blood on a dog's head. A million to one."



The Santa Clara County crime lab extracted human DNA from the swab. It was then matched through the state's database of samples taken from anyone convicted of a felony and those arrested or charged with a homicide or sex offense. Ultimately, all information led to 37-year-old Anthony Easley, police and prosecutors said. Officers apprehended the suspect. Easley was previously convicted of two sexual felonies in Solano County, according to court documents. He also was convicted of robbery in Contra Costa County. Now, as a third striker, he faces life in prison if convicted, said Santa Clara County prosecutor Michael Fletcher.

October 18, 2007

Underwater Paparazzi

It seems that with the advent of point and shoot digital cameras and cheap underwater housings, just about everyone has a camera to go diving with. This phenomenon has many pluses and minuses, but I must say that the minuses thus far, at least in my experience, seem to outweigh the pluses.

Without trying to be an elitist snob diving takes practice and skill. In order to achieve proper buoyancy, one must be comfortable in the water, and must know where all body parts and all extensions like fins are at all times in relation to the world around you. Most of the places we dive today are protected (thank goodness), meaning you are not allowed to touch the reef or the creatures living there. A careless fin, laying across coral for a photo, standing on coral, etc. can cause significant damage that takes a great deal of time to repair. I must say that I'm very lucky to have been originally introduced to ocean diving by people who took their responsibility to the environment very seriously, and taught me not to ever touch live coral or other creatures.

In order to shoot photos with most cameras (especially point and shoot digitals), you must get close to your subject. As you get close to your subject while diving, you generally must get close to the reef. As you get close to the reef, lack of buoyancy control will cause you to trash everything around you as you madly flail in order to get that picture that your family and friends just MUST have.

The more excited a photographer gets about the subject being photographed, the more he or she forgets that there are living creatures around (including fellow photographers). This week, I have watched a person lay on the reef and become incensed when the divemaster picked him off the coral and told him not to do this. I watched an excited photographer kick another photographer in the head as he cut her off for a picture of a file fish. I've seen numerous people kick over gorgonias, sponges, and soft corals while trampling each other for a photograph of a seahorse. I was personally shoved to the side by someone who wanted a picture of a frogfish I was filming (I have video of his camera cutting in front of mine), and the ruckus caused the frogfish to just give up and leave, moving to another spot. Unfortunately, that didn't stop the paparazzi, who chased him to the new spot and started all over again.

So, as a dive instructor and an underwater photographer and videographer, I have some suggestions. 1) Do not put a camera in your hands until you can demonstrate proper buoyancy AND dive without using your hands. 2) If the subject you wish to photograph is in a poor spot for you to get close enough without banging into something, come back later. It might have moved. 3) Take turns. Just like in kindergarten. Chances are, the subject won't be going far. It is not a feeding frenzy, and you'll likely stress the animal and yourself before you get a decent picture. 4) Make sure you are weighted properly for all aspects of the dive. Late in the dive with a light tank is not the time you should find out you can't hold position to shoot that squid who is coming right at you. 5) If you see ME shooting...do not taught happy fun recalcitrant videographer. I will bite, or inflate your BCD and send you to the surface.

I did laugh pretty hysterically today when the paparazzi chased a turtle around the reef. As they all clamored for position, the turtle took off and hung out with me for a good 4 minutes of video. He got so close that I had to pull back so he'd be in focus. Same thing happened with a frogfish. He wound up directly in front of me where I got some great video. Ditto with a seahorse.

To see video shot without crashing onto reefs, go to this handy link

October 04, 2007

Yet another whiner bringing a lawsuit

This law suit whiner stuff is really getting me down..... Makes me wonder why I didn't file a lawsuit rather than working harder in college.

UMass student takes his C to federal court - The Boston Globe:


By Jonathan Saltzman, Globe Staff  |  October 4, 2007

Plenty of college students grumble when they get a mediocre grade and feel that they deserved better. When Brian Marquis got a C instead of an A-minus at the University of Massachusetts at Amherst, he made a federal case of it.

Literally.

Marquis, a 51-year-old paralegal seeking bachelor's degrees in legal studies and sociology, filed a 15-count lawsuit in US District Court in Springfield in January after a teaching assistant graded a political philosophy class on a curve and turned Marquis's A-minus into a C. Marquis contends that the university violated his civil rights and contractual rights and intentionally inflicted "emotional distress."

Last week, after a brief hearing with Marquis and a university lawyer, District Court Judge Michael A. Ponsor dismissed the suit. But Marquis said this week he is considering appealing to the US Court of Appeals for the First Circuit.

"This is not something I relish," he said from the W.E.B. Du Bois Library on campus. "This is not an issue of me walking into court and saying, 'I don't like the way this professor grades this paper,' which is purely their academic prerogative. This is an issue where the empirical data was quite clear and convincing to any reasonable mind that my performance was well within a higher range."

Phillip Bricker, chairman of the philosophy department and one of eight defendants in the suit, said it had already caused enough damage. "I think suing over a grade is somewhat absurd," he said. "It ended up just wasting a lot of people's time and money."

In an era when the courts are asked to decide who owns a record-setting home run ball and who is to blame when a cup of hot coffee from a fast-food restaurant scalds a person, it seems perhaps only modestly surprising that a grade dispute leads to litigation.

But Catharine Porter, the UMass-Amherst ombudsman and a defendant in the suit, said that Marquis's complaint was the only one she was aware of over a disputed grade in 30 years at the university. He got the C in a class called "Problems in Social Thought," which explored the works of theorists such as Thomas Hobbes, John Locke, and Karl Marx.

"If every student that didn't like his or her grade started to do this, we'd have to hire, I don't know, 25,000 attorneys," Porter said.

Ada Meloy - general counsel for the American Council on Education, which represents more than 1,600 college and university presidents - said such suits are rare and almost never successful. Generally, the complaints reflect an unrealistic fear that a single grade can torpedo academic or professional goals, she said.

Marquis - who salts his comments with "strike that" - acknowledged he was alarmed the C might lower his grade point average and make him less attractive to a law school.

The C has rendered his transcript a "dismal record of non-achievement," his suit said. Marquis, who enrolled at UMass-Amherst in spring 2006, said he has roughly a B-plus average.

His chief adversary in the suit was Jeremy Cushing, a graduate student in philosophy and teaching assistant who is about half his age. He did not respond to interview requests.

At the start of the semester last fall, Marquis said, Cushing told the class that students would take three tests, each worth 25 percent of the final grade, for a total of 75 percent. Four papers, each worth 5 percent, would comprise 20 percent of the grade. Class participation would decide the rest.

Based on that formula, Marquis figured he scored a 92.5 percent, or an A-minus. But when the Lanesborough resident checked his grade online in early January, he saw a C and e-mailed Cushing to complain.

Cushing wrote back that he graded the students more stringently on the third exam because they had had a full semester to learn how to write for a philosophy class. As a result, Cushing wrote, Marquis got an 84 for the class. But the students' numerical scores struck Cushing as too high, so he graded everyone on a curve before assigning letter grades. Marquis ended up with a C.

"As I am entering grades, I consider whether or not they seem fair," he wrote Marquis. ". . . I thought your grade was a good reflection of your work."

Marquis e-mailed Porter, the ombudsman. But she said faculty have their own grading scales and that one professor might view an 84 as an A-minus, while another might view it as a C.

"I urge you to accept this grade and continue on with your course work, as there are no grounds for an academic grievance," she wrote.

Less than three weeks later, Marquis filed suit.
>Peter Michelson, a lawyer for the university, urged Judge Ponsor to dismiss it, saying Marquis had failed to present a single legitimate legal claim.

He also focused on public policy, asking, "Does the court really want to put itself in the business of reviewing, under some constitutional or federal statutory doctrine, the propriety of the grades which a student has received?"

Ponsor gave his answer last Wednesday from the bench: No.

Jonathan Saltzman can be reached at jsaltzman@globe.com.

Bad News

RIAA Jury Finds Minnesota Woman Liable for Piracy, Awards $222,000 on Threat Level:



DULUTH, Minnesota -- Jammie Thomas, a single mother of two, was found liable Thursday for copyright infringement  in the nation's first file-sharing case to go before a jury.

Twelve jurors here said the Minnesota woman must pay $9,250 for each of 24 shared songs that were the subject of the lawsuit, amounting to $222,000 in penalties.

They could have dinged her for up to $3.6 million in damages, or awarded as little as $18,000. She was found liable for infringing songs from bands such as Journey, Green Day, AFI, Aerosmith and others.

After the verdict was read, Thomas and her attorney left the courthouse without comment. The jurors also declined to talk to reporters.

The verdict, coming after two days of testimony and about five hours of deliberations, was a mixed victory for the RIAA, which has brought more than 20,000 lawsuits in the last four years as part of its zero-tolerance policy against pirating. The outcome is likely to embolden the RIAA, which began targeting individuals in lawsuits after concluding the legal system could not keep pace with the ever growing number of file-sharing sites and services.

Still, it's unlikely the RIAA's courtroom victory will translate into a financial windfall or stop piracy, which the industry claims costs it billions in lost sales. Despite the thousands of lawsuits -- the majority of them settling while others have been dismissed or are pending -- the RIAA's litigation war on internet piracy has neither dented illegal, peer-to-peer file sharing or put much fear in the hearts of music swappers.

According to BigChampagne, an online measuring service, the number of peer-to-peer users unlawfully trading goods has nearly tripled since 2003, when the RIAA began legal onslaught targeting individuals.

At the time, BigChampagne says, there were about 3.8 million file sharers trading over the internet at a given moment. Now, the group has measured a record 9 million users trading at the same time. Roughly 70 percent of trading involves digital music, according to BigChampagne.

The case, however, did set legal precedents favoring the industry.



Click on the link above for more

October 03, 2007

Are you being monitored? We'll keep it secret so you can't sue us....

ACLU seeks to revive NSA spying challenge:


The American Civil Liberties Union asked the Supreme Court on Wednesday to revive its lawsuit seeking to challenge President Bush’s years-long use of warrantless wiretaps to eavesdrop on what officials deemed to be suspicious telephone and e-mail contacts that may involve terrorist suspects. The case against the National Security Agency electronic spying program was dismissed by the Sixth Circuit Court mainly on the theory that the individuals and groups that claimed harm from the surveillance had not offered proof that they were monitored, and could not show that unless they had access to government secret, which was forbidden.  The petition in American Civil Liberties Union, et al., v. National Security Agency, et al., can be found here. (PDF required)  (Filed Wednesday morning, it has not yet been assigned a docket number.)

The appeal raises both a question of the right to sue, and the more basic constitutional question of the President’s authority to begin and continue such a surveillance program that reaches inside the U.S.  The questions presented are:

“1. Whether the Court of Appeals erred in holding that plaintiffs who have been injured because of government surveillance are precluded from challenging the lawfulness of that surveillance if the government refuses to disclose whether plaintiffs’ communications have been intercepted.

“2. Whether the President possesses authority under Article II of the Constitution to engage in intelligence surveillance within the United States that Congress has expressly prohibited.”

On the first issue, the petition argues: “Because the last six years have sseen a dramatic expansion in the government’s surveillance activities, it is critically important for this Court to address the question of who has standing to challenge the lawfulness of government surveillance. There is considerable confusion in the lower courts on this issue.  Some courts have applied this Court’s traditional standing rules….Other courts, however, departing from the standing framework that this Court has applied in other contexts, have disregarded evidence of concrete injury and denied standing unless plaintiffs are able to establish with certainty that they have in fact been monitored under the surveillance program they seek to challenge….[T]his showing is often impossible to make because the government refuses, by invoking the state secrets privilege, to confirm or deny whether plaintiffs have been monitored.”

On the second point, the petition notes that President Bush, in defending the program “has claimed the authority to violate any statute if he concludes that it interferes with his power under Article II to protect the nation during a time of war. This dangerous claim — essentially a claim that the President is above the law — should not go unreviewed by this Court.”

Although the ACLU recognizes that the Bush Administration has since gone to a special court, the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court (and to Congress) for authorization of at least some form of the NSA electronic spying program, it adds that “the President continues to assert the authority to disregard…at any time” the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act, governing secret eavesdropping that touches individuals inside the U.S.


Simply Switched Off the Internet: Myanmar Junta v. Bloggers - JSQ

Remember this when we're told that anonymity on the net is a "bad thing." Remember it also when we have debate after debate on "net neutrality."

Simply Switched Off the Internet: Myanmar Junta v. Bloggers:



Sanghas23.jpg

When blogging is a revolutionary act:


Internet geeks share a common style, and Ko Latt and his four friends would not be out of place in cyber cafés across the world. They have the skinny arms and the long hair, the dark T-shirts and the jokey nicknames. But few such figures have ever taken the risks that they have in the past few weeks, or achieved so much in a noble and dangerous cause.


Since last month Ko Latt, 28, his friends Arca, Eye, Sun and Superman, and scores of others like them have been the third pillar of Burma’s Saffron Revolution. While the veteran democracy activists, and then the Buddhist monks, marched in their tens of thousands against the military regime, it is the country’s amateur bloggers and internet enthusiasts who have brought the images to the outside world.


Armed with small digital cameras, they have documented the spectacular growth of the demonstrations from crowds of a few hundred to as many as 100,000. On weblogs they have recorded in words and pictures the regime’s bloody crackdown, in a city where only a handful of foreign journalists work undercover. With downloaded software, they have dodged and weaved around the regime’s increasingly desperate attempts to thwart their work. Now the bloggers, too, have been crushed. Having failed to stop the cyber-dissidents broadcasting to the world, the authorities have simply switched off the internet.



Bloggers who risked all to reveal the junta’s brutal crackdown in Burma
,
by Kenneth Denby,
The Times, 1 October 2007


Unfortunately for the bloggers, they all had to register with the government
to be allowed to blog in the first place.
If the junta falls, they'll be heroes.
If it survives, they'll probably be dead.


This is not the first time.


During the suppression of the Tienanmen Square demonstrations in China in 1989
eyewitnesses faxed out reports that were typed in by people in the U.S.
and elsewhere and posted on USENET, immediately distributing them worldwide.
While Yeltsin was shelling Parliament in Russia in 1993, locals sent
electronic mail reports out by UUCP and FidoNet.
The local governments in both cases had not quite yet realized the
capability of computer networks to get around press bans.
The generals in Myanmar no doubt know all about those previous incidents,
and were ready.
Plus they prepared in advance, by requiring all bloggers to register.


These bloggers were truly brave.


-jsq


PS: Seen on

Bruce Sterling's Beyond the Beyond
.

Beware of Stinky Chili

Spicy Chili Smell Leads to Evacuation:


LONDON (AP) - Super spicy chili sauce being cooked at a London Thai restaurant sparked road closures and evacuations after passers-by complained that the smell was burning their throats, police said Wednesday.

London Fire Brigade's chemical response team was called after reports that a strong smell was wafting from the restaurant in the heart of London's Soho district Monday afternoon, a Metropolitan police spokesman said, speaking anonymously in line with force policy.

Authorities sealed off several premises and closed roads. The Times of London described shoppers coughing and spluttering as firefighters wearing special breathing masks sought the source of the smell.

The paper said firefighters smashed down the door of the Thai Cottage restaurant and seized extra-hot bird's eye chilies which had been left dry-frying. It said they were being prepared as part of a batch of Nam Prik Pao, a spicy Thai dip.

"The smoke didn't go up into the sky because of the rain and the heavy air," The Times quoted Thai Cottage owner Sue Wasboonma as saying. "It's the hottest thing we make."

The police spokesman said no arrests were made in the case.

"As far as I'm aware it's not a criminal offense to cook very strong chili," he said.



"'Copying' Music You Own Is 'Stealing'" - The Trademark Blog

"'Copying' Music You Own Is 'Stealing'":


ArsTechnica: "Song BMG's Chief Anti-Piracy Lawyer: "Copying" Music You Own Is "Stealing":

"Testimony today in Capitol Records, et al v. Jammie Thomas quickly and inadvertently turned to the topic of fair use when Jennifer Pariser, the head of litigation for Sony BMG, was called to the stand to testify. Pariser said that file-sharing is extremely damaging to the music industry and that record labels are particularly affected. In doing so, she advocated a view of copyright that would turn many honest people into thieves."


Aliens forced Americans out from the Moon!

Ah, the truth has finally come out. I'm so glad that we now have the REAL information.

This must be why President Shrub is so adamant about amnesty for illegal aliens. Rumor has it that if Congress doesn't go along, he will enlist our Moon Alien friends to help with the war in Iraq.

Aliens forced Americans out from the Moon - Pravda.Ru:


One of Russia's central television channels, RTR, has recently aired a documentary about US astronauts who allegedly came across extraterrestrial civilizations. The film showed Russian ufologist Vladimir Azhazha and astronomer Yevgeny Arsyukhin telling that expeditions to the Moon launched within 1969-1972 allegedly came across UFOs.

The researchers state that flying objects of extraterrestrial origin were persistently spying on American Apollos. They said the expeditions to the Moon looked very much like a race and presented a film demonstrating a luminous object closely following an American spaceship. Records of communication between astronauts and the Mission Control Center were also included into the film but they were absolutely inaudible as they had been purposefully jammed by Americans. They expected that the expeditions would find something astonishing on the Moon and with the view of keeping their communication with the surface secret they encoded their messages to the MCC. When the records of communication were later deciphered it turned out that the US missions came across lunar bases, remains of space vehicles and deserted towns on the Moon.



Get the whole torrid story by clicking on the title above.

October 02, 2007

First RIAA Filesharing Trial Underway in Duluth

First RIAA Filesharing Trial Underway in Duluth:


Twenty-thousand lawsuits -- one trial. A jury of six men and six women will decide the fate of a single mother of two accused of uploading music to Kazaa, in the first case to go to trial in the the music industry's four-year-old litigation campaign against filesharing.


October 01, 2007

More reverse domain name hijacking in the works!

Short Domain Names Threatened by Proposed Policy on IGO Dispute Resolution Procedure:


ICANN staff has published a draft report on dispute resolution procedures for IGO (inter-governmental organization) domain names. This proposal has deep flaws and should be rejected by the community, as it does not have the balance and protection of registrant rights present in the existing UDRP. Initially, the proposed policy would apply to new Top-Level Domains (TLDs), but via a Policy Development Process (PDP) it could be extended to existing TLDs. More...

I used to think....

Coming from NH, I used to think that the state had some semblance of sanity. There is no state sales tax, no state income tax, and a populace very demanding of individual rights and freedoms. Anyone showing obviously stupid behavior "had to be an import from Massachusetts." I suppose that now I have to think again...

wjz.com - N.H. Pumpkin Tosser Knocked Out By Launcher:


(AP) GREENFIELD, N.H. The first weekend of pumpkin flinging season ended abruptly Sunday in Greenfield when one of the operators of a catapault-like device was knocked out in a freak accident.

Chuck Willard of Hancock was hit in the chin by the boom on the Yankee Seige, a remake of a medieval weapon called a trebuchet. It can toss pumpkins 300 yards and it knocked Willard for a loop.

An employee at the attraction said Willard was out for about two minutes.

He was treated and released and said to be anxious to start tossing pumpkins again.

The Yankee Siege, on Route 31, will be launching pumpkins, weather permitting, every weekend through the end of next month.

Uh, DUH! Who'd a thunk an embassy would have metal detectors?

Man Held Over Embassy Hand Grenades |Sky News|World News:


A man caught with a backpack containing explosives, nails and Islamic literature has been arrested after trying to enter the US Embassy in Austria, police say.

The man tried to enter the American embassy
Officials in Vienna say he dropped the bag and tried to flee on foot when he triggered metal detectors at the entrance.

The suspect - described as a 42-year-old Bosnian who now lives in the province of Lower Austria, which encircles the capital - was arrested nearby and taken into custody around noon local time.

No-one was injured but police sealed off the area as a precaution, patrolled with bomb-sniffing dogs and shut down or rerouted nearby bus and tramway lines.

A police spokeswoman said: "There were a lot of nails in that bag. Had it exploded, it would have had an enormous shrapnel effect."