Friday, October 18, 2013

Open source app dev platform aims to ensure privacy in the cloud


Thanks to the revelations of Edward Snowden about the activities of the U.S. National Security Agency and the U.K. Government Communications Headquarters, data privacy makes life a lot more complicated for anyone who wants to develop cloud-based applications. If users can't be confident that the privacy of their data is assured, then they're likely to think twice before ever using your applications.


But there's an opportunity here, too: If your apps do keep user data private, then they'll be far more appealing than apps that don't. Developers will soon be able to exploit this opportunity using an open-source secure cloud application development platform called Crypton.


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Applications that perform heavy data processing in the cloud often pose a problem, as data needs to be decrypted in the cloud before it can be processed. On the other hand, apps that carry out data processing in a browser on the client side, leveraging the cloud for the storage of encrypted data only, are a different prospect.


Using this type of architecture, user data is always encrypted when it's in the cloud. Even if an intelligence agency or hacker gets access to it in the cloud, or during its journey to or from the cloud, it's unusable.


Analysis: U.S. Spy Budget Reveals Investments in 'Groundbreaking' Cryptanalysis


The problem developers face is building this type of application while ensuring the cryptography component is implemented securely. That's what Crypton aims to address.


Customers want cloud, developers want platform for cloud apps
Crypton is sponsored by a cloud storage and backup company called SpiderOak. CEO Ethan Oberman says Crypton came from the company's software client, which encrypted data before sending it to SpiderOak for storage.


"When customers discovered that they had to download and install our client software, more and more of them were abandoning," he says. "The world is moving toward cloud-based software and people who care about privacy."


Once the company decided to supply a Web-based application instead, it made sense to create an open source platform that other developers could use to build "zero knowledge" applications, Oberman says. This means the cloud provider stores encrypted data and has no information about the data it's storing or where to find the decryption keys.


Related: 5 Elements Your Cloud Infrastructure Needs to Enable Application Agility


Source: http://www.infoworld.com/d/application-development/open-source-app-dev-platform-aims-ensure-privacy-in-the-cloud-228958
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Mary-Kate and Ashley Olsen Say Michelle Tanner Wore Chanel, Marc Jacobs on Full House Set


Showered with praise by the fashion industry after the success of their label, The Row, Mary-Kate and Ashley Olsen, 27, have seemingly come a long way since their days of sporting denim overalls as infants-to-toddlers-to-kids on the set of Full House. Or have they?


Those adorable and awkward outfits Michelle Tanner cycled through on the show -- think star-shaped sunglasses, magenta-hued tops and other funky '90s wear -- were actually from designers!


PHOTOS: Mary-Kate and Ashley Olsen through the years


In an interview with Net-a-Porter's The Edit, the Olsen twins shared: “'[On Full House] we'd be in six-hour fittings three times a week, because we had to wear 12 different outfits,' Ashley recalls. The majority of the wardrobe was made up of adult pieces, including Chanel and Marc Jacobs, cut to fit."


Michelle Tanner's denim overalls were a huge hit in the '90s.

Michelle Tanner's denim overalls were a huge hit in the '90s.
Credit: ABC Photo Archives/ABC/Getty Images



Even then, the two found their calling in fashion: “We were designing clothes for ourselves as we were so petite,” said Mary-Kate. “So I think that is when we became obsessed with fit, and now the obsession has become a profession.”


PHOTOS: Which Olsen sister has better red carpet style?


Those enviable pieces worn by Michelle Tanner helped refine the twins' taste, since they want The Row to be a more subdued luxury brand. "If I wear certain designer brands, or too much of something, I look crazy, and I need something to break it up," stated Ashley. "If you are wearing a Chanel jacket and you need an anonymous piece that will show just how special that jacket is, I hope that is what The Row gives you."


Other fun facts for Olsen twin fans: Ashley is one inch taller than Mary-Kate, who is 5-feet-tall, and the two combined are ambidextrous! Mary-Kate is a righty, while Ashley is a lefty.


PHOTOS: Celebrity siblings


Source: http://www.usmagazine.com/celebrity-news/news/mary-kate-and-ashley-olsen-michelle-tanner-wore-chanel-marc-jacobs-on-full-house-20131810
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Caroline Kennedy confirmed as U.S. ambassador to Japan (cbsnews)

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Thursday, October 17, 2013

Insert Coin semifinalist: Smart Power Strip helps you do home automation yourself



Seems like everyone's trying to get a piece of the home automation action these days. Question is, however, if pricey catchall systems are really the answer. Smart Power Strip offers a simple, affordable solution, letting you control and monitor appliances in real-time using your smartphone. The power strip has outlets that can be managed individual via your handset both at home and remotely. The strip also features two USB ports for charging -- because it's 2013, after all.


You can see all of the Insert Coin semifinalists here.


Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/10/17/smart-power-strip/?ncid=rss_truncated
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Britney Spears’ Dad Wants More Money to Conservator Her




By Lex October 17, 2013 @ 4:36 PM



Britney Spears Steps Out Braless In A Low Cut Top In London
It seems like such a long time ago that Britney shaved her head and holed up in her bathroom with her kids. Like, many many paychecks to her dad for being in charge of her money ago. Jamie Spears gets $16K a month to make sure Britney’s money is only being spent wisely, like the $6 million he authorized last year for shopping trips for his daughter. Just the essentials. In addition to his conservator salary, Jamie Spears also gets money to pay the rent on his ‘I take care of Britney’ office space. He says his rent has risen, so he asked the judge to give him another eight-hundred bucks a month of Britney’s money to cover that. It’s hard to watch a man go through this process really. There’s a quiet dignity in living off your daughter’s money that is simply besmirched by the legal process.


Photo Credit: Splash




Source: http://www.wwtdd.com/2013/10/britney-spears-dad-wants-more-money-to-conservator-her/
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The Outcasters; Sym and Dahvie




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Sony's New Mirrorless Cameras Are the First to Get Full-Frame Sensors




Over the past few years, the best mirrorless interchangeable-lens cameras have caught up to low- to mid-range DSLRs in terms of performance. They’ve always been more-portable than traditional DSLRs, too. And now, they’re going after the big guns: The professional full-frame cameras that boast bigger sensors than the APS-C imagers found in consumer DSLRs.


The Sony Alpha 7 and Alpha 7R are the first mirrorless interchangeable-lens cameras with full-frame sensors. They’re also the first Sony mirrorless cameras outside of the NEX lineup. The company is positioning the higher-resolution 7R as a professional-level shooter; it has a 36-megapixel full-frame sensor as compared to the Alpha 7′s 24-megapixel sensor.


Most full-frame DSLRs are big, bulky powerhouses that make consumer DSLRs look petite by comparison. The Alpha 7 and 7R are smaller still, with body shapes and sizes that are more in line with the Olympus OM-D EM1. Both cameras have tilting LCD screens — another first for full-frame cameras.


The higher-end 7R lacks a low-pass anti-aliasing filter, which means it should capture super-sharp images. The Alpha 7 is built for peppier focusing and shooting, with a hybrid phase/contrast detection autofocus system and a top continuous shooting speed of 5fps at full resolution.


These aren’t the cameras to just leave in “Auto” mode. As you’d expect, the 7 and 7R have manual exposure controls, with shutter speeds that top out at 1/8000 of a second, ISO equivalency that reaches up to 25,600, and even beginner-friendly imaging effects and Sweep Panorama mode. Like most of Sony’s new cameras, they’ve also got Wi-Fi and NFC capabilities, as well as the ability to run Sony’s own camera-centric apps.


The 7 and 7R should be amazing video-capture devices too — especially when you consider the benefits of shooting with a full-frame sensor in low light. The 7 and 7R both capture 1080p video at 60fps and 24fps with full manual exposure controls. Headphone jacks, audio-level controls, and the ability to output uncompressed video from the camera via HDMI also sweeten the deal for videographers.


Both cameras use Sony’s E-mount lenses natively, and because they have full-frame sensors, there’s no crop factor to keep in mind. You can also use A-mount DSLR lenses with the cameras, but that requires buying an adapter. With mirrorless cameras, you don’t get a through-the-lens optical viewfinder, but the 7 and 7R have eye-level OLED viewfinders with 2.4-million-dot resolution.


The Sony Alpha 7R is priced at $2,300 for the body only, while the Alpha 7 will sell for a slightly more-modest $1,700 or $2,000 with a 28-70mm/F3.5-F5.6 kit lens.



Source: http://feeds.wired.com/c/35185/f/661370/s/328316d2/sc/5/l/0L0Swired0N0Cgadgetlab0C20A130C10A0Csony0E7r0C/story01.htm
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U.S. House passes bill to reopen government, increase debt limit (reuters)

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Wednesday, October 16, 2013

Researchers Uncover Holes That Open Power Stations to Hacking




A pair of researchers have uncovered more than two dozen vulnerabilities in products used in critical infrastructure systems that would allow attackers to crash or hijack the servers controlling electric substations and water systems.


The vulnerabilities include some that would allow an attacker to crash or send a master server into an infinite loop, preventing operators from monitoring or controlling operations. Others would allow remote code-injection into a server, providing an opportunity for an attacker to open and close breakers at substations and cause power outages.


“Every substation is controlled by the master, which is controlled by the operator,” says researcher Chris Sistrunk who, along with Adam Crain, found vulnerabilities in the products of more than 20 vendors. “If you have control of the master, you have control of the whole system, and you can turn on and off power at will.”


The vulnerabilities are found in devices that are used for serial and network communications between servers and substations. These products have been largely overlooked as hacking risks because the security of power systems has focused only on IP communication, and hasn’t considered serial communication an important or viable attack vector, Crain says. But the researchers say that breaching a power system through serial communication devices can actually be easier than attacking through the IP network since it doesn’t require bypassing layers of firewalls.


An intruder could exploit the vulnerabilities by gaining physical access to a substation — which generally are secured only with a fence and a webcam or motion-detection sensors — or by breaching the wireless radio network over which the communication passes to the server.


“If someone tries to breach the control center through the internet, they have to bypass layers of firewalls,” Crain said. “But someone could go out to a remote substation that has very little physical security and get on the network and take out hundreds of substations potentially. And they don’t necessarily have to get into the substation either.”


He points to a recent presentation at the Black Hat security conference that discussed methods for hacking wireless radio networks, which a lot of utility control systems use, including ways to crack the encryption.


“There are quite a few ways onto these networks, and utilities have to worry about this new attack vector,” Crain said.


Once in the network, an intruder can send a malformed message to the server to exploit the weakness.


“The device is supposed to throw that [malformed] message away,” says Sistrunk, “and in these cases it’s not and is causing issues.”


Neither Crain nor Sistrunk is a security researcher. Sistrunk is an electrical engineer at a major utility, but conducted the research independently of his employer and therefore asked that it not be identified. Crain recently launched a consulting firm called Automatak that focuses on industrial control systems. They began to examine the systems last April using a fuzzer that Crain created, and submitted their findings to the Department of Homeland Security’s Industrial Control System-CERT, which helped them notify the vendors.


“We found vulnerabilities in virtually all implementations [of the protocol],” Sistrunk said. “Some of them are worse than others.”


Since then, ICS-CERT has published a number of advisories about the vulnerabilities, and vendors have distributed patches for nine of them, but the rest remain unpatched so far. Despite the distribution of patches, Crain and Sistrunk say that many utilities have not applied them because they’re unaware of the serious nature of the vulnerabilities.


The systems use DNP3, a protocol for serial communications that is used in almost all electrical utilities in the U.S. and Canada to transmit communication between servers located in data centers and field devices. Electric utilities generally have a data center with two or three servers that can each monitor and communicate with a hundred or more substations, depending on the size of the utility.


The servers communicate with programmable logic controllers and remote-terminal units in the field to collect status data from them in order to allow operators to monitor conditions and to allow them to trip breakers as needed or to increase or decrease the voltage.


Causing the server to crash or enter an infinite loop would blind operators to conditions in the field — something they might not initially realize since a crashed server in the data center doesn’t always register to operators, who work in other locations. Sistrunk says it would likely take operators a while to notice that the data they’re seeing on their screens, which is fed by the servers, hasn’t refreshed in a while. In the meantime, they might make bad decisions based on outdated data.


A lot of utilities also use the master servers for security purposes to control alarm systems, so crashing them would potentially disable alarms as well.


Sistrunk says a reboot of the server will generally resolve the issue, but an intruder could continue to send malicious messages to the server causing it to crash repeatedly. He also said that in some cases they found that the attack would corrupt the system configuration, which meant the system had to be reconfigured or restored from a backup before operations returned to normal.


Of the 25 vulnerabilities they uncovered the most serious was the buffer overrun vulnerability that would allow someone to inject arbitrary code into the system and own the server.


One of the vulnerabilities they found exists in the source code for a popular library from Triangle Microworks. It’s not known how many vendors and products have used the library and are therefore vulnerable, but Crain and Sistrunk say that the library is one of the most popular among vendors and is used by 60 to 70 percent of them for their products.


Crain says the standard for DNP3 is not the problem but that the vulnerabilities are introduced in the insecure ways that vendors have implemented it.


The problem is exacerbated by the fact that separate security standards set by the North American Electric Reliability Corporation for how to secure power systems focus only on IP communications, overlooking the real vulnerabilities that serial communications also present.


The researchers plan to discuss their findings at the S4 security conference to be held in Florida in January.



Source: http://feeds.wired.com/c/35185/f/661370/s/3288c7bd/sc/11/l/0L0Swired0N0Cthreatlevel0C20A130C10A0Cics0C/story01.htm
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Are We Moving To A World With More Online Surveillance?





Brazilian President Dilma Rousseff was angered by reports that the National Security Agency was spying on her. She has called for giving individual countries greater control over the Internet.



Getty Images


Brazilian President Dilma Rousseff was angered by reports that the National Security Agency was spying on her. She has called for giving individual countries greater control over the Internet.


Getty Images


Many governments around the world have expressed outrage over the National Security Agency's use of the Internet as a spying platform. But the possible response may have an unforeseen consequence: It may actually lead to more online surveillance, according to Internet experts.


Some governments, led most recently by Brazil, have reacted to recent disclosures about NSA surveillance by proposing a redesign of Internet architecture. The goal would be to give governments more control over how the Internet operates within their own borders.


But privacy advocates warn that some of the changes under consideration could actually undermine Internet freedom, not strengthen it.


"Unfortunately, there is enormous blowback," says Bruce Schneier, a cybersecurity expert who has worked closely with Britain's Guardian newspaper in reporting on NSA surveillance activities.


Schneier says some of those who advocate changes in Internet governance are acting unwisely, though he blames the NSA for having undermined global confidence in the Internet and prompting ill-advised reform moves.


"The NSA's actions embolden these people to say, 'We need more sovereign control,' " Schneier says. "This is bad. We really need a global Internet."


An Absence Of Government Control


Those who have closely followed the Internet, such as Milton Mueller of Syracuse University, say its free and open character is due largely to the absence of government control.


"The reason the Internet worked, the reason it created this massive amount of innovation, is precisely because, for a brief period of about 10 years, it just completely overcame the telecommunications system of national boundaries," Mueller says. "It created a virtual space that was completely interconnected and globalized, and governments had to react to that after the fact."


To the extent one country has dominated the Internet, it's been the United States. The only organization with a significant Internet governance function, the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN), was set up by the United States. Also, the companies most associated with the Internet around the world, such as Microsoft, Google and Facebook, are U.S. firms.


Prior to the uproar over NSA surveillance on the Internet, an argument could be made that American control of the Internet had served the cause of Internet freedom.


"In the area of free speech, I think it's been a great thing that the United States has had this hugely disproportionate role in providing the Internet's infrastructure," says Andrew McLaughlin, an Internet entrepreneur and formerly the deputy chief technology officer for the United States. "Our First Amendment traditions have meant that freedom of speech and freedom of expression have prevailed and really characterized the Internet globally."


Suspicion Of American Surveillance


But McLaughlin sees that record now in jeopardy.


"We've kind of blown it," he says. "The global fear and suspicion about American surveillance is pushing countries to centralize their [Internet] infrastructures and get the U.S. out of the picture. Ultimately, I think that will have negative consequences for free speech as well as for protection of privacy."


Some of the countries pushing for more international control over the Internet were never all that supportive of Internet freedom, like Russia and China. But they've now been joined by countries like Brazil, whose president, Dilma Rousseff, was furious when she read reports that she was herself an NSA target.


Speaking at the United Nations last month, Rousseff called for a new "multilateral framework" for Internet governance and new measures "to ensure the effective protection of data that travel through the Web."


At home, Rousseff has suggested that Brazil partially disconnect from U.S.-based parts of the Internet and take steps to keep Brazilians' online data stored in Brazil, supposedly out of the NSA's reach.


But Schneier says such moves would lead to "increased Balkanization" of the Internet.


One indication of the discontent with the dominant U.S. role on the Internet came at a meeting in Uruguay last week. Directors of major Internet organizations, including ICANN, endorsed a call for all governments to be treated equally in Internet governance.


The ICANN president, Fadi Chehade, actually praised Rousseff for her "leadership" and personally backed her effort to challenge the United States on Internet governance issues.


In Europe, policymakers have discussed the possibility of writing new rules for how information can flow around the world. Some proposals would introduce restrictions on how U.S. companies like Google can operate overseas.


Mueller, who teaches at Syracuse University's School of Information Studies, says such a move would be costly.


"Is it practical in the sense that you can create regulations that block off trade in these information services? Yeah, you can do that," Mueller says. "There will be massive sacrifices of economic efficiency. But you can introduce barriers, definitely."


Source: http://www.npr.org/blogs/parallels/2013/10/16/232181204/are-we-moving-to-a-world-with-more-online-surveillance?ft=1&f=1019
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Greek isle of Lesbos shows community spirit to migrants


Mytilene (Greece) (AFP) - Beautiful beaches, olive groves and green mountains long summed up Greece's third-largest island Lesbos, but this corner of the Aegean Sea also faces an ever-rising tide of migrants reaching its shores.


Like Italy's tiny Lampedusa, site of two recent migrant shipwreck tragedies that cost almost 400 lives, Lesbos is a gateway to the European Union and refugee traffic has soared over the past year.


But locals are not clamouring for a force field around their home, also known as Emerald Island for its rich greenery of forests and mountain peaks.


Over the past few months, the residents of the capital Mytilene and other neighbouring communities have given first aid to migrants found wandering on beaches early in the morning or trying to make their way to some village.


"Lesbos is only a thoroughfare for migrants, they all want to leave as soon as possible to get to Athens and then to other countries," said Nelly Hatzidaki from the Lesbos-based citizens' movement Co-existence and Communication in the Aegean Sea.


"That undoubtedly explains why locals have never been hostile," she added.


The island's only migrant reception centre, housed in a former military warehouse, closed down in 2010 after criticism by Greek and international NGOs that called it Europe's most unhealthy place.


From then until 2012 "the influx of migrants levelled off. But when the arrivals picked up again, police and port authorities were totally overwhelmed," said Efi Latsoudi, of a local association called "The village for all".


"They would even not make arrests for lack of (detention) space."


"At first, the authorities ignored the problem," adds Hatzidaki.


"So in November 2012 we asked migrants to gather in front of the municipal theatre. It was a shock for many people to find out that there were entire families, often with very young children."



'A dignified welcome'



Immediately people brought clothes, blankets and food for the migrants and the town hall even gave local associations the keys to a former campsite, not far from the airport.


"We opened the first self-managed reception centre," says Latsoudi proudly, pointing out that thanks to volunteers the centre can feed and take care of up to 150 migrants.


Sometimes, even police bring new arrivals to the campsite, volunteers say.


But the authorities have also closed down the reception centre on numerous occasions, leaving only the overcrowded cells of the local police station or the makeshift tents set up in a fenced-off area near the port to house the migrants.


In October, a new state reception and detention centre situated in a former military camp opened its doors, promising migrants "a dignified welcome."


The volunteers' community spirit is not impermeable however, and after a few months people have been feeling the strain.


"Residents on the island have their own economic problems, and it is a heavy burden," said Hatzidaki.


Meanwhile, undocumented migrants continue to flood into Lesbos -- this week alone, dozens of Afghans and Eritreans reached the island.


Since autumn 2012, when EU border control agency Frontex and Greek authorities clamped down on the Greek-Turkish northern land border, marked by the Evros river, migrant traffic here has surged.


Greek police say 2,834 undocumented migrants were arrested in Lesbos during the first eight months of this year, compared to 253 over the same period in 2012.


"This week alone, around 70 people -- Eritreans, then Afghans," said Latsoudi.


Although arrest numbers are the only data available from the police, experts agree it provides an accurate picture of migrant traffic.


The numbers on the other Greek islands Samos, Chios and Rhodes in the eastern Aegean reveal a similar trend.


And some journeys end in tragedy. In March, at least six Syrians drowned before reaching Lesbos, while another 21 people perished in December last year.



Source: http://news.yahoo.com/greek-isle-lesbos-shows-community-spirit-migrants-154730433.html
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We Say Goodbye To Detective Munch, Umpire Wally Bell




Audio for this story from Morning Edition will be available at approximately 9:00 a.m. ET.



 



Sgt. John Munch is turning in his badge on Law & Order SVU Wednesday night. Actor Richard Belzer has played Munch for 15 seasons on the show. And we remember veteran baseball umpire Wally Bell, who died of a heart attack this week. He'd been on the job for 21 seasons. Bell was 48.


Source: http://www.npr.org/2013/10/16/235218363/we-say-goodbye-to-detective-munch-umpire-wally-bell?ft=1&f=
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House GOP unveils counter to Senate debt plan

WASHINGTON (AP) — House GOP leaders Tuesday floated a plan to fellow Republicans to counter an emerging Senate deal to reopen the government and forestall an economy-rattling default on U.S. obligations. But the plan got mixed reviews from the rank and file and it was not clear whether it could pass the chamber.


The measure would suspend a new tax on medical devices for two years and take away the federal government's contributions to lawmakers' health care and top administration officials. It would also fund the government through Jan. 15 and give Treasury the ability to borrow normally through Feb. 7.


House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, said he's "trying to find a path forward" but that "there have been no decisions about exactly what we will do." He told a news conference, "There are a lot of opinions about what direction to go."


Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., involved in negotiations with Senate GOP Leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, blasted the House plan as a blatant attack on bipartisanship.


"It can't pass the Senate and it won't pass the Senate," Reid said.


The move came as a partial shutdown entered its third week and less than two days before the Treasury Department says it will be unable to borrow and will rely on a this cash cushion to pay the country's bills.


The House GOP plan wouldn't win nearly as many concessions from President Barack Obama as Republicans had sought but it would set up another battle with the White House early next year.


"The jury is still out," said Rep. Michael Burgess, R-Texas.


Rep. Walter Jones, R-N.C., said he was not sure he could vote for the plan because it did not address the debt. "I have to know a lot more than I know now," he said.


The House move comes after conservative lawmakers rebelled at the outlines of an emerging Senate plan by Reid and GOP leader McConnell. Those two hoped to seal an agreement on Tuesday, just two days before the Treasury Department says it will run out of borrowing capacity.


The White House and Democrats quickly came out against the Republican plan. Obama planned to meet with House Democratic leaders Tuesday afternoon as negotiations continue.


"The latest proposal from House Republicans does just that in a partisan attempt to appease a small group of tea party Republicans who forced the government shutdown in the first place," said White House spokeswoman Amy Brundage. "Democrats and Republicans in the Senate have been working in a bipartisan, good-faith effort .... With only a couple days remaining until the United States exhausts its borrowing authority, it's time for the House to do the same."


"GOP's latest plan is designed to torpedo the bipartisan Sen solution," tweeted Rep. Chris Van Hollen, D-Md. "Plan is not only reckless, it's tantamount to default."


Political pressure is building on Republicans to reopen the government and GOP leaders are clearly fearful of failing to act to avert a default on U.S. obligations.


Republicans are in a difficult spot, relinquishing many of their core demands as they take a beating in the polls. Rep. Steve Southerland, R-Fla., led GOP lawmakers in several verses of "Amazing Grace."


"We have to stick together now," said Rep. Pete Sessions, R-Texas.


Like the House GOP bill, the emerging Senate measure — though not finalized — would reopen the government through Jan. 15 and permit the Treasury to borrow normally until early to mid-February, easing dual crises that have sapped confidence in the economy and taken a sledgehammer to the GOP's poll numbers.


"There are productive negotiations going on with the Republican leader," Reid said as he opened the Senate Tuesday. "I'm confident we'll be able to reach a comprehensive agreement this week in time to avert a catastrophic default."


On Wall Street, stocks were mixed early Tuesday, with investors somewhat optimistic over a potential deal.


"We're willing to get the government open. We want to get the government open," Scalise said. "Hopefully they get something done that addresses the spending issue."


The competing House and Senate plans are a far cry from the assault on "Obamacare" that tea party Republicans originally demanded as a condition for a short-term funding bill to keep the government fully operational. It lacks the budget cuts demanded by Republicans in exchange for increasing the government's $16.7 trillion borrowing cap.


Nor do either the House or Senate frameworks contain any of a secondary set of House GOP demands, like a one-year delay in the health law's mandate that individuals buy insurance.


Another difference between the Democrats and Republicans involves a Democratic move to repeal a $63 fee that companies must pay for each person they cover under the big health care overhaul beginning in 2014. Unions oppose the fee and Senate Democrats are pressing to repeal it, but House Republicans are positioning to block them and Senate Republicans are adamantly opposed as well.


Democrats were standing against a GOP-backed proposal to suspend a medical device tax that was enacted as part of the health care law, but might not be able to win a floor vote since many Democrats oppose the tax too.


Democratic and Republican aides described the outlines of the potential agreement on condition of anonymity because the discussions were ongoing.


But with GOP poll numbers plummeting and the country growing weary of a shutdown entering its third week, Senate Republicans in particular were eager to end the shutdown — and avoid an even greater crisis if the government were to default later this month.


Any legislation backed by both Reid and McConnell can be expected to sail through the Senate, though any individual senators could delay it.


But it's another story in the House. Rep. Joe Barton, R-Texas, signaled that conservative members of the House were deeply skeptical. He said any bill had to have serious spending cuts for him to vote to raise the debt ceiling and said he thought Obama and Treasury Secretary Jack Lew had more flexibility than they had said publicly.


"No deal is better than a bad deal," Barton said.


In addition to approving legislation to fund the government until late this year and avert a possible debt crisis later this week or month, the potential pact would set up broader budget negotiations between the GOP-controlled House and Democratic-led Senate. One goal of those talks would be to ease automatic spending cuts that began in March and could deepen in January, when about $20 billion in further cuts are set to slam the Pentagon.


Democrats also were seeking to preserve the Treasury Department's ability to use extraordinary accounting measures to buy additional time after the government reaches any extended debt ceiling. Such measures have permitted Treasury to avert a default for almost five months since the government officially hit the debt limit in mid-May, but wouldn't buy anywhere near that kind of time next year, experts said.


The House GOP plan would repeal the extraordinary measures, which would make the Feb 7 date a hard deadline to revisit the fight.


___


Associated Press writers Donna Cassata, David Espo, Henry C. Jackson, Julie Pace and Alan Fram contributed to this report.


Source: http://news.yahoo.com/house-gop-unveils-counter-senate-debt-plan-155404672--finance.html
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Tuesday, October 15, 2013

What The World's Newspapers Are Saying





A London newspaper stand.



Kirsty Wigglesworth/AP


A London newspaper stand.


Kirsty Wigglesworth/AP


(Editor's Note: Starting this week, we're introducing a weekday feature of headlines from newspapers around the world.)


Britain's Guardian reports on former minister David Maclean, a member of Prime Minister David Cameron's Conservative Party, saying Britain's spy agencies may be operating outside the law in the mass surveillance of the Internet. His remarks come amid revelations about surveillance programs unveiled by former NSA contractor Edward Snowden.


In the Middle East, Israel's Haaretz newspaper reports on negotiations between Western nations and Iran in Geneva over the Islamic republic's nuclear program. It says the U.S. will continue to pressure Tehran until it has taken major steps to halt the program.


Lebanon's Daily Star reports that U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry said an international conference to set up a transitional government in Syria must be organized soon.


South Africa's Cape Times says a veteran member of the African National Congress lodged a complaint against a fellow party official for making allegedly anti-Semitic comments in Cape Town last week.


The China Daily reports on Britain's plan to make it easier for Chinese tourists and investors to visit the country.


India's Hindu newspaper says three senior officials were suspended in the wake of the deadly stampede near a temple in the town of Ratangarh in the central state of Madhya Pradesh. More than 100 people were killed in the stampede on a bridge that people feared was near collapse.


Source: http://www.npr.org/blogs/parallels/2013/10/15/234627132/what-the-worlds-newspapers-are-saying?ft=1&f=1009
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No Vote Likely Tonight (Taegan Goddard's Political Wire)

Share With Friends: Share on FacebookTweet ThisPost to Google-BuzzSend on GmailPost to Linked-InSubscribe to This Feed | Rss To Twitter | Politics - Top Stories Stories, News Feeds and News via Feedzilla.
Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/334307281?client_source=feed&format=rss
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'Captain Phillips' And The Terrible Excitement Of Real Action





Tom Hanks and Barkhad Abdirahman share close quarters in Captain Phillips.



Columbia Pictures


Tom Hanks and Barkhad Abdirahman share close quarters in Captain Phillips.


Columbia Pictures


Captain Phillips, Paul Greengrass' tense movie about the April 2009 hijacking of the freighter Maersk Alabama by four Somali pirates, is a love song to the patience-through-overwhelming-fire-superiority of the U.S. military.


Unless, of course, it's a Dog Day Afternoon-style chronicle of the final days of a few sympathetically inept criminals who want money, not blood, but who end up dead anyway. What's empirical is that the film spends more screen time on the hapless, teenage pirates than on any of its other characters, save for Richard Phillips himself — played by America's everydad, Tom Hanks, whose next role will be that of Walt Disney.


Like last year's Zero Dark Thirty, Greengrass' new movie is Based On A True Story and climaxes with a successful operation by Navy SEALs, those precision instruments that we rightly revere. And while Captain Phillips tells a far simpler story, covering days rather than years, both films strike me as Rorschach blots onto which anyone can project individual beliefs about how and when America swings its big stick.


Except­ — and I'll label this paragraph as a spoiler, mostly because Dana Stevens considered it as such in her Slate review — Captain Phillips doesn't quite end with the SEALs grimly/awesomely taking care of business. It takes an extra few minutes, after the Navy has rescued Phillips from his captors, to show us see how exhausted, frightened, and sickened he is by the ordeal — and no one is likely to mistake that response for ingratitude. Maybe those tears Jessica Chastain shed in the last shot of Zero Dark Thirty were for our national soul (I doubt it), but I don't think this pair of scenes, wherein Phillips is too drained to speak, walk unassisted or do anything other than howl and weep is intended as a metaphor for anything.


Unlike the concurrent Gravity, which brilliantly sustains tension by never cutting away from its protagonist, Captain Phillips lets us in on the turning of wheels to which neither Phillips nor his opponent/captor, the pirate leader Abdulwali Abdukhad Muse (Barkhad Abdi, giving a performance at least as persuasive as Hanks'), are privy. That lower left-hand corner of the screen keeps flashing datelines. Interchangeable Naval personnel give and receive orders via radio. We see the SEALs board their plane in Virginia to fly halfway around the world and skydive into the Indian Ocean, where three naval warships have converged to block the pirates from escaping to Somalia with Phillips as their hostage. (The SEAL team leader is played by Max Martini, whose freakishly right-angular jaw has damned him to be cast only as soldiers or cops. It's a weird problem for a guy whose name literally means "peak capacity fancy cocktails" to have.)


The SEALs' arrival by parachute is as it happened in real life. Still, it must be expensive to film a parachuting sequence, and this one is brief and unspectacular — so why is it in the movie? Is Greengrass trying to underline the vast expense the U.S. will accept to send the message that if you mess with one 55-year-old Merchant Marine seaman from Vermont, you mess with us all? Or, more likely, that disruption of the shipping lanes will not be tolerated? This incident was the first (briefly) successful hijacking of an American ship in 200 years. Few that get taken have the benefit of such a response, a fact the film seems to acknowledge with a single line, conveyed via radio from an Admiral whose face we never see.


When the eroding hostage negotiation is suddenly resolved by three snipers' bullets in three pirates' heads, Greengrass presents it as a moment of horror, not of triumph. It plays like a moral counterweight to news reports like this one, which celebrated the SEALs' marksmanship as a feat of athleticism — which, let's not kid ourselves, it was. (The lifeboat Phillips was taken captive in is on display at the Navy SEAL museum in Fort Pierce, Florida.)


Nothing about Captain Phillips smacks of exploitation. By casting Hanks as the curt but honorable captain, Greengrass has spared us any further intervention to make the "character" more "likeable." Still, I'm never sure how much I'm supposed to enjoy depictions of recent tragedies, even ones as seriously and well-made as this.


Greengrass has earned the freedom to do more or less what he wants, having made the second and third films in the have-your-cake-and-eat-it-too Bourne series — high-end popcorn movies that at once condemn and delight in mayhem. (As the soulfully amnesiac super-assassin Jason Bourne, Matt Damon never looks like he's enjoying all that kneecap shattering and windpipe punching, which makes us feel better about enjoying it.) He started his career as a documentarian, and he continues to make documentary-ish films like this one.


I doubt this can be said of Greengrass' United 93 — despite its sterling critical reputation, I've never been able to bring myself to watch it — but Captain Phillips offers substantial entertainment value. I don't recall any jokes, but there are a couple of expertly staged action scenes. A sequence wherein the crew of the Maersk Alabama uses fire hoses and evasive maneuvers to try to prevent the pirates from affixing a ladder to the hull and climbing aboard, is, with apologies to John Woo and my beloved James Bond franchise, the only exciting boat chase in any movie, ever. Surely it's okay to feel caught up in moments like these.


Ridley Scott's film Black Hawk Down was the first film I can recall to trigger this queasiness. Based on Mark Bowden's superb nonfiction book about the a botched 1993 attempt to capture a Somali warlord—resulting in an all-night firefight that left 18 U.S. soldiers and hundreds of Somalis dead — the movie was made before, but released soon after, 9/11. Like the book, the film expresses awe at the talents of U.S. Special Forces operators (the Army's Delta Force in this case, not the SEALs), even as it depicts a failed mission. The film retains some of Bowden's observations about the workplace culture of the elite sections of the Army, and a little bit of his geopolitical analysis. But it's overwhelmingly a war movie, an action movie. In translating Bowden's 486-page prose account to the most visceral story medium, Scott can't help but trivialize the event somehow.


Captain Phillips doesn't do that. There's something appealingly 1970s-like in its refusal to editorialize. It can afford its humanism because Phillips lived to write a book. It has patience, albeit through overwhelming fire superiority.


Source: http://www.npr.org/blogs/monkeysee/2013/10/15/234676998/captain-phillips-and-the-terrible-excitement-of-real-action?ft=1&f=1048
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Lee leads Malaysia by a shot after Thompson's 63

KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia (AP) — Ilhee Lee of South Korea kept her lead in the LPGA Malaysia on Friday while 18-year-old American Lexi Thompson shot an 8-under 63 Friday and was one stroke behind after two rounds.


Lee, seeking her second title on the LPGA Tour, had a 65 that left her at 13-under 129. She led by four early on, but Thompson surged on the back nine with four birdies around an eagle on the par-4 14th.


"It was right on line," Thompson said, referring to the eagle. "But I couldn't see the bottom of the hole, but a few of the volunteers up by the green started yelling, so I was like, 'All right, maybe it went in.'"


Thompson, third in the recent Evian Championship, is going after her second tour victory.


Last week's Reignwood Classic champion, Feng Shanshan of China, also shot a 65 and was at 10 under. I.K. Kim of South Korea (66) and Paula Creamer of the United States (67) were at 9 under.


Amy Yang of South Korea shot a tournament-record 62 at Kuala Lumpur Golf and Country Club and was among those five off the pace.


"It was a great round," Yang said. "I've shot 10 under before, but that was during a mini tour, so this is my best on the LPGA Tour and it feels great."


Defending champion and top-ranked Inbee Park shot par and was at 1 under.


Source: http://news.yahoo.com/lee-leads-malaysia-shot-thompsons-63-130043614--spt.html
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IBM's Watson uses Jeopardy skills to become House-like medical diagnostician

CLEVELAND, Oct. 15, 2013 -- IBM Research (NYSE: IBM) today unveiled two new Watson-related cognitive technologies that are expected to help physicians make more informed and accurate decisions faster and to cull new insights from electronic medical records (EMR).



The projects known as "WatsonPaths" and "Watson EMR Assistant" are the result of a year-long research collaboration with faculty, physicians and students at Cleveland Clinic Lerner College of Medicine of Case Western Reserve University. Both are key projects that will create technologies that can be leveraged by Watson to advance the technology in the domain of medicine.



With the WatsonPaths project, IBM scientists have trained the system to interact with medical domain experts in a way that's more natural for them, enabling the user to more easily understand the structured and unstructured data sources the system consulted and the path it took in offering an option. The Watson EMR Assistant project aims to enable physicians to uncover key information from patients' medical records in order to help improve the quality and efficiency of care.



"On Jeopardy! it was not necessarily critical to know how Watson arrived at its answer. But doctors or domain experts in any field will want to understand what information sources Watson consulted, what logic it applied and what inferences it made in arriving at a recommendation," said Eric Brown, IBM Research Director of Watson Technologies. "Through our research collaboration with Cleveland Clinic, we've been able to significantly advance technologies that Watson can leverage to handle more and more complex problems in real time and partner with medical experts in a much more intuitive fashion. These are breakthrough technologies intended to assist future versions of Watson products."



"WatsonPaths is designed to augment the problem-based learning methods that Cleveland Clinic medical students employ in the classroom. The vision is for WatsonPaths to act as a useful guide for students to arrive at the most likely and least likely answers to real clinical problems, but in a classroom setting," said J. Eric Jelovsek, MD, MMEd, Director of the Cleveland Clinic Multidisciplinary Simulation Center. "Of course, it is also easy to visualize how this type of technology could eventually be a tool for physicians to use in real-time clinical scenarios – a powerful guiding reference to consult when diagnosing and identifying the best treatment options."



Using WatsonPaths to support clinical reasoning



WatsonPaths explores a complex scenario and draws conclusions much like people do in real life. When presented with a medical case, WatsonPaths extracts statements based on the knowledge it has learned as a result of being trained by medical doctors and from medical literature.



WatsonPaths can use Watson's question-answering abilities to examine the scenario from many angles. The system works its way through chains of evidence – pulling from reference materials, clinical guidelines and medical journals in real-time – and draws inferences to support or refute a set of hypotheses. This ability to map medical evidence allows medical professionals to consider new factors that may help them to create additional differential diagnosis and treatment options.



As medical experts interact with WatsonPaths, the system will use machine-learning to improve and scale the ingestion of medical information. WatsonPaths incorporates feedback from the physician who can drill down into the medical text to decide if certain chains of evidence are more important, provide additional insights and information, and weigh which paths of inferences the physician determines lead to the strongest conclusions. Through this collaboration loop, WatsonPaths compares its actions with that of the medical expert so the system can get "smarter".



WatsonPaths, when ready, will be available to Cleveland Clinic faculty and students as part of their problem-based learning curriculum and in clinical lab simulations. With an emphasis on critical thinking and problem solving, WatsonPaths will be able to help medical students learn how to quickly navigate the latest medical information and will display critical reasoning pathways from initial clinical observations all the way to possible diagnoses and treatment options.



Unlocking the promise of electronic medical records with Watson EMR Assistant



IBM and Cleveland Clinic are using Watson EMR Assistant to explore how to navigate and process electronic medical records to unlock hidden insights within the data, with the goal of helping physicians make more informed and accurate decisions about patient care.



Historically, the potential of EMRs has not been realized due to the discrepancies of how the data is recorded, collected and organized across healthcare systems and organizations. The massive amount of health data within EMRs alone presents tremendous value in transforming clinical decision making, but can also be difficult to absorb. For example, analyzing a single patient's EMR can be the equivalent of going through up to 100MB of structured and unstructured data, in the form of plain text that can span a lifetime of clinical notes, lab results and medication history.



Watson's natural language expertise allows it to process an EMR with a deep semantic understanding of the content and can help medical practitioners quickly and efficiently sift through the massive amounts of complex and disparate data and better make sense of it all. With this research project, Watson's robust pipeline of natural language processing and machine learning technologies is being applied to begin analyzing whole EMRs with the goal of surfacing information and relationships within the data in a visualization tool that may be useful to a medical practitioner.



Working with de-identified EMR data provided by Cleveland Clinic and with direction from Cleveland Clinic physicians, the goal of the Watson EMR Assistant research project is to develop technologies that will be able to collate key details in the past medical history and present to the physician a problem list of clinical concerns that may require care and treatment, highlight key lab results and medications that correlate with the problem list, and classify important events throughout the patient's care presented within a chronological timeline.



IBM and Cleveland Clinic will discuss the role of Watson for the future of medicine at 4pm ET today at the Cleveland Clinic Medical Innovation Summit being held October 14-16, 2013 in Cleveland, OH. For live updates, follow #MIS2013 on Twitter.



To learn about how WatsonPaths came to be and how it fits into IBM's vision of the era of cognitive computing, please read a blog post by IBM researcher Michael Barborak on the A Smarter Planet blog, http://asmarterplanet.com/blog/2013/10/the-future-of-watson-computers-that-interact-naturally-with-people.html.



About IBM
For more information, please visit www.research.ibm.com and www.ibmwatson.com.



About Cleveland Clinic
Cleveland Clinic is a nonprofit multispecialty academic medical center that integrates clinical and hospital care with research and education. Located in Cleveland, Ohio, it was founded in 1921 by four renowned physicians with a vision of providing outstanding patient care based upon the principles of cooperation, compassion and innovation. Cleveland Clinic has pioneered many medical breakthroughs, including coronary artery bypass surgery and the first face transplant in the United States. U.S.News & World Report consistently names Cleveland Clinic as one of the nation's best hospitals in its annual "America's Best Hospitals" survey. More than 3,000 full-time salaried physicians and researchers and 11,000 nurses represent 120 medical specialties and subspecialties. The Cleveland Clinic health system includes a main campus near downtown Cleveland, more than 75 Northern Ohio outpatient locations, including 16 full-service Family Health Centers, Cleveland Clinic Florida, the Lou Ruvo Center for Brain Health in Las Vegas, Cleveland Clinic Canada, and, currently under construction, Cleveland Clinic Abu Dhabi. In 2012, there were 5.1 million outpatient visits throughout the Cleveland Clinic health system and 157,000 hospital admissions. Patients came for treatment from every state and from more than 130 countries. Visit us at www.clevelandclinic.org. Follow us at www.twitter.com/ClevelandClinic.


Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/10/15/ibm-watson-medical-diagnosis?ncid=txtlnkusaolp00000589
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Sean & Catherine Will Wed on TV! See 5 Pairs Who Already Did

ABC's The Bachelor is about to improve on its dismal matchmaking record. Out of 17 seasons, plus nine seasons of The Bachelorette, the show has produced only three marriages.

Source: http://www.ivillage.com/sean-lowe-catherine-giudicis-wedding-could-be-most-dramatic-bachelor-ceremony-yet/1-a-549628?dst=iv%3AiVillage%3Asean-lowe-catherine-giudicis-wedding-could-be-most-dramatic-bachelor-ceremony-yet-549628
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Sunday, October 13, 2013

Seven Red Cross Relief Workers Seized In Syria


The International Committee of the Red Cross says seven of its workers have been abducted in northwest Syria. The team, which includes one Syrian Red Crescent volunteer, was taken by gunmen as they drove to Damascus on Sunday morning.


The workers were seized in Idlib province, where rebels have clashed with government forces this month.


"We call for their immediate release," the relief agency said.


The AP reports:


"Syria's state news agency, quoting an anonymous official, said the gunmen opened fire on the ICRC team's four vehicles before seizing the Red Cross workers. The news agency blamed 'terrorists,' a term the government uses to refer to those opposed to President Bashar Assad."


In Damascus, ICRC spokesman Simon Schorno tells the AP the workers had been in the field for four days, reviewing medical needs in the country that's been wracked by a civil war. He wouldn't reveal the nationalities of those who had been kidnapped.


After the abduction Sunday, the group's director-general, Yves Daccord, tweeted, "Our thoughts are with our colleagues and their families."


Source: http://www.npr.org/blogs/thetwo-way/2013/10/13/233345516/seven-red-cross-relief-workers-seized-in-syria?ft=1&f=1009
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Friday, October 11, 2013

Latour's Pinault hires Araujo consultant to bolster communications ...


Chateau Latour owner Francois Pinault has hired a family member from his newly-acquired Araujo Estate to improve his communications strategy.



Jamie Araujo (pictured), the daughter of Bart and Daphne Araujo, who sold their high-end Napa winery to Francois Pinault’s Artemis group earlier this year, began her role this month. 

She is auditing the communications strategy at all four of Pinault’s wine properties, also including Chateau Grillet in the Rhone and Domaine d'EugĂ©nie in Burgundy.

Araujo founded wine marketing consultancy Terravina out of Paris in 2004, as France’s wine industry sought answers to New World competition in key export markets.

'Often, high-end estates can be overwhelmed by demands from press and collectors, and don't have time to sit back and look at the overview of how best to organise things,’ Araujo told decanter.com. ‘My role is to bring an external eye.'

She added, 'the number of requests means it is possible to miss things if there is not a careful system in place'. She said it was too early to say if one strategy could be applied across all four estates. ‘These are four very different properties, with different cultures.’

Araujo, who studied oenology in Bordeaux, took an MBA at INSEAD business school ans has also worked for Moet Hennessy, will also handle private clients at her parents’ old winery in Napa. It sells 50% of its wines direct.

A spokesperson for Latour confirmed that Araujo ‘will advise us through Terravina on some marketing and communication topics’.


Source: http://www.decanter.com/news/wine-news/584440/latour-s-pinault-hires-araujo-consultant-to-bolster-communications
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