Archive for March, 2009

Time Warner Expands Metered Internet Coverage

In Canada this is already the standard. I had a 95GB limit with Rogers on the highest data plan package in my area (at the time of writing) and I could reach it in the first 10 days of each billing cycle. It forces us to limit our use of internet. If we want to watch TV shows, movies etc (legal or not) we will max out quickly, and then the ISP will rake us over the coals in additional service fees.
-Editor

The Newly Spun-off Cable Company Will Impose Premium Rates On Big Users Of Broadband

In April, Time Warner Cable will begin collecting information on its customers’ Internet use in the Texas cities of Austin and San Antonio and in Rochester, N.Y. Consumption billing will begin in those cities later this summer. In Greensboro, N.C., the billing changes will begin sooner. Spun off from Time Warner (TWX) this month, Time Warner Cable had been testing a plan to meter Internet usage in Beaumont, Tex., since last year.

By charging a premium to the heaviest broadband users, much the same way cell-phone providers collect fees from subscribers who exceed their allotted minutes, Time Warner would upend a longstanding pricing strategy among Internet service providers. Typically, phone and cable companies charge flat fees for unlimited access to the Web. “We need a viable model to be able to support the infrastructure of the broadband business,” Time Warner Cable CEO Glenn Britt says in an interview. “We made a mistake early on by not defining our business based on the consumption dimension.” Time Warner Cable has 8.4 million broadband customers.

FOUR PROPOSED BROADBAND TIERS

Consumer advocates and Web site owners say tiered Web-use pricing limits customer choice and could stifle innovation by crimping demand for high-bandwidth services such as online video and music. Cable and phone companies say they need flexibility in setting prices for use of large, expensive, heavily used broadband networks.

In the case of Time Warner Cable, customers will be charged from $29.95 to $54.90 a month, based on data consumption and desired connection speed. Customers will be charged $1 for each gigabyte (GB) over their plan’s cap. Time Warner Cable offers four cap levels of 5, 10, 20, and 40 GB. A download of a high-definition movie typically eats up about 8 GB. A recent report from Sanford C. Bernstein suggests that a family on the 40 GB plan that streams 7.25 hours of online video a week (a fraction of the 60 hours Americans spend watching TV in a week) could end up spending $200 per month on broadband usage fees. And that’s just for video viewing, before factoring in such Internet activities as music downloads and photo sharing. “To put it mildly,” says Bernstein analyst Craig Moffett, “the decision to limit data consumption can be expected to have profound implications for [consumer] behavior.

But Time Warner says most people are not using that much data. The company’s trial in Beaumont, Tex., lasted several months. Of the 10,000 broadband customers enrolled—about 25% of the company’s total for Beaumont—about 14% exceeded their cap and had to pay additional fees that averaged about $19 a month. Time Warner Cable also discovered that the top 25% of users consumed 100 times more data than the bottom 25% of users, suggesting an enormous gap in usage patterns.

COMCAST: A WARNING, THEN NO SERVICE

As more and more people download TV shows and movies, particularly those in high-definition, broadband networks are facing enormous strain, providers say. Time Warner Cable has said its strategy is intended to alleviate some of that strain. But critics worry that the pricing will discourage broadband use and impede new online media businesses before they even have a chance to flourish.

AT&T (T) is currently conducting its own broadband pricing trial, also in Beaumont. Comcast (CMCSA), the nation’s largest cable operator, has taken a different approach, capping residential bandwidth usage at 250 GB a month. Customers who exceed it get a warning phone call from Comcast. A further problem can get a subscription canceled.

For Time Warner Cable’s Britt, instituting broadband pricing is a bold move just as he takes the helm of a newly independent company. Fully spun off from Time Warner, the cable company’s shares started trading on Mar. 30. Britt’s first big challenge may be to sell the upsides of aggressive broadband pricing to his investors. “It’s an intriguing idea if you didn’t have such a competitive landscape out there,” says Rich Greenfield, an analyst at Pali Research. “There are so many other alternatives for consumers when it comes to broadband.

Lowry is a senior writer for BusinessWeek in New York.

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FBI Raids Houses for Clicking a Link

The FBI has recently adopted a novel investigative technique: posting hyperlinks that purport to be illegal videos of minors having sex, and then raiding the homes of anyone willing to click on them.

Undercover FBI agents used this hyperlink-enticement technique, which directed Internet users to a clandestine government server, to stage armed raids of homes in Pennsylvania, New York, and Nevada last year. The supposed video files actually were gibberish and contained no illegal images.

A CNET News.com review of legal documents shows that courts have approved of this technique, even though it raises questions about entrapment, the problems of identifying who’s using an open wireless connection–and whether anyone who clicks on a FBI link that contains no child pornography should be automatically subject to a dawn raid by federal police.

Roderick Vosburgh, a doctoral student at Temple University who also taught history at La Salle University, was raided at home in February 2007 after he allegedly clicked on the FBI’s hyperlink. Federal agents knocked on the door around 7 a.m., falsely claiming they wanted to talk to Vosburgh about his car. Once he opened the door, they threw him to the ground outside his house and handcuffed him.

Vosburgh was charged with violating federal law, which criminalizes “attempts” to download child pornography with up to 10 years in prison. Last November, a jury found Vosburgh guilty on that count, and a sentencing hearing is scheduled for April 22, at which point Vosburgh could face three to four years in prison.

The implications of the FBI’s hyperlink-enticement technique are sweeping. Using the same logic and legal arguments, federal agents could send unsolicited e-mail messages to millions of Americans advertising illegal narcotics or child pornography–and raid people who click on the links embedded in the spam messages. The bureau could register the “unlawfulimages.com” domain name and prosecute intentional visitors. And so on.

“The evidence was insufficient for a reasonable jury to find that Mr. Vosburgh specifically intended to download child pornography, a necessary element of any ‘attempt’ offense,” Vosburgh’s attorney, Anna Durbin of Ardmore, Penn., wrote in a court filing that is attempting to overturn the jury verdict before her client is sentenced.

In a telephone conversation on Wednesday, Durbin added: “I thought it was scary that they could do this. This whole idea that the FBI can put a honeypot out there to attract people is kind of sad. It seems to me that they’ve brought a lot of cases without having to stoop to this.”

Durbin did not want to be interviewed more extensively about the case because it is still pending; she’s waiting for U.S. District Judge Timothy Savage to rule on her motion. Unless he agrees with her and overturns the jury verdict, Vosburgh–who has no prior criminal record–will be required to register as a sex offender for 15 years and will be effectively barred from continuing his work as a college instructor after his prison sentence ends.

How the hyperlink sting operation worked The government’s hyperlink sting operation worked like this: FBI Special Agent Wade Luders disseminated links to the supposedly illicit porn on an online discussion forum called Ranchi, which Luders believed was frequented by people who traded underage images. One server allegedly associated with the Ranchi forum was rangate.da.ru, which is now offline with a message attributing the closure to “non-ethical” activity.

In October 2006, Luders posted a number of links purporting to point to videos of child pornography, and then followed up with a second, supposedly correct link 40 minutes later. All the links pointed to, according to a bureau affidavit, a “covert FBI computer in San Jose, California, and the file located therein was encrypted and non-pornographic.”

more at http://news.cnet.com/8301-13578_3-9899151-38.html?tag=nefd.lede

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How Metals in Food Affect Your Child’s Behavior

heavy metals, metal, zinc, behavior, lead, mercury, aluminum, ADD, ADHDAccording to a lead researcher in the field, the contamination of food with certain metals needs to be urgently addressed in light of growing evidence linking trace metals to behavioral problems.

It has long been known that excessive amounts of any metal could be potentially dangerous, but there is now also strong evidence that even tiny amounts of some metals can contribute to aggressive or antisocial behavior, says Neil Ward, a professor of chemistry at the UK’s University of Surrey.

Lead has been linked to antisocial behavior, partly because it contributes to nutrient depletion. Aluminum has also been linked to antisocial behavior, as it competes for the binding sites of biochemical receptors of other metal ions, such as iron and zinc. Read the rest of this entry »

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Vaccine Ingredients and Fillers

In addition to the viral and bacterial RNA or DNA that is part of the vaccines, here are the fillers:

  • aluminum hydroxide
  • aluminum phosphate
  • ammonium sulfate
  • amphotericin B
  • animal tissues: pig blood, horse blood, rabbit brain,
  • dog kidney, monkey kidney,
  • chick embryo, chicken egg, duck egg
  • calf (bovine) serum
  • betapropiolactone
  • fetal bovine serum
  • formaldehyde
  • formalin
  • gelatin
  • glycerol
  • human diploid cells (originating from human aborted fetal tissue)
  • hydrolized gelatin
  • monosodium glutamate (MSG)
  • neomycin
  • neomycin sulfate
  • phenol red indicator
  • phenoxyethanol (antifreeze)
  • potassium diphosphate
  • potassium monophosphate
  • polymyxin B
  • polysorbate 20
  • polysorbate 80
  • porcine (pig) pancreatic hydrolysate of casein
  • residual MRC5 proteins
  • sorbitol
  • sucrose
  • thimerosal (mercury)
  • tri(n)butylphosphate,
  • VERO cells, a continuous line of monkey kidney cells
  • washed sheep red blood cells Read the rest of this entry »

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Canadian Military To Undertake “Domestic Security”

Sources:
http://www.prisonplanet.com/canadian-military-units-to-undertake-domestic-security.html

http://www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va&aid=12694

http://www.calgary911truth.org/my_weblog/2009/03/canadian-military-units-to-undertake-domestic-security.html

You would think a News Giant like CBC News would report on this:
http://www.cbc.ca/search/cbc?ie=utf8&site=CBC&output=xml_no_dtd&getfields=description&oe=utf8&safe=high&q=canadian+military+domestic+security

CBC ran this in December 2008 (unrelated, but similar):
 http://www.cbc.ca/empire/security.html

The Globe and Mail:
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/Page/document/v5/templates/hub?searchText=canadian+military+domestic+security&hub=Search&searchType=Quick&control=searchSimple&iaction.x=26&iaction.y=7&iaction=Go

The National Post:
http://www.nationalpost.com/news/story.html?id=1353971

The Toronto Sun:
http://search.torontosun.com/?sen=site&ie=UTF-8&q=canadian+military+domestic+security

 


  

 

 

Canadian Military Units To Undertake “Domestic Security”

 

Duties would include mass internment of citizens after terrorist attack, mirroring militarization of law enforcement in U.S. and Britain

Canadian Military Units To Undertake Domestic Security 100309top

Paul Joseph Watson

Prison Planet.com

Tuesday, March 10, 2009

The Canadian military is reorganizing its priorities to suit a “post 9/11-world,” by creating reservist units for each area of the country that would be tasked with providing “domestic security,” and involve roles such as the mass internment of citizens in the event of a terrorist attack.

“The Canadian military has embarked on a wide-ranging plan to turn its reserve soldiers into focused units trained and equipped to respond to a nightmarish array of domestic threats,” reports the National Post.

“The remodeling of the reserves will see the development of specialist units in four of the military’s regional divisions — Atlantic, Quebec, Ontario and the West.”

This is an open announcement that Canada has been subdivided into military units that will be policed by military reserves, who will take a “dominant role in domestic operations in the future,” according to the article.

Of course, the necessity of the change is dressed up using the notion of troops helping people in the event of earthquakes, floods and nuclear accidents, but we also learn that one of the duties that the reservists would potentially undertake would be mass internment of citizens in camps or quarantine zones after a biological terror attack.

“We are training to establish a perimeter,” said Brigadier-General Jean Collin. “Do I see a scenario when we might be obliged to keep people in? Probably. You need to be trained to be able to make sure that you don’t become a casualty in the process of doing that security.”

In light of that comment, it’s interesting to note that, according to the report, Brig-Gen. Collin, who has served in Bosnia and Afghanistan, “has also been a special advisor to the Chief of the Defence Staff on homeland security issues.”

Other roles for the military reservists would be to undertake law enforcement and other “security” duties for domestic events such as the 2010 Winter Olympic Games in Vancouver and the 2010 G8 summit of world leaders in Huntsville.

(ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW)

Canadian Military Units To Undertake Domestic Security obamadecept_340x169

The story dovetails with a report out of Barrie, Ontario, where authorities are considering using troops from the local army base to patrol bar areas on weekends in a supposed attempt to prevent rowdiness.

Mention is also made of “scenarios that might require a form of constabulary or policing function for reserves in civilian containment and security.”

David Bercuson, director of the Center for Military and Strategic Studies at the University of Calgary, attempted to dismiss the premise by claiming reservists would oppose such measures.

“People in Ottawa sometimes forget that the reserves are volunteers. If you try to change the reserves in ways they don’t want to change, they just might not show up,” he said.

Would reservists oppose the use of military units for purposes of domestic law enforcement and not show up, or would they just follow orders under the justification of a breakdown in authority after a biological attack or mass rioting after a total economic collapse?

I’m not so confident that people who have been kicking down doors, abducting, torturing and killing people in Afghanistan for seven years under the justification that they are terrorists would be unwilling to do the same to Canadian citizens if they were drilled with the same propaganda.

The militarization of law enforcement duties in the U.S., Canada and Britain is accelerating at a pace never before seen.

Last week it was revealed that the British Army is on standby to deal with rioting on UK streets as a result of the economic crisis, according to a newspaper report, which states that MI5 is targeting political activists who could help create a “summer of discontent”.

Meanwhile, in the U.S., urban warfare training drills are taking place across the country as Northcom announces that tens of thousands of active duty troops will be stationed inside the U.S. for domestic purposes.

The U.S. Army War College in November released a white paper called Known Unknowns: Unconventional ‘Strategic Shocks’ in Defense Strategy Development. The report warned that the military must be prepared for a “violent, strategic dislocation inside the United States,” which could be provoked by “unforeseen economic collapse,” “purposeful domestic resistance,” “pervasive public health emergencies” or “loss of functioning political and legal order.” The “widespread civil violence,” the document said, “would force the defense establishment to reorient priorities in extremis to defend basic domestic order and human security.”

Research related articles:

  1. Two More U.S. Military Units Assigned For Homeland Security
  2. Military May Patrol Bar Zone In Canadian City
  3. Pentagon to Detail Troops to Bolster Domestic Security
  4. Washington Post: 20,000 More U.S. Troops To Be Deployed For “Domestic Security”
  5. Military Examines Role In Domestic Defense
  6. Marines Admit “Security Force” To Operate Inside U.S.
  7. Georgia mobilizes commando units near S.Ossetia – Russian military
  8. Use of military in quelling domestic unrest a scary sign
  9. Domestic Military Operations At Camp Pendleton?
  10. The Nation’s Deathbed – A new Canadian Independent Documentary Film about the Security and Prosperity Agreement
  11. ALEX JONES on COAST to COAST AM “Domestic Security Force”
  12. Obama’s Civil Defense Program Resembles Domestic Draft

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Bill Targets Parents of Porn-Viewing Kids

Reference: www.xbiz.com NSFW

DES MOINES, Iowa — A bill under consideration by Iowa lawmakers proposes that parents face punishment if their children are allowed access to pornographic content.Under the bill, House 443, and its companion bill, Senate File 271, parents whose children view adult content would be guilty of child abuse and earn placement on the state child abuse registry.

Since its initial proposition last week, House 443 has been a subject of controversy.

Supporters of the bill are saying that several existing bills of a similar nature contain loopholes exempting parents from accountability in obscenity distribution, and that child abuse has a direct relationship to pornography.

This legislation isn’t the icing on the cake. It’s the cake,” said Kathy Lowenberg, director of counseling for Growth and Healing in Iowa City. “We have to have it.

Lowenberg added that in her experience treating victims of child abuse, pornography plays a considerable role in most cases.

The bill’s critics claim the existing bills are effective, and that the bill is broad to the point that ”even a child who sneaks a peek at a Playboy magazine could push parents into legal turmoil,” according to the Des Moines Register.

This would have the state intervening in families every time a parent drops their guard,” said Randall Wilson, legal director for the American Civil Liberties Union of Iowa. “You have adolescent hormones raging here, you have curiosity and I think, truth be told, you would find that a whole lot of kids would qualify as children in need of assistance who belong to perfectly normal families.

Critics have also raised the issue of the bill’s stance on children viewing pornography inadvertently or without their parents’ knowledge. It is reported that the bill does not answer these and other questions.

We need to do a lot more discussion,” said Sen. Becky Schmitz (D), “and be a little more specific about what we mean and the ramifications of it.

My Comments

First of all, we can argue that this is a good idea just as easily as we can argue that this is a bad idea.

First, FOR:

This is good for the sole purpose of keeping porn out of kids hands. I imagine this bill is targeting really young kids, not teenagers. I imagine they want to keep their kids innocent just like you and I would want. 

AGAINST:

Wow, where do I even Begin!? Invasion of privacy, civil liberties, freedom of thought, political intervention of parenting, overbearing, and just plain stupid!

The first time I encountered porn was my dad’s Playboy magazines as a teenager – about 14 years old. I am not the only buy I know with that story to tell. We’re all normal people. It did not ruin us.

I have been working on adult websites for 9 years now and I have never seen this idea come up. Considering I work in the adult industry I am very aware of keeping this stuff out of the hands of kids, and I am also very aware of HOW to do it. Never have my kids seen anything related to my adult work. YouTube has shown them more mature themes than any other method yet there is no Bill tabled on that.

This legislation is a bad idea – period. There are so many people consuming adult material nowadays – videos, DVDs, websites and sex toys, pillows, gadgets etc – that it would be impossible to defend an innocent person and immeasurably easy to convict an innocent person. Consider what this law is trying to accomplish… It wants your home to be free of sexually themed paraphernalia. THAT is governing your interests. There is no way for you to have such things in your home and make it completely child-proof. You just can’t do it.

Imagine your home has nothing related to sex in it at all, on any level – BUT – you DO have a computer connected to the net. Well guess what – you now have ever sexual concept ever conceived of plugged right into your home. If any kid figures out that spelling YouTube.com produces a porn site, You’re Guilty, BAM, you lose. What are you guilty of? Nothing. No one is guilty of anything so what is there to punish that would require a law?

Here’s a Better Idea:

Instead of inventing ways to take children out of their home, come up with ways of IMPROVING the home. Wow, that’s a better idea!

Make parental education easily available. 
Let’s face it, some people became parent’s when they were not ready and they could use all the tips they can find. The 17 year old boy who knocked up his girlfriend does not understand the need to hide his porn collection from a baby – teach him!
There are some things that people just don’t think about until it’s pointed out to them, and this is likely one of them, because if you look at it otherwise you would be saying that there are parents who show the porn to kids. Ridiculous! Those aren’t parents, those are pedophiles and this law would never find them!

The better idea is to get smarter, not to get more laws. 
Society is falling apart and it’s ideas like this that accelerate the process. 

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Harvard Medical Students Rebel Against Big Pharma Ties

Two hundred Harvard Medical School students are confronting the school’s administration, demanding an end to pharmaceutical industry influence in the classroom. The students worry that pharmaceutical industry scandals in recent years, including criminal convictions, billions of dollars in fines, proof of bias in research and publishing and false marketing claims, have cast a bad light on the medical profession. The students have criticized Harvard as being less vigilant than other leading medical schools in monitoring potential financial conflicts by faculty members. Harvard received the lowest possible grade, an “F,” from the American Medical Student Association, a national group that rates how well medical schools monitor and control drug industry money. The students were joined by Dr. Marcia Angell, a faculty member and former editor in chief of the New England Journal of Medicine, who has vigorously advocated for an end to liaisons between academia and Big Pharma.

Sources:
Alliance for Human Research Protection March 3, 2009 Read the rest of this entry »

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