Thursday, February 14, 2013

Canada Shelves C-30 Domestic Spying Bill - Immense Opposition to Very Controversial Bill

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Canada Shelves C-30 Domestic Spying Bill

Immense Opposition to Very Controversial Bill

The last few years Canada has been trying their best to mirror the warrantless domestic surveillance policies of their neighbor to the south. One big difference? Public opposition appears to have stopped some of these efforts in their tracks. According to the CBC, Canadian lawmakers have shelved controversial surveillance bill C-30 due to public outcry. The bill would have required that ISPs make their networks surveillance-ready without the use of warrants, which of course in intelligence land means the carriers have been handing over this data without warrants for years. A new bill, C-55, would legally allow warrantless data acquisition only "in relatively rare, urgent situations."

Source: http://www.dslreports.com/shownews/Canada-Shelves-C30-Domestic-Spying-Bill-123134

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Obama urges Congress to make government work for "the many"

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. President Barack Obama challenged a divided Congress on Tuesday to raise the minimum wage and make government work for "the many" in a State of the Union speech focused on economic fairness for the middle class as the Democrat takes a more assertive tack in his second term.

Looking to use momentum from his re-election victory last November, Obama vowed to turn much of his attention toward economic troubles like the 7.9 percent unemployment rate, an issue that dogged his first four years as president.

While he offered few concessions to Republican demands for spending cuts, Obama backed higher taxes for the wealthy and a $50 billion spending plan to create jobs by rebuilding degraded roads and bridges.

Obama outlined plans to withdraw 34,000 of the 66,000 U.S. troops in Afghanistan over the next year and called anew for action on immigration reform at home.

In the most emotional moment of the hour-long speech, Obama urged Congress to ban assault weapons and take other gun control measures. Victims of recent shootings like the school massacre in Newtown, Connecticut, looked on, some choking back tears.

But the central emphasis of his speech was to "build new ladders of opportunity" for the middle class.

"It is our unfinished task to make sure that this government works on behalf of the many, and not just the few," Obama told hundreds of lawmakers, Cabinet officials and dignitaries gathered before him in the well of the House of Representatives.

His address to a joint session of Congress came in the midst of yet another bitter battle with Republicans over taxes and spending, and this tussle cast a heavy shadow over his appearance.

Even as Obama spoke, House Speaker John Boehner, the top Republican in Congress, accused him of offering "little more than the same stimulus policies that have failed to fix our economy and put Americans back to work."

Boehner's comments came in a statement that was issued while Obama was still delivering his address and the speaker was sitting behind him, at times scowling. "The president had an opportunity to offer a solution tonight and he let it slip by," Boehner said in his statement.

NARROW WINDOW OF OPPORTUNITY

The clock is now ticking on Obama. He has about a year to get his legislative priorities enacted before Americans shift attention to the 2014 congressional elections.

Obama reserved his toughest words to urge a resolution to a festering budget battle that will result in automatic, deep spending cuts known as "sequestration" at the end of the month unless a deal can be reached.

Americans, he said, do not expect government to solve every problem, "but they do expect us to put the nation's interests before party. They do expect us to forge reasonable compromises where we can."

Many of his proposals may face a difficult path getting through Congress. He proposed raising the U.S. minimum wage for workers from $7.25 to $9 an hour. Republicans typically oppose increases in the minimum wage out of worry it will prompt businesses to fire workers.

He backed a $50 billion program to fund infrastructure rebuilding projects like fixing aging bridges, but many Republicans are adamantly against such stimulative government spending after Obama's first-term $787 billion stimulus did not lead to a dramatic reversal in the unemployment rate.

"Our economy is adding jobs, but too many people still can't find full-time employment," he said. "Corporate profits have rocketed to all-time highs, but for more than a decade, wages and incomes have barely budged."

Obama said that to offset the cuts he would like to raise $800 billion in revenue by eliminating tax loopholes enjoyed mostly by the wealthiest Americans.

It is a proposal Boehner backed before he reluctantly agreed instead to higher income tax rates on the richest to avert a fiscal crisis at the end of 2012. Republicans are in no mood for more tax increases and want spending cuts instead.

Florida Senator Marco Rubio, a rising Republican star who could run for president in 2016, accused Obama of being too fond of big government.

"I hope the president will abandon his obsession with raising taxes and instead work with us to achieve real growth in our economy," Rubio said in the formal Republican response to Obama's speech.

GUN REGULATIONS

Creating an emotional ending to his speech, Obama called on Congress to vote on measures to expand background checks, prevent gun trafficking, ban assault weapons and limit the size of magazines, saying victims deserved to have their elected officials vote on the proposals.

"They deserve a vote," Obama said, calling out the names of communities scarred by massacres, Newtown, Aurora, Oak Creek, Tucson, Blacksburg. "They deserve a vote."

Obama and Vice President Joe Biden have been trying to build public support for gun control after 20 children were shot in their school in Newtown, a day Obama has described as the worst of his presidency.

But they face an uphill battle against a powerful pro-gun lobby and a strong U.S. tradition of hunting and gun ownership. The right to bear arms is guaranteed to Americans in the U.S. Constitution.

Obama urged lawmakers to approve over the next few months an overhaul of immigration laws to permit a pathway to citizenship for some 11 million illegal immigrants. Republicans who saw Hispanics overwhelmingly vote for Obama over Republican challenger Mitt Romney last November are more open to new immigration rules but want stronger border security first.

In a nod to Republican worries over what they see as out-of-control government spending on entitlement programs for the elderly and poor, Obama said he would back efforts to reduce healthcare spending by the same amount over a decade as proposed by a bipartisan commission whose recommendations he had rejected.

Saying the 12 hottest years on record have taken place in the last 15, Obama vowed to take action to confront climate change through presidential executive orders unless Congress enacts legislation.

While heavily focused on domestic policies, Obama's speech had some crucial foreign policy elements.

He outlined steps to unwind U.S. involvement in the unpopular 11-year-old Afghanistan war and plans to announce that 34,000 of the 66,000 U.S. troops still there will return by early 2014.

He did not give details of what sort of residual American presence might remain in Afghanistan after 2014, when the U.S. withdrawal is supposed to be complete.

Obama's speech came a day after North Korea conducted its third underground test of a nuclear device in response to what it called U.S. hostility.

"Provocations of the sort we saw last night will only isolate them further, as we stand by our allies, strengthen our own missile defense and lead the world in taking firm action in response to these threats," he said.

Obama said the United States would enter into negotiations with the European Union aimed at reaching a transatlantic free trade agreement.

(Additional reporting by Mark Felsenthal, Tabassum Zakaria and John Whitesides; Editing by Alistair Bell and Jim Loney)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/obama-challenge-divided-congress-back-proposals-013016252.html

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Wednesday, February 13, 2013

Pebble CEO: ?I Can?t Comment? On Whether Apple Interested in Acquisition

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Source: http://www.technobuffalo.com/2013/02/12/apple-pebble-acquisition-ceo-iwatch/

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Artificial atoms allow for magnetic resonance on individual cells

Tuesday, February 12, 2013

Researchers from the Institute of Photonic Sciences (ICFO), in collaboration with the CSIC and Macquarie University in Australia, have developed a new technique, similar to the MRI but with a much higher resolution and sensitivity, which has the ability to scan individual cells. In an article published in Nature Nanotech, and highlighted by Nature, ICFO Prof. Romain Quidant explains how this was accomplished using artificial atoms, diamond nanoparticles doped with nitrogen impurity, to probe very weak magnetic fields such as those generated in some biological molecules.

The conventional MRI registers the magnetic fields of atomic nuclei in our bodies which have been previously excited by an external electromagnetic field. The collective response of all of these atoms makes it possible to diagnose and monitor the evolution of certain diseases. However, this conventional technique has a diagnostic resolution on a millimetric scale. Smaller objects do not give enough signal to be measured.

The innovative technique proposed by the group led by Dr. Quidant significantly improves the resolution at the nanometer scale (nearly one million times smaller than the millimeter), making it possible to measure very weak magnetic fields, such as those created by proteins. "Our approach opens the door for the performance of magnetic resonances on isolated cells which will offer new sources of information and allow us to better understand the intracellular processes, enabling noninvasive diagnosis," explains Michael Geiselmann, ICFO researcher who conducted the experiment. Until now, it has only been possible to reach this resolution in the laboratory, using individual atoms at temperatures close to the absolute zero (approx. -273 degrees Celsius.)

Individual atoms are structures that are highly sensitive to their environment, with a great ability to detect nearby electromagnetic fields. The challenge these atoms present is that they are so small and volatile that in order to be manipulated, they must be cooled to temperatures near the absolute zero. This complex process requires an environment that is so restrictive that it makes individual atoms unviable for potential medical applications. Artificial atoms used by Quidant and his team are formed by a nitrogen impurity captured within a small diamond crystal. "This impurity has the same sensitivity as an individual atom but is very stable at room temperature due to its encapsulation. This diamond shell allows us to handle the nitrogen impurity in a biological environment and, therefore, enables us to scan cells" argues Dr. Quidant.

To trap and manipulate these artificial atoms, researchers use laser light. The laser works like tweezers, leading the atoms above the surface of the object to study and extract information from its tiny magnetic fields.

The emergence of this new technique could revolutionize the field of medical imaging, allowing for substantially higher sensitivity in clinical analysis, an improved capacity for early detection of diseases, and thus a higher probability for successful treatment.

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ICFO-The Institute of Photonic Sciences: http://www.icfo.es

Thanks to ICFO-The Institute of Photonic Sciences for this article.

This press release was posted to serve as a topic for discussion. Please comment below. We try our best to only post press releases that are associated with peer reviewed scientific literature. Critical discussions of the research are appreciated. If you need help finding a link to the original article, please contact us on twitter or via e-mail.

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Source: http://www.labspaces.net/126731/Artificial_atoms_allow_for_magnetic_resonance_on_individual_cells

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Shoot an Email, Save Thousands: The Best Advice I Can Give You ...

Posted on | February 13, 2013 | No Comments

Screen Shot 2013-02-13 at 10.15.23 AM

Just click send.

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Trademark issues are becoming the single most popular legal topic amongst breweries. I hear the gripe in brewer meetings, client calls and publications across the web. The world of beer is shrinking and the pool of names is shrinking.

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Do we have enough words left to continue naming beer creatively? Should we just stick with descriptive monikers like IPA, Pale, ESB and so on? I say nay to the latter. Brewer creativity is at all time high as we are seeing more new styles, style-less beers, and blended concoctions each day. So keep this creativity rolling and let?s figure out a better way to handle it.

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Here are a few things that you need to know about beer trademarks:

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  • The US Patent and Trademark Office no longer distinguishes between beer, wine and spirits. In the past, someone could get a TM registered for ?rickshaw? in all three classes. Nowadays, as the disappointing Black Raven/Ravenswood action taught us, the USPTO considers each of these classes ?related products? and that a mark in one class will likely cause confusion with the same mark in another class. So, if you find a wine or liquor brandishing your name ? it is best to look elsewhere.?

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  • If you are in the clear, you need to register quickly. The law allows a person to file for registration before even using the mark, by filing a 1(b) application with an intent to use the mark. By law, you are entitled to file a total of five (5) individual six (6) month extensions (a total of 30 months) to show the USPTO that you are indeed selling a product using the mark in interstate commerce (better find your favorite over the border store!).

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And now for my best advice. This advice can save you thousands of dollars someday ? and lawyers might hate me for it. ?If you have a dispute over a mark that you want to use, or that you currently own, here is what you do: TALK. DON?T SUE. The brewery community is a tight one, even though it continues to grow every day. By simply shooting an email to someone who has a potential right in the mark ? or a potentially conflicting use ? you can save thousands of dollars, months of time, and respect in the brewery community. Heck, some breweries have even turned these conversations into a collaborative, and very profitable, brew.

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There is a time to file a lawsuit to enforce your trademark rights ? and it is nowhere near the time you first learn of a potential problem. ?Breweries are pulling the trigger on a legal letter from their lawyers way too early these days. There is always an?opportunity?to resolve the dispute well before the letter goes out. Once the legal letter goes out, you immediately put the recipient on the defensive. So please offer an olive branch first, before you pull out the guns.

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Your attorney should be more than willing to help you come up with the right words to say in your initial discussion ? it just does not have to come on their letterhead.

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Comments

Source: http://brewerylaw.com/2013/02/shoot-an-email-save-thousands-the-best-advice-i-can-give-you-about-your-trademark-issue/

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G7 fires currency warning shot, Japan sanguine

LONDON/TOKYO (Reuters) - Group of Seven nations reiterated their commitment on Tuesday to market-determined exchange rates and said fiscal and monetary policies must not be directed at devaluing currencies.

The intervention follows a round of rhetoric about currency wars, prompted largely by Japan's new government pressing for an aggressive expansion of monetary policy, which has seen the yen weaken sharply as a result.

The statement said the G7 powers - the United States, Britain, France, Germany, Japan, Canada and Italy - had agreed to consult closely on exchange rates which if allowed to move in a disorderly fashion could hurt economic and financial stability.

"We reaffirm that our fiscal and monetary policies have been and will remain oriented towards meeting our respective domestic objectives using domestic instruments, and that we will not target exchange rates," said the statement, released by Britain which chairs the G8 (G7 plus Russia) forum this year.

Despite that, there is little suggestion that Tokyo is going to come under serious pressure when G20 finance ministers and central bankers meet in Moscow at the end of the week, not least because the United States is indulging in similar policies.

Japanese Finance Minister Taro Aso welcomed the statement, saying it recognized Tokyo's policy steps were not aimed at affecting foreign exchange markets.

"It was meaningful for us as (the G7) properly recognizes that steps we are taking to beat deflation are not aimed at influencing currency markets," Aso told reporters.

U.S. Treasury official Lael Brainard said on Monday that while competitive devaluations should be avoided, Washington supported Tokyo's efforts to reinvigorate growth and end deflation.

The dollar edged up to 94.21 yen, from around 94.16 yen before the statement was issued.

WORDS NOT ACTION

U.S. and European officials have been concerned about comments from Japanese officials that suggest Tokyo is targeting a specific level for the yen.

Last week, France went as far as calling for a medium-term target to be set for the euro out of concern the exchange rate had become too strong. Berlin rejected that suggestion and said it did not view the currency as being overvalued.

French Finance Minister Pierre Moscovici made little headway at a meeting of euro zone finance ministers on Monday.

Since late last year, the euro has climbed more than 10 cents from below $1.27 before subsiding in recent days after European Central Bank chief Mario Draghi indulged in a bit of gentle verbal intervention, saying he would monitor the impact of a strengthening currency.

The U.S. Federal Reserve and Bank of Japan are expanding their balance sheets rapidly by printing money, while the ECB's balance sheet is tightening, partly due to banks paying back early cheap money the central bank doled out last year.

All else being equal, that could drive the euro yet higher, the last thing a struggling euro zone economy needs.

Any pain will be just as acute in emerging markets.

As newly minted cash pours into developing economies in search of higher yields, either their exchange rates will rise, making exports less competitive, or they will have to cut interest rates and/or intervene to hold down their currencies.

That could fuel credit and asset price booms that sow the seeds of inflation.

Brazilian Finance Minister Guido Mantega told Reuters last week that it could get even worse if Europe joins the fray.

(Writing by Mike Peacock. Editing by Jeremy Gaunt.)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/g7-reaffirms-commitment-market-exchange-rates-102343085--sector.html

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Why Lady Gaga postponed her next four concerts

Lady Gaga tweeted her fans with disappointing news: The next four concerts in her "Born This Way Ball" tour will be rescheduled for an unknown future date.

By Associated Press / February 12, 2013

Lady Gaga, seen here at Newark's Prudential Center in December, announced today that she's taking a few days off from performing.

Evan Agostini / Invision / AP / File

Enlarge

Lady?Gaga?says she's "heartsick" to postpone four shows after sustaining an injury that's left her unable to walk.

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A Tuesday news release says performances set for Feb. 13-14 in Chicago, Feb. 16 in Detroit and Feb. 17 in Hamilton, Ontario, Canada, have been postponed.

Gaga?took to Twitter to explain, saying she injured herself during a performance some time ago and her condition has worsened, leaving her immobile following Monday's concert in Montreal. She's been hiding the injury from her staff, but can no longer perform.

"I've been hiding a show injury and chronic pain for sometime now, over the last month it has worsened," she wrote. "I've been praying it would heal".

Neither?Lady?Gaga?nor the news release specifies what the injury is. The remainder of the "Born This Way Ball" tour is expected to continue on schedule, beginning with a two-night stand in Philadelphia on Feb. 19-20. Makeup dates for the missed shows will be announced later.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/60qYt2IfZb0/Why-Lady-Gaga-postponed-her-next-four-concerts

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