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Thursday, January 13, 2011

British police know location of WikiLeaks' founder Julian Assange: report - Christian Science Monitor

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Police in Britain know WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange’s whereabouts in the country, but have not acted on an international arrest warrant for him, a British newspaper reported Thursday.

The enigmatic figure, whose organization is in the midst of releasing some 250,000 secret US diplomatic cables that have been embarrassing to the US and, according to some, could damage diplomatic relations around the world, is wanted in Sweden for questioning on rape allegations. Mr. Assange has been absent from public view for nearly a month.

In a statement on its website Dec. 1, the international police organization Interpol said that it had put out a "red notice" for Mr. Assange on Nov. 20 to all 188 member countries. The red notice was only made public this week, however, following official authorization by Sweden, Interpol said.

A red notice is not itself an arrest warrant, but a notification that a warrant exists in one country and that that country will seek extradition of the suspect if arrested, as The Christian Science Monitor reported Tuesday. Some nations treat the notice as request for an arrest.

British newspaper The Independent reported today that police in Britain are “fully aware” of where Assange is staying, but have not authorized his arrest because officials are seeking “clarification” about his Swedish arrest warrant. Assange gave the police contact information when he moved to Britain in October, and Scotland Yard has been in touch with his attorneys for a month, reports the paper. He is believed to be in southeast England.

But unnamed sources told The Independent that Britain’s Serious Organized Crime Agency (SOCA) wants more information on the European Arrest Warrant issued for him by Swedish prosecutors. The Independent describes the warrant as using a “fast-track system for arresting suspects within the EU.”

MSNBC reports that according to Scotland Yard, “Swedish authorities need to issue a European arrest warrant – which is executable in the UK – before Assange can be arrested.”

The revelation comes as circumstances are already looking grim for Assange. On Thursday a Swedish court rejected his attempt to appeal his detention order in Sweden, reports the BBC. He had attempted to appeal court rulings allowing his arrest warrant to be issued. He has not been charged in the alleged rape, sexual molestation, and coercion but is wanted for questioning.

And the Associated Press reported Wednesday that Amazon.com refused to continue hosting WikiLeaks on its servers, and those who run the site were forced to move it back to a Swedish host. The website came under cyber attacks as it released the secret diplomatic cables, causing it to be unavailable at times. Amazon’s decision came after US senators contacted the company about the issue, according to the AP. White House spokesman Robert Gibbs has also said the US may want to prosecute Assange for violating secrecy laws or espionage.

Assange’s lawyers have denied the charges against him, and said Swedish authorities have ignored his requests for a meeting. People close to Assange have said he has been subject to death threats. And his mother recently defended him, saying much of what had been written about him is untrue, and he is merely “fighting baddies,” reported The Christian Science Monitor.

But the diplomatic cables released by WikiLeaks are causing concern in the international community, with some saying they will have far-reaching damage on diplomatic relations. The Monitor reports that US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton called the release “an attack on the international community.”

… Secretary Clinton said that both the furthering of US national interests and the operation of the world’s international political system depend on thousands of confidential exchanges, assessments, and conversations every day.

Far from being a “laudable” effort to make the workings of government transparent, the leaking of classified cables, she said, can have a chilling effect on such US foreign policy goals as the promotion of human rights or expansion of religious freedoms by discouraging the foreign proponents of those goals from working with the US.

The Monitor reports the released cables are unlikely to “lead to any significant geopolitical shifts or fundamental reworkings of US relations with other countries,” but may have a negative impact on the US diplomatic corps in its ability to have open conversations with their counterparts in foreign governments.


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In battle of iPad vs. Android-based Galaxy Tab, 85% prefer Apple - Apple Insider

In battle of iPad vs. Android-based Galaxy Tab, 85% prefer Apple

By Neil Hughes

Published: 07:55 AM EST

A new consumer poll pitting the Samsung Galaxy Tab against the iPad discovered that an overwhelming majority -- 85 percent -- prefer Apple's touchscreen tablet.

Analyst Gene Munster with Piper Jaffray revealed the results of a survey he and his team recently conducted. The Galaxy Tab got off to a relatively strong start, selling 600,000 worldwide in its first month of availability.

In the survey of 65 consumers, customers were asked to share what they believe the "perceived value" of each tablet is. Those polled indicated they felt the 3G-capable iPad is worth about $417 -- less than its actual price of $629, but also much higher than the $283 perceived value of the Galaxy Tab.

The survey indicates that customers believe both products should have lower prices, but also shows that respondents felt that the iPad is a product of more valuable than the Android-based Galaxy Tab.

"We note that the Galaxy Tab is not available in a Wi-Fi only model, which would compare to the Wi-Fi only iPad at $499," Munster wrote. "That said, we would expect the results of a similar survey conducted with the less expensive Wi-Fi only iPad to amplify the difference in perceived value relative to the MSRP. In other words, the perceived value of an iPad is actually slightly closer to its base-MSRP than our survey suggests."

Munster said he expects both the iPad and Android-based tablets to succeed, but Apple has the advantage of a head start. He has forecast that the tablet market will grow 205 percent year over year in calendar year 2011, hitting 44.2 million units.

He has predicted that Apple will sell 13 million iPads in calendar year 2010, representing an 89 percent market share. But Apple's share is projected to dip to 53 percent in calendar year 2011, with sales of 23.3 million units. He sees Android taking a 33 percent share, with 14.4 million total units.

Piper

Munster has referred to the iPad as the "Mac of the masses," as Apple's tablet is already outselling the Mac. After tracking sales on Black Friday last week, Piper Jaffray found that consumer interest in the iPad was significantly strong for the holidays.





Apple shows interest in individually lit, multi-color keyboard backlights
In battle of iPad vs. Android-based Galaxy Tab, 85% prefer Apple
Old Navy piloting Apple's iOS EasyPay retail software
Apple TV users reporting long rental wait times, HDMI issues
BBC to launch global subscription TV app for iPad
Verizon 4G LTE launches Sunday with high-speed plans starting at $50
Global mobile split between Apple's iOS and Symbian
Women want Apple's iPhone, men prefer Google Android, Nielsen finds
Users complain of sound issues with Apple's 27-inch Cinema Display
RIM's BlackBerry overtakes Apple's iPhone in US browser usage
Google nearly ready to challenge Apple, Amazon with e-bookstore
iOS 4.2 supports technology for reducing network congestion
Apple patents show convertible tablet, MagSafe optical data connector
Apple Global Data Center Director Olivier Sanche dies at 41
Apple amends iOS Game Center to use real names in invites
Amazon Kindle 'rapidly' losing e-reader market share to Apple's iPad
Insurance company claims Apple's 'dangerous' MagSafe started fire
Richard Branson's 'Project' debuts on iPad, Infinity Blade coming Dec. 9
PCWorld reliability survey: Apple 'smoked the competition'
Camera lens supplier selected for Apple's second-generation iPad - rumor
Softbank to offer fully subsidized iPad in Japan with 25-month contract
Windows Phone 7 developers fear platform flop
Microsoft to respond to new Apple TV with Xbox-based service - report
Tablets like Apple's iPad expected to 'displace' 10% of PCs in 2014
Cyber Monday: Apple's sale, $110 off MacBook Airs, Office for $80, Fusion for $18
IDC: Android poised to pass Apple's iOS, Nokia's Symbian in Europe
As world's most-sued tech company, Apple is forced to 'lawyer up'
Apple's 11-inch MacBook Airs 'flying off the shelves' alongside iPad
Apple iPhone user loyalty twice that of Android
Deep hardware discounts suggest sluggish sales of Google TV
Sony adopts, then drops, Cocoa-like GNUStep plans to rival Apple iOS
Apple iPad widely expected to lead tablet disruption of PCs in 2011
Black Friday Macs: Save up to $130 on MacBook Airs, $150 on MacBooks, $270 on MacBook Pros, $180 on iMacs, $100 on Mac minis and $400 on Mac Pros
Black Friday Software: 80% off Adobe CS5, Office 2011 for $89, Final Cut Studio for $799
Black Friday Electronics: AirPrint-ready printers, Apple accessories, and digital cameras
Black Friday iOS devices: Apple TV for $79.99, 8GB iPod touches for $199.99
Apple nabs HP's former 98 acre campus in Cupertino
Apple resellers launch early Black Friday sales: up to $150 off MacBooks, $270 off MacBook Pros, $180 off iMacs, $100 off MacBook Airs
Early Black Friday: Apple TV for $79.99, Office 2011 for $89.99, VMWare Fusion for $27.99
Apple posts Black Friday deals [u]



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Google Editions: a history of ebooks - Telegraph.co.uk

1971: Michael Hart launches Project Gutenberg, a volunteer scheme to create digital copies of cultural works to add to an archive.

1993: A company, Digital Book Inc, offers customers a floppy disk containing 50 ebooks encoded in the Digital Book Format (.dbf) format.

1995: Amazon starts selling printed books online, and soon comes to dominate the market.

1996: Project Gutenberg announces that it has digitised 1,000 books. Its target is one million titles.

1998: Some of the first ebook readers are launched, including the Rocket eBook, SoftBook, and they Cybook.

1999: Several online retailers start selling ebooks, such as eReader.com and eReads.com.

2000: Microsoft releases Microsoft Reader, dedicated ebook reading software. It could be used on Windows computers and PocketPCs, and used ClearType technology to ensure the type was legible on small devices.

2000: Stephen King’s Riding the Bullet is offered in a digital format, to read on a computer.

2002: Publishers Random House and HarperCollins sell digital versions of some titles.

2004: Google Print and Google Book Search, which would later become known as Google Books, are announced at the Frankfurt book fair.

2005: Amazon acquires Mobipocket, a software company that built ebook reading software for portable devices.

2006: Sony launches its first Reader ebook reading device, with eInk technology.

2007: Amazon unveils the Kindle, a dedicted ebook reader that can download ebooks over Wi-Fi or the mobile network from the Amazon website.

2008: BooksOnBoard starts to sell ebooks for Apple’s iPhone.

2009: Amazon launches the Kindle 2 and the Kindle DX, while Barnes & Noble unveils the Nook.

2010: Apple launches the iPad, complete with iBooks ebook reading software. It also launches the iBookstore, a virtual bookstore selling ebook downloads.

2010: Amazon announces that ebook sales have outnumbered hardcover sales for the first time ever.


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Mixed Reaction to FCC Internet Plan - New York Times

WASHINGTON — The plan from the chairman of the Federal Communications Commission to ensure an open and neutral Internet drew mixed reviews on Wednesday from consumer advocates and Internet service providers, presenting the agency with an uncertain way forward as it considers new broadband regulation.

The proposal, by Julius Genachowski, would forbid both wired and wireless Internet service providers from blocking lawful content. It would also require broadband Internet service providers to give consumers basic information about how the companies manage their networks and would forbid discrimination in transmitting lawful content.

But it relies in part on a novel legal interpretation of how much authority the agency has over the Internet, one that some critics think is almost certain to invite Congressional opposition and court challenges. And it drew lukewarm support from one of the most important voices in the debate, Michael J. Copps, an F.C.C. commissioner, who has advocated stricter regulation and whose vote the chairman will need in order to get an order approved by a majority vote of the five-member commission.

“It’s no secret that I am looking for the strongest protections we can get to preserve an open Internet, built on the most secure legal foundation, so we don’t find ourselves in court every other month,” Mr. Copps said. Noting that this is only the beginning of discussion about the proposal, which is likely to change before it becomes final, Mr. Copps added: “At issue is who will control access to the online experiences of consumers — consumers themselves or Big Phone and Big Cable gatekeepers.”

The proposal received strong support from prominent venture capitalists in Silicon Valley, and there was both praise and complaint among companies that would be affected. The wireless phone company Sprint said that it “commends the F.C.C. for the careful and deliberate approach it has taken on this issue.”

Verizon, the nation’s largest wireless phone company, was less impressed. Thomas J. Tauke, a Verizon executive vice president said, “The F.C.C.’s authority to act in this area is uncertain, and Congress has indicated a strong interest in addressing this issue.” Mr. Tauke said any new rules should be temporary, which would “encourage Congressional action, while showing appropriate deference to Congress.”

In aiming to enforce the nondiscrimination and no-blocking rules, which together make up a concept known as net neutrality, Mr. Genachowski is wading back into an area where a federal appeals court said in April that the agency has limited authority.

Because broadband service is classified as a loosely regulated information service, the F.C.C. had to prove that any regulation of it supported an expressly designated power of the agency, something that the court said the F.C.C. had failed to do.

Now, Mr. Genachowski thinks he has found a way around the court’s ruling, according to a senior F.C.C. official, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because the chairman’s proposal was subject to change.

The official said that the proposal relied in part on what is known as the F.C.C.’s Section 706 authority, which requires that the commission report to Congress each year whether broadband service is being deployed to all Americans in a reasonable and timely manner, and if not, to take steps to make it so.

In July, after the commission issued its National Broadband Plan, it cited that report’s finding that roughly 14 million Americans do not have broadband Internet service as evidence that broadband is not being adequately deployed.

Therefore, the official said, it is within the F.C.C.’s power to take steps that will promote the spread of broadband. Putting so-called net neutrality rules in place would help ensure that content providers can reach Internet users, which will increase the output of Internet companies, thereby increasing demand for Internet services and increasing deployment of broadband service.

There are problems with that theory, said Aparna Sridhar, policy counsel for Free Press, a nonprofit group that supports net neutrality rules. Among them, the F.C.C. has to make a Section 706 report to Congress each year. That need for annual reconsideration might not provide the certainty that Internet companies need to encourage them to commit the capital to produce new innovations, she said.


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Bruno Mars Thrilled By Seven Grammy Nominations - MTV.com

Each year, the Grammy Awards not only serve to recognize the best achievements in music over the past year but also help to elevate certain artists from unknowns to stars and from successes into household names. The latter will probably be true of Bruno Mars once the awards are handed out in February, as the singer and producer was nominated for a total of seven awards during Wednesday night's "Grammy Nominations Concert Live!" show.

Mars scored a handful of nominations as a performer for his vocal stylings on the chart-topping B.o.B track "Nothin' on You" and also picked up several nominations as a member of the Smeezingtons, the writing and production trio that consists of Mars, Philip Lawrence and Ari Levine. The three are responsible for hits like Cee Lo's "F--- You" (which picked up four nominations), and the crew also picked up a nod for Producer of the Year.

The Smeezingtons were rightfully thrilled at the prospect of taking home a load of hardware in February. "We don't know how it feels yet, because we just got the word. We're a little awkward in these situations," Mars admitted to MTV News following the show (in which he also performed live). "But the fact is that we worked so hard this year. In a studio not too far from here, in a little shack, we'd have B.o.B in there writing 'Nothin' on You' with us, or Cee Lo writing 'F--- You' with us. The fact that it's being acknowledged by the Grammys is incredible. It's really making us feel like we did something. We're being acknowledged by the biggest."

As far as which award the group is gunning for, they're open to anything. "I'd like to win Best Dressed," Mars joked. "Maybe Most Humorous. Or Best Kisser!" They also want the world to know that just because their status will become elevated doesn't mean that they're inaccessible.

"The funnest part of our job is that we don't know who we're working with next," Mars told MTV News. "We're fans and students of music, and we just love to work with whoever wants to work, whoever wants to write a song. Rock, hip-hop, R&B — we just want to do music. And we're happy just doing that."

Mars and the Smeezingtons will compete against other heavy hitters like Eminem (10 nominations), Jay-Z (six), Lady Gaga (six) and B.o.B (five) when the Grammys are handed out on Sunday, February 13, 2011.

How many Grammys do you think Bruno Mars will win? Let us know in the comments!


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