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To: Brumar89 who wrote (39138)2/15/2013 10:57:16 AM
From: FJB2 Recommendations  Respond to of 85487
 
Court ruling ‘bad news’ for internet companies

ft.com

By Bede McCarthy, Technology Correspondent

February 14, 2013 8:04 pm


The High Court has said Google and its peers can be held responsible for defamatory comments posted on their websites in a ruling described as “bad news” for internet companies.

The judgment, made in response to a defamation claim appeal, means companies which receive complaints about defamatory or offensive content on their websites could have to spend more in order to deal with them in a timely manner.


The complaint relates to eight comments posted on a blog titled “London Muslim”, which was hosted by Google’s free Blogger service. Payam Tamiz was seeking a libel claim against Google over the comments, which were posted in April 2011 and removed in August 2011 by the blog owner after a complaint was made via Google.

Although Lord Justice Richards and Lord Justice Sullivan agreed with the original ruling that Google was not a primary or secondary publisher of the content it hosted, they said it was “at least arguable that some point after notification Google became liable for continued publication of the material”.

The Lords Justice likened the situation to a 1930s court case in which a golf club was held responsible for defamatory material left on its noticeboard because it failed to remove it after it was notified.

Ian De Freitas, a commercial litigator at Berwin Leighton Paisner, said the ruling was bad news for internet companies, which have argued they are more like telecoms operators that provide connections but are not responsible for what passes through it. “It’s a fairly big deal because what Google were trying to confirm is that on their site they could never be a publisher of defamatory content, and that’s the point that they’ve lost on.”

However, the court denied Mr Tamiz’s claim because there was insufficient evidence the comments were seen by enough people in the UK to justify defamation.

A spokesman for Google said: “Services like Blogger help users to express themselves and share different points of view. Where content is illegal or violates our terms of service we will continue to remove it.”

The judgment sits in contrast with US law, where Google is not considered a publisher of third party content hosted on Blogger.


Mr Freitas said policing comments would be a headache for small businesses and internet start-ups, which usually have some element of user generated content.

“It means they have to be careful about checking these things and spend time and money doing it.”



To: Brumar89 who wrote (39138)2/15/2013 4:03:48 PM
From: FJB1 Recommendation  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 85487
 
Administration Will Spend $1.8B to Build 20-Mile Railroad in Hawaii

15 February 2013 / 100 Comments



The Department of Transportation (DOT) announced that $1.55 billion in new federal tax dollars will be allocated for the first-ever Hawaiian Transit Rail system on the island of Oahu, which will serve downtown Honolulu, at a total federal and state cost of $5.1 billion.

The train circuit will be 20 miles long, with 21 stops on an island that is 30 miles wide.

The transit system will span from the lesser populated island area of Kapolei, and will end at Ala Moana Center Station, approximately 1-3 miles from the University of Hawaii and Punahou School, the high school once attended by President Obama.

The most recent DOT announcement brings the total amount of federal funds going to the Rail project to just under $1.8 billion. Funding will not been given in a single appropriation, but will instead be doled out in increments over the coming fiscal years.

An additional $4 million has been obligated from the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (the “stuimulus”), and $209.9 million is coming from other sources within the DOT. Both the $1.55 billion and the $209.9 million are proposed funding plans, and will be contingent upon future appropriations from Congress.

Read More: cnsnews.com

Read more: minutemennews.com



To: Brumar89 who wrote (39138)2/15/2013 8:21:15 PM
From: Wharf Rat  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 85487
 
Maybe you didn't understand what you didn't understand.

Hippie Culture Just Keeps Truckin' On




By Oliver Libaw
May 23

The Grateful Dead are gone, (sorta.. furthur.net ), the original Woodstock is ancient history, but the hippie movement just keeps truckin' on.

In one corner of New York's Central Park last weekend, it looked like 1969 never left, as the New York Rainbow held its local "Gathering of the Tribes," complete with a drum circle, incense, and 150-odd people sporting the shoeless, tie-dyed look that is synonymous with hippie culture.

"We're everywhere," Aron Kay, the "Yippie Pie Man," said with a grin as he listened to eight drummers pound out a syncopated rhythm.

"We're still everywhere."

Kay has been an activist and self-proclaimed hippie since the mid 1960s, and he says the movement is still alive and well.

Although most will admit hippies' ranks have thinned considerably since its 1960s and 1970s heyday, there are still thousands of flower children in America.

There are few hard statistics on the number of new and aging Aquarians, and estimates vary wildly.

As many as 50 million Americans are broadly sympathetic to hippie values, say Paul Ray, a business consultant, and Sherry Anderson, a psychologist, in their 2000 book The Cultural Creatives.

"I'd have to say it's somewhere down around 5 to 10 percent [of the general population]," says Albert Bates, a New York University Law School graduate who has lived at The Farm, a several-hundred-member commune in Tennessee, since 1972.

Tie-Dyed Diversity

The annual Rainbow Family of Light Gathering of the Tribes draws some 20,000 people for a weeklong backwoods celebration of '60s values.

This year's gathering is expected to draw fewer people, perhaps 15,000 total, due to the group's legal battles over the need for permits for the event. It is scheduled for the first week of July, somewhere in the Great Lakes Region.

Last week's New York Rainbow gathering was an offshoot of the main, national event.

Attendees come from every age group and diverse background, says Rob Savoye, a computer programmer, former Deadhead, and Rainbow Family Gathering regular.

"You would be amazed at the diversity," he says. "You'd meet all these young kids with dreadlocks in a drum circle with their dogs, but you could also meet vice presidents of finance."

"There's a small collection of graybeard types like us," he says, but most Rainbow-goers are under 25.

The Rainbow Gathering is not the only evidence of the modern America's tie-dyed diversity.

Hundreds of communes still operate around the United States, says Tim Miller, a sociologist at the University of Kansas. He estimates there are "hundreds of thousands or millions" of hippies in the country today.

The Hippy.com Web site identifies "hippie havens" in 39 states, including not just New York, Oregon and California, but also Alaska, Hawaii and Arkansas.

Tie-Dyed Diehards

For Savoye and many other original members of the 1960s counterculture, the values and attitudes of the period have never left.

The underground mores of the Beat Movement spread to young people across the country with the explosion of rock music, drugs, and the divisiveness of the Vietnam War, experts say.

Other elements such as the introduction of the birth-control pill, the civil rights movement, and the beginnings of the popular environmental movement contributed to the cultural shift.

"You had this convergence right at this point," says Bates.

The size of the Baby Boom generation that came of age in the 1960s and '70s also helped cement the place of hippies in American culture, he suggests.

Hippie Values Still Hit Home

But most involved in the movement point to a more fundamental reason why the hippie phenomenon has lasted where other cultural trends have faded.

"The reason is that hippie era ideals were very, very sound," says John McCleary, author of the forthcoming Hippie Dictionary. "The whole movement wasn't based completely on sex drugs and rock and roll."

The hippie values of anti-materialism, environmentalism, non-violence, and so on, are both valuable and appealing to a broad range of Americans, McCleary says.

"The truth of the matter is that there are literally millions of people in this country who still live with and are interested in the ideals of the counterculture."

McClearly and others also point to the roots of 1960s counterculture, which they trace back to the "Lost Generation" of the 1920s, Ralph Waldo Emerson, and many other artists and intellectuals from centuries past.

Younger hippies today have embraced different elements of the original movement, and added their own twists.

For many younger scions of the '60s, constantly touring jam bands like Phish, Widespread Panic and String Cheese Incident have taken the place of the Grateful Dead.

Phish — which Rolling Stone called the most important band of the 1990s — disbanded a year and a half ago, but not before spurring another wave of free-form rock musicians to hit the road. Some experts also suggest the drug-friendly dance culture that emerged in the 1990s has roots in the '60s.

Moving to the Mainstream

If hippies have become more restrained in their rejection of mainstream values, it is also true that the mainstream has embraced many elements of 1960s revolution.

Recycling and the organic food movements have roots in the hippie movement, Miller argues, as does the widespread use of illegal drugs and relaxed attitudes towards sex.

The fashion world has repeatedly tapped into flower power for inspiration, too. This year, style writers across the country trumpeted the return of peasant blouses, crochet work, ponchos and hip-hugging bellbottoms.

"American youths' relentless hunt for fads has unlocked the 1960s counterculture," wrote the Knoxville News-Sentinel last month. "Knoxville teens and 'tweens have embraced it — faded jeans, tie-dye, incense, hemp belts, Grateful Dead and all."

Today's hippies aren't that different from those 30 years ago, says Bates.

"They know how to stay out of trouble better," he says.

"On the other hand, they still freak freely."
abcnews.go.com