Tuesday, February 26, 2013

HBT: Marlins' owner Loria remains clueless

For the first time in months, Jeff Loria met the press. He did so at last night?s Marlins game. Joe Capozzi of the Palm Beach Post has a detailed rundown of the interview. This was a the highlight for me. Loria was asked if he realizes fans hate him:

I have a sense of it. I?m sorry that we?ve built this amazing ballpark and fans are feeling the way they do but we did this for a reason ? we weren?t going anywhere and I think anybody who is a baseball person will realize that after two years that we had, we had to do something. We had to do something quickly and swiftly and bold.

The phrase ?? we?ve built this amazing ballpark and ?? in between ?I?m sorry? and ?fans feeling the way we do? pretty much sums it up. He may have well just called everyone ingrates. Of course he left out the part where those fans (a) paid for the ballpark against their will; (b) were duped into ?a whole new Marlins? thing, complete with all that new merchandise the team sold last year; and (c) were then treated to another talent liquidation.

Beyond that, Loria gives his side of the story regarding Jose Reyes? claim that Loria told him to buy a house in Miami a couple of days before he was traded. He-said-he-said, I suppose.

He also notes that the Marlins will not be making a long term offer to Giancarlo Stanton this season. Which isn?t the most surprising thing in the world given that he?s not yet arbitration eligible. But since this is the Marlins and they?ll trade anyone at anytime, it leaves the door open for him to be traded.

Source: http://hardballtalk.nbcsports.com/2013/02/26/jeff-loria-speaks-unscripted-doesnt-do-too-much-better/related/

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KASS: I Hear Apple Is Going To Announce A ... - Business Insider

Treat this one lightly, but investment manager Doug Kass is floating a rumor that Apple will announce a stock split tomorrow at its shareholders' meeting. Kass is long Apple.

Source: http://www.businessinsider.com/kass-i-hear-apple-is-going-to-announce-a-stock-split-tomorrow-2013-2

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Sunday, February 24, 2013

Merkel visits troops operating Patriots in Turkey

? German Chancellor Angela Merkel is visiting German troops deployed to operate Patriot missile batteries in Turkey.

The Patriots were sent to Turkey, a NATO member, to protect it from spillover from Syria's civil war.

Merkel's two-day visit comes as Turkey grows increasingly frustrated over the slow progress in its bid for European Union membership. Before arriving Sunday, Merkel said she backs opening a new chapter in those stalled talks, despite being skeptical about Turkey's accession.

The chancellor's first stop was Kahramanmaras, some 100 kilometers (60 miles) from the Syrian border, where some 300 German troops are manning two out of six NATO-deployed anti-missile batteries.

Merkel will hold talks with Turkish leaders on Monday. She is accompanied by a delegation of businessmen.

The Associated Press

Source: http://www.utsandiego.com/news/2013/feb/24/merkel-visits-troops-operating-patriots-in-turkey/

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Share With Friends: Share on FacebookTweet ThisPost to Google-BuzzSend on GmailPost to Linked-InSubscribe to This Feed | Rss To Twitter | Politics - Top Stories News, RSS and RSS Feed via Feedzilla.

Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/286859997?client_source=feed&format=rss

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Online Gamer Loses Cyber-Battle Then Accused Of... | Stuff.co.nz

An online gamer is accused of killing his cyber-rival after losing a fantasy game where they were pitted against each other in battle.

The violent blurring of the virtual and real worlds came after the pair had?been?playing an online game, each in his own house kilometres apart.

The Sunday Star-Times cannot reveal the names of the accused killer nor his victim, where the homicide took place or when, because the details may prejudice an eventual trial.

However, police have confirmed they believe the most likely motive for the attack was the game which the pair played in the hours immediately before the attack.

The dead man favoured PC-based role-playing games such as Guild Wars and Oblivion, which create complex fantasy worlds filled with swords and sorcery.

Guild Wars, part of a genre gamers call MMORPG (massively multiplayer online role-playing games), focuses on highly competitive player-versus-player action.

Players can spend considerable time and effort building characters - gaining experience, weaponry, armour and in-game money to become more powerful.

Police believe that after?a dispute arose, the attacker?was so enraged he drove the short distance to the quiet street where his friend lived, and stabbed him repeatedly with a knife.

Despite the apparent link between the killing and the violent video game, Christchurch-based clinical psychologist Craig Prince said there was no evidence violent online games created killers.

"It's often very difficult to pinpoint which variable contributed to these things because people are so complicated," he said. "It's usually that people have some underlying difficulty or problem already and the video game might contribute to the actions, but it's only one thing out of potentially many."

The man has appeared in court charged with murder. His parents would not speak to the Star-Times but an extended family member said: "He's just lovely. It's such a shock... it's obviously the last thing we expected."

The relative, who described the alleged killer as "academic and quiet", confirmed he enjoyed computer games but did not think he had any obsessive gaming tendencies.

His parents were unconcerned about his behaviour in the lead-up to the incident.

"It was just the most regular of nights and there were no warning signs - it was just the hugest shock to everybody," the relative said.

If the gaming link is proved in court, it will put New Zealand on an international stage.

The supposed link between video games and violence, alternatively mooted and refuted in contradictory multiple reports in recent years, resurfaced in the wake of the Sandy Hook Elementary School massacre in Connecticut, in the US.

The parents of the victim were unavailable to comment but colleagues of the dead man said he worked in the IT industry and produced "remarkable" work, while staying totally humble. Workmates described him as "quiet but very, very clever". They confirmed he was an avid gamer.

Adam Lanza, 20, killed 20 children and six staff on December 14 last year. Police said Lanza had dozens of violent video games that he played regularly and they were looking into whether there was a link between the games and the shootings.

- ? Fairfax NZ News

Source: http://www.stuff.co.nz/national/crime/8344250/Accused-killer-first-lost-cyber-battle

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Saturday, February 23, 2013

College students to spend spring break with Horry County's Habitat for Humanity

MYRTLE BEACH, SC (WMBF) ?Students will be volunteering for Habitat for Humanity of Horry County during their spring breaks.

The Collegiate Challenge, Habitat's national alternative break program, has 36 students participating this year.

Visiting from Eastern Kentucky University, Vanderbilt University and Alfred State College during the weeks of March 4-23, the students will help revitalize homes for families who've been in the Habitat for Humanity program for quite some time.

Gail Olive, the Executive Director for Horry County's Habitat for Humanity, says she looks forward to hosting the student volunteers once again.

"Collegiate Challenge provides the students with an opportunity to help build affordable housing in the area," Olive said. "The work they will do during their spring break will have a lasting impact in our community."

The sponsor for the program this year is Ripley's Aquarium, and several local restaurants, churches, and organizations are helping the cause by donating meals to the Collegiate Challenge volunteers. T-Bonz will be providing a lunch each week, while Mellow Mushroom has agreed to donate a dinner.

For more information, visit Habitatmb.org.

If you would like to be a part in hosting and welcoming these students to the community, please send an email to volunteer@habitatmb.org.

Copyright 2013 WMBF News. All rights reserved.

Source: http://conway.wmbfnews.com/news/news/50727-college-students-spend-spring-break-horry-countys-habitat-humanity

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Dot Earth Blog: Exploring Climate Resilience and Energy Sense

I visited Los Angeles this week to discuss new approaches to environmental communication with students and faculty at the Institute of the Environment and Sustainability of the?University of California, Los Angeles. I also joined two of the university?s professors ? the climate scientist Alex Hall and the environmental historian Jon Christensen ? for an onstage Z?calo Public Square discussion of this question: ?Should we just adapt to climate change?? (The answer of course is?drumroll?no.)

I encourage you to watch the conversation above. I?ve had time to transcribe a few sections, which are appended below, but wanted first to summarize an important point made by Hall, who has been using models to project regional temperature shifts for the Los Angeles region.

Hall said that by mid-century the region may see 4 to 5 degrees F. of warming ? as well as more frequent stretches of dangerously hot summer days ? under a ?business as usual? emissions trajectory. But even in an idealized (i.e., impossible) future in which worldwide greenhouse-gas emissions were somehow deeply curtailed, the city would still see 70 percent of that warming. Only late in the century would the unabated gas buildup cause a much bigger regional heating.

A central take-home message, he said (and I agreed), is that adaptation to heat is a prime imperative even as the much tougher task of moving beyond conventional use of fossil fuels is pursued.

There were great questions on a host of fronts, with several attendees focusing on oil ? both through the debate over the proposed Keystone XL pipeline and the growing recognition that California, which for a century has been an oil producer, is poised for a huge expansion of drilling for both oil and natural gas in the state?s Monterey shale deposits.

Here?s part of what I said on Keystone:

On the Keystone fight, essentially I?ve been saying ? not quite to the extent Joe Nocera said in The Times a couple of days ago when he called the protests ?boneheaded,? which I think was not productive ? I have been among those who?ve said you look at the global oil market and you realize that as long as the oil price is somewhere around $100 a barrel we will be going to the ends of the Earth the dirtiest possible places, to get the last drop. Of course now we won?t have to because California is going to be the next shale oil bonanza. [There were boos, and I stressed I was merely noting the reality, not endorsing it.] Maybe the Alberta tar sands won?t look so attractive. What I?m saying is it?s high demand that drives the oil-extraction imperative. Until you start to do the things we?ve been talking about to cut demand, you can blockade a certain pipeline or whatever but that oil will out?. It?ll be Nigeria or the Arctic if it?s not Alberta. So that gets me in trouble. So there?s a lot of yelling. The whole climate debate for years has been this yelling match. ?Yelling Fire on a Hot Planet,? remember the piece I wrote in 2006.

As I did the other day, I described the excitement surrounding an engineering contest I judged this week in which middle-school students from around the country presented their sustainable and energy-smart urban designs:

On Monday, I was in Washington, D.C., at a meeting that was part of National Engineers Week and these young people from around the country ? middle school students ? came for the finals of this big Future City Competition. These kids had to build model cities, very detailed, with water catchment areas for storm water, water filtration, thinking about fire hazards. They were building Indian cities, some did a city in Norway, some did Phoenix. Instead of yelling, I heard cheering. It?s so great. It?s so much more powerful.

A question was posed about the extensive and decades-old oil fields in neighborhoods near the Culver City venue for the talk, and the prospect for hydraulic fracturing, or fracking, expanding there and elsewhere in the state.

I said the newly appreciated reality that oil and gas are here for decades to come required that President Obama step beyond his ?all of the above? energy strategy and craft policies that ensure we keep advancing post-fossil energy technologies and efficiency efforts:

Having cheap natural gas will impede both the build-out of renewable energy options and also basic science in energy. Obama said something very valuable early in his first term. He talked about a shock and trance energy policy in this country ? mainly focused on gasoline prices. But you can see that if energy prices, especially for natural gas, stay low for a long period of time, we?ll be back in a trance and the imperative for other tougher pushes, whether it?s a build-out of renewables, as Joe Romm would like, or much more R. and D., as I would like, it?s just going to be really hard to sustain that.

There?s plenty more, including a great question about making climate-friendly fuels using carbon dioxide captured from air, posed by 14-year-old Benji Fields (the son of a friend). (I wrote about one such concept a few years ago.) I know the rumors that the president has chosen Ernest Moniz of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology to be his next energy secretary, but I mused that perhaps Benji had a shot.

If you see passages that excite or irk you, and have time, please include transcribed excerpts in your comments.

Source: http://dotearth.blogs.nytimes.com/2013/02/22/exploring-climate-resilience-and-energy-sense/?partner=rss&emc=rss

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Why sourdough bread resists mold

Feb. 21, 2013 ? Sourdough bread resists mold, unlike conventionally leavened bread. Now Michael Gaenzle and colleagues of the University of Alberta, Edmonton, show why. During sourdough production, bacteria convert the linoleic acid in bread flour to a compound that has powerful antifungal activity. The research, which could improve the taste of bread, is published online ahead of print in the journal Applied and Environmental Microbiology.

The major benefits from the research are twofold: better tasting bread, says Gaenzle, because "preservatives can be eliminated from the recipes, and because sourdough bread has a more distinct and richer flavor compared to bread produced with yeast only;" and novel tools to control fungi in malting and plant production, via treatment of seeds with the anti-fungal fatty acids.

Genuine sourdough bread differs from ordinary bread in having an extra fermentation step, over and above yeast fermentation. This step is mediated by lactic acid bacteria, typically of the genus Lactobacillus, says Gaenzle.

In the study, "we offered linoleic acid to lactobacilli and screened for organisms producing potent antifungal activity," says Gaenzle. The investigators then fractionated the metabolites to isolate and identify compounds with antifungal activity. "The identification was a bottleneck in the research project," says Gaenzle. "In collaboration with analytical chemists, we had to develop novel methods for identifying the compounds."

L. hammesii produced substantial quantities of hydroxylated monounsaturated fatty acids which the researchers found strongly inhibited mold formation. A second antifungal fatty acid produced by cereal enzymes contributes to the antifungal activity of sourdough.

"The two compounds and their formation by cereal or microbial enzymes had been described previously, but their antifungal activity and their generation in food production was unknown," says Gaenzle. These new findings, he says, were "a step towards understanding how and why lactobacilli metabolize fatty acids. This could be useful in the long term to improve our understanding of the biology of these organisms."

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by American Society for Microbiology.

Note: Materials may be edited for content and length. For further information, please contact the source cited above.


Journal Reference:

  1. B. A. Black, E. Zannini, J. M. Curtis, M. G. Ganzle. Antifungal hydroxy-fatty acids produced during sourdough fermentation: microbial and enzymatic pathways, and antifungal activity in bread. Applied and Environmental Microbiology, 2013; DOI: 10.1128/AEM.03784-12

Note: If no author is given, the source is cited instead.

Disclaimer: This article is not intended to provide medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. Views expressed here do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/most_popular/~3/b02TezJ_35g/130221194239.htm

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Friday, February 22, 2013

'Project Runway': Miranda Lambert Is Guest Judge, Offers Harsh Critiques (VIDEO)

  • "666 Park Avenue"

    <strong>"666 Park Ave.," ABC</strong> <strong>Status</strong>: Canceled <strong>Why</strong>: <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/11/16/666-park-avenue-canceled_n_2147290.html">ABC pulled the plug</a> on this supernatural drama earlier in the season.

  • "The Bachelor"

    <strong>"The Bachelor," ABC</strong> <strong>Status</strong>: Likely to be renewed <strong>Why</strong>: While ratings may have dropped, "The Bachelor" will likely see another season on ABC as tabloids and viewers still care about the comings and goings of contestants.

  • "Body of Proof"

    <strong>"Body of Proof," ABC</strong> <strong>Status</strong>: On the bubble <strong>Why</strong>: ABC is keen on this Dana Delany drama, but the ratings for this upcoming third season will be the true test.

  • "Castle"

    <strong>"Castle," ABC</strong> <strong>Status</strong>: Likely to be renewed. <strong>Why</strong>: Strong ratings and a dedicated viewership will keep "Castle" on the schedule.

  • "Dancing With the Stars"

    <strong>"Dancing With the Stars," ABC</strong> <strong>Status</strong>: Likely to be renewed <strong>Why</strong>: The series is hurting in the ratings ... by "DWTS" standards. It's still a strong player for ABC, but the new season hasn't premiered yet.

  • "Don't Trust The B---- In Apt. 23"

    <strong>"Don't Trust The B---- In Apt. 23," ABC</strong> <strong>Status</strong>: Canceled <strong>Why</strong>: <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/01/22/apartment-23-canceled-dont-trust-the-b_n_2528858.html">ABC pulled the low-rated comedy</a> from it schedule and the stars took to Twitter to announce the cancellation.

  • "Family Tools"

    <strong>"Family Tools," ABC</strong> <strong>Status</strong>: Too soon to tell <strong>Why</strong>: This ABC comedy has yet to debut, but a May 1 premiere date doesn't look great.

  • "Grey's Anatomy"

    <strong>"Grey's Anatomy," ABC</strong> <strong>Status</strong>: Likely to be renewed <strong>Why</strong>: America still loves McDreamy and the goings on at Seattle Grace. Expect "Grey's" to return.

  • "Happy Endings"

    <strong>"Happy Endings," ABC</strong> <strong>Status</strong>: On the bubble <strong>Why</strong>: Always the bubble show, never the surefire renewal hit. "Happy Endings" has suffered from many ratings ailments, including bad scheduling (<a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/02/14/happy-endings-friday-abc_n_2683091.html">it's moving to Friday night</a>) and lack of promo. But this ahmahzing show has some serious fans that could keep it afloat for another season ... maybe on another network (a la "Cougar Town.")

  • "How To Live With Your Parents (For The Rest Of Your Life)"

    <strong>"How To Live With Your Parents (For The Rest Of Your Life)," ABC</strong> <strong>Status</strong>: Too soon to tell <strong>Why</strong>: The ABC comedy starring Sarah Chalke has yet to debut, but its late season bow doesn't exactly bode well for its future.

  • "Last Man Standing"

    <strong>"Last Man Standing," ABC</strong> <strong>Status</strong>: Likely to be renewed <strong>Why</strong>: Viewers still love Tim Allen! Paired with "Malibu Country," "Last Man Standing" has been performing well on Friday nights and <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/02/14/jonathan-taylor-thomas-last-man-standing-home-improvement_n_2686307.html">will soon see Allen's "Home Improvement" co-star Jonathan Tyler Thomas</a>.

  • "Last Resort"

    <strong>"Last Resort," ABC</strong> <strong>Status</strong>: Canceled <strong>Why</strong>: <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/11/16/last-resort-canceled-abc_n_2147316.html">ABC killed the Shawn Ryan drama</a> in late 2012.

  • "Malibu Country"

    <strong>"Malibu Country," ABC</strong> <strong>Status</strong>: Likely to be renewed <strong>Why</strong>: "Malibu Country" has been performing well on Friday nights. Lesson: Never underestimate the star power of Reba.

  • "The Middle"

    <strong>"The Middle," ABC</strong> <strong>Status</strong>: Likely to be renewed <strong>Why</strong>: Now in its fourth season, "The Middle" is still pulling in more than 8 million viewers an episode as the anchor of ABC's Wednesday comedies.

  • "Mistresses"

    <strong>"Mistresses," ABC</strong> <strong>Status</strong>: Too soon to tell <strong>Why</strong>: ABC sent out the pilot with its 2012-2013 offerings, but the drama, which is based on the UK series of the same name, has yet to premiere despite having Alyssa Milano and "Lost" alum Yunjin Kim.

  • "Modern Family"

    <strong>"Modern Family," ABC</strong> <strong>Status</strong>: Likely to be renewed <strong>Why</strong>: A fan favorite and Emmy darling, "Modern Family" will be back and will make ABC lots of money in syndication.

  • "Nashville"

    <strong>"Nashville," ABC</strong> <strong>Status</strong>: On the bubble <strong>Why</strong>: Critical acclaim doesn't always equate to rating success. The show has stabilized in Nielsen ratings, but its future really depends on the strength of ABC's drama pilots.

  • "The Neighbors"

    <strong>"The Neighbors," ABC</strong> <strong>Status</strong>: Likely to be renewed <strong>Why</strong>: One of the few "hits" of the season, "The Neighbors" has found an audience and kept it pretty steadily week after week (<a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/06/11/abc-shows-fall-tv-2012-2013_n_1581796.html">much to our dismay</a>).

  • "Once Upon a Time"

    <strong>"Once Upon a Time," ABC</strong> <strong>Status</strong>: Likely to be renewed <strong>Why</strong>: A ratings hit in its second season, "Once Upon a Time" is almost sure to be back for a third season full of fairytale adventures.

  • "Private Practice"

    <strong>"Private Practice," ABC</strong> <strong>Status</strong>: Ended <strong>Why</strong>: The "Grey's Anatomy" spinoff said goodbye in January 2013.

  • "Red Widow"

    <strong>"Red Widow," ABC</strong> <strong>Status</strong>: Too soon to tell <strong>Why</strong>: The show has a late February debut on ABC.

  • "Revenge"

    <strong>"Revenge," ABC</strong> <strong>Status</strong>: On the bubble <strong>Why</strong>: "Revenge" has fallen out of critical favor and seen lower ratings in its new Sunday night home. But none of ABC's freshman dramas are doing well, so that works in the show's favor.

  • "Rookie Blue"

    <strong>"Rookie Blue," ABC</strong> <strong>Status</strong>: Renewed <strong>Why</strong>: The Canadian co-production will return for a fourth season on ABC during the summer of 2013.

  • "Scandal"

    <strong>"Scandal," ABC</strong> <strong>Status</strong>: Likely to be renewed <strong>Why</strong>: Shonda Rhimes has another hit on her hands. Now in its second season, "Scandal" has benefited from word-of-mouth and has been rising in the ratings (even recently beating out its lead in "Grey's Anatomy"). A likable star -- Kerry Washington -- and continued buzz will keep "Scandal" on the schedule.

  • "Suburgatory"

    <strong>"Suburgatory," ABC</strong> <strong>Status</strong>: On the bubble <strong>Why</strong>: The series started Season 2 off strong in the ratings, but its audience has slowly eroded. Its not the worst-performing ABC sitcom, but its buzziness has died down as well.

  • "Zero Hour"

    <strong>"Zero Hour," ABC</strong> <strong>Status</strong>: Too soon to tell <strong>Why</strong>: The Anthony Edwards vehicle debuted to 6.3 million viewers with a 1.3 rating in the key 18-49 demographic, making it <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/02/15/zero-hour-ratings_n_2695800.html">the least-watched premiere for a scripted series in ABC's history</a>. Obviously, things aren't looking good for the "ER" star's comeback, but maybe the ratings will improve.

  • "2 Broke Girls"

    <strong>"2 Broke Girls," CBS</strong> <strong>Status</strong>: Likely to be renewed <strong>Why</strong>: It's not doing "The Big Bang Theory" numbers, but "2 Broke Girls" has maintained a viewership over its two seasons.

  • "The Amazing Race"

    <strong>"The Amazing Race," CBS</strong> <strong>Status</strong>: Likely to be renewed <strong>Why</strong>: As an Emmy and fan favorite, "The Amazing Race" has been a strong player for CBS.

  • "The Big Bang Theory"

    <strong>"The Big Bang Theory," CBS</strong> <strong>Status</strong>: Likely to be renewed <strong>Why</strong>: Now in its sixth season, "Big Bang" is reaching series-high ratings. Even up against reality powerhouse "American Idol," "The Big Bang Theory" has been delivering with crazy high numbers in the 18-49 demographic, beating out what was once Fox's juggernaut.

  • "Blue Bloods"

    <strong>"Blue Bloods," CBS</strong> <strong>Status</strong>: Likely to be renewed <strong>Why</strong>: The Tom Selleck-fronted police drama is a strong ratings performer for CBS on Fridays. It will likely be back to help launch new Friday shows and produce enough episodes to enter syndication.

  • "Criminal Minds"

    <strong>"Criminal Minds," CBS</strong> <strong>Status</strong>: Likely to be renewed <strong>Why</strong>: As one of CBS's strong procedural players, the series has been steady in the ratings and will likely be renewed to help anchor a night and launch a new drama.

  • "CSI"

    <strong>"CSI," CBS</strong> <strong>Status</strong>: Likely to be renewed <strong>Why</strong>: Of the two "CSI" shows on the air, "CSI" is the stronger player in the TV landscape. The show is nowhere near its earlier ratings, but after such a successful run, CBS would be smart to bring the show -- and some old faces back -- for an abbreviated farewell season.

  • "CSI: NY"

    <strong>"CSI: NY," CBS</strong> <strong>Status</strong>: On the bubble <strong>Why</strong>: The spinoff series will be entering Season 10 in the 2013-2014 season. The ratings have faded over the years, but they're still pretty stable, especially for Fridays. It's a toss up, depending on how well CBS's development slate goes.

  • "Elementary"

    <strong>"Elementary," CBS</strong> <strong>Status</strong>: Likely to be renewed <strong>Why</strong>: One of the very few freshman series hits during the 2012-2013 TV season, CBS is very keen on this modern-day take on Sherlock Holmes. The audience has been steady and the network even gave it the post-Super Bowl timeslot.

  • "Golden Boy"

    <strong>"Golden Boy," CBS</strong> <strong>Status</strong>: Too soon to tell <strong>Why</strong>: CBS certainly has a handsome star at the front of this cop drama, but its late season entry and Friday timeslot could be a hint toward CBS's confidence in the show.

  • "The Good Wife"

    <strong>"The Good Wife," CBS</strong> <strong>Status</strong>: On the bubble <strong>Why</strong>: A former ratings champ, "The Good Wife" has slipped to series low ratings on Sunday nights. Blame football overrun, fan-detested storylines or too many guest stars, but "The Good Wife" is certainly in the danger zone. What it has going for it: star power and critical praise, plus its nearing a good syndication sweet spot.

  • "Hawaii Five-0"

    <strong>"Hawaii Five-0," CBS</strong <strong>Status</strong>: On the bubble <strong>Why</strong>: Its ratings -- bouncing around 8-10 million viewers an episode, are great ... if you're a show on NBC. By CBS standards, they're kind of meh, but this show has stars with very active fan followings. CBS could axe the drama to make room for new procedurals, or stick with it to get the show close to syndication gold.

  • "How I Met Your Mother"

    <strong>"How I Met Your Mother," CBS</strong> <strong>Status</strong>: Renewed <strong>Why</strong>: CBS handed out a ninth and final season to this comedy with the entire cast returning. Expect to meet the mother, finally.

  • "Made In Jersey"

    <strong>"Made In Jersey," CBS</strong> <strong>Status</strong>: Canceled <strong>Why</strong>: CBS pulled the plug on this legal drama very early on in the season because of low ratings.

  • "The Mentalist"

    <strong>"The Mentalist," CBS</strong> <strong>Status</strong>: On the bubble <strong>Why</strong>: "The Mentalist" has fallen to mediocre ratings -- by CBS standards -- and could be axed in favor of making room for a new drama.

  • "Mike & Molly"

    <strong>"Mike & Molly," CBS</strong> <strong>Status</strong>: Likely to be renewed <strong>Why</strong>: The ratings are down a little bit from last year, but Melissa McCarthy's star continues to rise. CBS will likely bring the show back for another season.

  • "NCIS"

    <strong>"NCIS," CBS</strong> <strong>Status</strong>: Renewed <strong>Why</strong>: CBS reached a deal with series star Mark Harmon in early 2013, keeping the No. 1 show in America around for a Season 11.

  • "NCIS: LA"

    <strong>"NCIS: LA," CBS</strong> <strong>Status</strong>: Likely to be renewed <strong>Why</strong>: Viewers love their "NCIS," in any form. The ratings have been strong and the network is producing a backdoor spinoff pilot for this spinoff show. A full night of "NCIS" could be in CBS's future.

  • "Partners"

    <strong>"Partners," CBS</strong> <strong>Status</strong>: Canceled <strong>Why</strong>: Low ratings and unfavorable reviews led to the <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/11/16/partners-canceled-cbs_n_2145832.html">early demise</a> of this CBS comedy.

  • "Person of Interest"

    <strong>"Person of Interest," CBS</strong> <strong>Status</strong>: Likely to be renewed <strong>Why</strong>: The series has developed a nice-sized audience, bigger than its first season.

  • "Rules of Engagement"

    <strong>"Rules of Engagement," CBS</strong> <strong>Status</strong>: Honestly, who knows <strong>Why</strong>: This comedy has been on the bubble since it premiered ... yet is now in its seventh season. It's too soon to look at the numbers for this season, but the show has been a midseason success for CBS in the past. However, series co-star <a href="http://insidetv.ew.com/2013/02/07/cbs-orders-comedy-pilot-starring-patrick-warburton/">Patrick Warburton is attached to star in a new pilot</a> ... for CBS.

  • "Survivor"

    <strong>"Survivor," CBS</strong> <strong>Status</strong>: Likely to be renewed <strong>Why</strong>: A strong player for the last 13 years, "Survivor" will likely be back. But due to its <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/02/14/survivor-ratings-lowest-premiere-ever_n_2687591.html">most recent premiere ratings</a>, we might not see it during the fall season, though a midseason or summer return -- with some new gimmick -- is definitely in the cards for the reality series.

  • "Two and a Half Men"

    <strong>"Two and a Half Men," CBS</strong> <strong>Status</strong>: Likely to be renewed <strong>Why</strong>: CBS wants another season of this bawdy hit, it's just a matter of getting its stars to sign back on.

  • "Undercover Boss"

    <strong>"Undercover Boss," CBS</strong> <strong>Status</strong>: Likely to be renewed <strong>Why</strong>: The show is enjoying life in syndication and its Season 4 numbers are better than most of its third season.

  • "Unforgettable"

    <strong>"Unforgettable," CBS</strong> <strong>Status</strong>: Uncanceled <strong>Why</strong>: CBS canceled the Poppy Montgomery drama last season ... and then revived it! Season 2 premieres Sunday, July 28.

  • "Vegas"

    <strong>"Vegas," CBS</strong> <strong>Status</strong>: On the bubble <strong>Why</strong>: Despite star power, the series hasn't been a breakout hit in the ratings. CBS previously canceled "Unforgettable" (then uncanceled it) last season when it was doing about the same as "Vegas."

  • Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/02/22/project-runway-miranda-lambert-video_n_2739361.html

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    Jerusalem Preparing for President Obama?s Visit

    US President Barack Obama will have a busy itinerary scheduled during his visit to Jerusalem next month. The Jerusalem Municipality and the Prime Minister?s Office are planning an interesting and memorable visit for the president as well as the hundreds of journalists expected to cover the event.

    usa_israel

    Jerualem?s Mayor Nir Barkat is spearheading a special public relations campaign for Jerusalem according to Israel?s Ynet News. The journalists visiting the city will get to experience all that the capital of Israel has to offer.
    There will be tours available to journalists of the city?s historical sites including the Western Wall tunnels and the City of David. The journalists will also have an opportunity to experience Jerusalem?s nightlife and bars.
    In addition, the journalists will visit Jerusalem?s famous Mahane Yehuda market and eat at the market?s unique restaurants. Also planned is a visit to the Israel Museum, where the reporters will get to see a new exhibition about the legendary King Herod, one of the Judea?s great builders ? famous for the construction of the Western Wall, among other things, two millennia ago.
    On a lighter note, the journalists will also see an ice sculpture built in President Obama?s image at Jerusalem?s first ever ice festival that will be held at Jerusalem?s old train station plaza.
    The US President?s schedule for Israel looks a little more different.
    Code-named ?Unbreakable Alliance,? the President?s visit to Israel will begin with a state reception following his landing in Israel on Wednesday, March 20. According to the itinerary released in Israel?s leading newspaper, Yediot Aharonot last week, President Obama will be welcomed by a state reception where he will hear speeches by President Shimon Peres and Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. President Obama himself will also speak.
    The President will then fly to Jerusalem directly to President Peres? residence and visit the Yad Vashem Holocaust Museum and then Mount Herzl, laying wreaths at Herzl?s tomb and Yitzhak Rabin?s tomb.
    In the afternoon, the US President will be hosted at the prime minister?s house where discussions will be held about Iran, Syria, the peace process and Jonathan Pollard, followed by a joint press conference.
    On Thursday, President Obama will depart for Ramallah and meet with Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas. At some point during the day, following a visit to the Israel Museum, examining a model of the Second Temple Period in Jerusalem, and viewing the Dead Sea Scrolls with Netanyahu, the President will also give a public speech to Israelis.
    For President Obama?s public address, the Americans have requested at least 1,000 Israelis to be in attendance.
    The last day of the president?s visit in Jerusalem will be on Friday, March 22. The president will either breakfast with Prime Minister Netanyahu in his home or at the King David hotel. President Obama will then visit the Iron Dome battery with Netanyahu and meet with soldiers in charge of the battery?s operation.
    A farewell ceremony will be held for President Obama at Ben Gurion International airport at 1:00 pm local time. The president will fly out to Jordan to meet with King Abdullah in Jordan.
    Jerusalem resident, Ben Avital, a student at David Yellin College in Jerusalem, believes that Obama?s visit to the capital is a strategic one. ?I personally don?t feel that Obama is against Israel or a great supporter of Israel. He is expected to visit Israel so that?s why he is doing it,? Avital told Tazpit News Agency.
    ?I do believe that Obama will stand with Israel on the important issues like Iran,? he added.
    By Anav Silverman, Tazpit News Agency
    Gravatars are small images that can show your personality. You can get your gravatar for free today!

    Weekly Press Pakistan - Canada is a Toronto-based newspaper that takes pride in its unbiased in-depth news reporting both in English and Urdu languages. The weekly ?? reaching t? hundreds of journalists through Press Pakistan Google Group as well as to local and international readers including Government officials, political leaders, diplomats, lawyers, civil society, activists and overseas Pakistani community.

    Source: http://weeklypresspakistan.com/2013/02/6832

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    Pot on the patio? Colorado's 'surreal' path to legalizing marijuana.

    Colorado's Amendment 64 Implementation Task Force is wading through the weeds of marijuana legalization, creating regulations to take pot from the shadows out into the open.

    By Patrik Jonsson,?Staff Writer / February 21, 2013

    A marijuana plant is ready to be harvested at a grow house in Denver. Voters approved legalizing marijuana in November, so Colorado is working to develop rules for the emerging recreational pot industry, with sales set to begin later this year.

    Ed Andrieski/AP

    Enlarge

    In the wake of the decision by voters in Colorado last November to legalize recreational marijuana for adults, the question of how to actually integrate legal pot into the practical, and often bureaucratic, realities of modern American life has fallen on two dozen Coloradans.

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    By the end of the month, the Amendment 64 Implementation Task Force must submit a report to the Colorado Legislature that lays out its suggestions for how the state should regulate legal marijuana. It has been a curious process.

    On one hand, the task force has considered new rules for what Colorado should do when it inevitably becomes a center of "pot tourism," it has debated whether smokers can use their backyard patios to light up, and it has considered how to deal with "marijuana clubs" that will appear. Yet, at the same time, marijuana use remains illegal according to federal law, and the Department of Justice may step in and try to invalidate everything the task force has done.

    In a time when as many as 25 states are considering pro-marijuana laws, what Colorado does could be broadly significant. How it converts a massive black market into what experts call "problematic adult commerce" on the fringes of society ? akin to gambling, drinking, and go-go clubs ? all amid lingering legal concerns, could provide a framework for other states to follow.

    So far, the results from the task force point to legal marijuana regulations that in many ways mirror regulations on alcohol and tobacco yet, because of the drug's unsettled legal status, are in some ways distinctly separate.?

    "We made an industry out of cigarettes, we made an industry out of alcohol and now we're creating an industry out of marijuana ? frankly, it's surreal sometimes," says task force member Mary Beth Susman, president of the Denver City Council. "We're making rules about an activity that is illegal according to the federal government, and sometimes we're making rules that in the normal course of events would be illegal themselves in order to stay under the radar of the federal government."

    So far, the Obama administration has kept its hands off the emerging experiments in Colorado (and Washington State, where voters also approved a ballot initiative that legalized pot), though it could be waiting until the Legislature formalizes new pot laws. That's expected by May 8.

    Last November, 55 percent of Colorado voters approved adult use of marijuana, meaning that the state would regulate the cultivation and sale of marijuana while allowing legal possession of up to 1 ounce per person. As caveats, the referendum allows towns and municipalities to opt out of retail marijuana sales and extends criminal and civil liability to smokers who drive high. The law also allows the state to collect hefty new taxes from license production and retail sales that will go toward state education funds.

    Nationally, a slim majority of Americans now support legalization of adult use of marijuana, up from 10 percent in 1971. Some 100 million Americans have tried the drug at least once, 25 million have smoked in the past year, and 14 million are regular users, according to surveys by the US Department of Health and Human Services.

    Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/J7Ge5IWHsLo/Pot-on-the-patio-Colorado-s-surreal-path-to-legalizing-marijuana

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    How to kill an asteroid? Get out a paint spray gun

    Feb. 21, 2013 ? There is research that is off the wall, some off the charts and some off the planet, such as what a Texas A&M University aerospace and physics professor is exploring. It's a plan to deflect a killer asteroid by using paint, and the science behind it is absolutely rock solid, so to speak, so much so that NASA is getting involved and wants to know much more.

    Dave Hyland, professor of physics and astronomy and also a faculty member in the aerospace engineering department at Texas A&M and a researcher with more than 30 years of awards and notable grants, says one possible way to avert an asteroid collision with Earth is by using a process called "tribocharging powder dispensing" -- as in high pressured -- and spreading a thin layer of paint on an approaching asteroid, such as the one named DA14 that came within 17,000 miles on Feb. 15.

    What happens is that the paint changes the amount by which the asteroid reflects sunlight, Hyland theorizes, producing a change in what is called the Yarkovski effect (which was discovered by a Russian engineer in 1902). The force arises because on a spinning asteroid, the dusk side is warmer than the dawn side and emits more thermal photons, each photon carrying a small momentum. The unequal heating of the asteroid results in a net force strong enough to cause the asteroid to shift from its current orbit, Hyland further theorizes.

    The kind of paint used is not the kind found at your local hardware store, Hyland explains.

    "It could not be a water-based or oil-based paint because it would probably explode within seconds of it entering space," he notes.

    "But a powdered form of paint could be used to dust on the asteroid and the sun would then do the rest. It cures the paint to give a smooth coating, and would change the unequal heating of the asteroid so that it would be forced off its current path and placed on either a higher or lower orbit, thus missing Earth.

    "I have to admit the concept does sound strange, but the odds are very high that such a plan would be successful and would be relatively inexpensive. The science behind the theory is sound. We need to test it in space."

    As for getting the paint on the asteroid, a practical way to do this was discovered by a former student of Hyland's, Shen Ge, who has since started a new space company. The "tribocharging powder dispenser" would spray a mixture of inert gas and charged dry-paint powder at the asteroid that would attract the powder to its surface through electrostatics. Then solar wind and UV radiation would cure the powder, giving a smooth, thin coat on the surface.

    Getting the paint in the asteroid's path in a timely manner will certainly be a challenge, Hyland observes.

    "The tribocharged powder process is a widely used method of painting many products," he says. "It remains only to adapt the technology to space conditions."

    NASA has approached Hyland for developing such a project to test the theory, and Earth may need it quickly. An asteroid called Apophis is due in 2029 and will come closer than many communications satellites in orbit right now. It will fly by on April 13 (Friday the 13 to be exact) of 2029 and make a return trip in 2036, and it's estimated to be more than 1,000 feet in length and is appropriately named for an evil Egyptian god of chaos and destruction. There is no chance of its hitting Earth in 2029, but a small chance in the next close approach in 2036, Hyland notes.

    Asteroids have hit Earth before. One hit off the Yucatan coast of Mexico about 65 million years ago and is believed to have caused the eventual extinction of the dinosaurs. And in 1908, the fabled "Tunguska event" occurred in Siberia in which an asteroid or meteor exploded several miles above? Earth, flattening trees and killing livestock over 800 square miles. The explosion is now estimated to have been 1,000 times more powerful than the A-bomb dropped on Hiroshima.

    "There are thousands of asteroids out there, and only a small percentage of them are known and can be tracked as they approach Earth," Hyland adds.

    "The smaller ones, like DA14 are not discovered as soon as others, and they could still cause a lot of damage should they hit Earth. It is really important for our long-term survival that we concentrate much more effort discovering and tracking them, and developing as many useful technologies as possible for deflecting them."

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    Story Source:

    The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Texas A&M University, via Newswise.

    Note: Materials may be edited for content and length. For further information, please contact the source cited above.


    Note: If no author is given, the source is cited instead.

    Disclaimer: Views expressed in this article do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

    Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/top_technology/~3/P-KSYEkOIYw/130221141102.htm

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    Thursday, February 21, 2013

    Realogy : Coldwell Banker Real Estate Ranked Highest Real Estate ...

    PARSIPPANY, N.J. 02-20-2013 ?

    Coldwell Banker Real Estate has been ranked No. 3 among organizations from all industries for its Coldwell Banker University training platform in the annual Training Top 125 by Training magazine, the training industry?s premier publication. This marks the fourth consecutive year Coldwell Banker Real Estate appeared on the annual Training Top 125 list, improving on last year?s No. 9 ranking and repeating as the best training organization in the real estate industry. Coldwell Banker? was joined by Verizon, Jiffy Lube, Farmers Insurance and CHG Healthcare Services in the top five.

    ?We are extremely honored to see our training programs ranked as best in the real estate industry, and it is rewarding to see Coldwell Banker recognized as one of the top three training organizations in the world among all industries,? said Budge Huskey, president and CEO of Coldwell Banker Real Estate LLC. ?We recognize the growing importance of exceptional training programs in today?s evolving real estate industry and have further developed our Coldwell Banker University program to continue to provide our network with the tools and resources they need to reach their personal and professional best.?

    Coldwell Banker University continues to emphasize performance based courses, innovation and new platforms to train the brand?s agents and managers. It now offers cloud-based content, facilitation of informal learning, video streaming and mobile learning, with the BlueViewSM agent portal now accessible on iPad.

    Additional advancements to Coldwell Banker University include:

    • Investing in a standardized, cross-industry benchmarked quality measurement system that has helped document increased revenue as a direct outcome of courses
    • Expanding course offerings that demonstrate tangible business results
    • Enabling the sharing of best practices across the brand?s network of 82,000 sales agents
    • Developing course content that managers can use at the local level to directly train their agents

    This is Training magazine?s 13th annual competition that evaluates organizational learning programs and judges companies on a range of qualitative and quantitative factors. The ranking also considers how closely such development efforts are linked to each organization?s business goals and objectives.

    Source: http://www.realogy.com/media/pr/show_release.cfm?id=1307&language=en-us

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    Friday, February 15, 2013

    Why Would all Organizations Care to Pay Me to Accomplish Online ...

    Are you on the list of skeptics who doubt that paid online studies actually pay? Have you been contacted by individuals who are desperately trying to persuade you that doing paid reviews is a waste of time? Then you once for all be confident that finishing paid online surveys is value for your own time and effort, and definitely need to review your views on online surveys by reading the info obtainable in this article.

    Companies giving settled web surveys have proliferated tremendously recently. Settled review offers are everywhere in the web space in pop-ups, backed links, and work-at-home sources. You get this type of large selection of survey offers it is understandable you might get confused to inform the legit survey offers from the cons. In fact, there?s a number of fraud sites that not spend earnings or mislead their subscribers in regards to the benefits of membership. However, you?ll find so many legitimate paid survey sites that provide results of web surveys at no cost.

    Why would organizations bother to cover money to people for completing internet surveys? Even though it might appear too small a job to sit back at home and get some good $10-$20 an average of for five minutes of your time, paid internet surveys are now actually a billion-dollar business. Paid surveys have been acknowledged by companies as an effective and beneficial general market trends method, as only consumer surveys straight communicate useful customer ideas to the product suppliers. Settled studies are conceived to fundamentally help the merchandise and service industries develop and thrive, while worthwhile people with money and prizes for enough time spend sharing their honest thoughts.

    Having such crucial issues at stake the survival and development of a number of small to large-scale companies, it?s now clearer why paid surveys are that important, and why it makes perfect business sense that customers get paid to accomplish surveys. It is true that as a survey taker may very well not get thousands yourself only by completing settled reviews in your free time. However, it?s quite possible that you might make great additional cash that will complement your mainstream income. While the average surveys payout is somewhere between $25 and $5, the highest-pay surveys can provide out as much as $200 for finishing more and longer specific questionnaires or taking part in focus groups. With 2-5 surveys each month by way of a single company, it also makes sense a subscription to as many study companies as you are able to. Like that, you increase your odds of getting more frequent invitations to perform paid reviews, and you get more stable profits.

    Be wise enough to prevent the survey scams that are lurking out there, and trust only paid survey organizations that need no upfront investment from you. Some web sites providing online surveys demand membership as a means of funding their internet sites. However, its thoroughly possible to find out these same listings free of charge at other reliable, free paid review sites. Once youve realized that organizations are willing to pay good money for your client opinion, you should know that your participation as a survey taker makes substantial big difference to the entire world of advertising. Consequently, don?t shy away from your opportunity to lead your customer activities to the growing researching the market industry, while getting rewarded with good cash and rewards.

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    Source: http://culturapopulara.ro/?p=20288

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    France's 'privacy tax' creator makes his case

    Antoine Duhamel / www.archi-photo.fr

    By Bob Sullivan, Columnist, NBC News

    If you aren?t paying for the product, you are the product.

    Internet users know this implicitly; there are no free apps, no free search engines. Instead, users trade their information in exchange for some service, vaguely aware that the company?s side of the bargain is free access to data it can turn into profit.? Some consumers get angry at the notion they provide free labor and raw materials to some of the world?s largest and richest companies, but Nicolas Colin thinks people should be a whole lot angrier. In fact, he believes that ?software is eating the world.?

    Colin, a tax inspector for the Ministry of the Economy and Finance in France, believes that corporations have turned the Digital Age into a massive tax haven which dwarfs anything high-priced accountants have ever pulled off in places like the Cayman Islands. His beef: Corporations don?t pay a penny in taxes on all that free labor. ?In other words, not only are you are the product, but you?re also paying for all the roads, fiber-optic lines and airports that digitally dependent corporations need to get rich.

    Colin caused a stir last month when he co-authored a report for the French government recommending what some have called a ?privacy tax? ? essentially a mechanism to punish companies that profit from misuse of consumer data. The idea of a new tax based on something seemingly so vague went over like a lead balloon in many quarters.

    But Colin?s idea is far broader, and has wide multinational implications. He wants to change the fundamentals of how taxes are levied, a step every bit as radical as the invention of income or sales taxes.?

    He wants to tax data.


    While new taxes aren?t exactly popular these days, the Red Tape Chronicles decided to hear him out.

    Colin?s proposal begins with the notion that, like it or not, we are all part of the supply chain now.

    ?What we do leaves traces, generates data. This data can be leveraged to create value,? he told NBC News during an extended interview via email. "If you want to create value, you can either hire employees, contract on the market or design an application that will attract millions of users and will turn their activity into economic value -- make them part of the supply chain.?

    In a strange reversal of fortune resulting from this new business model, Colin said, labor now happens in rich, giant Western nations while profits are counted in smaller, tax-friendly places.?

    With millions of unpaid laborers around the world helping to make your product, the notion of place has become less and less important in terms of taxation, he argues

    ?Digital technology has moved value creation from inside the factory to the customers' hands and brains,? he said. ?Value is now co-created by companies and the people who use their applications. This has consequences on corporate tax, because it changes the geography of value creation. It's not where the factories are anymore, it's where the users are.? ? Many authors have written on this phenomenon. Each has his own phrase to describe it : Web 2.0, co-creation, crowdsourcing, peer production, distributed capitalism, wikinomics, etc. But there's really one reality: In the digital economy, users create part of the value alongside employees, contractors, capital, and companies' assets.?

    Governments can?t tax worker income, or levy company payroll taxes, when the ?workers? aren?t paid. And they can?t charge sales taxes for products which are given away for free.? The situation creates quite a dilemma for taxation authorities, and it will ultimately have devastating consequences for society, Colin predicts.

    ?Tax base erosion will happen in each sector disrupted by the digital economy,? he said. ?Yesterday it was advertising, entertainment, retail, travel. Tomorrow it will be banking, health care, cars, telecommunications, manufacturing, higher education. The law must change quickly, because software is eating the world.?

    So what is to be done? Rich nations must negotiate and agree on a new concept of ?permanent establishment? which defines where companies operate and therefore are subject to taxation, he argues.?

    His basic notion: ?There should be a permanent establishment wherever a company collects data to fuel a service provided on the same territory.?

    The French proposal comes amid growing frustration among French lawmakers with their inability to collect taxes from large, digital companies like Google, which generated $2 billion in advertising in France last year but paid almost no taxes there. France has already tried an ill-fated ?link tax? in an attempt to support local publishers who fear they are losing money because of the search engine?s free links.?

    Google issued a statement last month saying it was researching the French proposal. ?Google did not immediately respond to requests for more information about its tax payments in France or about Colin?s proposal.

    But last week, CEO Eric Schmidt wrote a blog post describing two new France -friendly Google initiatives.

    ?Today I announced ? two new initiatives to help stimulate innovation and increase revenues for French publishers,? he wrote. ?First, Google has agreed to create a ? Digital Publishing Innovation Fund to help support transformative digital publishing initiatives for French readers. Second, Google will deepen our partnership with French publishers to help increase their online revenues using our advertising technology.?

    Not quite the radical shift in taxation policy Colin and his supporters are looking for. He makes a forceful case for the inequity of free, and untaxed, labor online.?

    ?You can replace employees and contractors with users of an application, and these users work for pleasure, not for money,? he said.? ?So it's free -- well, almost free, because the marginal cost of a user is practically equal to zero in the digital economy. ? Using those applications, French people contribute to profits made by foreign companies, yet those companies don't pay the taxes necessary to cover the public expenses that help fuel this value creation.?

    He pointed to a popular speech made by Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., during her campaign, making the case that companies benefit from tax-funded infrastructure, but aren?t paying their fair share.

    ?Individuals become active users if they are educated, equipped, covered by social insurances, and massively connected, and all of this costs money to the government,? he said.

    While such a new tax regime involves a massive shift in the notion of taxation ? from location of production to location of data collection -- the shift wouldn?t be unprecedented.? He cited the creation of progressive income tax early in the last century, and the implementation of the value-added tax in the 1950s, as similar shifts.

    The European valued-added tax ? or VAT -- requires companies to pay taxes every time they take any kind of raw material and turn it into a product that can be sold at a higher price. Data taxation grows logically from this idea, Colin believes.? With data collection, under Colin?s scheme, companies ?create value? when they turn consumers? information into a product that can be sold. Taxing data really means taxing creation of this new value, he says.

    ?The French are very proud to have invented the VAT in the ?50s. Today it's the most neutral tax, the most widely accepted by both individuals and corporations, and the one that raises the most revenue for governments,? Colin said.?

    He acknowledged that Americans, who have long resisted VAT taxes, will probably receive the idea of digital-age tax change with strong skepticism. But he argues that 20th century taxes distort the market and hurt the economy.

    ?Sometimes, new taxes are good for business when they help pay down the debt and balance the budget, and above all when they replace outdated taxes that distort the market instead of supporting growth and job creation,? he argued.

    The privacy tax, which Colin suggested implementing as an intermediate step, has been roundly criticized, beyond the notion that any new tax is a bad idea: Critics have said it would be nearly impossible to manage, would force government bodies to make rulings on very technical matters, and that its collection could itself represent a privacy violation. ?But Colin argues there is already general consensus in the computer security world on best practices with consumer data. Such a tax would properly align incentives in the marketplace, the way a carbon tax might create incentives for companies to take better care of the environment.

    ?What we recommend is to tax companies' behavior that is not in the interest of their users and not in the interest of innovation and growth,? he said. ??The French tax on non-compliant data collection behavior can really be compared to a carbon tax: In both cases, it creates an incentive for companies to change their behavior in the public's interest -- less pollution, more data protection, user empowerment and more innovation through smart disclosure.?

    And while changing an entire tax regime would require international treaties, Colin argued that France could unilaterally impose privacy taxes on firms operating within its borders.

    ?There is no way companies can avoid it, because that would mean closing the service for users based in France,? he said. ?Is Google ready to stop operating its search engine in France? Or Facebook ready to close 20 million accounts???

    * Follow Bob Sullivan on?Facebook.

    * Follow Bob Sullivan on Twitter

    Source: http://redtape.nbcnews.com/_news/2013/02/15/16967092-privacy-tax-creator-makes-his-case-warns-software-is-eating-the-world?lite

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    Detroit emergency manager, a job for a "poor devil"

    DETROIT/WILMINGTON, Delaware (Reuters) - Wanted: A financial whiz with powers of persuasion, an acute political radar and thick skin, for the demanding assignment of taking over a major American city on the brink of bankruptcy.

    That's what Michigan Governor Rick Snyder is likely looking for as he decides whether to appoint an emergency financial manager for the city of Detroit, according to restructuring experts and Michigan politicians.

    Snyder revealed this week that he has a "short list" of candidates for the job. He still awaits a report from a team of advisers to decide whether Detroit needs an emergency manager, said spokeswoman Sara Wurfel, but is "talking to and looking for prospective qualified candidates."

    It's a job few may want as it will probably involve decisions that could lead to further cuts in jobs and services in a city that has been in decline for a long time - with its high crime rate, abandoned buildings and many unlit streets.

    Still, success could make the manager a star in the world of restructuring - especially given a number of other financially distressed cities in the United States which might have to seek a similar savior.

    "When there is not enough money to go around, somebody is going to be disappointed. And that disappointment will be aimed at whoever is the poor devil that took the job," said Steve Miller, a top turnaround specialist with strong Michigan ties who has worked for automakers Ford Motor Co and Chrysler Group LLC, and parts maker Delphi Automotive Plc.

    The ideal qualifications would be someone with both a business background and a sense of public service to do the job for little or no pay, said Miller, who is now non-executive chairman of insurer American International Group, which was bailed out by the U.S. government during the financial crisis.

    Scott Eisenberg, managing partner of corporate restructuring firm Amherst Partners and a past president of the Detroit chapter of the Turnaround Management Association, goes even further, saying "a magician" is needed for the job.

    "You have a city council that doesn't want to lose control," Eisenberg said. "Who knows how much the mayor will go along. This will be filled with legal challenges over what you can and can't do. Everything the person does that is controversial will be challenged in court."

    Snyder isn't talking about the candidates on his short-list, but politicians and restructuring experts say he needs to take their race into account. Eighty-three percent of Detroit's population is black and Mayor Dave Bing and city council members are all African American.

    "To forcibly put a Caucasian in that position could have a very negative effect on the workforce, the voting populace and the people he will have to work with," said State Senator Virgil Smith, a Detroit Democrat, who is black.

    A HISTORY-MAKING BANKRUPTCY

    No large American city in recent history has seen a decline like Detroit. Once the fifth largest city in America, it is now only the 18th biggest, according to the latest population figures. With the exodus has come declines in the tax base and revenue, the flight of jobs, rising numbers of poor, increased crime and a city saddled with the infrastructure and labor costs of a bygone era.

    Urban policy experts across the country are closely watching the struggles of Detroit, which could be an example for a number of cities still trying to recover from the housing bust and financial crisis, at a time when their pension and healthcare costs are soaring.

    The emergency financial manager could choose to recommend that Detroit files for bankruptcy, although the decision ultimately rests with a board composed of people appointed by Snyder.

    If Detroit files for Chapter 9 bankruptcy, its outstanding rated debt of $8.2 billion would make it the largest municipal bankruptcy in U.S. history, almost double the 2011 filing by Alabama's Jefferson County.

    Other American cities have gone to the edge of insolvency including New York in 1975, Cleveland in 1978 and Philadelphia in 1991. But none of them filed Chapter 9 municipal bankruptcy.

    Republican state lawmakers, who hold majorities in the legislature, said Snyder has not sought their counsel on the appointment of an emergency manager. But in interviews this week there was a virtual consensus among Michigan lawmakers in both parties that an emergency manager is likely.

    "Every day that goes by and Detroit does not take action to save itself limits the governor's options," said State Senator Virgil Smith, spokesman for Michigan's Republican House Speaker Jase Bolger.

    NO POPULARITY CONTEST

    Snyder has kept the names on his short list within a small circle of advisers, saying only that few people have the financial knowledge and people skills to do the job.

    So far, several of the names swirling around Detroit political circles have said they are not in the running.

    The Detroit News reported on Sunday that former Washington, D.C. mayor Anthony Williams, now in private law practice, had turned down the job. Repeated efforts to contact Williams for comment were not successful.

    Another former politician whose name has surfaced in the speculation said he was not interested in the job.

    "I am not a candidate for the emergency manager of Detroit," Thurbert Baker, a former attorney general of the state of Georgia now practicing law in Atlanta and Washington, told Reuters in an email.

    If anyone knows the challenges a Detroit financial manager would face, it could be Robert Bobb, who from 2009 to 2012 served as the state-appointed emergency financial manager for Detroit Public Schools.

    Bobb closed dozens of schools, outsourced school services, increased class sizes and laid off hundreds of teachers.

    "If you are there for a popularity contest, then cast that aside," said Bobb, who said he had not been contacted about the Detroit emergency manager position.

    While some described it as the job from hell, others said it could be a huge opportunity for someone to become the leading municipal turnaround specialist in the nation.

    "It's a bit amorphous as to what constitutes success in this project, but there are a lot of careers built on one successful job," said Tim Skillman, a managing director in the Los Angeles office of turnaround firm Gavin/Solmonese.

    (Additional reporting by Karen Pierog and James Kelleher in Chicago, Paritosh Bansal, Jessica Toonkel and Nicholas Brown in New York, and Dawson Bell in Lansing, Michigan; Writing by Greg McCune; Editing by Mary Milliken and Tim Dobbyn)

    Source: http://news.yahoo.com/detroit-emergency-manager-job-poor-devil-060244553--finance.html

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