Tuesday, November 13, 2007

"'Anonymous Friend' Gives $100 Million to Pennsylvania City"

'Anonymous Friend' Gives $100 Million to Pennsylvania City

ERIE, Pennsylvania (AP) — Mike Batchelor invited the heads of 46 charities into his downtown office for one-on-one meetings to personally deliver the news. Nearby, on a small table, sat a box of tissues.

And then he proceeded: A donor had given a staggering $100 million to the Erie Community Foundation, and all of the charities would receive a share.

That was when the tears began to flow — and the mystery began — in this struggling old industrial city of 102,000 on Lake Erie, where the donor is known only as "Anonymous Friend."

Batchelor, president of the Erie Community Foundation, has been sworn to secrecy and will allow only that the donor worked with the organization for years to identify deserving recipients before the announcement over the summer.

Is the donor dead or alive? No comment, Batchelor says. What is the donor's connection to Erie? No comment.

The talk about the gift has taken an interesting turn in recent weeks. As much as everyone here would like to know their benefactor's identity, many are also reluctant to pry.

"My feeling is that we're not honoring the donor if we spend time speculating about it," says Rebecca Brumagin, executive director at the Achievement Center, which provides physical therapy and other services to children. The center, which serves 3,200 children a year, will get $2 million.

"The needs are really great. So we will be able to help more children because of this," Brumagin says.

Kitty Cancilla cried when she learned the homeless shelter where she is executive director will get $2 million. Its previous largest donation was $25,000. Even now, Cancilla clutches a balled-up tissue and fights back tears as she talks about the gift.

Cancilla says she is unable even to speculate who the donor could be.

"We don't really travel in a community that knows the wealth of people," she says. And she prefers not to even try.

"It's disrespectful to the friend. To me, that's a spiritual thing."

Each of the charities will get about $1 million to $2 million. The recipients include a food bank, a women's center, a group for the blind and three universities.

The city — and the entire county of 280,000 — could clearly use the money.

Erie was once a bustling iron and steel town, and later also made machinery, plastics, paper and furniture. But many factories eventually closed or moved overseas. The paper mill, which employed more than 2,000 people in the 1950s, shut down in 2002 after more than 100 years in business.

The city has a growing service industry and has tried to remake itself as a tourist destination with a new slots casino. But its poverty rate is about 19 percent, or twice the national average, median household income is $31,196, versus $48,451 nationally, and as of 2006, it had an estimated 400 homeless people.

"What a godsend for some of these agencies, because I know a lot of them struggle," says Pam VanHorn, as her 5-year-old autistic daughter, Abigail, rides a scooter-like contraption at a playroom at the Achievement Center.

Some charity officials fear that other people will see the large donation and decide their small contributions aren't needed.

But Batchelor says that's not what Anonymous Friend intended at all.

"I know that the donor hopes this will inspire others to give within their means," he said.


"Software tackles 'stupid' forum postings"

Software tackles 'stupid' forum postings

Because the web needs 'prophylactics for memetically transmitted diseases'

Iain Thomson, vnunet.com

A new open source application is being developed to cut stupid or abusive comments on internet forums.

The StupidFilter Project aims to make its software available for free by the end of the year, and is planning a Firefox application by 2008.

The project is run by systems administrator Gabriel Ortiz as part of an initiative to take back internet conversation from "those who seek to debase it ".

"Too long have we suffered in silence under the tyranny of idiocy. In the beginning, the internet was a place where one could communicate intelligently with similarly erudite people," he says on the StupidFilter website. "It is time to fight back."

The software will sit on the server side of a website and examine new postings for signs that the contributor is not making sense. These might include repeat letters (e.g. 'amazinggggg') and text-speak such as 'LOL' (for 'laughs out loud').

If the software feels that the post is unsuitable it will send it back to the author and suggest that it needs to be rewritten.

Ortiz maintains that this kind of filtering is a lot tougher than spam filtering because of the intricacies of the language. He also expects people to try and defeat the system in the short term.

"We certainly hope they will because that implies they are no longer generating text statistically likely to be stupid," he said.

"It is true that an obvious attack on the StupidFilter would be to salt a short, stupid comment with a long excerpt pasted from, say, Project Gutenberg. But we think it is reasonable to count on the laziness of the stupidest commenters not to do this."

The project has taken over 200,000 user comments from sites such as YouTube and will be using them to develop and test the software.

The team is also recruiting internet users to help improve the filters, although such moderators have to pass a grammar test and submit a selection essay that weeds out over 90 per cent of applicants.

"Marvel Comics Takes An Online Leap"

from cbsnews.com

Marvel Comics Takes An Online Leap

Many Of Its Older Comics Will Be On View; Downloads Not Allowed

(AP) Marvel is putting some of its older comics online, hoping to reintroduce young people to the X-Men and Fantastic Four by showcasing the original issues in which such characters appeared.

It is a tentative move onto the Internet: Comics can only be viewed in a Web browser, not downloaded, and new issues will only go online at least six months after they first appear in print.

Still, it represents perhaps the comics industry's most aggressive Web push yet. Even as their creations - from Iron Man to Wonder Woman - become increasingly visible in pop culture through new movies and video games, old-school comics publishers rely primarily on specialized, out-of-the-way comic shops for distribution of their bread-and-butter product.

"You don't have that spinner rack of comic books sitting in the local five-and-dime any more," said Dan Buckley, president of Marvel Publishing. "We don't have our product intersecting kids in their lifestyle space as much as we used to."

Translate "kids' lifestyle space" into plain English and you get "the Internet." Marvel's two most prominent competitors currently offer online teasers designed to drive the sales of comics or book collections.

Dark Horse Comics now puts its monthly anthologies "Dark Horse Presents" up for free viewing on its MySpace site. The images are vibrant and large.

DC Comics has also put issues up on MySpace, and recently launched the competition-based Zuda Comics, which encourages users to rank each other's work, as a way to tap into the expanding Web comic scene. Company president Paul Levitz said he expects to put more original comics online in coming years.

"We look at anything that connects comics to people," Levitz said. "The most interesting thing about the online world to me is the opportunity for new forms of creativity. ... It's a question of what forms of storytelling work for the Web?"

For its mature Vertigo imprint, DC offers weekly sneak peeks at the first five or six pages of upcoming issues. The publisher also gives out downloadable PDF files of the first issues in certain series, timed to publication of the series in book or graphic novel format.

For Marvel, the general public has often already gotten its initial taste through movies like "Spider-Man" or the "Fantastic Four" franchises.

The publisher is hoping fans will be intrigued enough about the origins of those characters to shell out $9.99 (euro6.8) a month, or $4.99 (euro3.4) monthly with a yearlong commitment. For that price, they will be able to look through, say, the first 100 issues of Stan Lee's 1963 creation "Amazing Spider-Man" at their leisure, along with more recent titles like "House of M" and "Young Avengers." Comics can be viewed in several different formats, including frame-by-frame navigation.

Though most comic fans are collectors, some simply want to catch up on the backstory of their favorite characters and would no longer have to pay top dollar to do so.

About 2,500 issues will be available at launch of Marvel Digital Comics, with 20 more being released each week.

Monday, November 12, 2007

"Universal Music Dips Deeper Into DRM-Free Waters"

from digitalmusicnews.com

London-based Universal Music Classics & Jazz is now offering its catalog DRM-free, a three-month experiment.  The move is part of a broader play by Universal Music Group, which is now dabbling in protection-free formats.  "The online music market is evolving quickly and we want to explore the way forward thoroughly and responsibly," commented Dickon Stainer, managing director of Universal Music Classics & Jazz.  "By making our entire catalog available in an open MP3 format we will have the opportunity to assess the level of demand, the effect on the wider music download market and of course whether we will have a problem with piracy."

The group launched its download destination at classicsandjazz.co.uk in January, a response to increased digital demand.  Member labels include Deutsche Grammophon, Decca, Philips, Verve, Emacy, and Impulse, a group that collectively contributes roughly 8,000 albums.  Label artists include Katherine Jenkins, Jamie Cullum, Luciano Pavarotti, Miles Davis, Andrea Bocelli, Diana Krall, and Russell Watson.  The catalog also includes a considerable number of classical recordings from greats like Tchaikovsky, Handel, Beethoven, and Bach.  

Sunday, November 11, 2007

"New Police Technology Offers Bird's Eye View"

from abcnews.com

Pistol Cam Fits on Gun Barrel and Records as Soon as It Is Removed From Holster

A digital camera that's attached to the barrel of a gun and starts recording when an officer draws his or her weapon is allowing law enforcement officials to go high-tech in their hunts.

The "Pistol Cam," which acts as extra eyes for any officer caught in a confrontation, currently is only used in Orange County, N.Y. More are expected to end up in police stations around the country during the next few years.

"This allows us the opportunity to review shooting incidents, unlawful use of force incidents and hopefully exonerate the member that's involved in the shooting. It also ensures the public the police are not overstepping their boundaries," said Orange County Sheriff's Office Capt. Dennis Barry.

The camera can catch things like a bullet traveling 1,000 mph from a gun barrel, and the founder of the company that makes the device said it's like an airplane black box because it can't be tampered with by the officer.

The Pistol Cam, which was originally created to videotape animals while hunting, is part of a large move toward more transparency in law enforcement. Dashboard camera videos aboard police cruisers have been popular for years, and now some officers even carry Tasers with cameras.

"You are going to be able to see that I was giving somebody lawful commands. You are going to be able to see them in an … angry stance, emotionally disturbed," said Marcus Martin, of the Las Vegas Metro Police Department, which uses Tasers with cameras.

Police hope the technology will help prevent confusion about what really happens during arrests and stops and help citizen feel more secure having everything caught on tape.

They hope to avoid high-profile cases like the one earlier this year when a University of Florida student was Tasered after asking persistent questions to Sen. John Kerry, D-Mass. The case gained national attention as the victim yelled out, "Don't Tase me, bro," as a camera recorded the incident.

But privacy advocates worry the new crime-fighting technologies have the potential to cross the line.

"The cameras have the potential to be a good thing, but only if the recordings are shared with the public on request," said Gary Peck of the American Civil Liberties Union.

"PRINCE taking legal action to new heights"

By Ekaf Swen - November 11th, 2007

Minneapolis, MN


The artist currently known as PRINCE has been on a much publicized suing spree for many weeks now. The targets of his litigation thus far have been Youtube.com, Ebay.com, several Torrent sites worldwide, and even his own fans.

Ace Lounge has learned that the purple one is truly taking things to the next level with regards to his copyright infringement crackdown.

Future lawsuits will be filed next week against m
embers of England's Royal Family: Prince Charles, Prince William, and Prince Harry.

Also on his list of litigants: J.K Rowling - author of the novel "Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince", the creators of the syndicated television program "The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air", and The Disney Company for their repeated use of the Prince Charming character for the past 50+ years.


He also is demanding that all past and future moneys collected from persons administering or persons who were administered Prince Albert Piercings be awarded to him.

Phone calls to all parties were not returned by press time. We will keep you informed on this story as it develops.

"Rap icon hosts lively Hip-Hop debate show on Web"

from reuters.com - by Gail Mitchell

LOS ANGELES (Billboard) - Bill Maher crossed with "Meet the Press" for the Hip-Hop culture -- that's the potent formula behind "SpitFire," a new talk show hosted by rap pioneer Kool Moe Dee.

The show is an offshoot of IAmHipHop.com, a recently launched social networking site. Concentrating on all things hip-hop, the portal (http://www.iamhiphop.com) will also begin posting three- to five-minute segments of various "SpitFire" episodes at the end of November.

Taped before a studio audience in Los Angeles, "SpitFire" finds a suit-and-tied Kool Moe Dee orchestrating a lively discussion with three special guests. For instance, the sixth episode (taped October 30) featured MC Lyte, radio/TV personality Tavis Smiley and Public Enemy frontman Chuck D.

The trio dug into such issues as the absence of black political leadership today, whether there is a willful silencing of social and political messages in Hip-Hop music and Lyte's decision to participate in VH1's "Celebrity Rap Superstar" series. (Kool Moe Dee passed on the same offer.)

At one point, Smiley directed a pointed question to young black America: "Is there anyone in the public sphere who you believe would be willing to die for you in the way Martin Luther King and Malcolm X did?"

"This is about the evolution of Hip-Hop and representing its culture," says Alex Avant, chief networking officer and partner in I Am Hip Hop.Com.

Anyone affiliated with the Hip-Hop culture -- New-School/Old-School artists, managers, agents, lawyers, graffiti artists -- are potential guests. Noting that Kool Moe Dee had long harbored the dream of being a talk-show host, Avant adds, "Hopefully, this show and the site will become key sources for people to find new Hip-Hop artists."

Earlier episodes of the 90-minute show (which includes about 20 minutes of audience Q&A) brought together such guests as Doug E. Fresh, Warren G, Xzibit, Run-D.M.C.'s Darryl McDaniels, clothing designer Karl Kanai, the Sugarhill Gang's Master Gee and author/former Billboard columnist Nelson George. Topics range from fashion/imaging and use of the "N" word to assessing an artist's social responsibility and what constitutes as selling out.

Primarily African-American with a 20% mix of Hispanics and Caucasians, the "SpitFire" audience falls between 18 and 51 years old. Avant says two to three more tapings are planned for this inaugural cycle. During the hiatus, the shortened segments will begin running on IAmHipHop.com. "God willing, after that," Avant says, "viewers will able to watch 'SpitFire' on a television network."