May 19, 2012 | Google News Updates

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The Disgraceful Shame Of Oppression

Aljazeera - Hamza al-Khateeb used to love it when the rains came to his small corner of southern Syria, filling up the farmers' irrigation channels enough so that he and the other children could jump in and swim. But the drought of the last few years had left the 13-year-old without the fun of his favourite pool.

Instead, he'd taken to raising homing pigeons, standing on the roof of his family's simple breeze-block home, craning his neck back to see the birds circling above the wide horizon of fields, where wheat and tomatoes were grown from the tough, scrubby soils.

Though not from a wealthy family himself, Hamza was always aware of others less fortunate than himself, said a cousin who spoke to Al Jazeera. "He would often ask his parents for money to give to the poor. I remember once he wanted to give someone 100 Syrian Pounds ($2), and his family said it was too much. But Hamza said, 'I have a bed and food while that guy has nothing.' And so he persuaded his parents to give the poor man the 100."

In the hands of President Bashar al-Assad's security forces, however, Hamza found no such compassion, his humanity degraded to nothing more than a lump of flesh to beat, burn, torture and defile, until the screaming stopped at last. Arrested during a protest in Saida, 10km east of Daraa, on April 29, Hamza's body was returned to his family on Tuesday 24th May, horribly mutilated.

West Wing Week : Best Of 2011
U.S. Whitehouse - Taking a look back at the best of the many events covered during President Obama's third year in office. Highlights include exclusive behind-the-scenes footage and some of his favorite public presidential moments. Spanning from day 711 on January 1st to day 1073 on December 31st of 2011.
Presidential Candidate Against SOPA
Jill Stein for President
Jill Stein, Green Party candidate for president, said today she opposes the Stop Online Piracy Act (SOPA, H.R. 3261) for giving the government and corporations too much power to restrict speech on the internet. "Democracy can only succeed when free speech is a reality, not merely a promissory note. SOPA would impose censorship on the internet and threatens whistle-blowers and others whose speech is vital to a healthy society. SOPA is part of the escalating assault by global media corporations and many governments on the openness of the internet," said Stein. Under SOPA, the U.S. Attorney General would be able to block websites by creating a blacklist and requiring service providers (including search engines) to block sites on that list. While the powers granted to the Attorney General would present major obstacles to regular users, it would be easy for the tech-savy individuals responsible for actual "online piracy" to circumvent.
Feds Investigate Employers Demanding Facebook Passwords
Venture Beat
  •  By Tom Cheredar
Two U.S. senators are asking the Attorney General to investigate claims that employers are asking workers to submit personal Facebook login information as part of the job. We first heard about this strange new trend last week. Apparently, there are some human resources professionals who ask applicants to hand over Facebook login credentials, including their user names, passwords, and security questions. Others have simply asked workers to log into their Facebook accounts on a company computer to comb through their accounts later, or have asked their workers to add them as a friend on the social network to gain access to their profiles. Many people don’t want to push back against the requests for fear of being fired, or not getting a job they’re seeking.
Live Superfoods - The Raw Superfoods Superstore
SOPA: What if Google, Facebook and Twitter Went Offline?
Time-Techland
  •  By Graeme McMillan
Can you imagine a world without Google or Facebook? If plans to protest the potential passing of the Stop Online Piracy Act (SOPA) come to fruition, you won’t need to; those sites, along with many other well-known online destinations, will go temporarily offline as a taste of what we could expect from a post-SOPA Internet. Companies including Google, Facebook, Twitter, PayPal, Yahoo! and Wikipedia are said to be discussing a coordinated blackout of services to demonstrate the potential effect SOPA would have on the Internet, something already being called a “Nuclear Option” of protesting. The rumors surrounding the potential blackout were only strengthened by Markham Erickson, executive director of trade association NetCoalition, who told FoxNews that “a number of companies have had discussions about [blacking out services]” last week.
Net Neutrality Opponents
Save The Internet
  •  By Tim Karr
Why does the Internet Innovation Alliance (IIA) have a problem with the open Internet? It’s hard to tell. IIA’s stated mission is to ensure every American, regardless of race, income or geography, has access to broadband. It seems a worthy cause, but when it comes to Net Neutrality -- the principle that protects consumer choice and the free flow of information online -- IIA is a staunch opponent. And earlier this year, the group was more than willing to tell the Federal Communications Commission as much, warning the agency not to pass rules that would protect everyone’s Internet freedom.
Trying To Filter The Social Web
GIGAOM
  •  By Mathew Ingram
Anyone who has tried to track dozens of Twitter streams, hundreds of Facebook updates or thousands of blog posts simultaneously knows that the social web can be an intimidating — and never-ending — ocean of information, one that constantly threatens to swamp us. (There’s a reason Twitter and other social networks call the APIs they use to provide all their data a “firehose.”) A startup called Swift River is one of a number of new services that are trying to find ways of filtering and understanding that ocean in real time, by using “semantic web” technologies.
AP - Fair Trade Fashion and Footwear

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