Showing posts with label pays. Show all posts
Showing posts with label pays. Show all posts

Monday, March 17, 2014

SLAIN SOLDIER; Commanding Officer pays tribute to

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SLAIN SOLDIER; Commanding Officer pays tribute to

Saturday, January 11, 2014

Houston father pays child support in full but gets six months in jail anyway


By George Chidi
Saturday, January 11, 2014 21:46 EST


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  • A Houston-area man expects to turn himself in to the Harris County jail in a few days after receiving a six-month sentence for failing to pay his child support … which appears to be completely paid up.


    The story of Clifford Hall began to go viral Friday after Houston’s Fox affiliate, Fox 26 reported the man’s plight.


    Hall claims that his child support payments had been modified in court without his knowledge, and that he quickly made up the $ 3000 difference before his court appearance in November. While he’s been an active participant in his 11-year-old son’s life, the court cited him for violating his visitation requirements — another condition he says had been changed earlier without notice.


    His ex-wife had been pressing for an additional $ 3000 in attorney’s fees.


    The story itself neither names Hall’s ex-wife, nor her attorney. A call to Quanell X, a minister in the New Black Panther Party who has been pressing Hall’s case, hasn’t yet been returned.


    Family court Judge Lisa Millard told Fox 26 that she found Hall in contempt after he walked out of the courtroom when she pronounced him in violation, which she says is a big no-no and may have contributed to the sentencing.


    Watch a report on Hall’s case below.



    Read more:







    The Raw Story



    Houston father pays child support in full but gets six months in jail anyway

Tuesday, November 19, 2013

Google pays US states $17m to settle Apple web browser tracking complaint

Google pays US states $17m to settle Apple web browser tracking complaint
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Payment equal to one days’ revenue for hacking Safari browser cookie settings going to 37 US states and District of Columbia in PR blow to search company


Google is paying $ 17m to 37 US states and the District of Columbia as compensation for snooping on millions of people by subverting Apple’s web browser in 2011 and 2012.


The settlement, announced on Monday evening, follows a record $ 22.5m fine handed out to the search giant in August 2012 over the same complaint by the US Federal Trade Commission.


The settlement came after Google admitted in 2012 that it had circumvented protections built into Apple’s Safari browser on the iPhone, iPad and Mac to track users via its DoubleClick advertising network.


Apple’s default settings ban sites which users have not visited from setting “cookies”, small text files with information about the user and site, on their machine. Cookies can act as unique identifiers of a user; if two unrelated sites used DoubleClick for advertising – as many do – and a Safari user went from one to the other, their movements could be tracked by Google.


Google admitted that it had carried out the hacking of the Safari browser in February 2012, but did not admit liability, the same position that it adopted with the FTC. This was important in that judgement because an admission of liability could have left Google subject to a much larger fine on the grounds that it breached a previous FTC consent order over user privacy. That was imposed in March 2011 over its “Buzz” social network and will be in force for 20 years.


Google has maintained the Safari intrusion was an inadvertent side-effect of an attempt to make it easier for people to recommend ads.


Until the problem was uncovered by Jonathan Mayer, a graduate student at Stanford University, Google had assured Safari users that they wouldn’t be monitored as long as they didn’t change the browser settings to permit the tracking.


“Misrepresenting that tracking will not occur, when that is not the case, is unacceptable, as this settlement emphasises,” Wisconsin Attorney General J.B. Van Hollen said.


“We work hard to get privacy right at Google and have taken steps to remove the ad cookies, which collected no personal information, from Apple’s browsers,” the company said in a statement. “We’re pleased to have worked with the state attorneys general to reach this agreement.”


The settlement will be divided among the participating states and the District of Columbia.


The states’ rebuke is primarily a PR blow to Google, whose privacy controls have suffered other lapses in recent years. The most glaring privacy breach came when a Google engineer installed a program which enabled Google cars collecting pictures of street scenes to also scoop up personal data being transmitted over unprotected Wi-Fi networks. That led to a $ 7m fine from 38 US states and the District of Columbia, while the Federal Communications Commission fined it $ 25,000 for obstructing its investigation into what happened.


The latest settlement will barely dent Google’s finances. After stripping out the company’s advertising commissions, Google’s revenue this year is expected to be about $ 47bn, according to analysts surveyed by FactSet. That suggests it would take Google slightly more than three hours to generate $ 17m in revenue on an average day.


Besides paying the fine, Google also is agreeing to maintain a special page devoted to cookies for the next five years and refrain making any misleading statements about its online tracking practices.





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Saturday, November 9, 2013

Gov’t pays $1,123,463 to develop strawberry harvest-aiding robots

Gov’t pays $1,123,463 to develop strawberry harvest-aiding robots
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By Eric Scheiner | CNS News


The U.S. Department of Agriculture  (USDA) has given an award of $ 1,123,463 to the University of California, Davis to develop “relatively small, inexpensive robots” to aid in harvesting strawberries.


The announcement was made in late October as part of a series of USDA awards “to spur the development and use of robots in American agriculture production,” according to a USDA press release.


The release describes the UC Davis robotics grant as a “project (that) will develop relatively small, inexpensive robots to aid in human harvesting of strawberries.”


Read more at CNS News. 



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Read more about Gov’t pays $1,123,463 to develop strawberry harvest-aiding robots and other interesting subjects concerning NSA at TheDailyNewsReport.com

Thursday, November 7, 2013

CIA Pays Telecoms Millions for Your Personal Information


Kurt Nimmo
Infowars.com
November 7, 2013


President Jimmy Carter and Senator Frank Church in 1977. Photo: National Archives and Records Administration

President Jimmy Carter and Senator Frank Church in 1977. Photo: National Archives and Records Administration



On Thursday, the New York Times reported that the CIA is paying AT&T more than $ 10 million a year to help the intelligence agency conduct “counterterrorism investigations” on voluntary contract. The arrangement is a business deal that avoids the messy business of subpoenas, court orders, the legal system and the Bill of Rights.


The CIA gives the transnational communications corporation the phone numbers of people it wants data on and AT&T searches it databases.


“The program adds a new dimension to the debate over government spying and the privacy of communications records, which has been focused on National Security Agency programs in recent months,” the Times explains. “The disclosure sheds further light on the ties between intelligence officials and communications service providers.”


NSA and CIA spying on the American people is nothing new. It has occurred uninterrupted since the establishment of the national security state in 1947.


Illegal spying on the communications of the American people began in earnest back in 1945 with Operation Shamrock, a collaborative effort between British and U.S. intelligence to collect the telegraph messages of millions of citizens. It operated in tandem with Project Minaret, a sister project that sent the pilfered communications along to the FBI, CIA, Secret Service, Bureau of Narcotics and Dangerous Drugs, the Department of Defense, and local law enforcement.


Both programs were designed to keep tabs on “unreliable” Americans like Martin Luther King and thousands of others considered dangerous to the status quo, including antiwar protesters, untrustworthy politicians, diplomats, businessmen, trades union leaders, non-government organizations, and even Catholic Church officials. Minaret was established with the specific purpose of spying on “subversive” Americans, in other words those who disagreed with the establishment.


Although the Church Committee uncovered a lot of information about these Fourth Amendment busting operations, the full extent of the involvement of Western Union, RCA, ITT, and other telecoms was covered up by President Gerald Ford when he extended executive privilege to the corporations on the recommendations of then Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld and presidential chief of staff Dick Cheney.


In addition, then vice president Nelson Rockefeller worked to keep Senate Democrats from discovering just how deep the constitutional violations of the intelligence community ran. He established the bogus “Rockefeller Commission” to whitewash excesses after the New York Times published a Seymour Hersh article revealing the existence of the decades-old domestic surveillance programs. Instead, Senate Democrats sidestepped Rockefeller and established the Church Committee in 1975 (this would be the last time a relatively unencumbered congressional committee would be allowed to investigate the CIA and other intelligence agencies).


Limited revelations uncovered by the Church Committee would lead to President Jimmy Carter signing the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act into law in 1978. This would lead to the creation of a secret FISA court outside the purview of the Constitution and the Bill of Rights. It routinely rubber-stamped illegal surveillance of American citizens.


In October, following a howl of public outrage over NSA surveillance, the Senate Intelligence Committee approved the dubiously titled FISA Improvement Act. Instead of reforming FISA procedures, the measure in fact legalized bulk data collection. Congress admits that it has virtually zero oversight over the NSA (and less than zero over the CIA and the rest of the intelligence community).


“I believe the NSA would answer questions if we asked them, and if we knew to ask them, but it would not routinely report these things, and in general they would not fall within the focus of the committee,” said Senate Democrat Dianne Feinstein when asked about oversight.


The latest news about CIA rolling around in bed with large telecoms is hardly surprising and in fact only underscores what we already know — we live in a sprawling surveillance panopticon and have since the end of the Second World War and the establishment of the national security state.


This article was posted: Thursday, November 7, 2013 at 11:16 am


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Infowars



CIA Pays Telecoms Millions for Your Personal Information

Tuesday, August 6, 2013

NSA pays £100m in secret funding for GCHQ

gchq-logoNSA has been funding the UK’s largest intelligence agency to the tune of $ 100 million over the past three years…


Nick Hopkins and Julian Borger report for the Guardian.


Via The Guardian:


The US government has paid at least £100m to the UK spy agency GCHQ over the last three years to secure access to and influence over Britain’s intelligence gathering programmes.


The top secret payments are set out in documents which make clear that the Americans expect a return on the investment, and that GCHQ has to work hard to meet their demands. “GCHQ must pull its weight and be seen to pull its weight,” a GCHQ strategy briefing said.


The funding underlines the closeness of the relationship between GCHQ and its US equivalent, the National Security Agency. But it will raise fears about the hold Washington has over the UK’s biggest and most important intelligence agency, and whether Britain’s dependency on the NSA has become too great.


In one revealing document from 2010, GCHQ acknowledged that the US had “raised a number of issues with regards to meeting NSA’s minimum expectations”. It said GCHQ “still remains short of the full NSA ask”.


Ministers have denied that GCHQ does the NSA’s “dirty work”, but in the documents GCHQ describes Britain’s surveillance laws and regulatory regime as a “selling point” for the Americans.



Keep reading.


 


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NSA pays £100m in secret funding for GCHQ

Tuesday, July 16, 2013

Gallup Pays $10.5M Settlement for Overcharging Feds

Gallup has agreed to a $ 10.5 million settlement with the Department of Justice after two government agencies said the polling and market research firm significantly overcharged them.

According to The Hill, the State Department and the U.S. Mint alleged in a Justice Department complaint that Gallup overstated its estimated labor hours, resulting in “falsely inflated prices” for the work it did for the government.


The complaint also said the firm engaged in “improper employment negotiations” with an employee from the Federal Emergency Management Agency to get an overpriced contract.


“Contractors must be honest and straightforward in their contract proposals to the government,” the DOJ said in a statement, according to The Hill.


“We will pursue contractors that seek to take advantage of the government by providing estimates that do not reflect their best judgment, or by offering employment to federal officials who have a conflict of interest. This type of misconduct results in inflated contract prices and undermines the integrity of the government’s contracting process,” the statement said.


Gallup has not admitted to any wrongdoing, and said in a statement, “By ending this civil action with no admission of wrongdoing, Gallup can avoid further distraction and focus on serving its customers. The company continues its dedication to the highest standard of ethics in business.”


© 2013 Newsmax. All rights reserved.




Newsmax – America



Gallup Pays $10.5M Settlement for Overcharging Feds

Saturday, June 29, 2013

In South Africa, Obama pays tribute to ill Mandela







U.S. President Barack Obama pauses during a town hall meeting with young African leaders at the University of Johannesburg Soweto on Saturday, June 29, 2013, in Johannesburg, South Africa. The president is in South Africa, embarking on the second leg of his three-country African journey. The visit comes at a poignant time, with former South African president and anti-apartheid hero Nelson Mandela ailing in a Johannesburg hospital. (AP Photo/Evan Vucci)





U.S. President Barack Obama pauses during a town hall meeting with young African leaders at the University of Johannesburg Soweto on Saturday, June 29, 2013, in Johannesburg, South Africa. The president is in South Africa, embarking on the second leg of his three-country African journey. The visit comes at a poignant time, with former South African president and anti-apartheid hero Nelson Mandela ailing in a Johannesburg hospital. (AP Photo/Evan Vucci)





U.S. President Barack Obama greets the public as he arrives to deliver remarks and takes questions at a town hall meeting with young African leaders at the University of Johannesburg Soweto campus Saturday June 29, 2013.(AP Photo/Jerome Delay)





A wellwisher takes a photograph with their smartphone of a painting of President Barack Obama that sits amongst get-well messages and images of former South African President Nelson Mandela outside the Mediclinic Heart Hospital where Nelson Mandela is being treated in Pretoria, South Africa Saturday, June 29, 2013. President Barack Obama encouraged leaders in Africa and around the world Saturday to follow former South African President Nelson Mandela’s example of country before self, as the U.S. president prepared to pay personal respects to relatives who have been gathered around the critically ill anti-apartheid icon. (AP Photo/Ben Curtis)





U.S. President Barack Obama delivers remarks and takes questions at a town hall meeting with young African leaders at the University of Johannesburg Soweto campus in South Africa, Saturday June 29, 2013.(AP Photo/Jerome Delay)





U.S. President Barack Obama, left, talks with South African President Jacob Zuma at the Union Building on Saturday, June 29, 2013, in Pretoria, South Africa. The visit comes at a poignant time, with former South African president and anti-apartheid hero Nelson Mandela ailing in a Johannesburg hospital. The White House issued a statement Saturday that President Barack Obama plans to visit privately with relatives of former South African President Nelson Mandela, but doesn’t intend to see the critically ill anti-apartheid activist he has called a “personal hero.” (AP Photo/Evan Vucci)













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(AP) — Paying tribute to his personal hero, President Barack Obama met privately Saturday with Nelson Mandela’s family as the world anxiously awaited news on the condition of the ailing 94-year-old anti-apartheid leader.


Obama, who has spoken movingly about Mandela throughout his trip to Africa, praised the former South African president’s “moral courage” during remarks from the grand Union Buildings where Mandela was inaugurated as his nation’s first black president.


The U.S. president also called on the continent’s leaders, including in neighboring Zimbabwe, to take stock of Mandela’s willingness to put country before self and step down after one term despite his immense popularity.


“We as leaders occupy these spaces temporarily and we don’t get so deluded that we think the fate of our country doesn’t depend on how long we stay in office,” Obama said during a news conference with South African President Jacob Zuma.


Obama’s stop in South Africa marked the midway point of a weeklong trip to Africa, his most significant engagement with the continent since taking office in 2009.


His lack of personal attention on the region has frustrated some Africans who had high expectations for the first black American president and son of a Kenyan man.


Even with Mandela’s health casting a shadow over his visit, Obama tried to keep focus on an agenda that includes deeper U.S. economic ties with Africa. The president dismissed suggestions that he was only investing personal capital on Africa’s economy now as a response to the increased focus on the continent by China, India, Brazil and others.


“I want everybody playing in Africa,” he said. “The more, the merrier.”


But the president pointedly called on Africans to make sure that countries seeking an economic foothold on the continent are making a “good deal for Africa.”


“If somebody says they want to come build something here, are they hiring African workers?” Obama said. “If somebody says that they want to help you develop your natural resources, how much of the money is staying in Africa? If they say that they’re very interested in a certain industry, is the manufacturing and value-added done in Africa? “


The president did not specifically single out China, but some African leaders have criticized Beijing for such behaviors.


Obama’s focus on trade and business appeared to be well received in Africa, home to six of the world’s 10 fastest-growing economies. The majority of the questions he received from the South African press and later at a town hall meeting with young African leaders focused on U.S. economic interests in the region.


Between his two events, Obama spent about 30 minutes meeting privately with two of Mandela’s daughters and several of his grandchildren at the former leader’s foundation offices in Johannesburg. He also spoke by phone with Mandela’s wife, Graça Machel, who remained by her husband’s side at the Pretoria hospital where he has battled a lung infection for three weeks.


In a statement following the call, Machel said she drew strength from the Obama and his “touch of personal warmth.”


Obama, who has met Mandela in person only once before, did not visit the former leader in the hospital out of respect for his family’s wishes, the White House said. Ahead of his arrival in South Africa, the president had told reporters that he did not need “a photo-op” and didn’t want to be obtrusive.


Obama ascent to the White House has drawn inevitable comparisons to Mandela. Both are their nations’ first black presidents, symbols of racial barrier breaking and winners of the Nobel Peace Prize.


Zuma said Obama and Mandela “both carry the dreams of millions of people in Africa and in the diaspora who were previously oppressed.” Zuma said Mandela’s condition remained the same as it had in recent days — critical yet stable — though he expressed hope that Mandela soon would leave the hospital.


Obama, Zuma and other dignitaries held a moment of silence for Mandela during a dinner Saturday night.


Also Saturday, Obama held a town hall with young people in Soweto, an area of Johannesburg that was a center of the youth-driven movement to fight against South Africa’s apartheid government. At least 176 young people were killed there 27 years ago this month during a youth protest against the white government’s ban against teaching local Bantu languages. The Soweto Uprising catalyzed international support against apartheid, and June is now recognized as Youth Month in South Africa.


Outside the event, protesters under police watch demonstrated outside the university against Obama’s record on surveillance and foreign policy. Protesters from a range of trade unions and civil society groups chanted, “Away with intelligence, away,” holding posters depicting Obama with an Adolf Hitler moustache.


In Africa, where some governments struggle with corruption, Obama has made it a priority to promote civic activism among young people and invest in their development. He hosted young leaders from more than 40 African countries at the White House in 2010 and announced plans during the event to expand the program.


About 600 youth leaders from South Africa attended the town hall, with other young people participating via video conference from Uganda, Nigeria and Kenya, Obama’s ancestral homeland.


Kenya’s current political environment made it impossible for Obama to visit the country where many of his relatives live. The International Criminal Court is prosecuting Kenyan President Uhuru Kenyatta for crimes against humanity, including murder, deportation, rape, persecution and inhumane acts allegedly committed by his supporters in the aftermath of Kenya’s 2007 elections.


“The timing was not right for me as the president of the United States to be visiting Kenya when those issues are still being worked on, and hopefully at some point resolved,” said Obama, though he added that he planned to make many more trips to the East African nation.


The president planned to stop in Cape Town on Sunday and visit Robben Island, the prison where Mandela spent 18 of his 27 years in jail. Obama will close his trip with a visit to Tanzania.


___


Associated Press writer Nedra Pickler and AP Video Journalist Bram Janssen contributed to this report.


___


Follow Julie Pace at http://twitter.com/jpaceDC


Associated Press




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In South Africa, Obama pays tribute to ill Mandela

Friday, June 21, 2013

UK Spy Agency Allegedly Taps Into Transatlantic Cables To Collect Data, Pays Companies For Cost Of Cooperation


gchq_data


According to the latest set of documents from Edward Snowden that were released by the Guardian today, the Britsh spy agency GCHQ has been tapping into 46 transatlantic fiber-optic cables that carry data between Europe and North America to collect and store email messages, Facebook posts and other information for at least the last 18 months, though the program, code-named “Tempora,” has supposedly been built up over the last five years.


Given what we’ve heard about the NSA and its close relationship to Britain’s GCHQ, this may not come as a total surprise and as the Guardian reports, GCHQ is sharing its information with the NSA.


“It’s not just a U.S. problem. The U.K. has a huge dog in this fight,” Snowden told the Guardian. “They [GCHQ] are worse than the U.S.”


According to this report, about 300 GCHQ and 250 NSA analysts were working on analyzing this data by last May and an unnamed U.K. official argues that they get to work with even more information than the NSA because the program actually “produces larger amounts of metadata than NSA.” By last year, the program was handling 600 million “telephone events” each day and was processing data from 46 of the 200 fibre-optic cables it tapped into.


As with all of these program, the legality of the operation is in doubt, though the 2000 Regulation of Investigatory Powers Act (Ripa), the report says, requires the GCHQ to obtain a warrant for the tapping of “defined targets.”


The report also alleges that a number of companies have been “paid for the cost of their co-operation,” but unlike the NSA PRISM leaks, the names of these companies remain under wraps and the companies themselves are forbidden to reveal the existence of this program. They were, however, “obliged” to participate in the program, though it’s obviously not clear if they put up a fight or not.


Sadly, the Guardian did not post the actual documents, so for the time being, we have to take the reporter’s word as to the extend of the program.




TechCrunch



UK Spy Agency Allegedly Taps Into Transatlantic Cables To Collect Data, Pays Companies For Cost Of Cooperation