Showing posts with label tech. Show all posts
Showing posts with label tech. Show all posts

Thursday, March 27, 2014

Poll Shows San Francisco Tech Backlash Is Not Universally Supported

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Poll Shows San Francisco Tech Backlash Is Not Universally Supported

Friday, March 21, 2014

Obama meeting with Internet CEOs on tech privacy


(AP) — President Barack Obama is meeting with CEOs from leading Internet and technology companies to discuss their concerns about privacy and National Security Agency programs.


The White House says Obama will host the leaders Friday in the Oval Office. The meeting comes two months after Obama gave a speech proposing changes to NSA spying programs following public and industry concern.


Google CEO Eric Schmidt and Netflix CEO Reed Hastings will join the meeting. So will Drew Houston of the file storage site Dropbox and Mark Zuckerberg of Facebook.


Zuckerberg wrote on his own Facebook page last week that he had called Obama to express his frustration over damage he says the government is creating for everyone’s future. Zuckerberg says it seems like it will take a long time for true reform.


Associated Press




Politics Headlines



Obama meeting with Internet CEOs on tech privacy

Tuesday, March 11, 2014

Snowden Urges Tech Companies to Create More Security Products

At Not Just The News, the privacy of our visitors is of extreme importance to us (See this article to learn more about Privacy Policies.). This privacy policy document outlines the types of personal information is received and collected by Not Just The News and how it is used.


Log Files


Like many other Web sites, Not Just The News makes use of log files. The information inside the log files includes internet protocol (IP) addresses, type of browser, Internet Service Provider (ISP), date/time stamp, referring/exit pages, and number of clicks to analyze trends, administer the site, track user"s movement around the site, and gather demographic information. IP addresses, and other such information are not linked to any information that is personally identifiable.


Cookies and Web Beacons


Not Just The News does use cookies to store information about visitors preferences, record user-specific information on which pages the user access or visit, customize Web page content based on visitors browser type or other information that the visitor sends via their browser.


DoubleClick DART Cookie


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These third-party ad servers or ad networks use technology to the advertisements and links that appear on Not Just The News send directly to your browsers. They automatically receive your IP address when this occurs. Other technologies ( such as cookies, JavaScript, or Web Beacons ) may also be used by the third-party ad networks to measure the effectiveness of their advertisements and / or to personalize the advertising content that you see.


Not Just The News has no access to or control over these cookies that are used by third-party advertisers.


You should consult the respective privacy policies of these third-party ad servers for more detailed information on their practices as well as for instructions about how to opt-out of certain practices. Not Just The News"s privacy policy does not apply to, and we cannot control the activities of, such other advertisers or web sites.


If you wish to disable cookies, you may do so through your individual browser options. More detailed information about cookie management with specific web browsers can be found at the browser"s respective websites.



Snowden Urges Tech Companies to Create More Security Products

Wednesday, March 5, 2014

VIDEO: Samsung Pushed Out Of IPhone 6 Chip Production?







A new AFP report, which cites a Commercial Times story, says that A8 chip production for the iPhone 6 family of phones has started, with Taiwan’s TSMC being the primary chip maker for the handset. Samsung has apparently been left mostly out of chip production, the report hints, as TSMC has “won most of the manufacturing orders for logic and power management integrated chips for the new handset.” This isn’t the first time Samsung is said to have been given a smaller and smaller role in Apple’s supply chain , although the parties involved would not confirm it.













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VIDEO: Samsung Pushed Out Of IPhone 6 Chip Production?

Wednesday, February 5, 2014

Five ways Asia is saving American tech

Five ways Asia is saving American tech
http://resources0.news.com.au/images/2014/02/06/1226819/703064-81adae4a-8ed2-11e3-8dff-f6af7c30323d.jpg




Apple is growing thanks to China. And they


Apple is growing thanks to China. And they’re not the only American company with vital ties to Asia. Source: AP Photo Source: AP




WITHOUT Asia, American technology companies would be plummeting. It’s a bold statement but it’s a gripping reality.



An article by Mashable explains how earning reports and major tech company strategies revolve around Asia and how without its market they’d struggle to bloom.


Apple is not immune


They might be the most profitable brand in the world but even Apple needs to reach out a branch to Asia. After securing a deal with China Mobile (the country’s biggest mobile provider) its forecasted earnings for 2014 have seen a significant rise. With China being the biggest smartphone market in the world this deal will prove key to Apple’s growth and staying power.


Lenovo comes to Google’s rescue


It was recently announced that Lenovo (a Chinese-owned company) would buy Motorola from Google. This is great business for Google as it was able to ditch a flagging arm of its business whilst keeping the Android patents. Lenovo also stepped-in and bought the PC business from IBM back in 2005 – again offering a lifeline to a company that didn’t see a part of its business as essential. Lenovo is helping American companies shed what isn’t in their strategy for a big chunk of cash.


MORE: 28 awesome things you didn’t know about Google



Google is selling Motorola


Google is selling Motorola’s smartphone business to Lenovo for US$ 2.9 billion, a price that makes Google’s biggest acquisition look like its most expensive mistake. Source: AP Photo Source: AP



Facebook is liked in Asia


Facebook has over 368 million monthly active users in Asia and that amounts to Facebook’s most populous and fastest growing continent. Asian numbers are still blooming, despite China actually blocking the site.


MORE: Five ways Facebook has changed our lives


Yahoo’s sugar daddy


Alibaba is China’s biggest e-commerce company. Anything you can think of can pretty much be bought here. And in big numbers. You might not realise but Yahoo actually owns a 20 percent stake in the business and last quarter its earning were double that of Yahoo’s. Snapping up a stake in Alibaba was a savvy move, a move that is without doubt keeping Yahoo running.


Microsoft’s fate


It might be a tenuous link but perhaps the most significant rescue by Asia is Microsoft in their new CEO Satya Nadella. Born in Hyderabad, India, he received his bachelor’s degree there and moved to the US eventually taking up a role within Microsoft. After 22 years at the company, growing Microsoft’s cloud business he has taken the reigns from Steve Ballmer. His knowledge of online may prove pivotal to Microsoft’s future strategy as they aim to play catch up in the mobile market and restore faith back into their Windows 8 debacle.





NEWS.com.au | Technology News




Read more about Five ways Asia is saving American tech and other interesting subjects concerning Technology at TheDailyNewsReport.com

Wednesday, January 22, 2014

Israeli Tech WILL read your mind - For Airport and Company use!!


posted on Jan, 22 2014 @ 11:51 AM


These should be mandatory for every Presidential and Congressional election, as well as Supreme Court candidates. They should also be used for Congressional hearings and police miscconduct investigations.




AboveTopSecret.com New Topics In General Conspiracies



Israeli Tech WILL read your mind - For Airport and Company use!!

Monday, January 20, 2014

Secret ‘Minority Report’ Tech In All Post-2010 iPhones

Secret ‘Minority Report’ Tech In All Post-2010 iPhones
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iBeacon tracks individual locations, bombards user with ads


Paul Joseph Watson
Prison Planet.com
January 20, 2014


Apple recently announced that they had been secretly installing Minority Report-style tracking technology in all iPhones since the iPhone 4, which was released in 2010.


Facebook @ https://www.facebook.com/paul.j.watson.71
FOLLOW Paul Joseph Watson @ https://twitter.com/PrisonPlanet


*********************


Paul Joseph Watson is the editor and writer for Infowars.com and Prison Planet.com. He is the author of Order Out Of Chaos. Watson is also a host for Infowars Nightly News.


This article was posted: Monday, January 20, 2014 at 2:28 pm









Prison Planet.com




Read more about Secret ‘Minority Report’ Tech In All Post-2010 iPhones and other interesting subjects concerning NSA at TheDailyNewsReport.com

Secret ‘Minority Report’ Tech In All Post-2010 iPhones


iBeacon tracks individual locations, bombards user with ads


Paul Joseph Watson
Prison Planet.com
January 20, 2014


Apple recently announced that they had been secretly installing Minority Report-style tracking technology in all iPhones since the iPhone 4, which was released in 2010.


Facebook @ https://www.facebook.com/paul.j.watson.71
FOLLOW Paul Joseph Watson @ https://twitter.com/PrisonPlanet


*********************


Paul Joseph Watson is the editor and writer for Infowars.com and Prison Planet.com. He is the author of Order Out Of Chaos. Watson is also a host for Infowars Nightly News.


This article was posted: Monday, January 20, 2014 at 2:28 pm









Prison Planet.com



Secret ‘Minority Report’ Tech In All Post-2010 iPhones

Secret ‘Minority Report’ Tech In All Post-2010 iPhones

Secret ‘Minority Report’ Tech In All Post-2010 iPhones
http://www.prisonplanet.com/wp-content/plugins/wp-print/images/printer_famfamfam.gif


iBeacon tracks individual locations, bombards user with ads


Paul Joseph Watson
Prison Planet.com
January 20, 2014


Apple recently announced that they had been secretly installing Minority Report-style tracking technology in all iPhones since the iPhone 4, which was released in 2010.


Facebook @ https://www.facebook.com/paul.j.watson.71
FOLLOW Paul Joseph Watson @ https://twitter.com/PrisonPlanet


*********************


Paul Joseph Watson is the editor and writer for Infowars.com and Prison Planet.com. He is the author of Order Out Of Chaos. Watson is also a host for Infowars Nightly News.


This article was posted: Monday, January 20, 2014 at 2:28 pm









Prison Planet.com




Read more about Secret ‘Minority Report’ Tech In All Post-2010 iPhones and other interesting subjects concerning NSA at TheDailyNewsReport.com

Thursday, January 9, 2014

What CES"s weird tech trends mean for you

What CES"s weird tech trends mean for you
http://feeds.theguardian.com/c/34708/f/663871/s/35b685f8/sc/15/mf.gif

In CES Las Vegas, you don’t wear technology. Technology wears you. Let us explain 2014 tech trends. Photograph: Julie Jacobson/AP












Technology news, comment and analysis | theguardian.com


Read more about What CES"s weird tech trends mean for you and other interesting subjects concerning NSA at TheDailyNewsReport.com

Tuesday, January 7, 2014

Report: NSA and tech companies both frustrated by public misunderstanding

By End the Lie


(Image credit: Ryan Somma/Flickr)

(Image credit: Ryan Somma/Flickr)



A new in-depth report reveals that National Security Agency (NSA) officials are incredibly frustrated by the public’s perception of their activities, a sentiment shared by individuals in the tech industry as well.


Read our latest articles: “Defense Department drone roadmap: ‘nano’ drones and more autonomous systems” and “FBI changes ‘primary function’ from law enforcement to national security


When Americans think that NSA agents are trying to steal their privacy, it “makes them crazy,” according to the lengthy article published in Wired.


“It’s almost delusional,” said Rick Ledgett, a deputy director at the NSA who heads the agency’s Media Leaks Task Force. “I wish I could get to the high mountaintop to scream, ‘You’re not a target!’”


Wired notes that Ledgett’s position was “created last summer for Snowden damage control.”


Gen. Keith Alexander, the director of the NSA, expressed similar sentiments.


Alexander said that he is concerned that many would want to get rid of the Prism program without knowing the facts.


The elimination of the Prism program, which he called a “hornet’s nest,” would do more harm than good, according to Alexander.


“We would like to give it [the Prism program] to somebody else, anybody else,” he said. “But we recognize that if we do that, our nation now is at greater risk for a terrorist attack. So we’re going to do the right thing; we’re going to hold on to it, let people look at the options. If there is a better option, put it on the table.”


Ledgett said that no one even understands how the NSA works.


“It’s always been a black box, Enemy of the State movies, stuff like that,” Ledgett said. “People don’t understand the NSA’s checks and balances.”


Similarly, individuals from tech companies expressed a degree of exasperation with the situation.


“We had 90 minutes to respond,” said Joe Sullivan, Facebook’s head of security, speaking of the amount of time given by The Washington Post to respond to the Prism story.


“Similar panicked conversations were taking place at Google, Apple, and Microsoft,” according to Steven Levy, the author of the Wired piece.


“The tech companies quickly issued denials that they had granted the US govern­ment direct access to their customers’ data,” Levy wrote. “But that stance was complicated by the fact that they did participate—often unwillingly—in a government program that required them to share data when a secret court ordered them to do so.”


The fact that the companies were prevented from talking about everything they knew in public and their own ignorance of the details of the programs led to response that were not seen as intended, according to Levy.


“We can put out any statement or statistics, but in the wake of what feels like weekly disclosures of other government activity, the question is, will anyone believe us?” said Michael Buckley, Facebook’s global communications head.


“Every time we spoke it seemed to make matters worse,” an executive at one unnamed company said to Levy. “We just were not believed.”


On the other hand, some telecommunications companies didn’t seem to be all that concerned with maintaining the trust of consumers.


“Verizon has never denied passing along its key billing information, including the number and duration of every call made by each of its millions of customers,” Levy said, referring to the first of Edward Snowden’s leaks.


Ultimately, the NSA doesn’t apparently see any of the fallout as problematic or a reason to stop mass harvesting data.


“They chalk all of that negativity up to monumental misunderstandings triggered by a lone leaker and a hostile press,” Levy writes.


We would love to hear your opinion, take a look at your story tips and even your original writing if you would like to get it published. Please email us at contact@EndtheLie.com.


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End the Lie – Independent News



Report: NSA and tech companies both frustrated by public misunderstanding

Sunday, December 22, 2013

VIDEO: Apple Announces Deal With China Mobile







China Mobile has finally signed a deal with Apple, bringing the iPhone to China Mobile’s 769 million customers.













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VIDEO: Apple Announces Deal With China Mobile

Tuesday, December 17, 2013

Obama ‘hijacks’ tech executive meeting to make ‘PR pitch’ on Obamacare website fix instead of dealing with NSA surveillance

At Those Damn Liars, the privacy of our visitors is of extreme importance to us (See this article to learn more about Privacy Policies.). This privacy policy document outlines the types of personal information is received and collected by Those Damn Liars and how it is used.

Log Files

Like many other Web sites, Those Damn Liars makes use of log files. The information inside the log files includes internet protocol (IP) addresses, type of browser, Internet Service Provider (ISP), date/time stamp, referring/exit pages, and number of clicks to analyze trends, administer the site, track user"s movement around the site, and gather demographic information. IP addresses, and other such information are not linked to any information that is personally identifiable.

Cookies and Web Beacons

Those Damn Liars does use cookies to store information about visitors preferences, record user-specific information on which pages the user access or visit, customize Web page content based on visitors browser type or other information that the visitor sends via their browser.

DoubleClick DART Cookie

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Obama ‘hijacks’ tech executive meeting to make ‘PR pitch’ on Obamacare website fix instead of dealing with NSA surveillance

Tech executives press Obama to reform surveillance practices




WASHINGTON Tue Dec 17, 2013 7:49pm EST



U.S. President Barack Obama speaks about the economy at an event hosted by the Center for American Progress in Washington December 4, 2013. REUTERS/Kevin Lamarque

U.S. President Barack Obama speaks about the economy at an event hosted by the Center for American Progress in Washington December 4, 2013.


Credit: Reuters/Kevin Lamarque




WASHINGTON (Reuters) – Technology company executives pressed President Barack Obama on Tuesday to rein in the U.S. government’s electronic spying after a court dealt a blow to the administration’s surveillance practices.


Top executives from Apple Inc, Google Inc, Yahoo Inc, Netflix Inc, Comcast Corp, AT&T Inc, Microsoft Corp, Twitter Inc, Facebook Inc and other companies met privately for more than two hours with Obama and top White House aides.


The session came as Obama and his national security team decide what recommendations to adopt from an outside panel’s review on constraining the activities of the National Security Agency without compromising U.S. national security.


The White House had trumpeted the meeting as a chance to talk up progress made in repairing the government’s healthcare website after its botched rollout generated a political firestorm and sent Obama’s job approval rating tumbling.


But in a brief statement released after the session, the tech companies focused solely on government surveillance, not healthcare.


“We appreciated the opportunity to share directly with the president our principles on government surveillance that we released last week and we urge him to move aggressively on reform,” the technology companies said in their statement.


The NSA’s practices essentially made the companies partners in sweeping government surveillance efforts against private citizens.


Separately, Obama’s nominee to be chief legal counsel to the Central Intelligence Agency said on Tuesday she disagreed with a judge’s ruling that the NSA surveillance programs are likely unlawful, citing a 1979 case often used as precedent in privacy cases.


“I have a different view about the Fourth Amendment,” nominee Caroline Krass said at a Senate hearing. “I think that under Smith v. Maryland, which I still consider to be good law, there is not a reasonable expectation of privacy in telephony metadata.”


A federal judge ruled on Monday that the U.S. government’s gathering of Americans’ phone records is likely unlawful.


PROTECT PRIVACY


Eight tech companies launched a campaign a week ago asking for governments to reform surveillance practices to protect privacy, writing an open letter to Obama and Congress on the issue.


They said revelations by former NSA contractor Edward Snowden had highlighted an urgent need to reform government surveillance practices worldwide.


A representative from one of the companies, who asked not to be identified, said the White House had wanted to meet to discuss the HealthCare.gov website. The invitations were sent before the White House received the tech companies’ letter.


The main draw for the tech companies was the opportunity to press the case on the need for more transparency on the bulk data collected.


A senior administration official, speaking on condition of anonymity, described the meeting as constructive and “not at all contentious.” Obama and a clutch of his top advisers – including national security adviser Susan Rice and counterterrorism aide Lisa Monaco – listened closely to the company executives’ ideas and concerns, the official added.


Documents provided by Snowden showed that a U.S. surveillance court had secretly approved the collection of raw daily phone records in the United States. Other revelations have included reports that U.S. monitoring extended to some foreign leaders including German Chancellor Angela Merkel.


Obama is due to announce next month what steps he will take to roll back the sweeping surveillance practices.


The White House said after the tech meeting that the president and the executives discussed the national security and economic impacts of unauthorized intelligence disclosures as Obama nears completion on his intelligence review.


“The president made clear his belief in an open, free and innovative Internet and listened to the group’s concerns and recommendations, and made clear that we will consider their input as well as the input of other outside stakeholders as we finalize our review of signals-intelligence programs,” the White House said in a statement.


(Additional reporting by Patricia Zengerle; Editing by Will Dunham and Lisa Shumaker)






Reuters: Politics



Tech executives press Obama to reform surveillance practices

Monday, December 16, 2013

GOP Makes Tech Gains But Still Playing Catch-Up



Earlier this year, the Republican National Committee released a political autopsy titled “Growth and Opportunity Project.” The much-discussed report touched on the wide array of perceived party shortcomings — from poor messaging to the lengthy presidential primary — that presumably hampered the GOP in the last two (losing) presidential elections.


The most conspicuous points in the 100-page report focus on Republican attempts at “rebranding” and improving the party’s standing among young, female and minority voters. Whenever Republicans make a messaging misstep — such as when the RNC tweeted praise for Rosa Parks and “her role in ending racism” earlier this month — opponents gleefully point to the gaffe as evidence that the rebranding efforts have failed.


But the longest section of “Growth and Opportunity Project” focuses on the less exciting topic of campaign mechanics. The report conceded that “Democrats had the clear edge on new media and ground game, in terms of both reach and effectiveness.”


The authors offered several recommendations for how Republicans could improve their campaigns. And since its release, the RNC said it has made strides in building the 21st-century infrastructure needed to win elections. The committee is now attempting to become “the most technologically advanced organization in politics,” according to RNC spokesman Raffi Williams.


The digital revamp is inextricably tied to the party’s pursuit of a “permanent ground game,” the committee announced in an October memo.


In the memo, RNC Communications Director Sean Spicer wrote that the organization would shift away from its strategy of stockpiling cash and spending heavily in the three months before an election. Instead, it has begun investing in technology and staff to maintain a permanent presence in communities throughout the country. Permanent ground-game staffers are continuously collecting data on voters to improve turnout and increase the efficiency of spending.


Currently, the GOP has more people in the field than at the RNC’s Capitol Hill headquarters.


“We’re in roughly 30 states,” said Williams. “The 2014 states are being built out first and most include state directors, field staff, minority directors and field staff and data directors.” He added that the party, looking to 2016, has started investing in all 50 states.


In the past, the RNC would survey potential voters once and then contact them with information about issues that those voters cared about. The once-successful strategy is now outdated, as Democrats have shown their ability to continually follow-up with voters and better tailor their messaging to individuals.


Investing in a permanent ground game allows the RNC to do what Democrats have already been doing for years. Williams said that the spending will enable the RNC “to build real relationships with voters and will allow our relationships to be more individualized.”


DNC spokesman Mike Czin told RealClearPolitics that though he has “no doubt that Republicans are making investments and really spending time trying to figure out how to do this,” they are still lagging behind.


Czin pointed to the Virginia gubernatorial race as proof that GOP investments in this effort have not yet paid off. A few weeks before the election, Republican Ken Cuccinelli’s campaign sent out an e-mail asking those interested in volunteering to reach out again because “sometimes things fall through the cracks.”


“That tells me that whatever investments they’re making weren’t being used by the biggest targeted, competitive race of the year,” Czin said of the contest won by Democrat Terry McAuliffe.


Toward the end of the October memo, Spicer noted that the change of strategy wasn’t “about one candidate or one campaign or one election year. … It’s about building a lasting foundation.” That could be perceived as a reference to the divide between the Democratic National Committee and Organizing for Action, the president’s permanent political presence.


Following the 2008 presidential election, Obama’s campaign became part of the DNC and was renamed Organizing for America. OFA was charged with helping implement the president’s agenda. At the time, the organization focused on energizing the vast grassroots network that helped elect Obama in 2008 in order to help pass the Affordable Care Act.


This January, however, Organizing for America broke from the DNC and became a non-profit called Organizing for Action. Its mission mirrors that of the party — the new OFA has spent 2013 advocating for gun control and immigration reform — but it works independently from the DNC.


The separation has caused some tension. Although the two organizations ostensibly advocate for the same things, they now compete for donor dollars. 2013 has been a lackluster season for fundraising at the DNC, which has been outraised by the RNC for most of the year.


While the Obama campaign masterminded the Democrats’ technological leaps, it mostly focused on advancing one cause: the re-election of President Obama. It was unclear for most of this year whether the campaign would share data from its much-praised Project Narwhal. (Narwhal contains massive amounts of voter data information.) In November, following complaints from Democrats who wanted access to 2012 Obama data, news broke that the former campaign would give most of its voter information to the DNC’s master voter file. But it would rent out its e-mail list to OFA, party committees and other groups.


For its part, the RNC hopes to avoid the awkward divides — perceived or actual — that have defined the relationship between the overlapping DNC, OFA, and Obama campaign infrastructures. Republicans will have their work cut out for them. Currently, their data are possibly more fragmented than those on the Democratic side. Several organizations have data platforms designed for Republicans, and the RNC is working on consolidation.


Williams said that the RNC is “building something that can be used for cycles to come” that will help elect Republicans at every level. And he argued that the best place to build a data center is at the RNC.


“Doing it together ensures we have the most quality data points we can as a party,” he said. “There are strategic advantages to having the RNC do this and not a candidate — no other organization has the ability to coordinate and share with candidates and state parties the way the RNC can.”


To that end, the RNC is working to become a one-stop data shop for Republican candidates throughout the country. A “data warehouse” with decades’ worth of information is being amassed for the benefit of Republicans ranging from city council candidates to aspiring presidents.


Still, the RNC can only do so much to help Republicans get elected. Publicly and privately, Republicans concede the Democrats’ point that technology isn’t panacea for GOP woes. “Their biggest shortcoming and their biggest failing is their message,” said Czin. “That’s what alienated voters and that’s what drove voters away.”


Regardless, maintaining a significant edge with data collection will be critical in the upcoming cycle’s closer contests.


Republicans may catch up or even pass Democrats in terms of technological infrastructure. But it could take longer for them to reorient the culture of their organization and effectively train their staff and volunteers to use that infrastructure. And the true test of whether Republicans have created the right synergy between technology and culture won’t come until Election Day 2014. 




RealClearPolitics – Articles



GOP Makes Tech Gains But Still Playing Catch-Up

Sunday, December 1, 2013

Officials: Worst tech bugs over for Healthcare.gov







This photo of part of the HealthCare.gov website is photographed in Washington, on Nov. 29, 2013. The beleaguered health insurance website has had periods of down times as as the government tries to fix the problems. (AP Photo/Jon Elswick)





This photo of part of the HealthCare.gov website is photographed in Washington, on Nov. 29, 2013. The beleaguered health insurance website has had periods of down times as as the government tries to fix the problems. (AP Photo/Jon Elswick)













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(AP) — The worst of the online glitches, crashes and delays may be over for the problem-plagued government health care website, the Department of Health and Human Services said Sunday.


But that doesn’t mean HealthCare.gov is ready for a clean bill of health.


Officials acknowledged more work remains on the website that included hundreds of software bugs, inadequate equipment and inefficient management for its national debut two months ago. Federal workers and private contractors have undertaken an intense reworking of the system, but the White House’s chief troubleshooter cautioned some users could still encounter trouble.


“The bottom line — HealthCare.gov on December 1st is night and day from where it was on October 1st,” Jeff Zients told reporters.


More than 50,000 people can log on to the website at one time and more than 800,000 people will be able to shop for insurance coverage each day, the government estimated in a report released Sunday. If true, it’s a dramatic improvement from the system’s first weeks, when frustrated buyers watched their computer screen freeze, the website crash and error messages multiply.


The figures — which could not be independently verified — suggest millions of Americans could turn to their laptops to shop for and buy insurance policies by the Dec. 23 deadline.


“There’s not really any way to verify from the outside that the vast majority of people who want to enroll can now do so, but we’ll find out at least anecdotally over the coming days if the system can handle the traffic and provide a smooth experience for people trying to sign up,” said Larry Levitt, a senior adviser at the Kaiser Family Foundation.


But, he added, HealthCare.gov is clearly working better than when it first went online. Its challenge now is to convince users who were frustrated during their first visit to give it another chance.


Politically, a fixed website could also offer a fresh start for President Barack Obama and his fellow Democrats after a wave of bad publicity surrounding the president’s chief domestic achievement.


“This website is technology. It’s going to get better. It’s already better today,” said Rep. Keith Ellison, a Minnesota Democrat who is a co-chairman of the liberal Congressional Progressive Caucus. “And we’re only going to be working out more kinks as we go forward.”


Amid all the problems with HealthCare.gov, Obama set a deadline for Saturday for several significant problems to be resolved. The administration organized a conference call with reporters Sunday morning to give a status report and boast that 400 technical problems had been resolved but declined to say how many items remain on the to-do list.


Even with the repairs in place, the site still won’t be able to do everything the administration wants, and companion sites for small businesses and Spanish speakers have been delayed. Questions remain about the stability of the site and the quality of the data it delivers to insurers.


“The security of this site and the private information does not meet even the minimal standards of the private sector, and that concerns me,” said Rep. Mike Rogers, the Michigan Republican who leads the House intelligence panel. “I don’t care if you’re for it or against it, Republican or Democrat, we should not tolerate the sheer level of incompetence securing this site.”


Obama promised a few weeks ago that HealthCare.gov “will work much better on Nov. 30, Dec. 1, than it worked certainly on Oct. 1.” But, in trying to lower expectations, he said he could not guarantee that “100 percent of the people 100 percent of the time going on this website will have a perfectly seamless, smooth experience.”


Obama rightly predicted errors would remain. The department reported the website was up and running 95 percent of the time last week — meaning a 1-in-20 chance remains of encountering a broken website. The government also estimated that pages crashed at a rate less than once every 100 clicks.


“Yes, there are problems,” said Rep. Chris Van Hollen of Maryland, the top Democrat on the House Budget Committee. “There’s no denying that. Let’s work to fix them.”


The nation’s largest health insurer trade group said significant problems remain and could be a barrier for consumers signing up for coverage effective Jan. 1.


“HealthCare.gov and the overall enrollment process continue to improve, but there are significant issues that still need to be addressed,” said Karen Ignagni, president and CEO of America’s Health Insurance Plans.


Republicans, betting frustration about the health care law is their best bet to make gains in 2014′s congressional and gubernatorial elections, continued their criticism of the system.


“I don’t know how you fix it, I’ll be honest,” said Sen. Bob Corker, R-Tenn. “I don’t know how you fix a program that was put together in this manner with only one side of the aisle, and taking the shortcuts we’re taking to put it in place.”


Democrats, sensing their potential vulnerability, sought to blame Republicans for not offering ideas on how to improve the website.


“Yes, we have to fix it. We should be working together to fix it,” said Van Hollen, a former chairman of the committee tasked to elect more Democrats to the U.S. House.


The first big test of the repaired website probably won’t come for a few more weeks, when an enrollment surge is expected as consumers rush to meet a Dec. 23 deadline so their coverage can kick in on the first of the year.


Avoiding a break in coverage is particularly important for millions of people whose current individual policies were canceled because they don’t meet the standards of the health care law, as well as for a group of about 100,000 in an expiring federal program for high-risk patients.


Ellison spoke to ABC’s “This Week.” Rogers and Van Hollen were interviewed on NBC’s “Meet the Press.” Corker joined CBS’ “Face the Nation.”


___


Associated Press writers Darlene Superville and Ricardo Alonso-Zaldivar contributed to this report.


___


Follow Philip Elliot on Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/philiprelliott


Associated Press




Politics Headlines



Officials: Worst tech bugs over for Healthcare.gov

Thursday, November 28, 2013

3-D pie: Could tech change Thanksgiving?


Thanksgiving



2 hours ago


Photo illustration depicting apple pie in a 3D printer, related to a story which posits that dessert will be 3D printed in future Thanksgivings. (John...

Photo illustration by John Brecher / NBC News


Photo illustration depicting apple pie in a 3D printer. While 3-D tech can’t render a full pastry yet, some say it’s well on the way.



Enjoy that turkey while you can — someday, it might be grown in a test tube.


With scientists worried that the world’s increasing population could lead to a food crisis, lab-coated chefs of tomorrow have begun serving up a buffet of alternative food choices, not just for meeting food needs in the hungry developing world, but for healthier, cheaper, more sustainable eating in nations like the U.S.


Lab-grown meat, exotic protein sources, and 3-D printing all have the potential to change the way Americans eat. NBC News checked with experts about what might replace cranberry sauce and stuffing on Thanksgiving tables in just a few decades.


Chef Richard McGeown cooks the world

Toby Melville / Reuters


Chef Richard McGeown cooks the world’s first lab-grown beef burger during a launch event in west London August 5, 2013.



Test tube turkey?
In August, scientists and world-class chefs joined forces to cook and taste a beef patty made from lab-grown tissue. Will we be serving test tube turkey for Thanksgiving one day? “It’s possible to do it,” said Mark Post, professor of physiology at Maastricht University in the Netherlands, who is engineering the tissue.


While it is “easy” to grow the meat in shreds to press together into a patty, the hard part will be fashioning a bird-shaped product that can be stuffed and carved, he said.


The challenge is building plumbing through thick chunks of tissue that can nourish deep-set cells. Bioengineers who are building replacement organs like livers and kidneys in the lab for medical use are trying to clear the same hurdle.


Post says that his technique can be used to grow any kind of meat, from tuna to turkey. But, because of the environmental footprint of rearing farm animals, “the biggest game to be had is beef.”


As for whether the final product will ever taste like it grew up on the farm, “I guess it’s a gamble,” Post said, after all his beef patty’s flavor “could still be improved.” How? “If we keep the cells and let them make the tissue like it is in the animal, it will hopefully create the same taste.”


Bug casserole?
In a few years, don’t be too surprised if green bug casserole is a Thanksgiving staple.


Cricket pumpkin pie.

Audubon Butterfly Garden and Insectarium


Cricket pumpkin pie, prepared for curious visitors at the Audubon Insectarium in New Orleans.



The Audubon Butterfly Garden and Insectarium in New Orleans is serving a limited edition fare of Thanksgiving themed bug snacks: mealworm-filled cornbread stuffing, wax worm cranberry sauce and a dessert of cricket pumpkin pie are on the menu.


Over 1,900 species of insects have been identified as edible, the U.N. said in a report published in May. Popular crunchy munchies include: beetles, caterpillars, wasps and ants, as well as cicadas, termites, and dragonflies.


Though an estimated 80 percent of the world eats bugs, they’re still practically unknown in American cuisine.


That’s changing, slowly. Last summer, Rene Redzepi the Copenhagen restaurant Noma served live ants with crème fraiche at a pop-up event at Claridge’s hotel in London.


A Brooklyn startup called Exo is crafting protein bars with flour milled from slow-roasted crickets. The bars — each containing 25 insects — come in three flavors: cacao nut, PB&J and cashew ginger Moroccan spice. A Kickstarter funding campaign floated by the two co-founders that aimed to raise $ 20,000 ended up netting more than double that amount. Out west, San Francisco-based Chirp hopes to be “America’s first producer of sustainably grown, edible insects.”


3-D printed pie?
In May, NASA funded a project that’s developing 3-D printing technology that can create food during space travel. Pizzas will be first up because their layered design – dough, sauce, cheese — makes it an ideal candidate for printing.


But desserts are likely to be among the printed foods we’ll be eating first. In fact, you can try one today.


Fab@Home, a research group at Cornell University, started out printing layers of gooey chocolate that hardened into shapes, and has now spun off a startup called Seraph Robotics to develop its food printing technology.


At the Sugar Labs in Los Angeles, a duo of confectioners specialize in all-sugar cake decorations that they print out on a device that resembles a Xerox machine. It’s likely that a layered pie, or at least a perfectly woven lattice crust popped fresh from the printer, is just a few years away.


But folks who are familiar with eating trends in the U.S. say that much of America won’t be tempted by 3-D printed dessert, whether the filling is apple, pumpkin or pecan.


“Anything That Moves” author Dana Goodyear has observed that “throwback” concepts like foraging and the paleo diet are gaining ground. American food has come to be known as processed and industrial, and Americans — those that can afford it anyway — are trying to distance themselves from the idea.


“People are more mistrustful than ever of that kind of processing and technology,” she told NBC News. “They want to feel closer to their food not removed from it.” If technology is being explored in new ways in this country, it tends to be older ideas, like pickling and canning, that are sticking.


“The future of food does not lie in futuristic technology,” she said, “it lies in the technologies of the past.”


Adventurous gourmand Andrew Zimmern, host of Bizarre Foods on the Travel Channel, told NBC News that he wants the food of the future “to be curated by family farmers.”


“I don’t believe that the future of food is done by men in white coats,” he said.


Not entirely, anyway — he does think technology has an important role to play, calling Post’s lab-grown burger and the plant-based egg substitute made at Hampton Creek Foods in San Francisco “gigantic first steps.”


Facing the food problems of the future might mean rethinking our relationship with technology, but also tempering our expectations of time-tested table traditions.


Yet, as Zimmern put it, “for some reason we’re hung up on the turkey idea.”


Nidhi Subbaraman writes about science and technology. You can follow her on Facebook, Twitter and Google+






3-D pie: Could tech change Thanksgiving?

Tuesday, November 19, 2013

UPDATE 1-Atomico aims $476 mln fund at tech start-ups outside Silicon Valley

UPDATE 1-Atomico aims $476 mln fund at tech start-ups outside Silicon Valley
http://currenteconomictrendsandnews.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/11/db98b__p-89EKCgBk8MZdE.gif




Tue Nov 19, 2013 1:27pm EST



By Mia Shanley


Nov 19 (Reuters) – Atomico, a European venture capital firm that has invested in the likes of Angry Birds developer Rovio, plans to spend its new $ 476 million fund on technology start-ups outside Silicon Valley, it said on Tuesday.


While the United States has long dominated venture capital investments in technology, investors have been increasingly drawn to opportunities in Asia and Europe, especially in areas such as e-commerce and gaming.


“Ten years ago people thought you had to be in Silicon Valley to build a global technology business. That is no longer the case,” said Atomico founder Niklas Zennstrom, a Swedish entrepreneur who co-founded Skype, a web phone service which was sold to Microsoft Corp for $ 8.5 billion in 2011.


“We see entrepreneurs from all over the world achieving global success faster than ever before and across every sector of the global economy. Our new fund is aimed squarely at this opportunity,” he said.


Reuters reported last week that London-based Atomico had wrapped up its third fund, citing a document filed with the U.S. Securities & Exchange Commission.


The venture capital firm said on Tuesday the fund, three times the size of its previous in 2010, would be dedicated to helping entrepreneurs outside Silicon Valley scale their businesses globally.


Asked which sectors the money could be spent on, Mattias Ljungman, an Atomico partner who also sits on the board of Finnish mobile game maker Supercell, pointed to a current portfolio of investments which includes online games, payments, travel and e-commerce services.


“This is what’s so exciting. What we’re seeing now is the transformation of the old economy into the new economy, which is a digitised economy,” he said, adding that there were a lot of interesting opportunities in the mobile phone space.


He said Atomico would stay focused on big markets where it is present such as Europe, China, Japan, Brazil, Turkey and South Korea.


“But that’s by no means exclusive,” he added. “We want to work with outstanding entrepreneurs wherever they are.”


The firm said the fund was oversubscribed and had broad backing from investors in Asia, the United States and Europe.


According to Thomson Reuters data, venture capital firms have made $ 35.7 billion in tech investments so far this year, with the United States taking up the lion’s share at almost 60 percent followed by Asia at 31 percent and Europe at 9 percent.


Atomico, which is seven years old, has made more than 50 investments including Jawbone, maker of the Up fitness tracker, and Swedish payments service Klarna.


Supercell, one of its earlier investments, was recently given a $ 3 billion valuation after Japan’s SoftBank snapped up a 51 percent stake in the three-year-old firm.






Reuters: Financial Services and Real Estate




Read more about UPDATE 1-Atomico aims $476 mln fund at tech start-ups outside Silicon Valley and other interesting subjects concerning Real Estate at TheDailyNewsReport.com

Monday, November 11, 2013

Tech Blackout to Protest SOPA



Sign this petition to support the day of blackout: http://act.ly/5cz Google, Yahoo, Facebook and Amazon are considering a day of blackout to protest the “Sto…



Tech Blackout to Protest SOPA

Friday, November 1, 2013

Tech Giants Throw Weight Behind Legislation Which Would ACTUALLY Rein In NSA Spying


Washington’s Blog
November 1, 2013


The head of the Senate Intelligence Committee – NSA shill Diane Feinstein – introduced a Trojan Horse of a bill today which pretends it reins in the NSA, but would actually legalize bulk surveillance on Americans.


But the tech giants just threw their support behind a real reform bill.  Specifically, Google, Apple, Microsoft, Yahoo, Facebook and AOL put their support behind the USA Freedom Act … the bill introduced by Senator Leahy and Congressman Sensenbrenner to start reining in the NSA for real.


The tech giants aren’t supporting the bill out of the goodness of their hearts, but because cooperating with the NSA has cost them tens of billions of dollars. And see this.


This article was posted: Friday, November 1, 2013 at 5:59 am


Tags: domestic spying, government corruption, technology










Infowars



Tech Giants Throw Weight Behind Legislation Which Would ACTUALLY Rein In NSA Spying