Tuesday, January 10, 2012

RogerSchiffman: Learn from Hogan, Nicklaus, Watson, Geiberger, Toski, Love Jr. Classic golf books. Instruction Blog @GolfDigestMag http://t.co/2CErSwrR

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Learn from Hogan, Nicklaus, Watson, Geiberger, Toski, Love Jr. Classic golf books. Instruction Blog @GolfDigestMag ow.ly/8lALF RogerSchiffman

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Source: http://twitter.com/RogerSchiffman/statuses/155822291131961344

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Sunday, January 8, 2012

What donors? Super PACs buy time to keep secrets

(AP) ? Independent political groups backing top Republican candidates are taking advantage of federal rules that will effectively let them shield the identities of their donors until after key primary elections this month.

These political action committees, known as super PACs, notified federal election regulators in recent weeks that they intend to file their financial reports every month. Those requests, once approved, effectively will allow the groups to hold off disclosing the names of their contributors until after primaries in New Hampshire and South Carolina.

Without the change, those groups would have had to file reports before the GOP primaries.

Just this week, a new political committee supporting former Pennsylvania Sen. Rick Santorum ? the Red, White and Blue Fund ? made a similar request to the Federal Election Commission, which would delay its next deadline to file to Jan. 31. That's the date of the Florida primary, after which candidates with little money will find it hard to continue the race.

Groups backing GOP candidates Mitt Romney, Newt Gingrich and Jon Huntsman have also said they would begin filing monthly reports, which they said eases administrative burdens. Before then, the super PACs filed reports quarterly to the FEC, a practice they said required submitting tedious reports before each state's primary. Democratic-leaning super PACs have not yet asked for similar extensions.

The subtle administrative change is significant since such groups are expected to play a crucial role in this year's election. In one case, Romney-leaning Restore Our Future ran a series of attack ads against Gingrich that have been widely cited as a reason for the former House speaker's plummeting support. Gingrich placed fourth in the Iowa caucuses behind Romney, Santorum and Texas Rep. Ron Paul.

"It is secret money ? you won't know until after the primaries have occurred who helped fund them," said Trevor Potter, a former Republican FEC commissioner and president of the watchdog group Campaign Legal Center. "Whether they're doing this for the right or wrong reasons, it's the opposite of what the disclosure system was designed to do."

Robert Kelner, a campaign-finance expert and partner with the Washington law firm Covington & Burling, noted that once the FEC approves the requests, the groups eventually will file disclosure reports more frequently. "It's sort of in the eye of the beholder if that's improving or undermining disclosure," he said.

The FEC has already approved requests from Restore Our Future and Huntsman-leaning Our Destiny PAC.

The new super PACs sprung from a series of federal court rulings, including the Supreme Court's Citizens United case in 2010 that stripped away restrictions on corporate and union spending in elections. The groups can't coordinate directly with campaigns but many of them active in this election are staffed by longtime supporters of the candidates.

As a result, campaign-finance watchdogs have assailed the rulings as a dangerous return to the pre-Watergate era. The filing changes also have the effect, they say, of shielding donors until dates when many candidates might likely drop out.

The super PACs, for their part, said they are doing nothing illegal, following established law and exercising their free-speech rights.

Restore Our Future treasurer Charles Spies said his political committee complies with FEC rules and has been above board disclosing the identities of its donors. His group was the first to ask the FEC ? in a two-sentence request ? for the fling change in December.

Democratic-leaning Priorities USA Action hasn't asked for a change in its filing frequency, nor has its GOP counterpart, American Crossroads, a group backed by former President George W. Bush adviser Karl Rove. Both have nonprofit arms that are regulated by the IRS and don't have to disclose their donors.

Super PACs have already spent millions on television ads and mailings to boost their favored candidates in Iowa. And the Red, White and Blue Fund and Our Destiny have already begun planning for ads in South Carolina.

____

Follow Jack Gillum at http://twitter.com/jackgillum

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/89ae8247abe8493fae24405546e9a1aa/Article_2012-01-07-Secret%20Political%20Donors/id-8b119744106f4125b00b8a53f72037b1

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Thursday, January 5, 2012

Samsung Pushes Galaxy Tablet With Same Child Actress From iPhone 4S Ad (Mashable)

Consumers and blogs are criticizing Samsung for not only stealing the look and feel of Apple commercials, but for blatantly borrowing the same child actress who appeared in the commercial for the Apple iPhone 4S to sell the company's Samsung Galaxy 8.9 LTE Tablet.

[More from Mashable: iPhone 4S Coming to China and 21 Other Countries Jan. 13]

In the Samsung Galaxy 8.9 LTE Tablet commercial (above), she is used to boost the fun you can have reading, playing games and watching movies with the new under 1-pound tablet.

[More from Mashable: Mimbo the iPhone Robot Mimics Your Emotions]

In the Apple iPhone commercial (above), she's seen brightly dressed on the phone screen as photos of her are displayed to showcase the phone's advanced optics system and on-screen editing options.

The Samsung Galaxy 8.9 LTE Tablet, unveiled in August 2011, debuted as a 8.6 mm thin and 453 g tablet with a 1.5GHz dual-core processor, 8.9-inch display and Android 3.2 Honeycomb system.

SEE ALSO: Patent Wars: A New Age of Competition [INFOGRAPHIC]

Samsung pulled the advertisement from its official YouTube page, since publications have scrutinized the South Korean tech conglomerate's commercials.

We've reached out to Samsung for a comment.

The two companies have been duking it out since last April after Apple filed patent infringement claims regarding the alleged likeness between the iPhone and iPad and Samsung's Galaxy Tab 10.1. And an ad from Samsung late last year lampooned Apple fans.

Watch for yourself. Did Samsung blatantly copy Apple advertisements?

This story originally published on Mashable here.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/applecomputer/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/mashable/20120104/tc_mashable/samsung_pushes_galaxy_tablet_with_same_child_actress_from_iphone_4s_ad

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Actress Salma Hayek To Receive French Honor

Actress Salma Hayek To Receive French Honor

Actress Salma Hayek is set to receive France’s highest culture prize, the Legion d’Honneur. The Mexican actress, whose hubby is French businessman Henri Francoix Pinault, [...]

Actress Salma Hayek To Receive French Honor Stupid Celebrities Gossip Stupid Celebrities Gossip News

Source: http://stupidcelebrities.net/2012/01/02/actress-salma-hayek-to-receive-french-honor/

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E-voting gets closer in 2012

Voters in many states will have an easier time casting their ballots in 2012, as elections officials are now allowing some people to vote via email or iPad devices. They're also using technology to help count ballots faster and keep track of ballot boxes.

These new voting technologies will save time and money and perhaps allow more people to take part in the elections process. But some experts worry that security flaws still haven't been fixed and that federal elections are still decades away from going fully online.

Despite the concerns, some states are embracing e-voting as a way to counter low voter turnout.

Oregon, for example, allowed disabled people to vote with iPads during a special election in November 2011 and will continue allowing that in 2012.

Oregon is also one of 11 states that currently or will soon let residents register to vote online as long as they have a valid state driver's license or ID card, according to Politico. All other states require voter registration in person or by mail.

ANALYSIS: Clever E-Voting Tech Reduces Fraud

West Virginia officials ran a pilot program in 2010 that allowed military and overseas voters to return their ballots online, said Jim Glance, spokesman for the West Virginia Secretary of State's Office. The program won't continue in 2012, however, because legislators failed to renew it.

In Long Beach, Calif., city officials are putting radio frequency identification (RFID) chips on ballot boxes to track their movements after polls close. The chips are used by big-box retailers to track inventory through their supply chain.

WATCH VIDEO: Find out how we'll be voting in the future.

Other states are installing new high-speed scanners to help count paper ballots more quickly.

While some states and localities are taking baby steps to embrace new voting technology, it's not likely that online voting will come to the masses anytime soon, experts say.

"We still do not know as a society how to build secure electronic systems," said Alexander Shvartsman, professor at the University of Connecticut's Center for Voting Technology Research. "Obviously an electronic voting system makes everything easier, but it has to be auditable. There is no replacement for having a ballot that is verified by the voter."

One of the nation's first online voting experiments was a big failure. In October 2010, officials in Washington, D.C., set up an Internet-based system for overseas and military voters to cast their ballots.

During a one-week test period, the D.C. Board of Elections and Ethics asked the public to test its integrity. Students from a University of Michigan class obliged and within 36 hours had posted the Michigan fight song on the website.

"Not only were they able to penetrate the system, but also they were monitoring what was going inside the system itself," Shvartsman said.

He added that the students were also able to see the electronic signatures of hackers based in both China and Iran probing the D.C. site. The District of Columbia scrapped the plan and has no plans to resurrect it in 2012.

NEWS: Conservative Candidates Are Often Better-Looking

Most U.S. voters will continue to use paper ballots that are counted electronically. The older punch-card ballots that caused havoc during the disputed 2000 presidential election in Florida have been outlawed.

Meanwhile, other nations are moving forward. Canadian officials want to start electronic voting in federal elections by 2013; it's already available in some Canadian cities. Sweden, Latvia and Switzerland have also tested online voting, while the Baltic nation of Estonia has implemented "I-voting" for the past five consecutive elections since 2005.

The Estonian voting system works well because the country already has a secure national ID card, people are comfortable with the security of e-commerce and the voting software mimics the standard voting process, according to Priit Vinkel, adviser to the Estonian National Electoral Commission.

"Internet voting is prominently seen as just another e-service in communicating with the government, as a part of the modern info-society," Vinkel said in an email to Discovery News.

Vinkel said the biggest potential vulnerability is the security of citizens' individual home computer or smartphone (which can also be used to cast ballots), but so far Estonian officials have detected no fraud or tampering.

Electronic voting has resulted in a 2.6 percent bump in overall turnout, he said. "In Estonia," Vinkel said, "every vote counts."

? 2012 Discovery Channel

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/45860467/ns/technology_and_science/

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Tuesday, January 3, 2012

yoyoha: Every time I go on Facebook I lose my faith in humanity. Every time I go on Twitter I get it right back.

Twitter / Josh Hara: Every time I go on Faceboo ... Loader Every time I go on Facebook I lose my faith in humanity. Every time I go on Twitter I get it right back.

Source: http://twitter.com/yoyoha/statuses/153359273408212992

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Man spreading HIV may have California victims

GRAND RAPIDS (WZZM) -- A Comstock Park man accused of trying to spread HIV to hundreds of people may have victims in California.

Last week, Smith walked into the Grand Rapids Police Department headquarters and told officers he purposefully tried to spread HIV to drug and sex partners. So far, he's been charged in two cases.

KGTV, the ABC affiliate in San Diego,?reported Friday that David Smith lived in that area for eight years before divorcing his wife and moving to Michigan.

His ex-wife says he called her a couple years ago to notify her that he was HIV positive. So far, she has tested negative for the virus, which causes AIDS.

Smith remains in the Kent County jail on a $100,000 bond.

Source: http://grcentral.wzzm13.com/news/news/65191-man-spreading-hiv-may-have-california-victims

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