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You bet your life

New Scientist features an article on the bookmaker Ladbrokes who are taking bets on the next major scientific breakthrough to be achieved by the year 2010. Bets will be taken on life on Titan, gravitational waves, the Higgs boson, cosmic ray origins and nuclear fusion.

“We’ve taken bets on life on Mars before,” says Warren Lush, Ladbrokes’ novelty bets expert, “and we wanted to provide something completely different.” The initiative follows an approach from New Scientist, and the full 10-page feature, Monsters of the Universe appears in the print edition of the magazine.

They put the odds of the discovery of gravitational waves at 500-1 but Jim Hough at the University of Glasgow is confident that his project the LIGO detector will catch a gravitational wave before 2010. “I would have put the odds between 2-1 and 10-1” he said.

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Rumsfeld Indirectly to Blame for Abu Ghraib

The panel of the offical inquiry into the scandal of US soldiers’ mistreatment of prisoners at the Abu Ghraib prison has issued a report that lays some of the blame at the door of Donald Rumsfeld.

The Reuters news agency reveals that

Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld came under fire on Tuesday from a high-level inquiry into the Abu Ghraib prison scandal but a U.S. military judge ruled he did not have to testify at a trial arising from the abuse of Iraqi prisoners.

A four-member panel headed by former Defense Secretary James Schlesinger issued a report accusing the chain of command from Rumsfeld down of leadership failures that created conditions for the abuse late last year that sparked anti-American outrage across the world.

“Military and civilian leaders at the Pentagon share this burden of responsibility.”

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The Korean’s been Khan’d

British boxing wunderkind 17-year-old Amir Khan has guaranteed himself at least a bronze medal after a emphatic win over South Korea’s Baik Jong-sub.

The referee had to stop the match in the first round after Khan had landed a series of powerful blows on his opponent. Khan commented after the fight:

“I didn’t expect to beat him that quickly but I was confident I could beat him.

“I knew he had slow feet and slow hands and I used that to my advantage.

“It’s a great achievement for me to win a medal. Now I’ve got that bronze medal the pressure is off me a bit now.

“I think I can go in the ring more relaxed and more calm and get even better.

“I’m happy to win a medal but hopefully I can go on to make the final.”

BBC Sport: Khan guarantees medal

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The BillBlog: Copyfight

Bill Thompson, technology writer and “controversialist” writes a weekly column on technology issues, the latest of which I’ve reprinted in full below. It is released under a Creative Commons Licence.

Fight for the Right to Copy

It’s somewhat depressing when the mere fact that a court has shown some common sense is newsworthy, but we should applaud the 9th US Circuit of Appeals in Los Angeles for making it clear that file sharing isn’t illegal.

This is just as well since file sharing, which is just copying data from computer to computer, underpins the entire operation of the internet, from email to viewing web pages to downloading the 72Mb of Windows XP SP2.

But of course the argument wasn’t about that sort of data copying.

The court had been asked to rule in a case brought against Grokster and StreamCast Networks over the use of their peer-to-peer networks to make unlicensed copies of copyrighted music.
It’s certainly true that they can be used in this way. I had a copy of KaZaA on my laptop until recently, and a quick search revealed thousands of unlicensed MP3s of songs by a wide variety of artists.

But there is a well-established precedent in US law that just because something is capable of being used illegally that does not mean its manufacturers can be sued or prosecuted.

A peer-to-peer network can be used to share family photos, free software, licensed music and any other sort of digital content. The mere fact that it could in principle be used to exchange dodgy copies of a Britney song is therefore irrelevant.

And since both Grokster and StreamCast’s Morpheus programs are true peer-to-peer offerings, with no central index of files shared and no central node through which requests or data about transfers is passed, the court ruled that the manufacturers of the software could not themselves be asked to stop infringing activities.

After all, they don’t know it’s taking place.

The judge even bothered to point out that just because closing down P2P networks would satisfy “the copyright holders’ immediate economic aims” it might turn out to be bad for creativity and innovation generally, and so any such decision should be left to Congress who can pass new laws if they want to.

This might seem to settle the matter, but the Recording Industry Association of America says it’s going to appeal yet again. And, more worryingly, Congress seems to be thinking about doing what the judge suggested.

A bill introduced by Senator Orin Hatch, a long-term friend of the music industry – and recipient of large campaign contributions from the same industry – would make it a criminal offence to induce anyone to break copyright.

Hatch’s Inducing Infringements of Copyright Act would allow the record industry to sue Grokster because their service makes it so easy to copy music files that it counts as an ‘inducement’.

It would, as the Electronic Frontier Foundation points out, probably allow the record companies to sue Apple for making and marketing the iPod since it indirectly encourages us all to copy our friends’ CDs.

We might think that such an absurd law would never be passed by the US Congress, but it’s important not to underestimate just how much influence the record companies have. They employ expensive lobbyists and make significant contributions to campaign funds, so they may get what they want.

Although this is currently a US copyright battle, the results will affect everyone. European legislation like the EU Copyright Directive is often directly modelled on US law, in this case the Digital Millennium Copyright Act, and the record companies are just as concerned about protecting their European markets as they are about the US.

It isn’t just an abstract discussion either. The arguments over copyright are the first skirmishes in a serious battle over the shape of our digital world. If the big rights holders have their way then copyright will become a real ‘property right’, like the rights I have over the laptop I am writing this on.

You can’t make me lend it to you, it’s mine forever unless I sell it or give it away, and if you take it from me without asking then that’s theft and you could go to gaol.

Intellectual property is not like that. It was never supposed to be like that: copyright is a time-limited monopoly on certain forms of use of a book or recording, and was not to be treated in the same way as ownership of a house or car or pair of shoes. But persuading the record companies that they can’t expect to exert complete control over every recording, forever, is not proving easy to do.

Perhaps they’ll be persuaded if we refuse to give them our money.

I have never bought a music file online, even though I’m a big music fan. I don’t do it because I don’t want music files which are crippled by the digital rights management tools that every online store uses to limit what purchasers can do with the songs they buy.

I don’t do it because much of the music I want to listen to is available for around the same cost as a CD, and I can then rip that onto my hard drive and download it to my portable music player myself – keeping a safe copy on disk for when my system crashes and has to be rebuilt.

In fact, I don’t do it for the same reasons I don’t eat meat. I’m vegetarian because I don’t want to be part of a system that raises animals in inhumane conditions and kills them with cruelty. And I won’t buy music online because I don’t want to support a system that is trying to lock down our creative heritage, stifle innovation and claim ownership of our common culture.

The Grokster decision has given me hope that the law around copyright is still understood by the judges.

We need to make sure that this does not change, and we also need to make sure that lawmakers on both sides of the Atlantic realise that they cannot give the big rights holders everything they want.

Written by Bill Thompson. It is released under a Creative Commons Licence.

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Barbara Hepworth Gardens


Barbara Hepworth Gardens
Originally uploaded by lorenzo23.

The Barbara Hepworth Museum and Sculpture Garden in St. Ives, Cornwall is an amazing place that I’d recommend to everyone.

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Super Saturday Sorrowful Sunday

High and lows of Team GB in the Olympics this weekend.

Fucking hell it’s super Saturday and Britain has won so many medals today I’ve lost count.

As has been usual we get the Golden stuff in rowing and sailing but also oddly due to some rule breaking German Leslie Law has been promoted to the Gold medal in the 3 day eventing. The Gold for Chris Hoy in the cycling on Friday has started off a medal grab in this sport also with Bradley Wiggins also getting Gold and others sure to follow.

Shout out for the young Welsh swimmer David Davies. Fucking great performance for the 19 year old in the 1500m freestyle, I think we have a future swimming star here. Gold for Davies in Beijing.

Sunday and what should have been a joyous occasion for Paula Radcliffe turns to sorrow as she pulls out of the marathon a few miles from the finish. After the huge haul of medals on Saturday the country was downcast following this news but we did win a Silver today in rowing with the Women’s coxless quadruple sculls team.

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Global errorism

Whilst writing a piece about terrorism I mistyped the word terrorist at dictionary.com and ironically got this:

errorist

\Er”ror*ist\, n. One who encourages and propagates error; one who holds to error.

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Is global warming a bigger threat than terrorism?

Is global warming a bigger threat than terrorism?

Global warming is now a weapon of mass destruction

Global warming is getting worse – but the message is getting through

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A Stolen Munch

BBC News: Scream stolen from Norway museum

Having previously been stolen about 10 years ago you’d think that the Munch Museum would have improved security to prevent another theft of Edvard Munch’s painting The Scream.

 
A French radio producer who was in the museum at the time of the theft said security was not very tight.

“What’s strange is that in this museum, there weren’t any means of protection for the paintings, no alarm bell,” Francois Castang told France Inter radio, the Associated Press reported.

“The paintings were simply attached by wire to the walls,” he said. “All you had to do is pull on the painting hard for the cord to break loose – which is what I saw one of the thieves doing.”

Ms Christofferson said the guards were more concerned with protecting visitors than the paintings.

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Northwest flight 327

The story that wouldn’t die. Journalist Annie Jacobsen traveled on Northwest Airlines flight #327 from Detroit to Los Angeles with her husband and young son and was unnerved by the strange behaviour of a group of 14 Middle-Eastern men. She wrote about the incident at WomensWallStreet.com in an article titled Terror in the Skies, Again? A follow up to this appeared in The New York Times which put a different perspective on the events that occurred on Flight 327 by revealing that it was simply a group of Syrian musicians.

The Internet was gripped by the story with a huge amount of discussion appearing on a number of websites, particularly the bloggers who seemed to fall into two opposing camps. A simple Google search for Northwest flight 327 or Annie Jacobsen will find them. Camp one believes that it highlights the flaws in security some even going as far as saying that contrary to all evidence that it was definitely a dry run by terrorists, whilst camp two believe that it was nothing that just got blown all out of proportion by a bunch of paranoid racists.

The official response to the incident was that the Air marshals aboard the airplane felt that no action was needed and that the 14 individuals were thoroughly checked upon landing and were found to be exactly what they said they were, musicians with no links at all to terrorism.

The story doesn’t end there though Jacobsen in an effort to claw back her reputation having been exposed as a hysterical overreactor pursues the story some more and discovers some further details such as the fact that members of the band were traveling on expired visas.

Annie Jacobsen’s five part story can be read at the following addresses.
Part I: Terror in the Skies, Again?
Part II: Terror in the Skies, Again?
Part IV: Terror in the Skies, Again?
Part IV: Terror in the Skies, Again?
Part V: Terror in the Skies, Again?

A moderate middle ground on this incident needs to be taken I think. Security is a twofold process. Making people safe and secure and making them feel safe and secure. There is a well known phrase ‘giving a false sense of security’ well the converse is also true ‘giving a false sense of insecurity’.

We are currently living in a climate of fear and the Western governments are as much to blame as the terrorists are for that. We are not getting a positive message that reassures us from our government. Instead we get told that an attack is inevitable and we should prepare for it and we are sent leaflets containing common sense advice of how to react in an emergency. The average citizen is in no more danger from dying in a terrorist attack than they ever were, such events are rare occurrences and affect relatively few people in any case. Yet we cannot escape talk of terrorists, they are everywhere – the modern day bogeymen.

The 9/11 attacks and subsequent actions by the US and British governments have created a fear and mistrust of Arabs. That isn’t to say that the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq were wrong but the inclusion of them into the War on Terrorism was wrong. I think that for the average person whose only knowledge of Arab and Muslim people comes from the media coverage of terrorist attacks and wars it can be difficult not to equate Arab with terrorist.

We are asked by our government to be vigilant and report suspicious activity. But be vigilant for what?

This request only causes the public to become afraid and paranoid, and increasingly xenophobic. We are not trained professionals and so can easily misinterpret innocent activities as being sinister if we are caused to be overly suspicious. This mindless rhetoric that the politicians keep spouting is for their benefit only i.e. to get them re-elected or in the case of leaders like Putin of Russia to further secure their hold on power.

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