Saturday, February 28, 2009

How to Choose a Winning Forex Exchange Trading Program

With roughly 30% of all traders using a forex exchange trading program as part of their trading regiment, it's safe to say that as the technology continues to improve this trend will only continue to grow. A forex exchange trading program can trade faster and more effectively than the best traders out there and make a novice look like a pro in their trading patterns, not to mention it completely eliminates emotions in trading, a major trade killer.

Unfortunately this newfound popularity of forex exchange trading programs amongst traders has prompted a number of publishers to throw cheaply thrown together programs into the ring, begging the question how can you find a winning program which will truly pave your route to success?

Customer Service - Customer service is a major primary tell of whether or not a forex exchange trading program is worth your time or not. Try sending them a test email if they have no phone support and even just let them know that you're interested in their product. You can tell a lot about a publisher and their program based on the publisher's response to your test query, if you get one at all. Reputable publishers will value your opinion of them before and while you're their customer.

FAP Turbo Review - Is it For You?

FAP Turbo is one of the newest auto trading forex programs to hit an already crowded marketplace of trading systems. Why the fuss about trading systems? An effective trading system analyzes real time market data around the clock and recognizes changes in trends and auto trades to effectively keep you on the profitable sides of your trades as far often as possible. Without a trading system this is a full time job and even still you may not get as effective results as you would with one of the most capable trading systems. This brings us back to FAP Turbo specifically. How effective and worthy is this system, and who is it for?

An upgraded and revamped version of the already popular Forex Autopilot, FAP Turbo has some notable improvements over its predecessor. One such improvement is the inclusion of stop loss and take profit protocols which essentially give you an added element of control over the in market limits which the system trades to. Beginners generally need not concern themselves with this as the system still promotes completely automated and effective trading with little to no input from you.

Here's How You Can Make Money in the Forex Markets

If you are somebody who has just learned about currency markets, you are likely thrilled about the potential to gain some extra revenue. Forex markets offer individuals the chance to make some great extra income and many people are getting into these markets because of this fact.

Just like transacting in stocks, in the currency markets you wish to buy low and sell high. But in these markets, currencies are dealt rather than shares. Like stocks, the of a currency rises and falls. It's an uncomplicated idea when you think about it. When you pick up a currency when you find it's cheap and then dump it once it grows in value, you make money.

Even though this appears to be simple in theory, there are a number of details you must keep in mind before you jump into forex trading. For one thing, there are numerous different currencies available for trade. One person can't actually monitor the data for each of the different currencies. However, even when you do pinpoint a few good currencies to watch, how do you know when it's the correct time to make a transaction?

Thankfully, you can get forex market analyzing software programs that can return earnings for you. These software programs are programmed by pro currency traders and computer programmers and can examine the forex markets for you. This software not only will find the currencies with the best profit potential, but they will also monitor forex market information to determine just when is the best time to purchase or sell.

How Google Grows...and Grows...and Grows

By: Keith H. HammondsWed Dec 19, 2007 at 12:40 AM
... Its performance is the envy of executives and engineers around the world ... For techno-evangelists, Google is a marvel of Web brilliance ... For Wall Street, it may be the IPO that changes everything (again) ... But Google is also a case study in savvy management -- a company filled with cutting-edge ideas, rigorous accountability, and relentless attention to detail ... Here's a search for the growth secrets of one of the world's most exciting young companies -- a company from which every company can learn.

On Tuesday morning, January 21, the world awoke to nine new words on the home page of Google Inc., purveyor of the most popular search engine on the Web: "New! Take your search further. Take a Google Tour." The pitch, linked to a demo of the site's often overlooked tools and services, stayed up for 14 days and then disappeared.

To most reasonable people, the fleeting house ad seemed inconsequential. But imagine that you're unreasonable. For a moment, try to think like a Google engineer -- which pretty much requires being both insanely passionate about delivering the best search results and obsessive about how you do that.

If you're a Google engineer, you know that those nine words comprised about 120 bytes of data, enough to slow download time for users with modems by 20 to 50 milliseconds. You can estimate the stress that 120 bytes, times millions of searches per minute, put on Google's 10,000 servers. On the other hand, you can also measure precisely how many visitors took the tour, how many of those downloaded the Google Toolbar, and how many clicked through for the first time to Google News.

This is what it's like inside Google. It is a joint founded by geeks and run by geeks. It is a collection of 650 really smart people who are almost frighteningly single-minded. "These are people who think they are creating something that's the best in the world," says Peter Norvig, a Google engineering director. "And that product is changing people's lives."

Google

Google Inc.
Type Public
NASDAQ: GOOG
LSE: GGEA
Founded Menlo Park, California (September 4, 1998)[1]
Founder(s) Sergey Brin
Larry Page
Headquarters Googleplex, Mountain View, California,
United States
Area served Worldwide
Key people Dr. Eric E. Schmidt
(Chairman) & (CEO)
Sergey Brin
(Technology President)
Larry Page
(Products President)
Industry Internet, Computer software
Products See list of Google products
Market cap US$ 96.472 Billion - At market close on January 22, 2009
Revenue 31.3% US$ 21.796 Billion (2008)[2]
Operating income 30.4% US$ 6.632 Billion (2008)[2]
Net income .6% US$ 4.227 Billion (2008)[2]
Total assets US$ 31.768 Billion (2008)[2]
Total equity US$ 28.239 Billion (2008)[2]
Employees 20,222 - December 31, 2008[3]
Website Google.com

Google Inc. is an American public corporation, earning revenue from advertising related to its Internet search, e-mail, online mapping, office productivity, social networking, and video sharing services as well as selling advertising-free versions of the same technologies. The Google headquarters, the Googleplex, is located in Mountain View, California. As of December 31, 2008, the company has 20,222 full-time employees.[3]

Google was co-founded by Larry Page and Sergey Brin while they were students at Stanford University and the company was first incorporated as a privately held company on September 4, 1998. The initial public offering took place on August 19, 2004, raising US$1.67 billion, making it worth US$23 billion. Google has continued its growth through a series of new product developments, acquisitions, and partnerships. Environmentalism, philanthropy and positive employee relations have been important tenets during the growth of Google, the latter resulting in being identified multiple times as Fortune Magazine's #1 Best Place to Work.[4] The unofficial company slogan is "Don't be evil", although criticism of Google includes concerns regarding the privacy of personal information, copyright, censorship and discontinuation of services. According to Millward Brown, it is the most powerful brand in the

Is Google Making Us Stupid?

Illustration by Guy Billout

"Dave, stop. Stop, will you? Stop, Dave. Will you stop, Dave?” So the supercomputer HAL pleads with the implacable astronaut Dave Bowman in a famous and weirdly poignant scene toward the end of Stanley Kubrick’s 2001: A Space Odyssey. Bowman, having nearly been sent to a deep-space death by the malfunctioning machine, is calmly, coldly disconnecting the memory circuits that control its artificial “ brain. “Dave, my mind is going,” HAL says, forlornly. “I can feel it. I can feel it.”

I can feel it, too. Over the past few years I’ve had an uncomfortable sense that someone, or something, has been tinkering with my brain, remapping the neural circuitry, reprogramming the memory. My mind isn’t going—so far as I can tell—but it’s changing. I’m not thinking the way I used to think. I can feel it most strongly when I’m reading. Immersing myself in a book or a lengthy article used to be easy. My mind would get caught up in the narrative or the turns of the argument, and I’d spend hours strolling through long stretches of prose. That’s rarely the case anymore. Now my concentration often starts to drift after two or three pages. I get fidgety, lose the thread, begin looking for something else to do. I feel as if I’m always dragging my wayward brain back to the text. The deep reading that used to come naturally has become a struggle.

I think I know what’s going on. For more than a decade now, I’ve been spending a lot of time online, searching and surfing and sometimes adding to the great databases of the Internet. The Web has been a godsend to me as a writer. Research that once required days in the stacks or periodical rooms of libraries can now be done in minutes. A few Google searches, some quick clicks on hyperlinks, and I’ve got the telltale fact or pithy quote I was after. Even when I’m not working, I’m as likely as not to be foraging in the Web’s info-thickets’reading and writing e-mails, scanning headlines and blog posts, watching videos and listening to podcasts, or just tripping from link to link to link. (Unlike footnotes, to which they’re sometimes likened, hyperlinks don’t merely point to related works; they propel you toward them.)

For me, as for others, the Net is becoming a universal medium, the conduit for most of the information that flows through my eyes and ears and into my mind. The advantages of having immediate access to such an incredibly rich store of information are many, and they’ve been widely described and duly applauded. “The perfect recall of silicon memory,” Wired’s Clive Thompson has written, “can be an enormous boon to thinking.” But that boon comes at a price. As the media theorist Marshall McLuhan pointed out in the 1960s, media are not just passive channels of information. They supply the stuff of thought, but they also shape the process of thought. And what the Net seems to be doing is chipping away my capacity for concentration and contemplation. My mind now expects to take in information the way the Net distributes it: in a swiftly moving stream of particles. Once I was a scuba diver in the sea of words. Now I zip along the surface like a guy on a Jet Ski.

I’m not the only one. When I mention my troubles with reading to friends and acquaintances—literary types, most of them—many say they’re having similar experiences. The more they use the Web, the more they have to fight to stay focused on long pieces of writing. Some of the bloggers I follow have also begun mentioning the phenomenon. Scott Karp, who writes a blog about online media, recently confessed that he has stopped reading books altogether. “I was a lit major in college, and used to be [a] voracious book reader,” he wrote. “What happened?” He speculates on the answer: “What if I do all my reading on the web not so much because the way I read has changed, i.e. I’m just seeking convenience, but because the way I THINK has changed?”

Friday, February 27, 2009

Carbon Dioxide Drop And Global Cooling Caused Antarctic Glacier To Form

ScienceDaily (Feb. 27, 2009)Global climate rapidly shifted from a relatively ice-free world to one with massive ice sheets on Antarctica about 34 million years ago. What happened? What changed? A team of scientists led by Yale geologists offers a new perspective on the nature of changing climatic conditions across this greenhouse-to-icehouse transition — one that refutes earlier theories and has important implications for predicting future climate changes.

35 horsepower, millions of fans

The company's Nano Web site has seen more than 30 million hits, and social networks such as Facebook have thousands of interest groups and communities around the car.

Why the fuss? The Nano -- its working name was the "People's Car" -- is just half the price of the next-cheapest car in the world, a Chery Automobiles QQ3 sold only in its domestic market of China. The $5,200 Suzuki Maruti is the current least expensive option for Indians, where per capita incomes are nearing $1,000 after years of explosive economic growth. In the U.S., the cheapest option is the Nissan Versa, which, at $9,990, is about five times the price of Nano.

With a snub nose and a sloping roof, the world's cheapest car can hold five people -- if they squeeze. And the basic version is spare: There's no radio, no air bags, no passenger-side mirror and only one windshield wiper. If you want air conditioning to cope with India's brutal summers, you need to get the deluxe version. Analysts estimate taxes, delivery and extras will add 30% or so to the car's cost.

At 10 feet long, the Nano is about 2 feet shorter than a Mini Cooper. Its 623-cubic-centimeter, two-cylinder engine is estimated to produce about 35 horsepower, good for a top speed of 75 mph.

The 10 cheapest cars sold in the U.S.:
ModelPriceModelPrice

Nissan Versa

$9,990

Toyota Yaris

$12,205

Hyundai Accent

$11,070

Kia Spectra

$13,550

Kia Rio

$11,495

Suzuki Reno

$13,839

Chevrolet Aveo5

$11,965

Hyundai Elantra

$14,120

Smart fortwo

$11,990

Pontiac G3

$14,335

The $2,000 car you can't buy

Tata Nano © Saurabh Das/The Associated Press

Extra2/26/2009 5:30 PM ET

The $2,000 car you can't buy

The much-anticipated Tata Nano -- at just half the price of the next-cheapest car in the world -- will be sold in India beginning in April. You won't find it in the US, though.

By MSN Money staff and wire reports

The cheapest car in the world is expected to begin rolling off assembly lines March 23, seven months behind schedule.

India's tiny Tata Nano, priced at 100,000 rupees, or about $2,000 at current exchange rates, will not be sold in the United States. Cars will reach dealerships across India in April, and production for the first year is expected to reach 250,000 vehicles.

The Nano's unveiling in January 2008 caused a stir worldwide and especially in India, where there are fewer than 10 cars for every thousand people, compared with 40 per thousand in China and 450 in the U.S.

Indians bought about 1 million cars in 2007. Far more middle-class Indians buy and transport their entire families on scooters.

Twilight Earth

Twilight Earth


Buzz up!11 votes

coal mine

President Obama submitted a budget proposal on Thursday that halts the distribution of up to $200 million per year to states that have already cleaned up their abandoned coal mines, yet still receive money from the federal Abandoned Mine Lands (AML) program.

This action by Obama is bringing heated opposition from Wyoming, the nation’s largest coal producer, and the recipient of $100 million a year from the program.

“I can say with full confidence that I and Wyoming’s current congressional delegation will not rest until President Obama’s current AML proposal is buried.” - Rep. Cynthia Lummis, R-Wyo

Wyoming has finished the cleanup of its abandoned coal mines, but continues to divert the money to projects such as the University of Wyoming School of Energy Resources operating budget ($17.4 million), a gasification facility and technology center for the School of Energy Research ($20 million) , and the construction of a road to a future Carbon County coal-to-liquid plant ($10 million).

“This is a past obligation and to threaten to take away what we are already owed is outrageous.” - Sen. Mike Enzi, R-Wyo

The president’s proposal could also affect Montana, Texas, Louisiana, and three Native American tribes, and its critics claim that the proposal goes against a compromise agreed upon in 2006. That compromise allowed states that have achieved their coal mine cleanups to continue using the funding for road construction, non-coal reclamation, and other projects.

Under the initial federal AML program, coal operations across the country pay a tax on each ton of coal produced that funds the reclamation of mine sites abandoned before the 1977 federal strip mine law was passed.

“The goal is to stop payments to states where the job of reclaiming abandoned coal mines is done.” - Peter Mali, U.S. Office of Surface Mining, Reclamation and Enforcement.

Some say Bunning, in frustration, hinted he may quit GOP seat

By James R. Carroll and Joseph Gerth • The Courier-Journal • February 27, 2009

WASHINGTON — Already in conflict with his party’s leaders, Sen. Jim Bunning has reportedly said privately that if he is hindered in raising money for his re-election campaign he is ready with a response that would be politically devastating for Senate Republicans: his resignation.

Advertisement

The Kentucky Republican suggested that possible scenario at a campaign fundraiser for him on Capitol Hill earlier this week, according to three sources who asked not to be identified because of the politically sensitive nature of Bunning’s remarks.

The implication, they said, was that Bunning would allow Kentucky Gov. Steve Beshear, a Democrat, to appoint his replacement — a move that could give Democrats the 60 votes they need to block Republican filibusters in the Senate.

“I would get the last laugh. Don’t forget Kentucky has a Democrat governor,” one of the sources quoted Bunning as saying.

“The only logical extension of that comment is, ‘(Make me mad) … enough and I’ll resign, and then you’ve got 60 Democrats,’ ” said another source who was present at the event.

That was the clear message Bunning was sending, said a third source who heard the senator’s remarks at the fundraiser, which attracted about 15 people.

Bunning was touring storm-damaged areas in Western Kentucky today. In a statement made through spokesman Mike Reynard, he said:

RIAA Decries Attorney-Blogger as 'Vexatious' Litigator

By David Kravets EmailSeptember 17, 2008 | 5:47:01 PM

Beckerblog The Recording Industry Association of America is declaring attorney-blogger Ray Beckerman a "vexatious" litigator. The association is seeking unspecified monetary sanctions to punish him in his defense of a New York woman accused of making copyrighted music available on the Kazaa file sharing system.

The RIAA said Beckerman, one of the nation's few attorneys who defends accused file sharers, "has maintained an anti-recording industry blog during the course of this case and has consistently posted virtually every one of his baseless motions on his blog seeking to bolster his public relations campaign and embarrass plaintiffs," the RIAA wrote (.pdf) in court briefs. "Such vexatious conduct demeans the integrity of these judicial proceedings and warrants this imposition of sanctions."

Lory Lybeck, a Washington state defense attorney leading a proposed class-action lawsuit accusing the RIAA of allegedly engaging in "sham" litigation tactics, said the RIAA's motion comes from the same organization that has sued about 30,000 people over the last five years for file sharing, some of them falsely. It's the same organization, he said, that has sued dead people, the elderly and even children -- all while using unlicensed investigators.

"This is like irony and irony and irony," Lybeck said in a telephone interview. "That's what vexatious litigation is."

Beckerman, whose blog is Recording Industry vs The People, said in an interview the allegations were "frivolous and irresponsible."

Raymundo
Attorney Ray Beckerman denies RIAA charges that he's a "vexatious" litigator.

Lybeck represented an Oregon woman, Tanya Andersen, and got the case dismissed last year. The RIAA fought paying his legal fees because it claimed she was still an infringer. He countersued. The case seeks to represent what he says are "thousands of people falsely sued" by the RIAA. The case is pending.

"Irony is too tame of a word to describe the motion against Ray," Lybeck said. "Their whole 30,000-lawsuit scheme is founded on the purpose to run a PR campaign based on a fundamental starting place of an illegal investigation by unlicensed investigators and then a threatening letter," Lybeck said. "Ray is duty bound and ethically bound to zealously defend his client."

RIAA Fears 'Manipulation' of Courtroom Web Broadcast

By David Kravets EmailJanuary 20, 2009 | 4:16:18 PMCategories: RIAA Litigation

Commiepics_2

The Recording Industry Association of America is objecting to the webcasting of pretrial arguments in an upcoming file-sharing trial.

The RIAA claims that the re-runs "will be readily subject to editing and manipulation by any reasonably tech-savvy individual."

That is among the arguments the RIAA is making in urging a federal appeals court to reverse a Massachusetts federal judge's order that would allow the pretrial broadcast this Thursday. The broadcast, assuming it goes forward, will include a Boston University student and his attorney challenging the RIAA's copyright infringement case. It is believed to be the first time a U.S. federal trial court has allowed a live internet stream from the courtroom.

"Petitioners are concerned that, unlike a trial transcript, the broadcast of a court proceeding through the internet will take on a life of its own in that forum," the RIAA wrote (.pdf) the U.S. 1st Circuit Court of Appeals. "The broadcast will be readily subject to editing and manipulation by any reasonably tech-savvy individual. Even without improper modification, statements may be taken out of context, spliced together with other statements and broadcast (sic) rebroadcast as if it were an accurate transcript. Such an outcome can only do damage to Petitioner's case."

The RIAA is taking exception to the fact that the feed will be distributed on the Berkman Center for Internet and Society's website. The head of the center is Charles Nesson, who is defending Joel Tennenbaum, the defendant in the case.

"Accordingly, in the name of 'public interest,' the district court has directed the general public to a website replete with propaganda regarding the Defendant's position in connection with this case, and that is specifically designed to promote Defendant's interests in this case," the RIAA wrote.

Last week, U.S. District Judge Nancy Gertner of Massachusetts granted the over-the-internet coverage for the 2 p.m. hearing. Only a handful of U.S. trial judges have ever allowed cameras in their courtrooms during a live proceeding. Most of the states grant local judges the discretion whether to allow cameras.

"At previous hearings and status conferences, the Plaintiffs have represented that they initiated these lawsuits not because they believe they will identify every person illegally downloading copyrighted material. Rather, they believe that the lawsuits will deter the Defendants and the wider public from engaging in illegal file-sharing activities. Their strategy effectively relies on the publicity resulting from this litigation," Gertner wrote in granting the internet coverage.

The 1st Circuit did not indicate when it would rule.

Judge Declares Mistrial in RIAA-Jammie Thomas Trial

By David Kravets EmailSeptember 24, 2008 | 6:18:26 PMCategories: RIAA Litigation
Jammie_thomas_660px_2
Jammie Thomas, left, and her attorney, Brian Toder, leave the courthouse last year after a jury dinged her $222,000 for sharing 24 songs on the Kazaa file-sharing network.
Photo: Associated Press

A federal judge on Wednesday set aside the nation's first and only federal jury verdict against a peer-to-peer file sharer for distributing copyrighted music on a peer-to-peer network without the labels' authorization.

U.S. District Judge Michael Davis of Duluth, Minnesota, declared a mistrial in the case of Jammie Thomas, a Minnesota mother of three, setting aside the $222,000 penalty levied by a federal jury last year for copyright infringement -- $9,250 for each of the 24 infringing music tracks she made publicly available on the Kazaa file sharing network.Michaeljdavis_2

Davis' decision means the Recording Industry Association of America's five-year copyright infringement litigation campaign has never been successful at trial.

Most of the 30,000 cases have settled out of court for a few thousand dollars and have never broached the hot-button legal issue that ultimately prompted Davis to declare a mistrial.

Thomas was the nation's only RIAA target to take her case to trial, which last year ended in an RIAA victory. The case emboldened the recording industry's resolve to continue its public relations effort against file sharing through a nationwide litigation campaign.

The legal brouhaha prompting Davis to declare a mistrial focused at the heart of all file sharing cases: What level of proof was necessary for the RIAA to prevail.

Davis had instructed (.pdf) the jury last year that the recording industry did not have to prove anybody downloaded the songs from Thomas' open Kazaa share folder. Davis read Jury Instruction No. 15 to jurors saying they could find unauthorized distribution -- copyright infringement -- if Thomas was "making copyrighted sound recordings available" over a peer-to-peer network "regardless of whether actual distribution has been shown."

But Davis had second thoughts and, without any urging from the litigants in the case, summoned the parties back to his courtroom in August, writing in a brief order that he may have committed a "manifest error of the law." He heard arguments from both sides and said he would issue a ruling soon.

With Wednesday's opinion, Davis made his revised position official and ordered a retrial -- one with different jury instructions.

Water 'more important than oil' businesses told


Water shortage will cause greater ruin than peak oil. Photograph: Pedro Armestre/AFP/Getty Images

Dwindling water supplies are a greater risk to businesses than oil running out, a report for investors has warned.

Among the industries most at risk are high-tech companies, especially those using huge quantities of water to manufacture silicon chips; electricity suppliers who use vast amounts of water for cooling; and agriculture, which uses 70% of global freshwater, , says the study, commissioned by the powerful CERES group, whose members have $7tn under management. Other high-risk sectors are beverages, clothing, biotechnology and pharmaceuticals, forest products, and metals and mining, it says.

"Water is one of our most critical resources – even more important than oil," says the report, published today . "The impact of water scarcity and declining water on businesses will be far-reaching. We've already seen decreases in companies' water allotments, more stringent regulations [and] higher costs for water."

Droughts "attributable in significant part to climate change" are already causing "acute water shortages" around the world, and pressure on supplies will increase with further global warming and a growing world population, says the report written by the US-based Pacific Institute.

"It is increasingly clear that the era of cheap and easy access to water is ending, posing a potentially greater threat to businesses than the loss of any other natural resource, including fossil fuel resources," it adds. "This is because there are various alternatives for oil, but for many industrial processes, and for human survival itself, there is no substitute for water."

In a joint statement, CERES' president Mindy Lubber and Peter Gleick, president of the Pacific Institute, urged more companies and investors to work out their dependence on water and future supplies, and make plans to cope with increased shortages and prices.

Former Teen Cheerleader Defies RIAA Over $7,400 File Sharing Tab

Newwhitney
The recording industry wants $7,400 from Whitney Harper for infringing 37 songs on the Kazaa file sharing network. Harper, shown here at age 14, was a juvenile at the time of the unlawful downloading. She is now a college junior fighting the case.

Former cheerleader Whitney Harper admits downloading pirated music from her San Antonio, Texas family's computer years ago, when she was barely in high school. She just doesn't think think she should pay $7,400 for it today.

"I would do homework on that computer and listen to music. I didn't know I was stealing or distributing it. I thought I was like listening to MTV on the internet," Harper said in a telephone interview.

Harper is now 20, a Texas Tech public relations junior, and represents yet another statistic in the Recording Industry Association of America's litigation campaign -- with some 30,000 copyright file sharing lawsuits filed and counting. It's not known how many of the RIAA targets are juveniles, but Harper is being pursued for acts she says she committed when she was 14, 15, or 16 years of age.

Now the Recording Industry Association of America wants (.pdf) $7,400 to settle a file sharing lawsuit stemming from her piracy of 37 tracks, including music by Eminem, the Police, Mariah Carey and others.

"I had no idea I was doing anything wrong. I knew I was listening to music. I didn't have an understanding of file sharing," Harper said.

For years, those tracks languished on the family's computer with the file share folder open, even after Harper moved to college two years ago. "I don't even remember what the password is," she said of her Kazaa account. "I think it is morally wrong to sue me for something I did that long ago. That it was being distributed to all of cyberspace, I didn't have an understanding of that at all."

Harpernow
Harper, who says file sharing is "morally wrong," is now a junior at Texas Tech.

Last year, the RIAA originally sued her father, Steven, but redirected its case months later to his daughter after she admitted she was the downloader.

"They contacted my dad, who doesn't know much about computers except for e-mail," she said. "He said he didn't know what they were talking about."

RIAA spokeswoman Cara Duckworth said via an e-mail: "As in every case, we strive to be fair and reasonable. However, it's disappointing that the defendant is apparently choosing to drag this out."

The woman's lawyer, Scott Mackenzie of Dallas, said RIAA lawyers told him, "'Come on, she knew better than this,'" he said.

For her part, Harper said downloading "is morally wrong for people that know what they are doing. I would not do it now. I would never do it. I don't steal from people. I'm not a bad person."

She is demanding a trial, and the RIAA in court documents last week called her "vexatious" for refusing to settle for $200 a song, the amount the Copyright Act allows for so-called "innocent infringement."

"I think it is wrong for them to sue me. I'm hoping I can win and don't have to pay anything," she said.

While most of the RIAA file sharing cases settle out of court for a few thousand dollars, one lawsuit has gone to trial. It resulted in a $222,000 verdict against a Minnesota woman last year for infringing 24 songs on Kazaa.

But a mistrial was declared last month after the trial judge ruled that merely making available songs on the internet for others to download does not amount to copyright infringement, a decision the RIAA is appealing.

Report: RIAA Undergoing Massive Layoffs

The Recording Industry Association of America is firing scores of workers, a "bloodbath" as some have described it.

The recession, and its announced pullback of its 5-year-old litigation campaign, are among the reasons.

Hypebot.com reports dozens of RIAA workers are being let go. The "RIAA as you know it is probably history by Tuesday of next week," the site says. The site predicts the group is likely to merge with the International Federation of the Phonographic Industries, the RIAA's European counterpart which is part of the ongoing trial against The Pirate Bay in Sweden.

Cara Duckworth, an RIAA spokeswoman, says in an e-mail to Digital Media News that: "Can't confirm number but I can confirm there were layoffs."

The move comes two months after the music industry's litigation and lobbying front announced an end to its 5-year litigation campaign, in which more than 30,000 individuals had been sued for file sharing. The RIAA, which defeated Napster and Grokster in court, said instead of litigation it would work with ISPs to suspend file sharing copyright scofflaws – a plan that has not materialized.

Duckworth did not immediately return e-mails or phone calls for comment.

The Motion Picture Association of America, the film studio's litigation and lobbying arm, announced layoffs weeks ago.

Calling all Webmasters….

Free website and Blog submissions….

By memphismurphy

Calling all Webmasters….

Check out this useful site we just launched….we are really trying hard to tap into as many as possible ventures relating to publishing on the web….

Topsite Agent_

Topsite agent_ This site gives you as an Webmaster the opportunity to submit your blog or website’s link here, in return other members and visitors can rate your site….I have seen it so many times; the link at the top of the front page gets most of the hits…so the better your layout and stickyness of your site the higher your ranking.

The principal round Topsite Agent is the more views (hits) and the higher you get rated by users, the higher your position on the main page….also there is different categories to choose from so you might not have high rating on the main page, but you could have No.1 in a category….so you get the most hits>>>

Search Engine’s like to harvest links from sites like this one…use it as a tool…it is Free!…the more links you’ve got pointing back to your sites, the better for you.

Join Topsite Agent now <<Submit Website>>

Financial Crisis 101

By greenewable

Good video for those seeking the most basic of explanations of some of the causes of the financial crisis. Takes a simple look at how balance sheets are effected when bank’s investments in mortgage assets turn toxic. Video is nice for people with little understanding of finance and who may have a short attention span. Video outlines what happened in two minutes, 2:17 to be exact.

Thanks to Barry Ritholtz. Some things are worth reposting!

Source:
Understanding the Financial Crisis
EnspireLearning Channel, YouTube, Accessed October 21, 2008
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gF6LbFDjvW0

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

I’m Lovin’ It!

By greenewable

McDonalds finds a new appeal in the culinary capital of the world. I’ll lay off the french fry jokes, as there are too many, and they’re all bad. The jokes, not the fries. :)

Alastair Miller/Bloomberg News

The Arc de Triomphe stands behind a McDonald's fast food restaurant on the Champs Elysees in Paris, on Feb. 19, 2008. Photographer: Alastair Miller/Bloomberg News

Oct. 21 (Bloomberg) — It’s lunchtime in Paris and the packed restaurant has neither checkered tablecloths nor carafes of red wine. It’s a McDonald’s and the French are lovin’ it.

While rising prices and record low consumer confidence drive the French to throw their culinary pride to the wind and embrace le Big Mac, traditional bistros are hurting. About 3,000 independent French restaurants filed for bankruptcy in the first half, a record 27 percent higher than the same period a year earlier, according to Paris-based statistics office Insee.

“A hamburger patty and fries in a bistro around the corner from my office costs almost twice as much,” said Alexandre Cavanel, a 27-year-old computer programmer, as he tucked into his 8 euro ($10.70) double cheeseburger menu meal with colleagues at a McDonald’s in Paris’s Opera district. [Full Story]

Source:
French Bistros File Record Bankruptcies as Le Big Mac Reigns
Ladka Bauerova, Bloomberg, October 21, 2008
http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601109&sid=a77FzqH2MlN0&refer=home

Tags: , , , , , ,

shopbot atricle

shopbot atricle