Friday, February 27, 2015

The FCC on Net Neutrality: Be Careful What You Wish For

from pcmag





Net Neutrality
Yesterday's decision by the FCC to regulate Internet providers as common carriers is being hailed as a victory by most of the groups supporting net neutrality, and as a loss by the cable and telecommunications companies that will now be regulated. But as much as I back the concept of net neutrality – the idea that Internet providers shouldn't discriminate among content providers – I worry that we really don't know where these changes will lead to, and that there are likely to be unintended consequences that we can't predict.
The actual ruling, which came on a 3-2 partisan vote, classifies the Internet providers as a telecommunications service under Title II of the Communications Act, as opposed to an information service. The FCC has promised to "forebear" many of the regulatory powers it would have under that act, but it hasn't yet published the final ruling, so many of the details remain unknown.
The ruling follows years of debate about net neutrality. The concept seems obvious to me – if I subscribe to an Internet provider, I want to be able to get to all of the Internet content equally, at the speed I'm paying for. And while I understand the reason why some providers like the concept of "paid prioritization" – where services like Netflix pay an Internet provider such as Comcast extra to make sure their content gets delivered quickly - I can see how if this practice becomes commonplace, the Internet sites that can't afford to pay for this would be relegated to the "slow lane." The arguments by smaller firms such as Etsy that this would hurt their businesses and prevent new ones from being started make a lot of sense to me.
The FCC has tried to address this before, going back to Comcast's attempt to slow down connections to peer-to-peer sites such as BitTorrent. In 2010, the FCC passed rules that required transparency, no blocking, and no "unreasonable discrimination" in providing access to web sites. Verizon led an appeal of that ruling, and last January, the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals agreed that the FCC didn't have the authority to impose those rules on services it hadn't classified as telecommunications service.
While the Internet providers took that as a win, yesterday's ruling reclassifying them so they can be more tightly regulated was an unforeseen consequence. Indeed, for years, FCC members stated they didn't want to reclassify Internet providers, but it seems like the court ruling gave them little other choice. Of course, the Internet providers will appeal this ruling, as well, and likely work with their supporters in Congress to get the laws changed.
In the meantime, the advocates of net neutrality mostly seem overjoyed with the ruling. But I worry that they, too, should be wary of unintended consequences.
Most advocates of net neutrality, including me, would also favor very little regulation on the Internet. But the simple act of reclassification means that the FCC is asserting it has the power to regulate the Internet in all sorts of ways, even if it is promising to forebear new regulations regarding pricing, taxes, and fees. There's no guarantee that future commissions won't change their minds. And while the First Amendment generally provides protection for speech in this country, there are those who argue that providers should block sites that support terrorist groups or that provide pornography. Once the FCC has the right to regulate the Internet, it's hard to draw a firm line.
One reason that net neutrality is so important is because we have so few options in broadband providers. While there are a few places with fiber connections available through Google or phone companies, (and the FCC also seems to be pushing for municipal broadband), most of us have only one place to get a high-speed broadband connection: our local cable companies. And in most cases, it was regulation that established the local cable monopolies in the first place.
Another consequence of tighter U.S. regulation of the Internet is that it will make it harder for the government to argue against further Internet regulations in other countries. Having a global Internet where everyone can talk to everyone, with relatively few rules, has been a huge benefit. I'm worried we're moving slowly towards a more fragmented Internet, with each country or region having its own set of rules.
I would have preferred a middle ground here, with Congress and the administration agreeing to laws that would have enabled the FCC to enforce net neutrality rules without reclassifying Internet service. It seems that it would have been a good time to look at the overall Telecommunications Act, which hasn't been updated since 1996, before most of today's Internet sites even existed and long before we had fast wireless data. But partisans on both sides dug in their heels to the point that no legislation could move forward. This led directly to yesterday's ruling, with the prospect for more appeals and regulations that could change dramatically depending on who controls the FCC. To both sides I say: be careful what you wish for. You may get it, and find the consequences aren't what you expect.
For more, check out 5 Things You Need to Know About the FCC's Net Neutrality Plan and the video below.

Wednesday, February 25, 2015

3 planned to kill in U.S. if unable to join Islamic State, FBI says

from latimes



Three Brooklyn men arrested and charged with attempting to aid Islamic state
Two men were arrested Wednesday in New York as they allegedly prepared to join Islamic State militants in Syria, while a third man was arrested in Florida for allegedly helping fund their efforts, after they boasted of their plans on the Internet.
The three, all immigrants from Central Asia who live in Brooklyn, N.Y., allegedly plotted to launch attacks in this country if they were prevented from joining the extremist group, according to a criminal complaint filed in U.S. District Court in Brooklyn.
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FOR THE RECORD
Feb. 25, 1:57 p.m.: An earlier version of this post incorrectly described the three men arrested as Uzbeks. Two are Uzbeks and one is a Kazakh.
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One of the men repeatedly offered to assassinate President Obama if ordered to do so by  Islamic State, according to the complaint.
Akhror Saidakhmetov, 19, a citizen of Kazakhstan, was arrested at John F. Kennedy International Airport as he attempted to board a flight to Istanbul, Turkey, and then travel to Syria, the FBI said.
In conversations secretly recorded by the FBI, Saidakhmetov allegedly said he might try to force the flight to divert “so that the Islamic State would gain a plane.”
He also allegedly said that if he failed to reach Syria, he was prepared to join the military to kill U.S. soldiers, plant a bomb on Coney Island, the beachfront entertainment area in Brooklyn, or shoot FBI agents and New York police.
“We will go and purchase one handgun … then go and shoot one police officer,” he said in one wiretapped call, according to the complaint.
“Boom… Then, we will take his gun, bullets and a bulletproof vest … then, we will do the same with a couple of others. Then we will go to the FBI headquarters, kill the FBI people.”
Also arrested was Abdurasul Hasanovich Juraboev, 24, a citizen of Uzbekistan. Authorities said he had purchased a ticket to Istanbul and planned to follow Saidakhmetov to Syria next month.
The third suspect, Abror Habibov, 30, also an Uzbek citizen, is accused of giving the two money to help them fly to Turkey to join Islamic State. Habibov, who owns a chain of kiosks in retail malls in several states, was arrested in Jacksonville, Fla.
About 20,000 foreign fighters have joined Islamic State and other Sunni militant groups in Syria and Iraq, including several thousand Europeans and about 100 Americans, according to U.S. estimates. About a dozen Americans are believed to be fighting on behalf of Islamic State.
According to the complaint, U.S. investigators first began tracking the men in August after Juraboev allegedly posted a note on a now-closed Uzbek-language website that sought recruits for Islamic State, offering to shoot Obama if the extremist group ordered him to do so.
“That will strike fear in the hearts of infidels,” the note states. Juraboev repeated his pledge to “execute Obama” in an email later that month to another Islamic State website, according to the complaint.
Special FBI Agent Ryan Singer wrote in the criminal complaint that agents first interviewed Juraboev in August and he openly discussed plans not only to join the Islamic State but also  to kill Obama.
The investigation spread to Saidakhmetov, and wiretaps were approved to pick up the two men’s conversations. The FBI also planted a paid confidential informant, who met and befriended Juraboev at a local mosque.
At one point Saidakhmetov offered to join the U.S. military so he could pass information to Islamic State “to help in their attacks,” according to the complaint. Barring that, he said, he “could always open fire on American soldiers and kill as many of them as possible.”
According to the criminal complaint, Saidakhmetov was overjoyed when his travel documents were cleared by the U.S. Department of Homeland Security last week. He opened the package and said “his soul was already on its way to paradise and made the sound of a horn.”
The three were each charged with attempt to provide and conspiracy to provide material support to Islamic State. If convicted, they each face up to 15 years in prison.
All three made initial appearances in court but did not yet enter pleas in the case.
Loretta Lynch, the U.S. attorney in Brooklyn and President’s Obama’s nominee to replace Eric H. Holder Jr. as attorney general, is overseeing the case. A Senate Judiciary Committee is scheduled to vote Thursday on her nomination.
Lynch said the case shows the U.S. efforts to stop people from joining Islamic State, as well as to stop people influenced by the group from using violence in this country.
“The flow of foreign fighters to Syria represents an evolving threat to our country and to our allies,” Lynch said in a statement. “Anyone who threatens our citizens and our allies, here or abroad, will face the full force of American justice.”
On Capitol Hill, Rep. Michael McCaul (R-Texas), chairman of the House Homeland Security Committee, announced a new congressional task force to strategize how to stop U.S. residents from becoming militants. “More must be done to keep them off the battlefield,” he said.
Rep. Adam B. Schiff (D-Burbank), ranking member of the House Intelligence Committee, said Wednesday’s arrests were “yet another reminder that even in the United States, [Islamic State] barbarism has found its adherents.”
At a news conference in Brooklyn, New York City Police Commissioner William J. Bratton said the case highlights Islamic State's reach on social media, and the group's ability to motivate sympathizers in the U.S. to act.
"This is real," he said. "This is the concern about the lone wolf, inspired to act without going to the Middle East."
Bratton made reference to 32-year-old Zale Thompson, a Queens resident who attacked four city police officers with a hatchet in a subway station last year. When officers scoured his computer after the assault, they found he had visited several websites sympathetic to Islamic State, Bratton said.
Asked why Juraboev wasn't arrested immediately after threatening to kill Obama, Diego Rodriguez, assistant director in charge of the FBI's New York field office, said agents chose to monitor him instead to obtain more information about his network.
Follow @RickSerranoLAT for news on the FBI and Justice Department and @JamesQueallyLAT for breaking news
Copyright © 2015, Los Angeles Times

UPDATES

12:51 p.m.: This post has been updated with additional information from the criminal complaint and comments by New York City Police Commissioner William J. Bratton. 
The first version of this post published at 10:48 a.m.

Tuesday, February 24, 2015

U.S. missionary Phyllis Sortor kidnapped by masked gunmen in Nigeria

from latimes


The Rev. Phyllis Sortor
The Rev. Phyllis Sortor, an American missionary with the Free Methodist Church, was kidnapped Monday by masked gunmen in Nigeria, officials said. (AFP/Getty Images)





Masked gunmen abducted an American missionary in southern Nigeria, her church's website and Nigerian authorities said Tuesday.
"Early this morning we received a report that Rev. Phyllis Sortor, our missionary in Nigeria, was abducted from the Hope Academy compound in Emiworo, Kogi state, Nigeria by several persons," the Free Methodist Church website said, calling for prayers for her safe return.
The abduction late Monday was confirmed by Kogi state police spokesman Sola Collins Adebayo, the Agence France-Presse news service reported.
The motive of the kidnapping wasn’t known, but Nigeria has seen dozens of kidnappings of expatriates by criminal groups for ransom, as well as abductions of Westerners by Islamist militant groups, including Boko Haram.
Boko Haram is normally active mainly in northern Nigeria, although it has carried out attacks in Abuja and central Nigeria.
“We are calling on the U.S. church to join together in prayer for Phyllis’ safety and speedy release,” Bishop David Kendall, said in a church statement. He said the State Department and FBI were working with local authorities to trace Sortor and free her.
Few personal details about Sortor were provided, though the website of the Seattle Pacific University in Seattle identified her as an alumna.
According to the church website, Sortor developed a close affinity with the Fulani people -- semi-nomadic herdsmen -- and had helped open schools for their children. In a recent newsletter, she reported her joy at the opening of a new school in Enugu in southeastern Nigeria.
“We have worked long and hard on this school, and are so thrilled that yesterday, January 19th, 2015, we were able to open our doors for the first time! We began with 82 children, 58 of whom are Muslim, Fulani kids from one nearby camp!” Sortor wrote in a January newsletter.
“The Fulani parents are wonderfully cooperative -- sending food and water with their kids, organizing a Parent-Teacher Association -- giving us Fulani security guards for the school! We have six teachers altogether; a tutor-chaplain, bursar, driver and 'mother's helper.' All are wonderful Christian people who I know, with God's help, will make this school great!” she wrote.
Follow @robyndixon_LAT on Twitter for news out of Africa

Tuesday, February 17, 2015

ISIS militants reportedly burn to death 45 people in western Iraqi town

from fox


Published February 18, 2015       
FoxNews.com
The identities of the victims are not clear, the local police chief told the BBC, but some are believed to be among the security forces that have been clashing with ISIS for control of the town. ISIS fighters reportedly captured most of the town last week.
Col. Qasim Obeidi, pleading for help from the Iraqi government and international community, said a compound that houses families of security personnel and officials is now under siege.
The reports come days after ISIS released a video purportedly showing the beheadings of 21 Egyptian Coptic Christians along a beach in Libya, sparking an international outcry, including commendation from Pope Francis, who called the killings "barbaric.”
Earlier this month, ISIS released another video showing a fleet of vehicles flying the black ISIS flag and driving through what is believed to be the streets of Benghazi, Libya. The video shows the vehicles being cheered by men, women and children as they drive by.
On Friday, a media group linked to ISIS released a four-minute video titled "Peshmerga Captives in Kirkuk Province,” which purportedly showed Kurdish prisoners -- imprisoned in iron cages -- being driven around on trucks in Iraq, according to the Middle East Media Research Institute.
The imagery of the prisoner convoy in orange uniforms was similar to the scenes of an execution of a Jordanian pilot. In a video released by ISIS two weeks ago, Lt. Muath al-Kaseasbeh was shown being burned alive in a cage.
Al-Baghdadi, which is about 50 miles northwest of Ramadi in Anbar province, is located about five miles from Ain al-Asad air base, where 400 U.S. military personnel are training Iraqi soldiers and Sunni tribesmen to take on ISIS. The base was raided last week by a small band of fighters, in what some experts believe may have been a probe in preparation for a full-scale attack.
The base has been the target of sporadic mortar fire in past weeks, and the jihadist army has been moving forces from its strongholds in Syria to Anbar Province, possibly setting the stage for a major clash with forces on the base that is now the sole bulwark between ISIS and Baghdad.
There are currently nearly 2,600 U.S. forces in Iraq, including about 450 who are training Iraqi troops at three bases across the country, including al-Asad. Forces from other coalition countries conduct the training at the fourth site, in the northern city of Irbil.
But even if Islamic State militants close in on the base, taking it would require a massive force, that would present a target for airstrikes, retired Col. Thomas Lynch, a National Defense University fellow, told Fox News.
 





Saturday, February 14, 2015

FAA seen ready to open skies to commercial drones

from pcworld





The Federal Aviation Administration will announce on Sunday its long-awaited proposed rules for commercial operation of drones.
The announcement will be made by U.S. Transportation Secretary Anthony Foxx and FAA Administrator Michael Huerta and comes as speculation suggests many of the current restrictions that have commercial drone flight all but grounded will be removed.
On Saturday, Forbes published what it says is an FAA economic analysis into the new rules. The document, which is dated February 2015, was apparently uploaded to an FAA site in error and has since been removed from that site. It doesn’t contain the new rules, but analysis of them—at least as they stood at the time the document was written.
It says the new rules will have an economic benefit exceeding $100 million [m] a year, thanks to savings from the use of drones in jobs that currently require humans or from new business areas not currently economically feasible, like some types of aerial photography.
It would cost a total of around $300 to become FAA-certified under the proposed rules, the document says.
“If the use of a small UAS replaces a dangerous non-UAS operation and saves one human life, that alone would result in benefits outweighing the expected costs of this proposed rule,” it reads, using the abbreviation of the official “unmanned aerial systems” to refer to drones.
The report considers cost benefits in several other areas including bridge inspection, of which it reports there are roughly 600,000 in the U.S. that are required to be checked every two years. Roughly 45,000 of those are suitable for being checked by drones, it says.
It also considers the use of drones for visible checks on cell phone towers. Between 2004 and 2012, there were 95 fatalities involving workers on cell towers and the analysis indicates that figure could have been lower if drones use had been possible.
Currently, commercial use of drones is largely prohibited. The FAA has given a handful of companies permission to fly them, but they must adhere to certain rules such as the operator being a licensed pilot, the pilot being assisted by a spotter, and the drone remaining in sight at all times.
The new rules will apparently maintain the requirement for the drone to remain in sight and won’t permit operation between dusk and dawn due to safety concerns.
Once published, the rules won’t become law immediately. The FAA will open a commentary period during which members of industry and the public can submit their views on them. After that closes, the comments will be analyzed and the rules possibly rewritten.
It will be then that the proposed rules are sent to the President for approval. The process is likely to take at least several months.

Thursday, February 12, 2015

Amanda Knox announces engagement

from aol

Feb 12th 2015 8:17AM






















Even though Amanda Knox's legal case is continuing in Italy, back home in Seattle, she's moving on with her life.

According to The Seattle Times, Knox is engaged to musician Colin 'Thunderstrike' Sutherland. Sutherland reportedly wrote her while she was in an Italian jail and even moved back to Seattle to be with her.

Sutherland and Knox have been seen together as far back as September 2014 when the two were spotted in Coney Island.
Knox has retained a fairly normal life since moving back to the United States following her release from Italian prison in 2011.

She graduated from the University of Washington last year with a degree in creative writing.
From there, she's retained a job at a bookstore and as a freelance art reporter for The West Seattle Herald.

But her freedom is still in question abroad.

In 2007, while studying abroad for school in Italy, Knox's roommate, Meredith Kercher was stabbed to death. Knox was arrested in 2007 and indicted on murder charges in 2008.
In '09, Knox was convicted of murder, but appealed. She won the appeal and was released from prison to return to the U.S. in 2011.

Then, just two years later, that ruling was reversed and Italy's highest criminal court ordered a retrial.

The retrial found her guilty and she was again convicted of the same murder in 2014.
Now, there's another appeal as well as a legal fight over whether the U.S. should extradite Knox for her to serve her sentence. That case will be heard March 25.
The Seattle Times reports no wedding date has been set for Knox and Sutherland.

Amanda Knox over the years: