Friday, November 30, 2012

3 Reasons BandCamp Might Save The Music Industry - MC Zulu

I am no fanboy for any site, but I am going to answer the number one question I see everyone asking. ?HOW do you make any money as a musician these days?? One great answer to this is BandCamp. It?s been out for a while, but people aren?t ?getting it? like they should. (Including me)

The #1 Killer Of The Music Industry? PLAY COUNTERS!
A lot of things killed the music industry, but play counters did the most damage. Whoever decided to integrate them into social media probably had the best (greedy) intentions, but what they ended up doing was creating an environment where sheep-minded consumers completely FORGOT about whether they even LIKED a song or not. The value of art is QUANTified now. QUALity does not enter into it.

The current music industry is not about art. It?s about ?How many spins it got??. ?Musicians? focus became about getting ?spins? rather than creating good music. People are creating all kinds of crap THEY don?t even like for the ?spins?. THEN they have the NERVE to expect fans to buy into it? Well they won?t because you aren?t getting enough ?spins?? vicious cycle

Random Sheep Thought:

?I liked that song? but no one?else does?. maybe it?s not so good after all?

Now there are exploitative business models set to help you FAKE the ?spins?, and if you think the majors aren?t using them?. I have a bridge to sell you. The entire music industry is based on fake fans and hype. This is why ?superstars? often play to empty rooms? because their ?fans? are fake. Indies play to empty rooms because they cannot ?fake the fans? as well as the majors. It looks like they have no draw because they only got 250 spins on ?YouTube/FakeBook/FkFace?? what have you.

Additionally:
2) BandCamp is a same-day-fulfillment dream come true for a musician with no website. Set up, make music and sell it?. today. (NOTE* You need a PayPal and/or bank account)

3) Bandcamp went mobile almost seamlessly, while SoundCloud (a true fanboy circle jerk) stumbled through it. YouTube embarrassed themselves (completely changing their coding protocol) leaving millions of empty white boxes all over the net, like so many bastard children.

To make this? or any site worthwhile you need to constantly aim your fan base there. If you make a habit of letting people know they can find you somewhere? That?s where they will go to meet you.


Preview (and purchase) tracks from my new album?. As It?s Built

Think of it like a restaurant.
Will people look for you at McDonalds if you make it a habit of dining at the 4 seasons every morning?

Currently: As you release music, it eventually goes to Spotify? I love Spotify! I have about 200 songs there? but I will never see more than a dime from them. That means I have to stagger my release dates.

SO?For now?expect most of the music I make to be on BandCamp BEFORE it hits regular distribution channels. You might want to do the same.

Source: http://mczulu.com/blog/2012/11/3-reasons-bandcamp-might-save-the-music-industry/

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Delayed treatment for advanced breast cancer has 'profound effect'

ScienceDaily (Nov. 29, 2012) ? Results from a new study conducted by researchers at The Ohio State University Comprehensive Cancer Center -- Arthur G. James Cancer Hospital and Richard J. Solove Research Institute (OSUCCC-James) show women who wait more than 60 days to begin treatment for advanced breast cancer face significantly higher risks of dying than women who start therapy shortly after diagnosis.

"We wanted to see whether delaying treatment affected mortality rates among women with breast cancer," says Electra D. Paskett, associate director for population sciences at OSUCCC-James. "It's been shown that early detection and appropriate, timely treatment can increase five year survival rates to as high as 98 percent. Until this study, we didn't know the profound effect delaying treatment could have," she said.

Paskett is the senior author on the study, which is published online by the Journal of Clinical Oncology. In the study, researchers retrospectively examined 1,786 women enrolled in North Carolina Medicaid system who were diagnosed with breast cancer from January 1, 2000 through December 31, 2002, using the linked North Carolina Cancer Registry-Medicaid Claims database. Follow-up data were available through July 31, 2006.

The median time from biopsy-confirmed diagnosis to the initiation of treatment was 22 days. Sixty-six percent of the women started treatment within 30 days, and nearly all (90 percent) started treatment within 60 days. There was no difference in survival rates for those treated by 60 days.

However, for one in ten women studied, treatment started more than 60 days after their cancer diagnosis. Among those who had advanced cases of breast cancer, a delay of more than 60 days was associated with an 85 percent higher risk of breast cancer-related death, and a 66 percent higher risk of death overall, compared with women who were treated sooner.

"We're finding as we do research, it is really the lower income population that suffers the highest burden of all diseases," says Paskett. "This study suggests that ten percent of women can't get access to care, or it takes a longer time to get access to care."

Paskett says interventions to remove barriers and improve the timeliness of breast cancer treatment should focus on late-stage patients. Paskett recently published a study that confirmed patient navigators, often part of the clinical team, help patients negotiate the various complexities of the health care system and play a valuable role in helping breast cancer patients start treatment earlier.

"This research shows we have an opportunity to improve breast cancer outcomes by helping women who are diagnosed at late-stage to get started with treatment sooner," says Paskett. "Even if the goal of treatment isn't curative, early treatment seems to prolong survival."

The study was funded by grant 1R01CA121317 from the National Cancer Institute.

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Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Ohio State University Medical Center.

Note: Materials may be edited for content and length. For further information, please contact the source cited above.


Journal Reference:

  1. J. M. McLaughlin, R. T. Anderson, A. K. Ferketich, E. E. Seiber, R. Balkrishnan, E. D. Paskett. Effect on Survival of Longer Intervals Between Confirmed Diagnosis and Treatment Initiation Among Low-Income Women With Breast Cancer. Journal of Clinical Oncology, 2012; DOI: 10.1200/JCO.2012.39.7695

Note: If no author is given, the source is cited instead.

Disclaimer: This article is not intended to provide medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. Views expressed here do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/top_health/~3/is9fjKt5ElE/121129143535.htm

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Thursday, November 29, 2012

Top 7 Sony Xperia Smartphones Reportedly Getting Price Cut in India

Ahead of the holiday season in December, Sony the Japanese tech giant is reportedly planning to offer great price cuts and discounts on its products, especially the Xperia smartphone lineup.

According to a post by Saholic Shopa, a Facebook user on a group, Sony is reportedly planning to announce a price cut of Rs 1,000 to Rs 2,500 approximately on seven of its Xperia smartphones.

If you are planning to buy a new Xperia smartphone and waiting to avail attractive discount on the same, this is the right time and to help you decide, Gizbot has come up with the list of handsets that will receive official price cut.

Flip through the pages to know more details of these smartphones.

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Source: http://www.gizbot.com/mobile/sony-mobile/top-7-sony-xperia-smartphones-reportedly-getting-price-cut-in-india

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Video: Infant, dog both act like babies in howling duet

Sorry, Readability was unable to parse this page for content.

Source: http://video.today.msnbc.msn.com/today/50009332/

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Call of Duty: Black Ops II


I can't recall a first-person shooter that made me feel more like I was in the middle of an action movie than Call of Duty: Black Ops II. This, however, is not necessarily always a positive thing. The cinematic approach plays well enough (if never spectacularly) in the multiplayer and zombie modes that give this latest chapter in the venerable military-themed series its longest-lasting heft. But when similar techniques are applied to the single-player campaign, the results are more middling, especially in light of the sterling success of the?original Black Ops ?two years ago. Treyarch's follow-up to that super-smash hit has already obliterated sales records this time around as well, so it doesn't need much help finding an audience. But whether this burgeoning franchise-within-a-franchise can thrive with continued treatment of this sort is another question.

Medium-Rare Multiplayer
Let's start with what will be the meat of the Black Ops II experience for many: multiplayer mode. Treyarch has not toyed significantly with the formula, still giving players numerous options for facing off against others across the country and around the globe. "Core" missions include Team Deathmatch, Free-for-All, Search & Destroy, and Capture the Flag (all of which are also available in "Hardcore" mode, which removes the HUD and limits health), and eight others; you can also engage in in two types of "Combat Training" runs to hone your skills, or play four "Party Games" that put interesting for-entertainment-only spins on the weapons you can use and the rules you play by.

These are all enjoyable for what they are, although to what degree is determined by the people you play with. If you want to be guaranteed of having talented, trustworthy squad mates, you're better off creating a custom game and inviting the people you want to join you rather than trusting fate to provide you with worthy allies from the standard lounge system. In any event, it's easy to lose yourself in game after game, and we found that even playing on a below-average team didn't depress the fun factor too much.

You won't notice a lot of big changes in the everyday operation of Black Ops II's multiplayer mode, with one key exception: the new "Pick 10" character configuration system. With it, you can forgo established classes and instead create a new from scratch, customizing all the aspects of your play by using a points system that affects everything from weapons to perks. It won't appeal to everyone, but it strikes us as a clever addition that lets you personalize your multiplayer experience as much or as little as you want.

The Walking Dead
Not in the mood for a traditional multiplayer free-for-all? Zombies mode puts a fantastical spin on the shooting concept, dropping you into a closed location where you must defend against ever-increasing hordes of the raging undead.

"Survival" mode, in which you frantically try to acquire the weapons you need to decapitate the decaying masses and board up the entrances to your stronghold, is still on hand, but it has been joined by two others. "Grief" is a cool idea, in which two teams attack each other indirectly by luring the zombies against the opposing side. A campaign-style offering called "Tranzit" lets you move organically between maps in a way that imparts some much-welcome cohesion to what's been since its inception a quirky aftertaste to Call of Duty's more realistic flavor. Tranzit might even be too open-ended, as it can be difficult to discern exactly what you're supposed to do with all the options at your disposal.

These are, alas, hardly major innovations for the most part, but they're the only ones of real note in Zombies. Otherwise, this is standard, "shame the shambler" stuff that lacks the pungent immediacy of Call of Duty at its best. We imagine it's tough to think of that many ways to spice up a zombie shooter, which is perhaps stylistically over-specific as it is, but if this mode is going to continue to appear in future titles, it needs a facelift or it's going to get really boring, really quickly. (Unless you adore titles like Left 4 Dead, it might very well have already arrived there.)

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ziffdavis/pcmag/~3/FtH8yh-wYH8/0,2817,2412470,00.asp

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Today in History

Please check the URL for proper spelling and capitalization. If you're having trouble locating a destination on Yahoo!, try visiting the Yahoo! homepage or look through a list of Yahoo!'s online services.

Please try Yahoo Help Central if you need more assistance.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/today-history-050206767.html

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Wednesday, November 28, 2012

How the Heck Do You 'Wassail'? Top Five Food and Drink Related ...

The day after Thanksgiving marks the unofficial beginning of the holiday season. So despite the widespread bitching about the carols coming too early, the truth is that many a Miamian's radio dial turns to 101.5 FM?November 23.

Read also:
- Thanksgiving Leftovers? Eleanor Hoh Woks Our Turkey
- Miami Citizens, Businesses Get Generous This Holiday Season; Do Your Part

It's OK -- you don't have to admit to singing along to "Blue Christmas" on your morning commute. We know your dirty little secret. So for all the foodies out there tuning in to the holiday jams, here are our top five holiday tunes that mention food -- because this time of year, it's all about the eats.

5. "Hanukkah, O Hanukkah"
Christmas doesn't have sole dibs on seasonal songs -- or indulgent eating. We can't forget the Jewish holiday and all its accompanying edibles. This version by the Barenaked Ladies references everyone's favorite potato cakes: latkes. (They're available at many a Miami Jewish deli, for anyone suddenly struck with a craving.)

Source: http://blogs.miaminewtimes.com/shortorder/2012/11/final_what_the_hell_is_wassail.php

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Google Voice Finally Gets Updated for iOS 6

It's been over two months since Apple released iOS 6 and the iPhone 5 and Google has just now updated Google Voice. More »


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/fPDzJJq9YQg/google-voice-finally-gets-updated-for-ios-6

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Tuesday, November 27, 2012

Amid bitter leadership row, French conservatives tap Cop

Jean-Fran?ois Cop? today was named the winner of the conservative UMP party's recount. But rival Fran?ois Fillon begs to differ.

By Bastien Inzaurralde,?Correspondent / November 26, 2012

In this file photo, former French Prime Minister Fran?ois Fillon, left, and French conservative party UMP Secretary General Jean-Fran?ois Cop? pose for photographers before a televised debate last month. The two men have been locked in a contentious fight over leadership of the UMP.

Christophe Ena/AP/File

Enlarge

An internal committee investigating the contentious Nov. 18 election for leadership of France's right-wing opposition UMP party has declared a winner, but the struggle between two prominent French conservatives over the UMP's top spot looks set to continue, likely in court.

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The party's internal investigation began last week after initial results showed Jean-Fran?ois Cop? with only a 98-vote victory over Fran?ois Fillon. Today, the committee declared Mr. Cop? the UMP's new leader. But while Cop? called for the party to choose "forgiveness instead of division," Mr. Fillon rejected the recount as "illegal."

Fillon was prime minister during former President Nicolas Sarkozy?s tenure and is considered more moderate than Cop?, the current party leader who held a position equivalent to a US House majority leader until June, when the Socialist party and its allies won France's parliamentary elections.

What started as a neck-and-neck election eight days ago between Cop? and Fillon has quickly escalated into a public political war to succeed President Sarkozy as right-wing leader, with both men fiercely criticizing each other and accusing one another of cheating.

Both Fillon and Cop? claimed victory in the election on Nov. 18. But the next day, a UMP commission tasked with overseeing the election declared Cop? the winner by a mere 98 votes, and the tension between the two sides has grown steadily since.

On Wednesday, Fillon?s camp said that votes from three overseas territories hadn?t been counted and claimed that adding them to the vote tally would mean victory for Fillon. In today's announcement, the investigating committee put Cop? ahead by 952 votes after the recount.

An inheritance from Sarkozy?

St?phane Roz?s, a political analyst and the president of Cap, a communications consulting company, says the turmoil within the UMP stems in part from the void left by Mr. Sarkozy after he lost this year?s presidential election to Fran?ois Hollande.

?Nicolas Sarkozy didn?t leave anything that could allow the right wing to structure itself around a body of doctrine, because everything was organized around his person,? Mr. Roz?s says. ?The only thing that remained is a radicalization of the UMP that took [the party] further away from right-wing sympathizers.?

An editorial in the weekend edition of France?s most prestigious newspaper Le Monde argued that Sarkozy was to blame for the current crisis because he took the party too far to the right during the last presidential campaign. At the same time, Le Monde wrote, the UMP has not been able to move on since Sarkozy left power, nor has it engaged in any kind of soul-searching.

?Nicolas Sarkozy is not the big winner of this fratricidal war,? the editorial read. ?He is the cause of it.?

Trading barbs

Regardless of the cause, the debate over the election has led to a toxic atmosphere within the party, with Fillon and Cop? trading barbs publicly.

"The behavior of Fran?ois Fillon, it?s the story of an inelegant loser who now comes to give lessons of morality without applying them to himself,? Cop? told Europe 1 radio on Thursday.

The following day, Fillon had a few words for Cop?. ?I measure all the damages from this crisis, but at the same I want to say that a political party is not a mafia,? Fillon told RTL radio. ?A political party, it?s not a place where you can bury cases, refuse to tell the truth.?

On Sunday morning, Fillon?s team refused to recognize the UMP commission examining allegations of fraud as legitimate. In the evening, mediation between Cop? and Fillon by former French Prime Minister Alain Jupp?, who is considered the party?s moral gatekeeper, proved unsuccessful. The mediation attempt appeared to be a last resort and its failure was met by angry reactions on both sides.

Fillon took to Twitter after the meeting to blame Cop? for the failed talks and announced he would go to court. He tweeted, ?I will go to court to restore the truth of the results and give the party base its voice back.?

Agence France-Presse, relying on anonymous sources, reported that Sarkozy advised Fillon not to go to court when the two met for lunch on Monday. Sarkozy also said it would be better that a new election be held, according to Agence France-Presse.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/ovnmVR3PkOE/Amid-bitter-leadership-row-French-conservatives-tap-Cope

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Monday, November 26, 2012

The Lost Pictures Found in Old Motorola Razrs Sold on eBay Are Pretty Epic

Even though we had crappier phones with crappier cameras, most of us still loved to document our not so crappy lives on our phones. New York artist Kyle M. F. Williams bought 44 Razr phones on eBay and found that "half of them still had texts, sexts, pics, and vids." He put them all together in a book. More »


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/R1O-hqrODVI/the-lost-pictures-found-in-old-motorola-razrs-sold-on-ebay-are-pretty-epic

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"Don?t Blame Me for Being Fat"

Karley Workman, 14, examines a healthy snack during the Shapedown program Karley Workman, 14, examines a healthy snack during the Shapedown program for overweight adolescents and children in Aurora, Colo. Doctors are trying to find ways to encourage healthful living while also properly handling patients who are obese despite their best efforts.

Photo by John Moore/Getty Images

If people can make themselves healthy, should we blame them for getting sick? That is the stark question raised not only by broadening acceptance of the idea that people should assume some responsibility for their health by eating right, exercising, and so forth, but also by the exciting and necessary trend toward patient empowerment.

??Don't blame me for being fat!? said Lizmari Collazo at the recent Medicine X Conference at Stanford University, where a group of researchers, doctors, and caregivers met to discuss (among other things) the new world of patient-generated health. To his credit, organizer Larry Chu also invited a group of patients: ?Don't just talk about them,? was his message to the practitioners. ?Talk with them!?

The conference discussed what is now becoming accepted wisdom. Rather than just reform health care, we should also figure out how people can maintain or regain their own health. They need to eat right (and in smaller amounts), stop smoking, drink less, and exercise and sleep more. And they should avoid too much stress, even as they follow all of these rules, monitor their vital signs, and share bio-data.

Statistically, this works. People who do these things are healthier on average. They are less likely to get cancer or to die of heart attacks; they will probably stay slim and live longer. And, yes, society?s institutions should help them to do this. Schools should provide nutrition education (and healthy lunches). Businesses should encourage their employees to be healthy by providing discounts on insurance, offering team sports, and the like.

But suppose this fails. Suppose that, despite all blandishments, someone gets diabetes through some combination of behavior and genetics (even as other people with the same behavior do not). Should they now be blamed for developing diabetes and raising health care costs? Or can they blame their parents or the state for their inability to be healthy?

Sometimes such things are simply bad luck ? just as we used to think decades ago. It is important to remember that statistics is about generalities: For every 100 people who are 90 percent likely to be healthy, 10 percent will be unhealthy?and it may or may not be their ?fault.? Yet we seem to be heading toward a world in which self-anointed saints and blamers face off against supposed sinners and suspects.

To be sure, it is worthwhile to foster healthy behavior, which will lower costs and improve many people's lives. But how far do we want to go? Where are the appropriate limits when it comes to encouraging good behavior? Can good behavior be encouraged without ever punishing bad behavior?

I suspect that different societies, cultures, employers, and governments will come up with different answers. In part, we need to feel comfortable with the reality that there is no environment perfect for everyone, and there are no perfect people. In a world of statistics, it is 100 percent likely that fewer than 100 percent of people will be happy. We try to mitigate bad luck, but we cannot eliminate it.

In practical terms, though, we would be wise to listen to Collazo?s plea: ?I am not a fat blob, having [unhealthy] English breakfasts, who gave herself diabetes. I AM A HUMAN, AND I HAVE DIGNITY.? Collazo identifies the problem for her?and for all of us: ?Is there some diabetes that is preventable? I don't think anyone FULLY knows the answer to that. BUT SO WHAT? Does it mean I no longer deserve dignity if I do get it? If I ?fail? to ?prevent? it? Should I now be excommunicated from the population at large? Should I be made an ?example? to others? Should I be spoken of as a plague? As an unwanted thing in the world??

We should remember the old saying: Hate the sin, not the sinner. We can attempt to stop diabetes without rejecting diabetics, and to eliminate obesity without demonizing the obese.

In the end, we need to acknowledge the outliers?the people who got diabetes by chance, not by fault. Yes, they may be a minority. But, for the sake of human dignity, we must allow every one of them to claim that statistical anomaly, even as we support each of them in trying to follow the path that statistics indicate could help them to lead healthier lives.

This article was originally published by?Project Syndicate.?For more from?Project Syndicate,?visit their?Web site, and follow them on?Twitter?or?Facebook.

Source: http://feeds.slate.com/click.phdo?i=1750614a1c9f4bc3db0e1500d287cde0

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How online retail businesses stay secure on Cyber ... - The Next Web

Now that Turkey Day is finally passed, it?s time to fix yourself a Thanksgiving Sandwich and fire up the old computer to snag the latest deals on one of the fastest-growing shopping holidays around, Cyber Monday. The National Retail Federation estimates that more than half of online retailers will be offering promotions and discounts for Cyber Monday, and ComScore is projecting an astronomical $1.5 billion dollars in sales ? all in a single day.

But with that profit hinging on a few hours of fevered shopping, online outlets are positioning themselves for a big security risk. Hackers with a motive (or simply an easy way to get in) can threaten an entire website?s livelihood by launching a DDoS attack through simple means.

?Programs that can do serious damage to a company?s servers aren?t hidden,? says Marty Meyer, CEO of Corero Network Security, a cyber security company that specializes in DDoS attacks. ?These are free, easy to access, and can be launched quickly.?

With Cyber Monday quickly becoming the largest and highest profile ecommerce event, a lot can happen when you type your credit card number into a website that?s not equipped to handle a server breach or shutdown. Unfortunately, the inside look on cybersecurity for all websites ? even the big ones ? isn?t reassuring.

Problems from the first line of defense

Of course, Cyber Monday?s status as a premier online shopping holiday just magnifies an already rampant problem on the Internet all year round: Companies don?t defend well against hackers from the get-go, and very little protocol is in place to actually guard against breaches.

?We see businesses that look at cyber attacks like being hit by lightning, thinking, ?It won?t happen to me,? Meyer explains. ?But if it does, your business might be seriously injured or dead.?

This false sense of security is a trouble spot for not only the big players in the ecommerce space such as Amazon and Etsy, but also for smaller independent retailers looking to score big with online orders. Meyer says that small businesses are just as likely to get hit by hackers as big business and often cause even more damage ? especially if the company?s website or ecommerce system is new and untested.

?Cyber attackers are not always targeting specific sites,? Meyer says. ?Instead, they?re randomly polling URLs and IP addresses for vulnerable sites. So don?t think you can fly under the radar.?

False perceptions about how hackers work leads to drastic under-preparedness. In his experience, Meyer says that companies often rely on outdated network infrastructure and ineffective firewall services ? in short, nothing that could really help if a DDoS or other predatory maneuver was launched. Add to this a poor knowledge of regulating server traffic and shaky adherence to PCI security standards, and Cyber Monday begins looking more and more like a recipe for a complete Internet meltdown.

Once down, down for good

Unfortunately, the problems don?t end there. If by any chance an unprepared online business is looking now to get everything in place on Cyber Monday, there are very few last-minute measures to take.

?Reactive quick fixes are very limited in the attacks they protect against and are extremely expensive,? Meyer says. ?But if an e-retailer is not already using a CDN or service provider to provide burst bandwidth, they could try and set this up for Cyber Monday. However, the website will remain vulnerable to application-layer and server-targeted attacks, which can significantly degrade the site performance and drive away frustrated customers.?

Even worse, a successful attack could spell hours of downtime, long waits for the ISP, and relying on a whole lot of luck to get back up. Small businesses are, unsurprisingly, the ones with the most to lose when a cyberattack occurs: They have the least bandwidth, least secure ecommerce options and, perhaps most importantly, they have the least resources to rely on when an attack occurs. Cyber attacks can also cripple ecommerce outfits for the long-term, especially if a first-time customer finds out his or her data has been compromised.

?The huge increase in Cyber Monday as a source of revenue for retailers creates a rush to setup an online presence and, if protocols are not done properly, it could tarnish the reputation of the retailer if they are the target of a data breach and any private or payment card information is stolen.?

In short, many ecommerce platforms simply don?t have the infrastructure to withstand a calculated attack on such an important day ? and they could suffer if their servers come crashing down like dominoes.

The long run

In order for Cyber Monday to stay safe, secure and ? most importantly ? popular, ecommerce systems must replace their slow, weak and outdated cybersecurity systems. Meyer says that remaining vigilant and proactive is the most important defense against all kinds of online attacks.

?Attackers are smart and getting more sophisticated, and technology to combat them needs to move with the times,? Meyer adds.

There?s a lot riding on Cyber Monday, but increasingly insecure websites could mean big trouble. Users and businesses alike could potentially face deal phishing scams, information extraction from insecure ecommerce systems, and fraud of all kinds.

The best way to keep the day alive is not to think if, but when.

?Hope is not a strategy,? Meyer says.

Image Credit: Sandy Huffaker/Getty Images

Source: http://thenextweb.com/insider/2012/11/25/d/

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Exercising your creativity ? top 10 fun alternative workout ideas ...

When you?re starting out with exercise, routine is really helpful to help embed the fitness habit. After a while though, it can get just, well? a bit routine. So here are my top ten ideas for some new fitness activities to try out to get your enthusiasm flowing again. Novel exercises will also utilise a different mix of parts of your body and specific muscles. This will shake your body out of its complacency and give you a fitness and confidence boost too. The only limit is your own creativity! Have fun and do report back on Facebook how you get on with these suggestions, or other new things you try out.

1. Spacehoppers

The ultimate silly way to workout. Retro hoppers are back in fashion, or you can try out funky new designs. They?re a great mix of cardio blasting, leg strengthening, core toning and competitive daftness

2. Pole dancing

Not just for aspiring ?adult? entertainers. Working a pole well needs real strength and will develop your flexibility at the same time as having a giggle with like minded folks in a class.

3. Roller skating

Forget the dusty old skates hidden in your loft or at the back of the garage. There?s a brilliant choice of fun, funky skates out there to try now. You can skate normally outdoors, at your local rink, try some tricks at a skate park or fire up your team spirit by getting into Roller Derby. Something for all levels of fitness and nerve!

4. Orienteering

If you think ?straight? running is boring, then this is your opportunity to exercise your mind whilst you?re moving. Fun for all the family (there are races and events for all ages), it?s also a chance to explore new areas at high (though not too high or you?ll miss the checkpoints!) speed.

5. Kettlebells

Fire up your posterior chain to work those big muscles in the back of your body. Get some proper tuition in a class or one to one before swinging these iron weights about the place. Focus on your cardio system with swings and develop explosive power and strength from dynamic lifts and movements.

6. Rowing

You can brave the chill of the river or canal by joining in with your local club. Or stay warmer by applying good technique (it?s NOT all about your arms!) on the rowing machine at the gym. Outdoor rowing is very skilful ? from just getting into the boat and keeping it upright, to perfecting the timing with your oars with your team mates.

7. Hula hooping

Another 70s throwback which has hit the scene big style recently. Powerhoop is the branded ?product? gaining all the attention and has classes on the timetable at loads of private and council run gyms. Fantastic for toning your core and working your waist in particular.

8. Martial arts

There are SO many martial arts out there and they range from mobility and movement based (e.g. Tai Chi/Chi Gung) to full on combat forms (e.g. TaeKwonDo/Kickboxing). Specific benefits depend on the type you choose. But they?ll all give you some structure and discipline within a social setting. You?ll feel you?re learning something useful (self-defence & self-confidence) and interesting too.

9. Ballet

A great way to develop poise, balance, flexibility and strength. The routine of regular classes will keep you focussed and intent on improvement. No tutus needed, but it?s a brilliant chance to dig out your leg-warmers and maybe even show off on stage.

10. Suspension training

Nothing to do with discipline difficulties at work! Using straps anchored to the ceiling, you can get your whole body involved in a different take on strengthening and toning. Find out if your local gym offers TRX classes to keep up your interest levels.

Which is your favourite? These are just a smattering of fun suggestions to get you going. An exercise routine doesn?t have to be routine to be effective. So get out there and mix it up!

Source: http://energywisefitness.co.uk/blog/2012/alternative-exercise/

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ComScore: Black Friday online spending rings in at a record $1.04 billion

ComScore: Black Friday online spending rings in at a record $1.04 billion, climbs 26 percent over previous year

Considering the parody-worthy dangers of America's busiest shopping day, it's no surprise to hear that online consumerism is on the rise. According to ComScore, 57.3 million Americans took their wallets to digital storefronts on Black Friday, spending a record $1.04 billion in the process. "With Black Friday online sales up 26 percent and surpassing $1 billion for the first time, coupled with early reports indicating that Black Friday sales in retail stores were down 1.8 percent, we can now confidently call it a multi-channel marketing phenomenon," stated ComScore Chairman Gian Fulgoni. The organization also noted that digital content sales are on the rise, too, citing a 29 percent increase in the category over the same period last year. Finally, Fulgoni projected Cyber Monday sales in excess of $1.5 billion, based on observations culled from the years past. Read on for ComScore's official numbers.

Continue reading ComScore: Black Friday online spending rings in at a record $1.04 billion

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Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/3EWXxQSIla0/

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Egypt's top judges blast?Morsi decree?as 'attack'

Violent confrontations between protesters and Egyptian security forces continue in Cairo. NBC's Jim Maceda reports.

By Tom Perry, Reuters

CAIRO -- Egypt's highest judicial authority on Saturday said President Mohammed Morsi's decree granting himself new powers marked an "unprecedented attack" on the independence of the judiciary, while critics and supporters planned for rival rallies on Tuesday.??

Meanwhile, a huge explosion rocked the city of Rafah near the Gaza Strip, and al Arabiya reported that part of an intelligence building had collapsed. The border crossing at Rafah has been closed on and off over security issues, severely restricting the flow of goods to Gaza.

Youths clashed with police in Cairo for a second day, confronting Egypt with a crisis that has exposed the split between newly empowered Islamists and their opponents.?

A handful of hardcore activists hurling rocks battled riot police in the streets near Tahrir Square, where several thousand protesters massed on Friday to demonstrate against a decree that has rallied opposition ranks against Morsi.?

Following a day of violence in Cairo, Alexandria, Port Said and Suez, the smell of teargas hung over the square, the heart of the uprising that swept Hosni Mubarak from power in February 2011.

More than 300 people were injured on Friday. Offices of the Muslim Brotherhood, which propelled Morsi to power, were attacked in at least three cities.

The Muslim Brotherhood called for a mass demonstration in Cairo on Tuesday to show support for Morsi. It also called for shows of support in public squares across Egypt after early evening prayers on Sunday.


Parties opposed to the decree have also called for a protest on Tuesday in Cairo, though in a different square from the one where the Brotherhood called on its supporters to gather.?

Leftist, liberal and socialist parties have called for an open-ended sit-in with the aim of "toppling" the decree, which has also drawn statements of concern from the United States and the European Union. A few dozen activists manning makeshift barricades kept traffic out of the square on Saturday.

Calling the decree "fascist and despotic", Morsi's critics called for a big protest on Tuesday against a move they say has revealed the autocratic impulses of a man jailed by Mubarak, who outlawed Morsi's Muslim Brotherhood.

"We are facing a historic moment in which we either complete our revolution or we abandon it to become prey for a group that has put its narrow party interests above the national interest," the liberal Dustour Party said in a statement.

Issued late on Thursday, the decree marks an effort by the Morsi administration to consolidate its influence after it successfully sidelined Mubarak-era generals in August.

"We are here because the goals of the revolution have yet to be achieved," one protester said as people took to the streets after President Mohamed Morsi decreed more power for himself. Critics call it a power grab, and there have been calls for a million-man march against Morsi. NBC's Jim Maceda reports.

The decree reflects the Muslim Brotherhood's suspicion towards sections of a judiciary unreformed from Mubarak's days: it guards from judicial review decisions taken by Morsi until a new parliament is elected in a vote expected early next year.

It also shields the assembly writing Egypt's new constitution from a raft of legal challenges that have threatened the Islamist-dominated assembly with dissolution.

The Morsi administration has defended the decree on the grounds that it aims to speed up a protracted transition from Mubarak's rule to a new system of democratic government.

"It aims to sideline Morsi's enemies in the judiciary and ultimately to impose and head off any legal challenges to the constitution," said Elijah Zarwan, a fellow with The European Council on Foreign Relations.

"We are in a situation now where both sides are escalating and its getting harder and harder to see how either side can gracefully climb down," Zarwan said.

A central element of Egypt's transition, the drafting of the constitution has been plagued by divisions between Islamists and their more secular-minded opponents, nearly all of whom have withdrawn from the body writing the document.?

Morsi's new powers allowed him to replace the prosecutor general -- a Mubarak holdover who the new president had tried to replace in October only to kick up a storm of protest from the judiciary, which said he had exceeded his authorities.

At an emergency meeting called to discuss the decree, the Supreme Judicial Council, Egypt's highest judicial authority, urged "the president of the republic to distance this decree from everything that violates the judicial authority".

The Judges' Club, a body representing judges across Egypt, late called for a strike by judges and prosecutors during a meeting interrupted with chants demanding the "downfall of the regime" -- the rallying cry in the uprising that toppled Mubarak last year.?

Al-Masry Al-Youm, one of Egypt's most widely read dailies, hailed Friday's protest as "The November 23 Intifada", invoking the Arabic word for uprising. "The people support the president's decisions," declared Freedom and Justice, the newspaper run by the Brotherhood's political party.

The ultraorthodox Salafi Islamist groups that have been pushing for tighter application of Islamic law in the new constitution have rallied behind the decree.

The Nour Party, one such group, stated its support for the Morsi decree. Al-Gama'a al-Islamiya, which carried arms against the state in the 1990s, said it would save the revolution from what it described as remnants of the Mubarak regime.

Facing the biggest storm of criticism since he won the presidential election in June, Morsi addressed his supporters outside the presidential palace on Friday. He said opposition did not worry him, but it had to be "real and strong".

Candidates defeated by Morsi in the presidential vote joined the protests against his decision on Friday. Former Arab League Secretary General Amr Moussa was photographed linking arms with leftist Hamdeen Sabahi, liberal Mohamed ElBaradei and others.

Morsi is now confronted with a domestic crisis just as his administration won international praise for mediating an end to the eight-day war between Israel and Palestinians in the Gaza Strip.

"The decisions and declarations announced on November 22 raise concerns for many Egyptians and for the international community," State Department spokeswoman Victoria Nuland said in a statement.

The European Union urged Morsi to respect the democratic process, while the United Nations expressed fears about human rights.

NBC News staff contributed to this report.

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Copyright 2012 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

Source: http://worldnews.nbcnews.com/_news/2012/11/24/15410858-egypts-top-judges-call-morsi-decree-unprecedented-attack?lite

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Wednesday, November 7, 2012

Community Fitness Challenges | Northstar Publishing

Looking for the ingredients to host a successful fitness challenge?

Turn community fitness into a challenge. Photo Courtesy City of Warrenville

Combine ease of participation with a little friendly competition, fold in a partnership with a local medical facility, and add a dash of marketing.

For good measure?sprinkle with incentives and a mayor or city manager in sweat pants and a pair of tennis shoes?and voila you have a perfectly prepared program that serves the entire community.

Whether it?s inspiration from ?The Biggest Loser? or a plea from local medical centers to encourage physical activity, fitness challenges are gaining in popularity.

And with an obesity epidemic running rampant in the country, Warrenville, Ill., Mayor David Brummel says he is proud to be his community?s ?workout? buddy.

?It?s always a challenge to maintain weight and fitness,? Brummel explains. ?The idea is just to get as many people as possible up and moving.?

Like others, Brummel started a fitness challenge in his community by encouraging participants to spend a minimum of 150 minutes per week doing some type of physical activity to receive a T-shirt at the end of the eight weeks. He says 261 people signed up.

?Try to find something that fits the identity of the community,? Brummel offers as a tip for involvement. ?The majority of these people are not regular exercisers, so make it easy to participate.?

Similar challenges in other communities also invite residents to face off against mayors, city managers, council members, and local ?celebrities.?

?To me, it?s all about getting up, working hard, and staying active,? says 63-year-old Dan Snarr, the mayor of Murray, Utah. ?I want to inspire residents to do the same.?

Snarr competed against seven other area mayors, two councilmen, one city manager, and one city attorney in a 100-day fitness challenge sponsored by Intermountain Medical Center. The Salt Lake City-based healthcare system offered counseling, weigh-ins, stress tests, and other diagnostics to participants.

In Brunswick, Ohio, the parks and recreation department took the challenge a step further. In addition to partnering with Southwest General Medical Center to offer health screenings, the program also included a lecture series for participants to learn more about nutrition, exercise, and the importance of overall health.

Brunswick Parks and Recreation Director John Piepsny says marketing is a key in creating buzz and getting people interested.

Piepsny says stressing that the program is about overall healthy living is more important to participants than losing weight.

Get everyone involved! Photo Courtesy City of Brunswick

?People are looking for an experience. They don?t want to just lift weights,? he explains. ?And they want it to be fun.?

One cautionary detail he shares from the early days when the city offered another rendition of the program is that women do not want to reveal their weight. Therefore, the program transformed from a weight-loss challenge to an overall health-and-wellness competition.

Since 2004, the program has been through various renditions that involved everything from counting the number of steps participants took to awarding points based on the rigor of an activity.

Another version invited businesses to face off, and still yet to come is putting school-aged children to the test.

Snarr says regardless of the activity, it?s important for people to get up and move, and sometimes they may need a little motivation from their neighbors and friends.

?Mental fitness requires physical fitness to get the endorphins going,? he asserts. ?It?s really simple. It?s just a matter of people saying ?I can do it? and sticking to it.?

Christine Schaffran is the editor-in-chief for PRB magazine. Reach her at (866) 444-4216 or editor@northstarpubs.com.

??????????Sidebar????????????

Secrets For Success

  • Involve city officials and local ?celebrities.? The name recognition will hopefully encourage others to participate.
  • Partner with local medical facilities. Professionals can offer the necessary tools to live a healthy lifestyle.
  • Make it fun. Create themes that change from year to year, and make it easy to participate.
  • Give the program a time limit. Eight weeks seems to be the cutoff. If it?s too long, people will become bored or frustrated. Consider offering a program in the winter so people are not distracted by other activities.
  • Use tools such as direct mailing, ads in local newspapers and community directories, and Facebook posts to get residents revved up.
  • Sweeten the pot with incentives. Offer discounts on memberships to the community rec center (50 percent off during enrollment for the fitness challenge). Giveaways such as T-shirts, water bottles, and pedometers all can be motives to participate.
  • Award prizes. Ask local eateries and entertainment venues to donate gift cards for the winner or winners. Looking for prizes that don?t cost a dime? Give away a free yearlong membership to the grand-prize winner.

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Related posts:

  1. Fitness Cycles
  2. Sports & Fitness Q&A
  3. No End To Creativity
  4. Building Community
  5. Senior Health & Fitness Day

Source: http://www.northstarpubs.com/articles/prb/community-fitness-challenges

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Anheuser-Busch wants Budweiser out of 'Flight'

15 hrs.

LOS ANGELES --?Denzel Washington's character in "Flight" drinks a lot throughout the film, but his portrayal of a highly functioning alcoholic pilot isn't being welcomed by brewing company Anheuser-Busch or the distributor of Stolichnaya vodka.

Anheuser-Busch said Monday that it has asked Paramount Pictures Corp. to obscure or remove the Budweiser logo from the film, which at one point shows Washington's character drinking the beer while behind the wheel.

Budweiser is hardly the only alcoholic beverage shown in "Flight," which earned $25 million in its debut weekend. Washington's character frequently drinks vodka throughout the film, with several different brands represented. William Grant & Sons, which distributes Stolichnaya in the United States, also said it didn't license its brand for inclusion in the film and wouldn't have given permission if asked.

Rob McCarthy, vice president of Budweiser, wrote in a statement that the company wasn't contacted by Paramount or the production company of director Robert Zemeckis for permission to use the beer in "Flight."

"We would never condone the misuse of our products, and have a long history of promoting responsible drinking and preventing drunk driving," McCarthy wrote. "We have asked the studio to obscure the Budweiser trademark in current digital copies of the movie and on all subsequent adaptations of the film, including DVD, On Demand, streaming and additional prints not yet distributed to theaters."

A spokesman for Zemeckis referred questions to Paramount, which did not return an email message seeking comment.

Other vodka brands, including Absolut and Smirnoff, are also included in the film. Representatives of those companies did not return messages seeking comment.

Experts say the film is unlikely to run afoul of trademark protections, as courts have ruled that products may be featured in films regardless of whether the companies approve, as long as they have some artistic relevance.

Source: http://www.nbcnews.com/business/budweiser-seeks-removal-flight-1C6883970

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Remains of the Day: Android Vulnerable to SMS Spoofing

Remains of the Day: Android Vulnerable to SMS SpoofingA phishing vulnerability has been found in Android, Microsoft is retiring Live Messenger, Facebook gives its iOS app a big update, and Hulu strikes a deal with CBS.

  • New Phishing Vulnerability Discovered In All Versions Of Android A team of researchers at North Carolina State University were able to create an app that sends fake text messages that appear to be from your contacts?a method that can be used for phishing. Google has been notified, and says they will fix the problem in a future Android release. [MakeUseOf]
  • Microsoft to retire Windows Live Messenger in favor of Skype Moves to integrate Live Messenger with Skype look like they will culminate in Microsoft retiring it's instant messaging service in favor of Skype. No official word on when, but sources believe it could be as early as this week. [The Verge]
  • Facebook updates its iOS app with Gifts, new Messages interface, and multi-photo uploads Version 5.1 of the app brings with it batch photo uploads and tweaks to its camera and message services based off of the apps on the main Facebook website. Also in the update is the Gifts feature (US only), which lets you send real, physical gifts to your friends. [The Next Web]
  • CBS Finally Does A Deal With Hulu, But Only For Older Shows That Are Off The Air Hulu customers will now be able to stream CBS' "library content"?shows from the network's archive that are no longer on the air. In addition to having all the content available to Hulu Plus subscribers, a selection of episodes from the collection will be made avaliable to free users as well. Currently airing shows and their previously aired seasons are off the table for now. [TechCrunch]
  • Verizon to Shutter Its App Store in January Verizon's VCast Apps marketplace will be shut down in early 2013, after roughly three years of existence. Verizon anticipates "completing this process by March 27, 2013," [AllThingsD]
  • BillGuard Teams Up With Lemon's Mobile Wallet, Will Alert Users To Fraudulent Charges BillGuard is now integrating it's fraud protection services with Lemon's mobile wallet app. The service can be toggled on or off within Lemon for each card registered in the app, and will then authenticate and monitor the account for any potentially fraudulent charges. [TechCrunch]

Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/lifehacker/full/~3/Vs4oZjqIcbc/remains-of-the-day-android-vulnerable-to-sms-spoofing

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Monday, November 5, 2012

Israel Radio Correspondent: American Jews whisper voting for Romney

Israel Radio Correspondent: American Jews whisper voting for Romney
Dr. Aaron Lerner Date: 5 November 2012

When anchor Aryeh Golan asked Israel Radio correspondent Ayala Hasson-Nesher
in a live report from the United States on the Reshet Bet morning news
magazine today if American Jews are voting for Obama for president,
Hasson-Nesher replied ?some tell me they are voting for Romney ? others
whisper to me that they are voting for Romney?.

Hasson-Nesher noted that when she visited Chicago she found people where not
focused of the elections. ?When I asked someone who they thought would win,
they answered ?the[Chicago] Cubs [sports team]?.

Dr. Aaron Lerner, Director IMRA (Independent Media Review & Analysis)
(Mail POB 982 Kfar Sava)
Tel 972-9-7604719/Fax 972-3-7255730
INTERNET ADDRESS: imra@netvision.net.il
Website: http://www.imra.org.il

Source: http://www.imra.org.il/story.php3?id=58851

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Sunday, November 4, 2012

Fight intensifies over NW coal exports

In this photo taken Oct. 23, 2012, a ship is seen in the distance moored at the BP oil refinery in the Strait of Georgia just beyond the location of a proposed coal exporting terminal in Ferndale, Wash., near Bellingham, Wash. The progressive college town of Bellingham is at the center of one of the fiercest environmental debates in the region: should the Northwest become a hub for exporting U.S. coal to Asia? A proposal to build one of as many as five coal terminals here has divided the town, pitting union and businesses that welcome jobs against environmentalists who worry about coal dust and greenhouse gas emissions. A trade group is running TV ads touting the projects, while numerous cities such as Seattle and Portland are opposing coal trains through their communities. (AP Photo/Elaine Thompson)

In this photo taken Oct. 23, 2012, a ship is seen in the distance moored at the BP oil refinery in the Strait of Georgia just beyond the location of a proposed coal exporting terminal in Ferndale, Wash., near Bellingham, Wash. The progressive college town of Bellingham is at the center of one of the fiercest environmental debates in the region: should the Northwest become a hub for exporting U.S. coal to Asia? A proposal to build one of as many as five coal terminals here has divided the town, pitting union and businesses that welcome jobs against environmentalists who worry about coal dust and greenhouse gas emissions. A trade group is running TV ads touting the projects, while numerous cities such as Seattle and Portland are opposing coal trains through their communities. (AP Photo/Elaine Thompson)

In this photo taken Oct. 23, 2012, a ship is seen in the distance moored at the BP oil refinery in the Strait of Georgia just beyond the location of a proposed coal exporting terminal in Ferndale, Wash., near Bellingham, Wash. The progressive college town of Bellingham is at the center of one of the fiercest environmental debates in the region: should the Northwest become a hub for exporting U.S. coal to Asia? A proposal to build one of as many as five coal terminals here has divided the town, pitting union and businesses that welcome jobs against environmentalists who worry about coal dust and greenhouse gas emissions. A trade group is running TV ads touting the projects, while numerous cities such as Seattle and Portland are opposing coal trains through their communities. (AP Photo/Elaine Thompson)

In this photo taken Tuesday, Oct. 23, 2012, Cindy Franklin hands out information about how to write letters against a proposed coal exporting facility, in her home in Bellingham, Wash. The progressive college town of Bellingham is at the center of one of the fiercest environmental debates in the region: should the Northwest become a hub for exporting U.S. coal to Asia? A proposal to build one of as many as five coal terminals here has divided the town, pitting union and businesses that welcome jobs against environmentalists who worry about coal dust and greenhouse gas emissions. A trade group is running TV ads touting the projects, while numerous cities such as Seattle and Portland are opposing coal trains through their communities. (AP Photo/Elaine Thompson)

In this photo taken Oct. 23, 2012, a Border Patrol vehicle approaches train tracks that run through a wooded area near the site of a proposed coal exporting terminal Tuesday, Oct. 23, 2012, in Ferndale, Wash., near Bellingham, Wash. The progressive college town of Bellingham is at the center of one of the fiercest environmental debates in the region: should the Northwest become a hub for exporting U.S. coal to Asia? A proposal to build one of as many as five coal terminals here has divided the town, pitting union and businesses that welcome jobs against environmentalists who worry about coal dust and greenhouse gas emissions. A trade group is running TV ads touting the projects, while numerous cities such as Seattle and Portland are opposing coal trains through their communities. (AP Photo/Elaine Thompson)

In this photo taken Oct. 23, 2012, train tracks run through a wooded area near the site of a proposed coal exporting terminal Tuesday, Oct. 23, 2012, in Ferndale, Wash., near Bellingham, Wash. The progressive college town of Bellingham is at the center of one of the fiercest environmental debates in the region: should the Northwest become a hub for exporting U.S. coal to Asia? A proposal to build one of as many as five coal terminals here has divided the town, pitting union and businesses that welcome jobs against environmentalists who worry about coal dust and greenhouse gas emissions. A trade group is running TV ads touting the projects, while numerous cities such as Seattle and Portland are opposing coal trains through their communities. (AP Photo/Elaine Thompson)

(AP) ? The progressive college town of Bellingham, Wash., is known for its stunning scenery, access to the outdoors and eclectic mix of aging hippies, students and other residents. But lately it's turned into a battleground in the debate over whether the Pacific Northwest should become the hub for exporting U.S. coal to Asia.

Five ports proposed for Washington and Oregon could ship as much as 140 million tons of coal, mostly from the Rockies, where it could travel by rail through communities such as Spokane, Seattle and Eugene, Ore., before being loaded onto ships bound for Asia.

The Cherry Point marine terminal would be the largest coal-export port in the U.S., exporting up to 54 million tons of bulk commodities, mostly coal.

With so much at stake, critics and supporters have intensified their pitches in recent weeks, running TV and radio spots, doorbelling homes and turning to phone banks and social media to rally support for their side.

Hundreds packed a public hearing in Bellingham last week to tell regulators what should be analyzed during the environmental review process. Hearings in Seattle, Vancouver and Spokane are also expected to draw crowds.

"This flies in the face about what are we about as a region, as far as our leadership on building a clean economy and saying no to coal. We're seen as a region that leads with innovation," said Kimberly Larson, with the Power Past Coal campaign. "Are we going backward or forward?"

Environmentalists, some Northwest tribes and others want regulators to study the cumulative effects all five projects: increased train traffic, carbon emissions from burning coal overseas and other health and environmental concerns.

Project supporters say it's not practical to lump the projects together. Only some ports will be built, they say, and each has different circumstances.

"Most of the people who are proposing that just view it as an opportunity to grind everything to a halt," said Craig Cole, a spokesman for developer Seattle-based SSA Marine. "We are expecting a very full review of the impacts of this project."

Even as environmental reviews have started for three coal-export projects at Cherry Point, Port of Morrow, Ore., and Longview Wash., the Army Corps of Engineers hasn't decided whether it'll conduct a broader environmental review for all the projects.

"We haven't made that determination yet," said corps spokeswoman Michael Coffey. "We're not saying yes and we're not saying no either."

Two other projects are proposed in Oregon at Coos Bay and St. Helens. Another in Grays Harbor County, Wash., was shelved over the summer, after the developer decided to explore other terminal uses.

Meanwhile, a trade group that includes the three largest U.S. coal producers has been running TV and newspaper ads to tout jobs, tax revenues and other economic benefits.

"We feel that someone is going to supply the coal to the ports that need it. ... The question is: where is that coal going to come from?" said Lauri Hennessey, a spokeswoman for the Alliance for Northwest Jobs & Exports, which includes BNSF Railway and companies such as Peabody Coal, Arch Coal and Ambre Energy with stakes in the Northwest projects. "That coal can be sent through Washington and Oregon ports in a way that's environmentally responsible."

Several union leaders and some lawmakers say the region can't afford to turn down well-paying jobs. The company says the $665 million project will create 1,250 permanent direct and indirect jobs and generate $11 million in tax revenues; critics are skeptical.

"Some groups have demonized a natural resource and they think nobody on the planet should burn this material. I disagree. We need jobs," said Mike Elliott, chairman of the state's Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers and Trainmen.

Trains already carry coal from the Rockies through the state for export through British Columbia. But Bellingham resident Lynn Berman and others fear the increase in coal shipments ? about nine mile-long trains a day ? could threaten fisheries, create health problems and foul the area's natural resources.

"It's such a bad idea," said Berman, who worked the phone bank one afternoon in the field office in downtown Bellingham set up by ReSources, a local group that has been organizing against the project. "I think it will impact everyone in this community."

Volunteers have made 32,000 phone calls and hope to make tens of thousands more to educate people about the project, said Matt Petryni, Power Past Coal Campaign organizer. The Sierra Club is also running TV ads in Eastern Washington to warn of risks. It has plans to run more ads statewide and in Oregon.

The Cherry Point area is noted for extensive herring spawning grounds. It's also known burial grounds for the Lummi Nation. The tribe recently came out against the project.

"We do not want any further disturbance," said Jewell James, who manages the tribe's sovereignty and treaty protection office. "It's also a treaty rights issue. This always has been a major fishing and harvesting site for our fishermen."

On a recent afternoon, SSA Marine's Cole pointed to the site, near marine terminals for two oil refineries and an aluminum smelter. "This site has been intended for this purpose," said Cole, a former Whatcom County Councilman. He said the company plans to follow the highest environmental standards.

"The hoops that the company has to jump through are very extraordinary. They're really high. You have to prove that you can avoid impacts, minimize them or mitigate them," Cole said.

But neighbors and others who gathered in Cindy Franklin's living room for a letter-writing workshop that same afternoon weren't so sure.

"I'm afraid that this new race to get all this coal out of the ground, sell it under the guise of energy independence ... is going to destroy our atmosphere," said Franklin, 59, retired business consultant and environmental activist. "It's about the burning of the coal being a major contributor to climate change. We need to do all we can to stop this."

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/f70471f764144b2fab526d39972d37b3/Article_2012-11-03-Northwest%20Coal%20Clash/id-39c2f9aec38a4d009a20fdb97f451dfe

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