Freedom of Cyber Speech: Court Ruling In June Set to Forever Change Protected Speech Online – Video


Freedom of Cyber Speech: Court Ruling In June Set to Forever Change Protected Speech Online
http://www.undergroundworldnews.com The upcoming ruling on this case this summer is set to forever change what is considered to be Protected Speech Online.

By: DAHBOO77

Go here to read the rest:

Freedom of Cyber Speech: Court Ruling In June Set to Forever Change Protected Speech Online - Video

Freedom of expression must be upheld in wake of Charlie Hebdo attacks

Letters to the editor

Charlie Hebdo most certainly presented offensive content that would enrage devout Muslims around the world and I would not engage in such satire, but as a defender of the freedom of expression I accept that the right to offend and insult is a natural outcome of this most fundamental principle.

However, it intrigues me how many of my countryman have just discovered the importance of freedom of expression in their support of the right of French satirists to present objectionable material.

Where were these people of principle when the Gillard government was attempting to rein in our press and again when the present government was proposing the repeal of section 18C of the Racial Discrimination Act, which aims to make the use of offensive and insulting speech illegal in this country.

I am also very critical of Tony Abbott who, in the aftermath of the Paris atrocities, has spoken at length on the importance of freedom of expression, when it was he who abandoned the repeal of section 18C so cheaply earlier this year.

Advertisement

I hope this new found acknowledgement of the importance of freedom of expression takes root and that we as a nation can practice what we preach.

H.Ronald, Jerrabomberra

Senator Eric Abetz (Canberra Times, January 12) asserts that the Abbott Government cannot borrow money to pay for a wage increase for public servants.

A similar case was made when his government cut the real wages of Defence Force employees.

See the original post here:

Freedom of expression must be upheld in wake of Charlie Hebdo attacks

Pope Francis: there are limits to freedom of expression

Pope Francis waves to Filipino well wishers at a street in Manila, Philippines. Photograph: Francis R. Malasig/EPA

Pope Francis says there are limits to freedom of expression, especially when it insults or ridicules someones faith.

Speaking on Thursday about the Paris attacks while en route to the Philippines, Francis defended freedom of expression as not only a fundamental human right but a duty to speak ones mind for the sake of the common good.

But he said there were limits.

By way of example, he referred to Alberto Gasparri, who organises papal trips and was standing by his side. He said: If my good friend Dr Gasparri says a curse word against my mother, he can expect a punch. Its normal. Its normal. You cannot provoke. You cannot insult the faith of others. You cannot make fun of the faith of others.

The pope also said he is convinced that global warming is mostly manmade and that he hopes his upcoming encyclical on the environment will encourage negotiators at a climate change meeting in Paris to take courageous decisions to protect Gods creation.

Francis has spoken out frequently about the culture of waste that has imperiled the environment.

While in the Philippines, Francis will meet with survivors of the 2013 typhoon Haiyan, which the government has said was an example of the extreme weather conditions that global warming has wrought.

I dont know if it [human activity] is the only cause, but mostly, in great part, it is man who has slapped nature in the face, he said. We have in a sense taken over nature.

See original here:

Pope Francis: there are limits to freedom of expression

Sony to release 'Freedom Edition' of 'The Interview' on DVD and Blu-ray

CULVER CITY, Calif., Jan. 14 (UPI) -- Sony Pictures Entertainment says it will release a "Freedom Edition" DVD and Blu-ray version of The Interview on Feb. 17.

An image of the video's case boasts that the comedy is from "The Western Capitalist Pigs Who Brought You Neighbors and This is the End."

The movie stars James Franco as a celebrity talk-show host and Seth Rogen as his producer, who are longing to make the jump to serious news.

"After snagging an exclusive in-person interview with North Korea's Kim Jong Un, the unlikely pair are recruited by a covert CIA agent to embark on a mission to take out the reclusive dictator," a synopsis said.

The "Freedom Edition" Blu-ray disc "comes packed with 90 minutes of bonus feature content, including 14 deleted scenes, multiple behind-the-scenes featurettes, a seven-minute blooper reel that shows the outrageous gags and goofs from the set, as well as three 'line-o-ramas' where cast shot several alternate takes of jokes during filming," a Sony news release said. Also included on both Blu-ray and DVD are The Discovery Channel TV special Naked and Afraid, starring Franco and Rogen, as well as commentary by Rogen and writer-producer Evan Goldberg.

The Interview made headlines when its Dec. 25 theatrical release was first canceled, then limited to independent theaters, and TV and digital platforms.

Sony's computer system was hacked by an anonymous group known only as the Guardians of Peace, which cited its outrage over the movie as its motivation. Tens of thousands of private documents -- including copies of unreleased films, screenplays, financial information and personal emails -- were released online. The FBI has said the attack came from North Korea.

Theater chains initially announced they would not carry the movie out of fear for their patrons' safety when the hackers threatened violence at screenings. Sony then canceled the release, but reversed its decision after detractors argued it was a blow to American artists' right to freedom of speech.

Related UPI Stories

2015 United Press International, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Any reproduction, republication, redistribution and/or modification of any UPI content is expressly prohibited without UPI's prior written consent.

Read the original post:

Sony to release 'Freedom Edition' of 'The Interview' on DVD and Blu-ray

Ibiza Dreaming: Golden Beaches And Tremendous Trails | Trippin’ Worldwide Inc., Ep. 6 – Video


Ibiza Dreaming: Golden Beaches And Tremendous Trails | Trippin #39; Worldwide Inc., Ep. 6
http://www.epictv.com BUY EPIC GEAR, TESTED BY THE BEST: GoPro, Sony, DJI, ION, Magicam, Optrix, Hitcase and more http://shop.epictv.com For their season fin...

By: EpicTV

The rest is here:

Ibiza Dreaming: Golden Beaches And Tremendous Trails | Trippin' Worldwide Inc., Ep. 6 - Video

Newcastle beaches shut for 6th day

Newcastle's beaches remain closed due to a shark, nicknamed Bruce, that is disrupting swimmers.

A five-metre great white shark, nicknamed Bruce, has failed to keep Newcastle beachgoers from dipping their toes, and more, into the water.

The problem is, it's summer, it's stinking hot and it's school holidays.

Beaches in the coastal NSW city remain closed for a record sixth consecutive day on Thursday after further sightings of the huge shark, first spotted on Saturday at Merewether Beach.

But scores of swimmers and surfers defied warnings and have taken to the water at Newcastle's beaches on Wednesday, when the mercury hit a high of 34 degrees, and Thursday, when it reached 28C.

The last confirmed sighting of the shark was at Nobbys Beach on Wednesday afternoon when more than 50 swimmers and surfers reportedly hit the water at Newcastle Beach.

Lifeguards continued their patrols on Thursday.

"The lifeguards there are doing their best to inform people of the danger and to keep them out of the water, but on a day like yesterday when it was 35 degrees and such a good day, it's hard to keep them out," said Nobbys Beach lifeguard Isaac Morgan.

"If we see people swimming in the water, we try and direct them over to the baths," he said.

Lifeguards and hotel guides have been directing bathers to the city's two natural ocean pools - Merewether Ocean Baths and Newcastle Ocean Baths.

See more here:

Newcastle beaches shut for 6th day

Beaches might shut for another day

Newcastle's beaches remain closed due to a shark, nicknamed Bruce, that is disrupting swimmers.

A five-metre great white shark, nicknamed Bruce, has failed to keep Newcastle beachgoers from dipping their toes, and more, into the water.

The problem is, it's summer, it's stinking hot and it's school holidays.

Beaches in the coastal NSW city remain closed for a record sixth consecutive day on Thursday after further sightings of the huge shark, first spotted on Saturday at Merewether Beach.

But scores of swimmers and surfers defied warnings and have taken to the water at Newcastle's beaches on Wednesday, when the mercury hit a high of 34 degrees, and Thursday, when it reached 28C.

The last confirmed sighting of the shark was at Nobbys Beach on Wednesday afternoon when more than 50 swimmers and surfers reportedly hit the water at Newcastle Beach.

Lifeguards continued their patrols on Thursday.

"The lifeguards there are doing their best to inform people of the danger and to keep them out of the water, but on a day like yesterday when it was 35 degrees and such a good day, it's hard to keep them out," said Nobbys Beach lifeguard Isaac Morgan.

"If we see people swimming in the water, we try and direct them over to the baths," he said.

Lifeguards and hotel guides have been directing bathers to the city's two natural ocean pools - Merewether Ocean Baths and Newcastle Ocean Baths.

Link:

Beaches might shut for another day

Newcastle beaches might shut for 6th day

2:03

Consumer rights groups have welcomed an investigation into price discrepancies between the city and country.

0:48

The Australia-Japan Free Trade Agreement has come into effect today with prices set to drop.

The estate of a Victorian man who set off an explosion will fight a request to pay for the clean-up.

Insurance losses from a fire that destroyed 27 homes in the Adelaide Hills have reached nearly $25 million.

Gina Rinehart's Roy Hill iron ore mine has been issued two prohibition notices over safety concerns.

An Indonesian lady accused of ordering a hit on her husband will face charges carrying the death penalty.

0:58

Three men have been arrested over the death of a man in Melbourne last year.

See original here:

Newcastle beaches might shut for 6th day

Newcastle beaches remain closed for sixth day

2:03

Consumer rights groups have welcomed an investigation into price discrepancies between the city and country.

0:48

The Australia-Japan Free Trade Agreement has come into effect today with prices set to drop.

The estate of a Victorian man who set off an explosion will fight a request to pay for the clean-up.

Insurance losses from a fire that destroyed 27 homes in the Adelaide Hills have reached nearly $25 million.

Gina Rinehart's Roy Hill iron ore mine has been issued two prohibition notices over safety concerns.

An Indonesian lady accused of ordering a hit on her husband will face charges carrying the death penalty.

0:58

Three men have been arrested over the death of a man in Melbourne last year.

Read more from the original source:

Newcastle beaches remain closed for sixth day

Shark hunt shuts beaches

The huge 16ft shark was first spotted on Saturday off Merewether Beach and was last seen off Nobbys Beach on Wednesday afternoon.

Beaches are typically closed in the surfing city of 315,000 people, 100 miles north of Sydney, four or five times a summer due to shark sightings. Sharks are usually herded away by lifeguards on jet-skis and are never seen again.

Loading article content

Newcastle City Council's aquatic services co-ordinator Peter Withers said he had never encountered such a large shark or one that had lingered in the area in 37 years working for the authority.

The public was generally co-operating with the beach closures, although some surfers were willing to take the risk, he said.

Council spokeswoman Dana Fischetti said long-term council employees could not recall a shark closing city beaches for so long.

Beaches are reopened 24 hours after the last shark sighting. While the council does not keep records of the last longest period of beach closures, they are usually only closed for a day or two.

Patrols have resumed their search for the shark.

Originally posted here:

Shark hunt shuts beaches

'Biggest shark ever seen' leads to beaches closed in Australia

It is not safe for board riders to be out in the water, even close to shore, as sharks are known to move into the surf zone, hunting prey between where the surf breaks and the shoreline... It is unusual for a shark to stay around the same coastal areas for this many days in a row, and we would like to have at least a 24 hour period of no sightings before the beaches are reopened.

Australia has had a spate of serious shark attacks in recent years, mainly on the west coast. There have been numerous beach closures during the current summer, including at popular beaches such as Bondi in Sydney.

Lifeguards around Newcastle, which has a population of about 550,000, have been working extra hours and conducting additional patrols on jet skis.

Despite the warnings, beachgoers have continued to enter the waters to swim and surf.

Peter Withers, a long-serving council worker who runs local aquatic services, told Fairfax Media: "We've consistently seen the big one every day. Certainly it's the biggest shark we've ever had and it's hung around longer than any other shark.

Cliff Marsh, from the Westpac Rescue Helicopter Service, said the shark was "15 foot and ... a real menace".

See original here:

'Biggest shark ever seen' leads to beaches closed in Australia

SOFIA airborne observatory begins 2015 science campaign

14 hours ago NASA's Stratospheric Observatory for Infrared Astronomy (SOFIA) is seen performing ground tests prior to its first science flight of 2015. The year's first mission was flown on the night of Jan. 13/14, with the German Receiver for Astronomy at Terahertz Frequencies (GREAT) spectrometer on board. Credit: NASA/USRA/Greg Perryman

The Stratospheric Observatory for Infrared Astronomy, or SOFIA, Program began its third season of science flights on Jan. 13, 2015. SOFIA is NASA's next generation flying observatory and is fitted with a 2.5-meter (100-inch) diameter telescope that studies the universe at infrared wavelengths.

"Last night's flight used the German Receiver for Astronomy at Terahertz Frequencies (GREAT) spectrometer to study the chemical composition and motions of gas in a star-forming region, a young star, and a supernova remnant," said Pamela Marcum, NASA's SOFIA project scientist. "Observing at infrared wavelengths enables us to see through interstellar dust to record the spectral signatures of molecules in these regions. From this we can study the abundances of molecules and their formation process."

Water vapor in the Earth's atmosphere absorbs infrared radiation, preventing a large section of the infrared spectrum from reaching ground-based observatories. SOFIA is a heavily modified Boeing 747 Special Performance jetliner that flies at altitudes between 39,000 to 45,000 feet (12 to 14 km), above more than 99 percent of Earth's atmospheric water vapor giving astronomers the ability to study celestial objects at wavelengths that cannot be seen from ground-based observatories.

"The flights in January will conclude SOFIA's second annual observing series, known as Cycle 2, and the observatory will begin the Cycle 3 programs in March," said Erick Young, SOFIA's observatory director and a member of the Universities Space Research Association (USRA) team that operates the SOFIA Science Center at NASA Ames Research Center at Moffett Field, California. "Plans for Cycle 3 include 70 flights with more than 400 hours of science observations. The observations will span a broad range of astronomical topics including the interstellar medium, star formation, stars, bodies in our solar system, and extrasolar planets."

The observatory is expected to make a deployment to the Southern Hemisphere in June 2015, with science flights based out of Christchurch, New Zealand. There scientists will have the opportunity to observe areas of interest such as the Galactic Center and other parts of the Milky Way that are not visible from the Northern Hemisphere.

Explore further: NASA begins testing of new spectrograph on SOFIA observatory

(Phys.org) Astronomers are eagerly waiting to begin use of a new instrument to study celestial objects: a high-resolution, mid-infrared spectrograph mounted on NASA's Stratospheric Observatory for Infrared ...

NASA, the German Aerospace Center (DLR), the SOFIA Science Center, and the German SOFIA Institute (DSI) have announced the selection of 51 investigations to study the universe using the Stratospheric Observatory ...

(Phys.org)The Stratospheric Observatory for Infrared Astronomy, or SOFIA, a joint program between NASA and the German Aerospace Center DLR, is set to begin its first full cycle of science flights starting ...

See original here:

SOFIA airborne observatory begins 2015 science campaign

ASTRO Seeks Editor for New Open-Access Journal

Contact Information

Available for logged-in reporters only

Newswise Fairfax, Va., January 14, 2015 The American Society for Radiation Oncology (ASTRO) is seeking an editor for its new open-access journal. This new, online-only, open-access journal will provide practical and clinical information for the radiation oncology community and complement ASTROs two highly successful journals, International Journal of Radiation Oncology Biology Physics (Red Journal) and Practical Radiation Oncology (PRO). The new open-access journal will be published online-only and will be supported by article processing charges.

The incoming editor will work closely with ASTROs Board of Directors, and the editors and staff of Red Journal and PRO to finalize the new journal, build the editorial board for the journal, and begin soliciting and reviewing papers. The new open-access journal is expected to launch online in late 2015, and access to accepted and published manuscripts will be free of charge without a subscription. Additional details about the new journal, including the title, will be announced when finalized later this year.

ASTRO is proud to launch this new open-access journal that will fill a critical need to publish important radiation oncology research that exceeds the publishing capacity of our current journals, said ASTRO Chair Bruce G. Haffty, MD, FASTRO. This open-access journal will be peer-reviewed and provide a sound distribution platform for quality studies related to our specialty. Together with Red Journal and PRO, this open-access journal will solidify ASTROs role as the leading publisher of radiation oncology science, research and education.

Ideal candidates will: Have notable professional expertise in radiation oncology, including an advanced degree in the related sciences. Be committed to the launch, growth and improvement of this new open-access journal, and be a strong advocate for the open-access platform. Possess strong attention to detail and excellent follow-through. Be committed to maintaining comprehensive communications and a close working relationship with ASTROs Board of Directors and staff, and the publisher. Be committed to maintaining the journal and its editorial board, which will be representative of the scientific and professional diversity of ASTROs members. Have substantial experience writing, editing and reviewing scientific manuscripts. Be able to make the significant time commitment to the journal for the full, five-year term of the position.

JOB RESPONSIBILITIES: The editor is responsible for evaluating and selecting materials submitted for publication in the journal; promptly responding to communications regarding the journal; appointing and working closely with the editorial board on final selections of all manuscripts; developing and implementing improvements to journal; ensuring proper communication and tracking systems are in place in the editorial office and coordinating with the publishing staff. In addition, the editor will work collaboratively with the publisher and ASTRO on efforts to finalize and launch this new journal.

OTHER RESPONSIBILITIES: Candidates must indicate their institutions willingness to commit to providing adequate time to fulfill the roles and responsibilities of the editor.

INFORMATION AND DEADLINES: The term of the editor is expected to begin in early 2015. The editors term will be for five years, beginning immediately upon acceptance, and will be renewable once. To apply, please submit a letter of interest detailing your qualifications for the position, along with a brief statement of your vision for the new journal and your CV to Katherine Bennett at katherineb@astro.org. Letters of interest will be accepted through March 15, 2015.

ABOUT ASTRO ASTRO is the premier radiation oncology society in the world, with nearly 11,000 members who are physicians, nurses, biologists, physicists, radiation therapists, dosimetrists and other health care professionals that specialize in treating patients with radiation therapies. As the leading organization in radiation oncology, the Society is dedicated to improving patient care through professional education and training, support for clinical practice and health policy standards, advancement of science and research, and advocacy. ASTRO publishes two medical journals, International Journal of Radiation Oncology Biology Physics (www.redjournal.org) and Practical Radiation Oncology (www.practicalradonc.org); developed and maintains an extensive patient website, http://www.rtanswers.org; and created the Radiation Oncology Institute (www.roinstitute.org), a non-profit foundation to support research and education efforts around the world that enhance and confirm the critical role of radiation therapy in improving cancer treatment. To learn more about ASTRO, visit http://www.astro.org. ###

See more here:

ASTRO Seeks Editor for New Open-Access Journal