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Monthly Archives: March 2015
My project for the First Amendment #2 project – Video
Posted: March 12, 2015 at 7:48 pm
My project for the First Amendment #2 project
By: shelbychristineflint
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ACLU watches as KingCast delivers First Amendment smackdown on SJC 1:19 cameras in court. – Video
Posted: at 7:48 pm
ACLU watches as KingCast delivers First Amendment smackdown on SJC 1:19 cameras in court.
http://christopher-king.blogspot.com/2012/03/kingcast-watches-as-clifford-pisano.html Hearing on Wednesday 28 March 2p. http://christopher-king.blogspot.com/...
By: mr rzd Putra
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ACLU watches as KingCast delivers First Amendment smackdown on SJC 1:19 cameras in court. - Video
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RTDNA/F Executive Director Mike Cavender on the 25th Annual First Amendment Awards – Video
Posted: at 7:48 pm
RTDNA/F Executive Director Mike Cavender on the 25th Annual First Amendment Awards
By: RTDNA
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RTDNA/F Executive Director Mike Cavender on the 25th Annual First Amendment Awards - Video
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Balancing the First Amendment vs. racist chants at the University of Oklahoma
Posted: at 7:48 pm
University of Oklahoma President David Boren has expelled two members of the Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity on his campus for leading a horrifying racist chant. Does his decision violate their First Amendment rights? And if it does, what's wrong with this picture, in which a public university wouldn't be able to sanction students who not only bar blacks from their organization, but also refer to lynching in the process?
A public university is bound by the First Amendment because it's an organ of the state. Admittedly, there is something weird about this fact, because a public campus isn't inherently different from a private one with respect to educational function and goals. Some strange free-speech anomalies can arise from treating a university like the government. For example, professors sanction speech based on its content all the time, by grading wrong answers lower than right ones. But usually free speech bars such content discrimination.
Discipline is another anomaly. A university is meant to be a community of learning, and making such a community work requires rules of decorum that are more restrictive than those that should apply in the public square. The First Amendment generally guarantees us the right to yell, scream, insult, offend, condemn and denounce. None of these forms of speech belong in the classroom, and few belong on a well-functioning campus.
In a perfect world, there might be a broad First Amendment exemption for public campuses. But there isn't so Boren's decision has to be judged by First Amendment standards.
Applying ordinary free-speech doctrine, the expulsion looks unconstitutional, as professor Eugene Volokh has pointed out. Racist speech is still protected speech under the First Amendment, no matter how repulsive. The fraternity can be banned for race discrimination, which is prohibited conduct. Speaking in favor of discrimination, however, is generally protected.
But Boren's explanation for the expulsion rests on a different theory. He said specifically that the students were being expelled for their "leadership role in leading a racist and exclusionary chant, which has created a hostile educational environment for others."
The important words here are "hostile educational environment." Under federal anti-discrimination law, as interpreted by the Department of Education, a university has an affirmative duty to guarantee students an educational environment in which they are free of hostility based on race or sex.
You may have heard about this principle in connection with Title IX, which prohibits discrimination based on sex. The law has similarly been interpreted by the Education Department to require universities to protect students against a hostile educational environment based on sex discrimination, including sexual harassment.
In the business context, the analogy would be to an employer's obligation to protect against a hostile workplace environment.
So Boren was saying that the students are being expelled not for their opinions per se, but because their speech was a form of discriminatory conduct that would create a hostile educational environment for black students. Given that the speech was literally designed to inculcate the value of racial discrimination by making pledges recite their commitment never to admit a black member to the fraternity, this conclusion seems plausible. Removing the chant leaders from campus is aimed to fulfill the educational goal of creating a nonhostile educational environment.
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Balancing the First Amendment vs. racist chants at the University of Oklahoma
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Nexstar's Top Executive Receives 1st Amendment Award in DC
Posted: at 7:48 pm
WASHINGTON D.C. -- The Radio Television Digital News Foundation hosted its First Amendment awards in the nation's capital on Wednesday night.
The first amendment awards celebration honors working journalists and corporate executives for their hard work and dedication in the television broadcasting industry.
Receiving the 25th First Amendment award Wednesday night was Nexstar Chairman, President and CEO, Perry Sook.
"Our local television stations do two things, one, we produce local content which is our service to the community and our identity and we help local advertisers and local businesses grow," Sook told reporters.
"30 years I've been in the business, 15 with Perry, the man has lived up to the vision of everything he set out to do when he started this company," said Timothy Busch, Nexstar's Executive Vice President.
Nexstar Broadcasting started as one station 19 years ago. Now the company owns, operates and provides sales and other services to 105 television stations reaching approximately 15.6% of all US television households.
Sook says it's all about viewers having access to their news on a 24/7 basis.
"We have endeavored to offer local news throughout the day so that if you're working shift work, 3 to 11, we have a newscast for you, early afternoon or perhaps late night or we have expanded our morning shows," said Sook.
Sook has 33 years of experience in the television and radio broadcasting industry and credits the viewers for the success of his business.
"For viewers and advertisers, coupling digital and broadcast is an unbeatable combination."
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Nexstar's Top Executive Receives 1st Amendment Award in DC
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Nexstar's Top Executive Receives 1st Amendement Award in DC
Posted: at 7:48 pm
WASHINGTON D.C. -- The Radio Television Digital News Foundation hosted its First Amendment awards in the nation's capital on Wednesday night.
The first amendment awards celebration honors working journalists and corporate executives for their hard work and dedication in the television broadcasting industry.
Receiving the 25th First Amendment award Wednesday night was Nexstar Chairman, President and CEO, Perry Sook.
"Our local television stations do two things, one, we produce local content which is our service to the community and our identity and we help local advertisers and local businesses grow," Sook told reporters.
"30 years I've been in the business, 15 with Perry, the man has lived up to the vision of everything he set out to do when he started this company," said Timothy Busch, Nexstar's Executive Vice President.
Nexstar Broadcasting started as one station 19 years ago. Now the company owns, operates and provides sales and other services to 105 television stations reaching approximately 15.6% of all US television households.
Sook says it's all about viewers having access to their news on a 24/7 basis.
"We have endeavored to offer local news throughout the day so that if you're working shift work, 3 to 11, we have a newscast for you, early afternoon or perhaps late night or we have expanded our morning shows," said Sook.
Sook has 33 years of experience in the television and radio broadcasting industry and credits the viewers for the success of his business.
"For viewers and advertisers, coupling digital and broadcast is an unbeatable combination."
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Nexstar's Top Executive Receives 1st Amendement Award in DC
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Nexstar CEO honored at First Amendment Awards
Posted: at 7:48 pm
WASHINGTON (ABC 4 Utah) The Radio Television Digital News Foundation hosted its 25th annual First Amendment Awards dinner Wednesday in Washington D.C.
The First Amendment Awards celebration honors working journalists and corporate executives for their hard work and dedication in the television broadcasting industry.Nexstar Chairman, President and CEO, Perry Sook received the First Amendment Service Award.
"Our local television stations do two things: one we produce local content which is our service to the community and our identity, and we help local advertisers and local businesses grow," said Sook.
"Thirty years I've been in the business, 15 with Perry, the man has lived up to the vision of everything he set out to do when he started this company," said Timothy Busch, Nexstar Executive VP and Co-Chief Operating Officer.
Nexstar started with just one station 19 years ago. It now owns, operates and provides sales and other services to 105 television stations reaching approximately 15.6 percent of all US television households. Sook says it's all about viewers having access to their news on a 24/7 basis.
"We have also endeavored to offer local news throughout the day so that if you're working shift work 3 to 11 we have a newscast for you early afternoon or perhaps late night..or we have expanded our morning shows," said Sook.
Sook has 33 years of experience in the television and radio broadcasting industry and credits the viewers for the success of his business.
"For viewers and advertisers, coupling digital and broadcast is an unbeatable combination," said Sook.
Also honored at the event was Bob Simon, former correspondent for CBS News and 60 Minutes and journalists Steven Stolid and James Foley who received the Citation of Courage Award.
Nexstar is the parent company of ABC 4 Utah and Utah's CW30.
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Nexstar CEO honored at First Amendment Awards
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Nexstar President and CEO Receives First Amendment Service Award
Posted: at 7:48 pm
The Radio Television Digital News Foundation hosts its 25th Annual First Amendment Awards Dinner tonight in Washington D.C. And among the honorees was Perry Sook, President and CEO of WEHT's parent company, Nexstar Broadcasting.
The First Amendment Awards celebration honors working journalists and corporate executives for their hard work and dedication in the television broadcasting industry. Wednesday night, Nexstar's Chairman, President, and CEO, Perry Sook received the First Amendment Service Award.
"Our local television stations do two things," said Sook. "One we produce local content which is our service to the community and our identity, and we help local advertisers and local businesses grow."
"30 years I've been in the business, 15 with Perry," said Nexstar Co-Chief Operating Officer Tim Busch. "The man has lived up to the vision of everything he set out to do when he started this company."
Nexstar started with just one station 19 years ago. It now owns, operates, and provides sales and other services to 105 television stations reaching approximately 15.6% of all us television households. Sook says it's all about viewers having access to their news on a 24/7 basis.
"We have also endeavored to offer local news throughout the day," said Sook, "so that if you're working shift work 3 p.m. to 11 p.m., we have a newscast for you early afternoon or perhaps late night, or we have expanded our morning shows."
Sook has 33 years of experience in the television and radio broadcasting industry and credits the viewers for the success of his business
"For viewers and advertisers," said Sook, "coupling digital and broadcast is an unbeatable combination."
Also honored tonight was CBS News Correspondent Bob Simon, who was killed in a car crash last month, and journalists James Foley and Steven Sotloff, who were abducted and beheaded by ISIS last year.
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Cebit 2015: Saarland computer scientists present guarantees for online anonymity
Posted: at 7:47 pm
IMAGE:Sebastian Meiser and Esfandiar Mohammadi provide guarantees of users' anonymity within the Tor network. view more
Credit: Oliver Dietze
This news release is available in German.
Anonymity on the Internet is possible only up to a certain degree. Therefore, it is possible that others may see who is visiting an online advice site on sexual abuse, or who frequently looks up information about a certain disease, for example. Seeing that this kind of private information can be linked to their identity, users will often resort to special online anonymization services. One of the most popular tools is Tor. Since the beginning of the year, alone more than two million users have used it to anonymize their Internet connection data. These services will not only conceal browsing behavior, but also the identity of the user, and that of any other recipients. These will usually be other websites, but could also be another person. Tor works in a way that allows users to establish a connection that is then upheld through its own network. The Tor network comprises up to 6,000 servers, mostly run by volunteers, which computer scientists refer to as "nodes". And since every node only receives the minimal amount of data necessary to relay the information in question, it becomes far more difficult to de-anonymize both the transmitter and the recipient of the data.
"The Tor network isn't perfect, however," says Esfandiar Mohammadi, a researcher at the Research Center for IT Security, CISPA, and a doctoral candidate at the Graduate School for Computer Science in Saarbrcken. "For one, unanticipated attacks at a network level can endanger anonymity. Also, the degree of anonymity the network achieves is highly variable, since volunteers don't necessarily operate their nodes continually or regularly," says Mohammadi.
In collaboration with CISPA researcher Sebastian Meiser, who is also a postgraduate at the Saarbrcken Graduate School for Computer Science, Mohammadi developed a program that can provide an accurate assessment of the level of anonymity an individual user achieves, even while basing the estimate on the fluctuations of the Tor network. According to the researchers, this feature is a worldwide first.
"An attacker that compromises Tor servers can derive the identity of a user with a certain probability. This is exactly what our system calculates," Sebastian Meiser explains. The two Saarbrcken researchers based their technique, which they named "MATor", on a mathematical model that they extended to include different categories of possible attacks. "In order to indicate the probability of de-anonymization, our program performs its calculations using data that is aggregated once an hour and published on the network immediately. MATor also takes the specifics of the respective Internet connection into account, as well as the individual configurations of the Tor software," Meiser says. This feature is also intended as a basis for a so-called plugin, a small extension program for the software "Tor Browser" that the researchers now want to develop. Integrated into the Tor software, this could run in the background and simply notify users as soon as their connection became too unsafe.
Computer science and informatics at Saarland University
The Department of Computer Science forms the core of the informatics landscape at Saarland University. A further seven internationally renowned research institutes are located in the immediate vicinity on campus. As well as the two Max Planck Institutes for Informatics and for Software Systems, the Saarbrcken campus is also home to the German Research Center for Artificial Intelligence, the Intel Visual Computing Institute, the Center for IT Security, Privacy and Accountability (CISPA) and the Cluster of Excellence 'Multimodal Computing and Interaction'.
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Cebit 2015: Saarland computer scientists present guarantees for online anonymity
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What 'dark net' drug buyers say about their dealers
Posted: at 7:47 pm
The now-defunct Silk Road site, with drugs for sale (AP)
But what is actually on the dark net? Despite all this noise, relatively little is known. It is, of course, incredibly difficult to research. What we do know is that 2.5 million people use the Tor Browser each day. Tor can be used to browse anything online, and is much-used by civil liberties activists, journalists, and suprisise surprise law enforcement themselves. A decent fraction use Tor to get into the dark net, where there are an estimated 60 thousand or so websites an uncensored blend of the good, the bad, and the very very ugly.
The busiest sites on the dark net are probably the notorious and numerous anonymous markets. Here, anything can be bought and sold: class A narcotics ordered with a click, paid for with the crypto-currency Bitcoin, and delivered direct to your home. For my book, The Dark Net, I spent a lot of time on these sites, trying to work out how and why they worked and even going through the process of buying a small amount of cannabis from one known as Silk Road 2.0.
It turns out the key to their success is not clever encryption, or Bitcoin, or even Tor. It's good old-fashioned customer service. Every visitor to the site, after using his or her drug, leaves a piece of written feedback about the gear and gives a score out of 5. It's a little surreal, but users take it pretty seriously, because it creates the genuinely informed competition and choice which keeps the market ticking over:
Decent coke at a reasonable price. Stealthy packaging. 5/5
First order was lost...I got a reship and now im very happy...Heaven is one of the best dealers on the road!!! Very friendly and good communication too. I will be back soon 😉 5/5
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What 'dark net' drug buyers say about their dealers
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