Friday, 16 March 2012

Court Orders RapidShare to Filter User Uploads

Land Of The Free?

Via
(Thanx Josh!)

One for us grammar nazi's...

(Click to enlarge)
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(Thanx Helen!)

Mining and tax dodging: a dirty business all round

(Thanx Dave!)

We need to talk about Ivan

(Thanx Tony!)

Pussy Riot to Remain in Detention

The Moscow City Court refused on Wednesday to release from a pretrial detention center two alleged members of shock punk rock band Pussy Riot that performed a “punk prayer” in Russia's main Orthodox cathedral last month.
Maria Alyokhina and Nadezhda Tolokonnikova, who face up to seven years in prison on hooliganism charges, will remain under arrest until April 24. The defense promised to appeal.
The judge was biased because she was a target of a provocative stunt involving Tolokonnikova last year, said defense lawyer Nikolai Polozov. Tolokonnikova and several members of art group Voina released hundreds of cockroaches in a Moscow courtroom at a separate trial presided by the same judge as a form of protest.
The court decision triggered a backlash from rights activists, with Lev Ponomaryov from For Human Rights group denouncing the prolonged arrest as a “repressive” act.
In February, five masked members of Pussy Riot stormed the Christ the Savior Cathedral in downtown Moscow to perform a song next to the main altar, which is off-limits to all but priests, and then fled the building. Only two alleged performers have been detained so far.
Via

[PETITION]

Alexander Konovalov, Minister for Justice, Russia: Immediate release of Maria Alyokhina and Nadezhda Tolokonnikova

51% Of Internet Traffic Is 'Non-Human'

(Thanx Gennady!)

Ad Break

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(Thanx Tommy!)

Nike sorry over 'Black and Tan' shoe

Syd tha Kid by Lance Bangs

http://www.purplenakedladies.com

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Bruce Springsteen: SXSW - Keynote Address

(Thanx Marc! Quite a good birthday pressie eh?)

Odd Future - Radical


'I woke up one morning with $100,000 in my bank account'

ACLU VS Department of State

On April 12, 2011, the ACLU filed a Freedom of Information Act request for 23 State Department embassy cables that were released by WikiLeaks in November 2010 and then published by major newspapers. The ACLU sued the government after it failed to respond to the FOIA request. The lawsuit caused the State Department to release portions of the diplomatic cables to the ACLU.
The cables describe the U.S. government's efforts abroad to avoid attention or accountability over actions it has taken in connection with the "war on terror." The communications include the deceptive use of drones for targeted killings, opposition to the release of photos showing U.S. torture of detainees, and attempts to undermine European investigations into the rendition and torture of terror suspects.
Since the embassy cables were published by WikiLeaks in November 2010, the State Department has denounced the leaking of the documents and instructed its employees to not download them from the internet. In another example of the government's unrealistic position, it has said that lawyers representing Guantánamo detainees may not read classified documents released by WikiLeaks about to their clients unless they do so at a secure government facility (those documents, released on April 24, were not part of the ACLU's FOIA request).
The government refused to confirm the authenticity of any particular cable until it was forced to comply with the ACLU’s FOIA request. On October 21, 2011, the State Department released redacted versions of eleven cables and withheld the other twelve in full. When compared to the leaked cables published by WikiLeaks, the redacted releases expose what the government chooses to hide from the public and shed light on the government’s self-serving serving secrecy regime.
The ACLU is currently litigating the government’s justifications for concealing leaked and publicly available information. The government's continued anti-democratic policy of keeping documents classified despite their widespread availability illustrates a disturbing hostility to transparency and Americans' right to know what the government is doing in their name.

WikiLeaks Diplomatic Cables FOIA Documents

(Thanx Son#1!)

Visible Children

Jack Kerouac play to receive world premiere

Jack Kerouac in 1967 in his hometown of Lowell, Massachusetts, where his only full-length play will be staged. Photograph: Stanley Twardowicz/AP
Jack Kerouac's only full-length play will receive its world premiere this year, 55 years after it was written.
Beat Generation, a three-act play rediscovered in a New Jersey warehouse in 2005, will be staged for the first time this October in Kerouac's hometown of Lowell, Massachusetts. The Merrimack Repertory Theatre and the University of Massachusetts Lowell will deliver eight performances of staged reading as the centrepiece of this year's Jack Kerouac Literary festival.
Written in 1957, shortly after the publication of On the Road, Beat Generation shows a day in the life of Jack Duluoz, Kerouac's drink-and-drug-fuelled alter ego. The play draws on his own life and those of other Beat writers including Neal Cassady and Allen Ginsberg, who subsequently starred in the film Pull My Daisy, which was based in part on the play.
Kerouac had sent his work to numerous producers and actors, including Marlon Brando, in an attempt to drum up interest for a production, but after failing to do so asked his agent Sterling Lord to shelve the script.
On its rediscovery in 2005, Lord said: "It conveys the mood of the time extraordinarily well, and also the characters are authentically drawn."
The author's biographer Gerald Nicosia said at the time: "Kerouac wrote the play in one night when he returned to his home in Florida after the publication of On the Road." The play was commissioned by off-Broadway producer Leo Gavin, but remained unpublished until 2005 and unperformed until now.
"This is a moment of literary and theatrical history," said Charles Towers, artistic director of the Merrimack.
The production was announced on Monday, coinciding with the US publication of Kerouac's "lost" first novel, The Sea Is My Brother, written when he was 21. The novel, in which two young men travel from Boston to Greenland, was published in the UK last November.
Matt Trueman @'The Guardian'