Wednesday 2 March 2011

Immaterials: Light painting WiFi


This project explores the invisible terrain of WiFi networks in urban spaces by light painting signal strength in long-exposure photographs.
A four-metre long measuring rod with 80 points of light reveals cross-sections through WiFi networks using a photographic technique called light-painting.
More here:
nearfield.org/​2011/​02/​wifi-light-painting
yourban.no/​2011/​02/​22/​immaterials-light-painting-wifi/​
Photos:
flickr.com/​photos/​timo/​sets/​72157626020532597/​

Son, I am disappoint...


HERE

Keaton Henson - Charon


Via

China's Most Secret Weapon: The Messenger Pigeon

The Story of Citizens United v. FEC

DJ Edu - Destination Africa – 2011-02-28 (BBC1xtra)


DJ Edu with the hottest underground sounds out of Africa, from hip hop and RnB to dancehall, garage and D&B. Edu has big tracks from Ghana, Burundi and Zambia.
Tracklist:
Scientific – Nothin’ Without You (Feat Jayso) (Liberia/Ghana)
Fokn Bois – We Ae The Future (Ghana)
M.I – Slow Down (Nigeria) [Chocolate City]
Jaywon – Gbon Gbon (Feat Terry G) (Nigeria) [Kennis]
V.I.P – Away (Ghana) [Paradise Ent./Movingui]
Mzo Bullet – Casablanca (South Africa) [New State Music]
Am Roots – Txeza (Mozambique)
Wyre & JB Maina – Mwanake (Kenya) [Homeboyz/Lovechild]
Ceejay – I Don’t Keya (Zimbabwe)
Black Coffee Vs Katy Perry – Superman Vs Firework [Kronologik/Capitol/Virgin]
Djeff & Filipe Narciso – O Semba (Angola)
M3NSA – Asem Pa (Feat Kwabena Jones) (Ghana/UK) [Instrumensa]
Sexion d’assaut – Désolé (Senegal/D R Congo/France)
Kidum – Mapenzi (Burundi)
Skyeez – Mapenzi (Italy)
Sana – Najuta (Daredevil Remix) (Kenya) [Homeboyz]
Marlaw – Sorry Sana (Tanzania)
K’Millian – Weekend (Feat Bryan) (Zambia)
Blick Bassy – Nlela (Cameroon/France) [World Connection]
Edi Young – You Are (Feat Jayso)(Ghana) [Skillions]
Gal Level Vs Shawn Pen – Ohole Vs Get It In [Ogopa/Butterfly]
Zaki Ibrahim – Go Widdit (South Africa)
Oum – Whowa (Morocco) [Lof Music]
Tonix – That Girl (Uganda) [Goodlyfe]
One8 Vs T.I (Feat Chris Brown) – Hands Across The World Vs Get Back Up [Rockstar4000/Sony/Atlantic]
La Fouine – Veni, Vidi, Vici (Morocco/France)
Nelson Freitas – I Just want My Baby Back (Cape Verde) [Ghetto Zouk Music]
Kaysha – Throw Ya Money Up (Feat Big Nelo)(D R Congo/Angola)
Nick Nola – I Love The Way ft Bela & Okai
K’naan – Ameria (Feat Mos Def & Chali 2na) (Somalia/US) [A&M/Octone]
CLASSIC
Gigi – Gudfella (Remix) (Ethiopia) [Palm Pictures]
DJ Arafat – Djessimidjeka (Cote d’Ivoire) [Nouvelle Donne]
DNA MIX
Denis Graca Vs Collie Buddz – Volta Vs Tomorrow’s Another Day
Philipe Monteiro Vs Alicia Keys – Tempestade Vs You Don’t Know My Name
Nelson Freitas Vs Nathan – Deeper Vs Come Into My Room
Fatma Vs Chris Brown – Don’t Let It Go Vs With You [Zomba]
Prezzo & T.I.D Vs Usher – Leo Ni Leo Vs You Make Me Wanna
Ahmed Soultan Vs Ray J & Yung Berg – Give Me Ur Name Vs Sexy Can I [Somum/Koch]
Mika Mendes (Feat Shana) vs Vybz Kartel vs NeYo – Dis Moi Que Tu M’alme vs Romping Shop Vs Miss Independent [Sushiraw/Tad's/Def Jam]
Nameless Vs Robin Thicke – Sinzia Vs Lost Without You
Kaysha Vs TPain – The Sweetest Thing Vs Can’t Believe It [Sushiraw/RCA/Jive]
Harry Kimani Vs Kelly Rowland – Desire Vs Like This [Sony]
Ali Kiba Vs Rick Ross – Cinderella Vs The Boss [G Recordz/Def Jam]
Kanji Vs Algebra – Mpali Vs U Do It For Me [Kedar Ent]
Wenyeji Vs Game (Feat Kanye) – Mizani Vs Wouldn’t Get Far
Dogman Vs Kanye West (Feat Dwele) – Latifa Vs Flashing Lights
T.I.D Vs NeYo – Siamini Vs Sexy Love [Def Jam]
Exile Vs Taio Cruz – Kumvela Nimvela Vs I Just Wanna Know
Ty Vs Alicia Keys – Closer Vs Girlfriend [Ninja Tune/J]
Ali Kiba Vs Trey Songz – Nakshi Mrembo Vs Can’t Help But Wait
Shatta Rako Vs Lupe Fiasco – Nfonin Vs Superstar [Atlantic]
JB M’piana Vs Megan Rochell – Acapella Vs The One You Need [Sipe/Def Jam]
Jua Cali (Feat Sana) Vs Donell Jones – Kwaheri Vs Spend The Night [Calif/LaFace]
@'mixdeluxe'
Martin Chulov
Benghazi's organising committee has just formally asked UN to help end Ghaddafi's air strikes in eastern

Hate in the Digital Age

Why is Julian Assange trademarking his name?

Julian Assange. Photograph: ANDY RAIN/EPA
The news that Julian Assange is seeking to register his name as a trademark will surprise those who imagine the besieged WikiLeaks founder might have grown weary of his infamy – and of lawyers.
Turning your name into a trademark is an increasingly common legal move for celebrities seeking to protect the commercial use of their name to sell goods and services. Everyone from Lady Gaga to Alan Titchmarsh has done it. The tactic can look more self-aggrandising when deployed by free speech campaigners or politicians, who supposedly move in less nakedly commercial worlds. But that hasn't stopped Sarah Palin and her daughter, Bristol, who are currently seeking to register their names as trademarks in the United States. "It's a bizarre thing for someone associated with freedom of information to do," says David Allen Green, head of media practice at Preiskel & Co and the New Statesman's legal correspondent.
According to Abida Chaudri, an associate of trademark attorneys Grant Spencer , however, Assange's application, through his own law firm, Finers Stephens Innocent, is "quite logical". "I suspect the application is more to do with his going it alone and using his WikiLeaks website to publish material, as opposed to somebody else pretending to be Julian Assange, which is probably unlikely," says Chaudri.
Assange is an internationally recognised figure, widely praised for his role in obtaining and leaking official secrets. He also has a distinctive brand because of his memorable name (there are no Julian Assanges on the UK electoral roll).
It can be harder to get a common name accepted as a trademark by the UK's Intellectual Property Office (IPO) but trademark law ensures that if there was a masseur from Edinburgh called Julian Assange, he could continue to sign his name, even if the other Julian Assange was successful in his application. Another clause allows for "honest concurrent use" so Assange Masseurs, if it existed, could continue to trade.
There are plenty of infamous and unfamous people who have trademarked their names, including Tecwen Whittock, the coughing academic convicted in 2003 of helping Major Charles Ingram cheat his way to winning £1m on Who Wants to be a Millionaire? But if every Z-lister gets their name trademarked these days, celebs can always play a new game – competing for how many of the IPO's 45 different categories, covering every conceivable use of a trademark, they are protected under.
As Gillian Davies records in her paper, The Cult of Celebrity and Trade Marks, Catherine Zeta-Jones registered her full name under the IPO's "entertainment services" classification. Robbie Williams's registration featured four different classes of use, covering video, film, sound recordings, books, calendars, posters and clothing. Jamie Oliver registered his name in 11 different classes - but Alan Titchmarsh has trumped him with 12.
Modern celebrities put their names to a huge range of products, which gives them legal protection if their names are exploited on counterfeit products or used to endorse goods or services that have nothing to do with them.
Court cases hearing of the infringement of individuals' trademarked names are rare in the UK, which is either a sign that the law is a useful deterrent or that lawyers are making easy money. Many celebrities, such as David Beckham, take an even more thorough approach, filing for a "Community Trade Mark" in Alicante, Spain, so their name will be protected in all 27 EU countries. But that kind of application is more likely to receive objections from third parties.
Cynics who imagine Assange is seeking to profit from the production of Hacker Hunks 2012 calendars or silver-haired Assange dolls (ideally with swivelling "hawk eyes") are wrong. Mark Stephens, Assange's lawyer, says the applications to trademark Assange and WikiLeaks have been made in a "not for profit" category, unlike many celebrities.
"It's not about restricting free speech," says Stephens. "It's not that he's out there trying to make huge amounts of money. It's about protecting himself from being associated with things he doesn't know about or approve of." There have already been examples of merchandising, such as T-shirts, produced without Assange's assent, although Stephens does concede that is "not a big issue".
Assange's lawyers have sought to register his name under just one class, the same "entertainment services" bracket as Zeta-Jones. Within this classification, Assange is seeking to protect his name in public speaking services, news reporter services, journalism, the publication of texts other than publicity texts, education services and entertainment services. Like every case, his applications will take up to eight months for the IPO to determine.
It suggests that, whatever the fate of his legal fight over extradition to Sweden, Assange is determined to be the very public face of dramatic computer leaks for a while yet, and determined not to let new rivals, such as OpenLeaks, steal his thunder. Critics who view such attempts to trademark an individual name as the ultimate act of self-love may smile at the date when Assange's lawyers filed his application: Valentine's Day of course.
Patrick Barkham @'The Guardian'
Abdul Hamid Ahmad
Pakistani Minorities Affairs Minister Shahbaz Bhatti has been shot dead by unknown gunmen.

Brilliant!

(Thanx Anne!)

♪♫ The Strokes - Under Cover Of Darkness

Pro-reform protests in Vietnam

Listen to R.E.M.'s 'Collapse into Now'


@'npr'

Regulators Reject Proposal That Would Bring Fox-Style News to Canada

As America's middle class battles for its survival on the Wisconsin barricades -- against various Koch Oil surrogates and the corporate toadies at Fox News -- fans of enlightenment, democracy and justice can take comfort from a significant victory north of Wisconsin border. Fox News will not be moving into Canada after all! The reason: Canada regulators announced last week they would reject efforts by Canada's right wing Prime Minister, Stephen Harper, to repeal a law that forbids lying on broadcast news.
Canada's Radio Act requires that "a licenser may not broadcast....any false or misleading news." The provision has kept Fox News and right wing talk radio out of Canada and helped make Canada a model for liberal democracy and freedom. As a result of that law, Canadians enjoy high quality news coverage including the kind of foreign affairs and investigative journalism that flourished in this country before Ronald Reagan abolished the "Fairness Doctrine" in 1987. Political dialogue in Canada is marked by civility, modesty, honesty, collegiality, and idealism that have pretty much disappeared on the U.S. airwaves. When Stephen Harper moved to abolish anti-lying provision of the Radio Act, Canadians rose up to oppose him fearing that their tradition of honest non partisan news would be replaced by the toxic, overtly partisan, biased and dishonest news coverage familiar to American citizens who listen to Fox News and talk radio. Harper's proposal was timed to facilitate the launch of a new right wing network, "Sun TV News" which Canadians call "Fox News North."
Harper, often referred to as "George W. Bush's Mini Me," is known for having mounted a Bush like war on government scientists, data collectors, transparency, and enlightenment in general. He is a wizard of all the familiar tools of demagoguery; false patriotism, bigotry, fear, selfishness and belligerent religiosity.
Harper's attempts to make lying legal on Canadian television is a stark admission that right wing political ideology can only dominate national debate through dishonest propaganda. Since corporate profit-taking is not an attractive vessel for populism, a political party or broadcast network that makes itself the tool of corporate and financial elites must lie to make its agenda popular with the public. In the Unites States, Fox News and talk radio, the sock puppets of billionaires and corporate robber barons have become the masters of propaganda and distortion on the public airwaves. Fox News's notoriously biased and dishonest coverage of the Wisconsin's protests is a prime example of the brand of news coverage Canada has smartly avoided.
Robert F Kennedy Jr @'HuffPo'

Police officer charged with second assault at G20

Chas Licciardello
Charlie Sheen's been on Twitter for 6 hours and he's already smoked the hash out of all the tags.

'Ohio Senate committee schedules unborn child as witness'

You Should Have Stayed At Home

 (Photo:TimN - Westgarth 01/03/11)

G20: The Untold Stories
They were the most unlikely of troublemakers. There were thousands of ordinary citizens on the streets at Toronto G20 Summit marching peacefully until the police closed in and shut them down. Many had gone downtown simply to see what was going on, only to find themselves forcibly dragged away by police and locked up for hours in a makeshift detention center without timely access to lawyers or medical treatment.
It's been eight months since the G20 and the iconic images are still with us — burning police cars, rampaging mobs, the massive security presence that according to the official story is all that stood between Canada's largest city and chaos. But that’s not the whole story of Toronto’s G20. Astonishing new images caught on camera are now emerging and they expose a troubling new picture of what happened to hundreds of ordinary citizens caught in the huge police dragnet during those three highly-charged days last June.
Gillian Findlay presents a revealing new street-level perspective of what happened when thousands of police were deployed in downtown Toronto and instructed to do what was necessary to ensure the wall around the G20 Conference Centre was never breached. Exclusive eyewitness video obtained by the fifth estate brings to light startling images captured on cellphones and minicams by the innocent bystanders who found themselves on the wrong side of all that G20 "order." In a rare television interview, Toronto Police Chief Bill Blair explains why police took the actions they did.
On this edition of the fifth estate: the summit from the street, and the people who never dreamed it could happen to them. The stories you'll hear will raise questions about what protest means in this country and what the limits to dissent have become.
Watch it

Gaddafi's billionaire children

Britain has announced that the assets of the dictator and his family have been frozen, and the Treasury has created a special unit to trace the multi-billion pound assets they are thought to have squirrelled away in investments in the city. For years, though, that fortune helped the Gaddafi family win friends and influence across the world.
Saif al-Islam, the suave, western-educated second son of the Libyan dictator, was the best known of the sons.
Seen as the natural successor to his father before the wave of protests across the north African nation, the 38 year old Saif al-Islam presented himself as a reformer. He was welcomed in the West as the acceptable face of the regime, and claims the Duke of York, Peter Mandelson and Tony Blair among his "good friends".
In 1995, he received his degree in architecture and engineering at Tripoli's al-Fateh University, and then went on to obtain a management degree from the International Business School in Vienna before gaining a doctorate at Britain's London School of Economics (LSE).
Presenting himself as a humanitarian ambassador through the charitable body he set up in 1997, the young Gaddafi – whose name means the sword of Islam in Arabic – was at the heart of the complex negotiations over the Bulgarian nurses and Palestinian doctor freed by Libya in July 2007.
His foundation also negotiated the release of Western hostages held by a group of Islamist extremists in the Philippines in 2000 – who had earlier been funded by his father. He is said to have personally negotiated the financial compensation paid by Libya to the families of victims killed in the Lockerbie plane bombing in 1988 and the 1989 bombing of a French airliner.
The shaven headed bachelor, who keeps lions as pets, enjoys sea fishing and has a number of falcons with which he hunts, pledged a £1.5 million through his foundation to his alma mater, the LSE, a donation that in the light of recent events has caused no end of embarrassment to the university.
Saif al-Islam was a regular at London's top night spots. He and his brothers reportedly paid over £600,000 a pop to get Mariah Carey, Beyoncé and Usher to sing at their birthday parties.
It is reported that Saif al-Islam owns an £10 million mansion in Hampstead, North London – complete with suede-lined cinema room and swimming pool. The house was bought in 2009 by a holding company registered in the British Virgin Islands.
According to US diplomatic cables published by WikiLeaks, the Gaddafi children routinely benefited from the Libya's wealth. One cable written by Chris Stevens, a US diplomat in Libya, said it had "become common practice" for government funds to be used to promote companies controlled by Gaddafi's children. He also indicated that their companies have all benefited from "considerable government financing and political backing."
Gaddafi's fifth eldest son, Hannibal, also developed a reputation for things unconnected to his business acumen. In 2001, he attacked three Italian policemen with a fire extinguisher. In September 2004, he was briefly detained in Paris after driving a Porsche at high speed in the wrong direction and through red lights down the Champs-Elysees while intoxicated.
A year later his model wife, Aline Skaf, filed an assault suit against him. And on July 15, 2008, Hannibal and his wife were held for two days and charged with assaulting two maids in a hotel in Geneva, Switzerland. Gaddafi retaliated by arresting Swiss nationals in Libya and suspended oil deliveries to Switzerland.
Rumours have long abounded that state funds were used to further the career of Col Gaddafi's footballing son, Saadi, who despite his limited talent once played for Perugia in the Italian football league. The 37-year old, third son of Gaddafi was planning a new city styled on Vegas in the west of Libya.
Fiona Govan @'The Telegraph'
@'xkcd'

Tony Windsor receives death threats as climate of hate ramps up

Shifting editorial standards

HA!

The Revolution will not be searchable

♪♫ Nick Cave, Kylie Minogue, Shane MacGowan & Blixa Bargeld - Death Is Not The End

(A song for Tim #1)

Ombudsman reveals secret Melbourne Brotherhood

Printing Thom Yorke's head

When we blogged about Radiohead releasing the data from their video for “House of Cards” last year, we weren’t really sure what fans were going to do with the 400 megabytes representing the visual data from the video. But now, thanks to Thinigiverse, we have an awesome example of what’s possible when CC licenses encourage people to share and build upon each others work.
User Serratiago has used Blender to convert the original data from the Radiohead video into a set of coordinates that can be printed into a real-life 3D sculpture of Thom Yorke’s head. Since the original data is licensed under a Creative Commons BY-NC-SA license, that means Serriago’s derivative is as well. What’s great about this story is that Serratiago didn’t need to ask Thom Yorke, Radiohead, or anyone for permission to make and distribute his work, as the Creative Commons license had already established it!
So if you own a 3D printer, you can download the data and get started. If you need a 3D printer, you should check out MakerBot, an open source project brought to you by the guys behind Thingiverse.
@'Creative Commons'

Kinisi - Sun Battle Soul (Free download)


(Thanx to the Happyyman for turning me on to this!)

Carl Hiaasen: “Has Florida finally elected a certifiable whack job as governor?”

♪♫ PJ Harvey - The Words That Maketh Murder

Possible gag order on the Guardian re Assange case?

Jesus Hates Net Neutrality

Thousands of sadhus - or holy men - have been banned from selling cannabis to festival-goers at an ancient temple in Nepal.
They are gathering at Pashupatinath Temple in Kathmandu to celebrate the Hindu festival of Shivaratri.
Sadhus - Hindus who renounce the world around them - traditionally celebrate Shivaratri by smoking cannabis.
But those found selling drugs at the temple this year will face eviction by armed police, temple officials say.
Since last week police have been mingling with the sadhus in plain clothes to identify anyone selling drugs.
About 20 sadhus have already been arrested and have been moved to an area outside the city, officials say.
'Spoilt' The Hindu god Shiva is said to have enjoyed smoking cannabis.
Because of that sadhus - who mostly live in forests, caves and temples - see their use of the drug as receiving a blessing from him.
Thousands of sadhus have travelled from India for the festival - which falls on 2 March this year - and the temple authority has said it does not object to the sadhus smoking cannabis for their own worship.
Despite this, the Pashupati Area Development Trust (PADT) wants to ensure the drug is not sold on the temple premises.
"Over the past few years, the use of drugs has become more widespread and it's also become commercial," PADT Member Secretary Sushil Nahata told the BBC.
"It has spoilt the essence of the festival."
"We heard a lot of rumours that sadhus were selling these drugs. We tried to stop them doing this last year, but weren't able to," said Mr Nahata.
"This year we've started a proper campaign."
The PADT has put together a task force of 25 people, including police and armed police officers, to enforce the ban.
"We have only found limited amounts of hashish in cigarettes so far," Mr Nahata said.
He added: "Any sadhus arrested with large quantities of the drug will be sent to jail."
@'BBC'
Nepalese charas and my cobra chillum - memories *sigh*!

500 Desert Island Discs episodes to be made available online

Fighting the Lawmen

Iran: Security forces break up Tehran protests

Iranian police have fired tear gas to disperse opposition supporters mounting protests in the capital Tehran.
A BBC correspondent in Tehran said large numbers of riot police and militia on motorcycles in the city centre broke up any crowds that formed.
The unrest comes a day after websites close to opposition leaders Mir Hossein Mousavi and Mehdi Karroubi said they had been jailed.
The government has denied this, saying the two men were at home.
The BBC's Mohsen Agsari in Tehran said by early evening the security forces appeared to have full control of the streets.
The Basiji militia were chanting victory slogans, he said.
Earlier, despite the presence of security forces in Tehran's main streets and squares, sporadic gatherings were held close to the main Azadi square, our correspondent said.
Demonstrators chanting "Ya Hossein, Mir Hossein" were immediately attacked by the police.
After night fell, demonstrators made random protests, using the cover of darkness to confuse the security forces, our correspondent adds.
Police blocked the focal point of the demonstrations, Eskandari street, at both ends, sending bikers to disperse the protesters.
Detention denial Both Mr Mousavi and Mr Karroubi have called for demonstrations in Iran in the light of the recent uprisings in Tunisia and in Egypt.
Earlier this month the two men, along with their wives, were detained in their respective homes in Tehran as protests were staged.
Thousands of their supporters took to the streets of Tehran on 14 February, amid clashes with security forces which left two dead.
On Monday one of Mr Karroubi's sons told the BBC Persian service he had been told his father had been "taken by security forces to an unspecified location".
The semi-official news agency Isna quoted state prosecutor Gholam Hossein Mohseni Ejehei on Monday as saying that Mr Mousavi and Mr Karroubi were not detained.
The two men ran as opposition candidates in the disputed June 2009 presidential election. Mr Mousavi said he was the actual winner and President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad was only re-elected through a rigged vote.
Hundreds of thousands of opposition supporters then took part in marches that were violently broken up by the security forces, including the Basij militia on motorcycles.
@'BBC'

UbuWeb Top Ten for March 2011 Selected by John Zorn

Sound (In Alphabetical Order)
1. Karel Appel - Poeme Barbare
[Appel on UbuWeb Sound]
2. Antonin Artaud - Pour Finir Avec Le Jugement Du Dieu
3. Guy Debord - Situationisten - Tracks 1 - 6
4. Forough Farrokhzhad - Fathe Bagh
[Farrokhzhad on UbuWeb Sound]
5. Howard Finster - Some Of These Days
The Sound Of The Night Howard Finster Got Saved
6. Richard Foreman - Loops From Now That Communism Is Dead My Life Feels Empty
7. Maurice Lemaître - Improvisation Lettriste Pour Danser
[Maurice Lemaître on UbuWeb Sound]
8. Richard Maxfield - Bacchanale (1963)
[Maxfield on UbuWeb Sound]
9. Harry Smith - Interview 1965 Part One And Two
10. Tristan Tzara - L'amiral Cherche Une Maison A Louer
[Tzara on UbuWeb Sound]

Film (In Alphabetical Order)
1. Harry Smith - Heaven And Earth Magic
2. Joseph Cornell - Rose Hobart
3. Jack Smith - Flaming Creatures
4. Hermann Nitsch - Maria Conception Aktion
5. Kenneth Anger - Lucifer Rising
6. Yayoi Kusama - Kusama's Self Obliteration
7. Forough Farrokzhad - The House Is Black
8. Kiki Smith - Jewel
9. Guy Debord - Critique de la séparation
10. John Cage And Raasaan Roland Kirk - Sound??

John Zorn is an American avant-garde composer, arranger, record producer, saxophonist and multi-instrumentalist.

Dating Site Is the New Hotspot for Libyan Protest

Glenn Greenwald
If only Bob Woodward had been willing to criticize Rumsfeld when it mattered: v.