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Government

Italian scientist forecasts earthquake, is sued-> 1

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An anonymous reader writes "On 31/3, Italian scientist Giampaolo Giuliani forecasted that a big earthquake was expected in the zone between L'Aquila and Sulmona (central Italy) and warned Italian authorities on that. The prevision was based on a network of radon sensors; Giuliani (who is not a geologist, but instead works for the "Istituto Nazionale di Astrofisica dei Laboratori nazionali del Gran Sasso") observed in the past that an increase of radon gas emission from the ground means that the soil is fracturing and an earthquake is going to happen (some news pages, in Italian language). The head of the "Protezione Civile" (disaster handling agency) Guido Bertolaso promptly declared that "there are idiots raising panic, we all know earthquakes are unpredictable" and Giuliani has so been sued for "procurato allarme" (intent to cause panic).
On 6/4, 3:32 CEST an earthquake of 6.3 Richter magnitude happened near the city of L'Aquila: dozens of victims are currently reported. The media now talk about the prevision (Il Giornale, Corriere della Sera, sometimes mentioning the "randon" (sigh) gas), but no sign of apologies has come from Italian authorities, which often declare the intention to avoid the "fuga di cervelli" phenomenon (brain emigration, i.e. smart scientists moving abroad), without apparently realizing what could be causing that."

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The Media

PBS Interview with a professor of economics.->

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Anonymous Coward
Anonymous Coward writes "The information in this video has been referenced numerous times by me personally in the last six months as I've been researching the economic system. I think it's obvious that the people in control of the economy and the issuance of currency are making blatant policy decisions as politicians in our free democracy. It's thirty minutes you need to see. To pull this off you would need deceit on a massive scale. This guy is a distinguished author and professor of economics: http://www.pbs.org/moyers/journal/04032009/watch.html Justice must prevail, and we must hold those accountable in a court of law. That's how democracy works right? If the ever pervasive mass-media doesn't give you a piece information, do you immediately believe that it's false or feel overcome with apathy? We all know right from wrong and this is one of the worst things to ever happen to western civilization. Why is it that the information in this video doesn't show up in the media, namely the systemic fraud and failure of the banking industry and the political connections to former and current administrations. I've been studying the financial system and I'm truly shocked that this is the best that America can do. I believe in democracy and regulated capitalism. How do we get the power back? We have to do something, friends. The best that my roomate and I have come up with yet is using smaller banks and local credit unions, taking the power of capital away from those responsible. Violence is the worst idea possible, you cannot possibly win that way and it would be horrifying to even try. "Attacking" internet websites is also a horrible idea because they're trying to pass internet regulation laws that could possibly challenge net neutrality already: http://www.govtrack.us/congress/bill.xpd?bill=s111-773"
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Education

Discuss the US Presidential Election & Education 1515

Posted by CmdrTaco
from the running-out-of-time dept.
In 24 hours, many of you will be able to vote. So as we come down to the wire, this is really our last chance to talk about the issues. We've already discussed Health Care, the War, and the Economy. Today I'm opening up the floor to discuss education. Perhaps no other issue will matter more in 50 years. Which candidate will make the next generation smarter?
The Almighty Buck

How To Make Money With Free Software 81

Posted by kdawson
from the coin-of-the-realm dept.
bmsleight writes "The Dutch Ministry of Finance organized an architecture competition to design not a building, but rather the new 5-Euro commemorative coin. The theme was 'Netherlands and Architecture'. The winning design was made 100% with free software, mainly Python, but also including The Gimp, Inkscape, Phatch, and Ubuntu. The design is amazing — the head of Queen Beatrix is made up of the names of architects based on their popularity in Yahoo searches (rendered in a font of the artist's own devising). In the end the artist, Stani Michiels, had to collaborate closely on location with technicians of the Royal Dutch Mint, so all the last bits were done on his Asus Eee PC. Soon, 350,000 Dutch people will use and enjoy the fruits of free software."
Government

The First E-President 169

Posted by Soulskill
from the probably-not-ted-stevens dept.
Szentigrade writes "Popular Science is running a letter by Daniel Engber of the online Slate Magazine in which he offers the US Presidential nominees advice on using the full potential of the Internet upon their election into office. Some examples discussed in the letter include: a project already being developed that speeds up the patent approval process, a UK site that aims to improve government-citizen interactions, and perhaps most importantly, a call for government information to be 'presented in a standardized and widely used data format, like XML, so that anyone — in or out of government — could use and reconfigure it however they pleased.' Will 2009 be the first year of the E-President?"
Government

President Signs Law Creating Copyright Czar 555

Posted by kdawson
from the ip-con dept.
I Don't Believe in Imaginary Property writes "President Bush has signed the EIPRA (AKA the PRO-IP Act) and created a cabinet-level post of 'Copyright Czar,' on par with the current 'Drug Czar,' in spite of prior misgivings about the bill. They did at least get rid of provisions that would have had the DOJ take over the RIAA's unpopular litigation campaign. Still, the final legislation (PDF) creates new classes of felony criminal copyright infringement, adds civil forfeiture provisions that incorporate by reference parts of the Comprehensive Drug Abuse Prevention and Control Act of 1970, and directs the Copyright Czar to lobby foreign governments to adopt stronger IP laws. At this point, our best hope would appear to be to hope that someone sensible like Laurence Lessig or William Patry gets appointed."

My father was a God-fearing man, but he never missed a copy of the New York Times, either. -- E.B. White

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