10/17/2012

Apple sets Oct 23 event for expected iPad Mini launch


NEW YORK —
Apple sent out invitations for an event in exactly one week’s time where the company is widely expected to unveil a new “iPad Mini,” a smaller version of its market-leading tablet computer.
Reports have been swirling for months about the smaller version of the market-leading iPad, but Apple has made no comment. Some blogs which closely monitor Apple say the new tablet could be priced from $249 to $399, which could pressure rivals such as the Amazon Kindle Fire.
The event comes a little over a month after Apple released the iPhone 5, the latest model of its iconic smartphone, which was greeted with record sales. The October 23 gathering comes three days before the release of Microsoft’s new Surface tablet and two days before Apple reports quarterly earnings. The Wall Street Journal has reported that Apple has begun production of 10 million of the new iPads.
Various reports have cited the specifications of the new tablet and some pictures have also leaked. It is expected to have a screen of 7.85 inches (20 centimeters) compared with 9.7 inches for the current iPad. The 10-inch iPad has long dominated the tablet market, but faces a growing challenge from smaller models such as the Kindle Fire, the Google Nexus 7 and the Samsung Galaxy. Some reports said Apple may also unveil a new version of its MacBook Pro notebook computer.

Mansu Musa a Muslim, the World Richest Person Who Ever Lived


                                         

Mansu Musa a Muslim is standing on the top of list of World richest persons ever lived. The list prepared by Celebrity Net Worth. Mansu Musa was an emperor form West Africa in 14 century was worth $400 billion which is far ahead of current world richest man.
When Musa died in 1930’s, he left behind an empire filled with palaces and mosques some of which still present today. The secret of Musa’s wealth was the vast natural resources of his country which includes half of world’s salt and gold supply, but just after 2 years of his death all his wealth was wasted away by invaders and infighting.
Below is the list of world’s richest persons who ever lived but surprisingly only 3 of them are alive today, List prepared by Celebrity Net Worth.

1. Mansa Musa I, (Ruler of Malian Empire, 1280-1331) $400 billion
2. Rothschild Family (banking dynasty, 1740- ) $350 billion
3. John D Rockefeller (industrialist, 1839-1937) $340 billion
4. Andrew Carnegie (industrialist, 1835-1919) $310 billion
5. Tsar Nicholas II of Russia (last Emperor of Russia, 1868-1918) $300 billion
6. Osman Ali Khan, Asaf Jah VII (last ruler of Hyderabad, 1886-1967)
$236 billion
7. William the Conqueror (King of England, 1028-1087) $229.5 billion
8. Muammar Gaddafi (former Libyan leader, 1942-2011) $200 billion
9. Henry Ford (Ford Motor Company founder, 1863-1947) $199 billion
10. Cornelius Vanderbilt (industrialist, 1794-1877) $185 billion
11. Alan Rufus (Fighting companion of William the Conqueror,
1040-1093) $178.65 billion
12. Bill Gates (Founder of Microsoft, 1955- ) $136 billion
13. William de Warenne, 1st Earl of Surrey (Norman nobleman, ??-1088)
$146.13 billion
14. John Jacob Astor (businessman, 1864-1912) $121 billion
15. Richard Fitzalan, 10th Earl of Arundel (English nobleman,
1306-1376) £118.6 billion
16. John of Gaunt (son of Edward III, 1330-1399) £110 billion
17. Stephen Girard (shipping and banking mogul, 1750-1831) $105 billion
18. Alexander Turney Stewart (entrepreneur, 1803-1876) $90 billion
19. Henry, 1st Duke of Lancaster (English noble, 1310-1361) $85.1 billion
20. Friedrich Weyerhaeuser (timber mogul, 1834-1914) $80 billion
21. Jay Gould (railroad tycoon, 1836-1892) $71 billion
22. Carlos Slim (business magnate, 1940- ) $68 billion
23. Stephen Van Rensselaer (land owner, 1764- 1839) $68 billion
24. Marshall Field (Marshall Field & Company founder, 1834-1906) $66 billion
25. Sam Walton (Walmart founder, 1918-1992) $65 billion
26. Warren Buffett (investor, 1930- ) $64 billion

Steel's Edge (The Edge, #4) by Ilona Andrews

The Edge lies between worlds, on the border between the Broken, where people shop at Wal-Mart and magic is a fairy tale—and the Weird, where blueblood aristocrats rule, changelings roam, and the strength of your magic can change your destiny…

Charlotte de Ney is as noble as they come, a blueblood straight out of the Weird. But even though she possesses rare magical healing abilities, her life has brought her nothing but pain. After her marriage crumbles, she flees to the Edge to build a new home for herself. Until Richard Mar is brought to her for treatment, and Charlotte’s life is turned upside down once again.

Richard is a swordsman without peer, future head of his large and rambunctious Edger clan—and he’s on a clandestine quest to wipe out slavers trafficking humans in the Weird. So when his presence leads his very dangerous enemies to Charlotte, she vows to help Richard destroy them. The slavers’ operation, however, goes deeper than Richard knows, and even working together, Charlotte and Richard may not survive...

Lopez, Kardashian to host 'The X Factor'

LOS ANGELES (AP) — Mario Lopez and Khloe Kardashian Odom are officially joining "The X Factor."

After weeks of speculation, Fox announced Tuesday that the "Extra" host and the "Keeping Up with the Kardashians" co-star will indeed host the second season of the talent competition. Lopez and Odom will first appear as hosts during the show's live broadcasts next month, the network said.

"The worst kept secret in Hollywood is out," said "X Factor" creator and judge Simon Cowell in a statement. "Mario and Khloe are our hosts. They will debut on our first live show in November, and I couldn't be happier."

British television personality Steve Jones served as the sole host for the first season of the U.S. edition of the show.

The addition of Lopez and Kardashian is the latest shift for the underperforming singing contest. Britney Spears and Demi Lovato joined Cowell and L.A. Reid on "The X Factor" judging panel at the start of the second season. The pair replaced Paula Abdul and Nicole Scherzinger.

"I'm very excited to be joining 'The X Factor' team," said Lopez, who has also hosted MTV's "America's Best Dance Crew" for the past seven seasons. "I love the show, and I've been a big fan of Simon Cowell and the judges for a long time. Khloe and I have been friends for years, and I know we'll be a great team and have a blast."

The current second season of "X Factor" is earning solid ratings for Fox, but NBC's "The Voice" continues to perform better. Last week, 12.55 million people watched "The Voice," while "X Factor" was seen by 9.71 million, according to the Nielsen Co.

Brad Pitt mystifies as first male face of Chanel No.5

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Brad Pitt made his debut as the first male face of Chanel's iconic No.5 fragrance on Monday, in an ad campaign that had fans and fashionistas split on the actor's latest role.

Pitt, 48, is seen with long hair and dressed casually, looking wistfully into the camera in an enigmatic black-and-white video directed by "Atonement" filmmaker Joe Wright.

"It's not a journey. Every journey ends, but we go on. The world turns, and we turn with it. Plans disappear, dreams take over. But wherever I go, there you are, my luck, my fate, my fortune. Chanel No.5, inevitable," the "Moneyball" actor says.

The video is part of a $10 million advertising campaign for which Pitt was paid $7 million, according to Women's Wear Daily.

Time magazine's Erik Hayden called the ad "nonsensical," saying Pitt's "vaguely existential monologue ... sounds like it could plausibly have been discarded narration from the trailer for Terrence Malick's (film) 'Tree of Life.'"

Us Weekly's Zach Johnson called the video "sensual," while Vanity Fair's Amy Fine Collins said the choice to cast Pitt as spokesperson showed the French fashion house "subtly circling back to its gender-twisting origins."

Pitt is the first male spokesperson for women's fragrance Chanel No.5, the first perfume launched by legendary French designer Coco Chanel in 1921.

In a statement from Chanel, the actor called the fragrance "revolutionary."

"N°5 has always been the most iconic women's fragrance," Pitt said. "That's what I see being the appeal of this campaign; it goes beyond the abstract of emotion or beauty to evoke what is timeless: a woman's spirit."

Chanel No.5 has been represented by actresses Audrey Tatou, Nicole Kidman and Catherine Deneuve in the past. It has also been linked with screen icon Marilyn Monroe after she famously said the fragrance was all she wore to bed.

LOVE, SCORN AND AMBIVALENCE

On Twitter and YouTube, some fans noted the somewhat ironic coincidence of the campaign's release tying in with the 13th anniversary of "Fight Club," in which Pitt played a consumerism-hating salesman.

While the video for Chanel No.5 had generated more than 3,000 'likes' on YouTube within the first 24 hours, it also has 850 'dislikes', with some commenters saying they believe the ad did not represent the fragrance.

Harper's Bazaar editor-at-large Derek Blasberg said on Twitter: "I've watched Brad Pitt's Chanel No.5 commercial, oh, about 17 times today. I still don't know how I feel about it."

Another Twitter user, Aime Rogers, said, " WHAT were they thinking?? So strange."

YouTube user BabyHippo26, said "So pretentious!!! Why does he look so sad and serious ... I have been a long-time consumer of Chanel No.5 and Chanel products. This commercial has turned me off so much, I won't be buying No.5 again!"

Other fans, however, were mesmerized by the Hollywood star.

User Medusafern posted on YouTube: "it's his VOICE, that VOICE, Jesus, it's like one sweet drop of liquid angel I shall savor on my weary lips."

Twitter user Liz Lyons simply said, "I love love love Brad Pitt for Chanel no.5."

(Reporting By Piya Sinha-Roy, Editing by Jill Serjeant and Jan Paschal)

"Olympic Summer" of 2012 began!!!

Before the "Olympic Summer" of 2012 began, it had been widely predicted that London would benefit from the "Games boost". In fact, the opposite happened, with 2012 proving to be among the worst summers on record for many attractions, including some of the capital's most prestigious landmarks.

It hardly helped that the summer was the wettest in the last hundred years, and the Association of Leading Visitor Attractions (ALVA) reported that this combination of negative factors resulted in some attractions suffering a year-on-year fall of 60 per cent in their visitor numbers during the period of the Games (27 July - 12 August). Some of the worst hit attractions had such a poor summer that they requested that ALVA officials should not release full details of their visitor numbers until its full report comes out in 2013.

Unsurprisingly given the weather, the biggest drops in visitor numbers were endured by outdoor attractions, such as London Zoo and Kew Gardens. In the garden and leisure sector, sites saw an average fall of no less than 21.3 per cent.

Another sector which was badly affected was heritage and cathedrals. In this group, which includes St Paul's Cathedral, the Houses of Parliament and the Tower of London, visitor numbers were down by over 20 per cent.

The figures were described as "sobering reading" by ALVA's chief executive, Bernard Donoghue, when he spoke to the BBC. He went on to say that the summer of 2012 had seen considerable financial challenges for some of the nation's best-known and best-loved tourist attractions.

He singled out the soaking weather as a major cause of the problem, especially for outdoor attractions such as gardens, saying that the trading period had been "one of the worst ... since 2001", the year when tourism was badly hit by the outbreak of foot and mouth disease.

The figures reported fit well with those released last month by the Office for National Statistics, whose July data showed a fall in both visits and spending by people coming from outside the UK. Spending fell to about £2 billion, a fall of £310 million since last year, while 3.18 million trips were made from overseas, as against 3.36 million in July 2011.

As the Olympic Games approached, there was widespread criticism of the hotel industry, which was seen as taking advantage of the situation to increase prices excessively. At one point, some rooms were being priced at as much as ten times their normal amount. This did not last once it became clear that the ambitious predictions for demand during the period of the Games would not be realized.

Olympics organizers also came under attack from traders, who accused them of driving visitors away with overly dramatic warnings of possible disruption during the period of the Games.

Outside London, the combined effect of the poor weather and the Games was not as significant, although the majority of England and Scotland did see a fall in visitor numbers averaging 4.7 per cent.
The most notable exception to the downward trend came in Scotland's museums and galleries. Here, helped to an extent by the National Museum of Scotland's 2011 refurbishment, visitor numbers grew by over 30 per cent.

Cloud Atlas (2012)

By Paras Pitafi
Correspondent, SAM Daily Times




Cloud Atlas is an epic sci-fi/fantasy adventure-drama film written and directed by Lana and Andy Wachowski and Tom Tykwer. An exploration of how the actions of individual lives impact one another in the past, present and future, as one soul is shaped from a killer into a hero, and an act of kindness ripples across centuries to inspire a revolution.


It was adapted from the 2004 novel of the same name by David Mitchell. With a budget of $100 million, a portion of which came from Warner Bros., but most of which was raised from independent sources, Cloud Atlas is one of the most expensive independent film of all time.

Synopsis: Cloud Atlas explores how the actions and consequences of individual lives impact one another throughout the past, the present and the future. Action, mystery and romance weave dramatically through the story as one soul is shaped from a killer into a hero and a single act of kindness ripples across centuries to inspire a revolution in the distant future. Each member of the ensemble appears in multiple roles as the stories move through time.

The film was premiered on September 9, 2012, at the 37th Toronto International Film Festival, where it received a 10-minute standing ovation. It is scheduled to be released on October 26, 2012 in conventional and IMAX theaters.

Spanish students protest education cuts

Students hold up another student during a protest on the second
day of a three-day nationwide student strike to protest against
education cuts in Madrid October 17, 2012. (REUTERS) 

Thousands of high school and university students demonstrated in dozens of cities across Spain Wednesday against government cuts to education spending aimed at slashing the public deficit.

"Bankers' money to public schools!", they chanted as they marched through the streets of Madrid, in a reference to the billions of euros which the government has given Spain's ailing banks even as it cuts social spending.

Many wore the green T-shirts that have become a symbol of their movement against the budget cuts.

In Barcelona, Spain's second-largest city, police said 3,000 students had marched through the streets.

Thousands more protested in Valencia and other cities.


The protests were part of a three-day strike by students due to wrap up Thursday with a demonstration in Madrid in which parents and teachers will also take part.

"At my school they fired seven teachers this year and 16 last year," said 16-year-old high school student Sara Diaz at the protest in Madrid.


The spending cuts have swelled class sizes and forced the cancellation of activities such as laboratory experiments which require smaller groups, said Leonor Andres, 50, who accompanied her 14-year-old daughter at the protest in Madrid.

"If we want them to study, it would be logical to increase the means at their disposal," she said.

Protesters also complained that the spending cuts had led to higher university tuition fees.

"Tuition fees have risen sharply. Last year I paid 700 euros and this year it is 1,300 euros," said 21-year-old journalist student Laura Ruiz.

Public spending on education has been reduced by over one billion euros this year compared to 2011 and public schools employed nearly 3,000 fewer teachers during the 2011-12 academic year, according to the education ministry.

-  AFP


Early signs of lung cancer could be diagnosed by simple blood test: study

LONDON, Oct. 16 (Xinhua) -- Early signs of lung cancer could be diagnosed using a simple blood test, according a new discovery published by British scientists on Tuesday.

Early detection of lung cancer has been shown to save lives, but available methods for screening at-risk people are either too costly or involve invasive procedures.

Writing in the U.S. journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, researchers at University of York reported that they found an altered form of a protein called Ciz1 was present in lung cancers, even when at a very early stage.

"The Ciz1 protein is involved in cell growth. Altered forms of this protein are present in cancer cells, and one specific form is prevalent in lung cancers," said Dr. Dawn Coverley from the University of York.

"Surprisingly, this variant-Ciz1 somehow gets into the blood stream and once there appears to be very stable. This means that by looking for variant Ciz1 in the blood we can pick out people who have small tumours in their lungs, without the need to take a biopsy or undergo surgery," she added.

She said the method will offer doctors an alternative way to test whether an abnormal growth is cancerous. For patients, it means many can avoid invasive diagnostic procedures.

The team is now translating the research into a test suitable for use in hospital diagnostic laboratories.

Frustration but acceptance in Spain after French sneak late World Cup draw

Benzema takes on Casillas
MADRID, Oct. 16 (Xinhua) -- Spain coach Vicente del Bosque was forced to admit that justice was done following Oliver Giroud's 94th minute goal which gave France a dramatic 1-1 draw in the World Cup qualifying game between both sides in Madrid.

Spain had been on track for their third consecutive win in their group when Sergio Ramos headed them into a first half lead, but a defensive error from Spain fullback Juanfran Torres, who had come into the game as a second half substitute allowed Fran Ribery to set Giroud for a late late headed goal.

The result leaves both sides with seven points from three games, but France have a slight advantage given that Spain have to play them in Paris next year.

"The game was very open and we were always vulnerable to being hit on the break," admitted Del Bosque on Spanish television after the final whistle.

"They (France) pressured us a lot in the second half and we didn't defend well as we were too open at the back, but you can't take merit away from France," said the Spain coach, who admitted his players could have been tired following their 4-0 win in Belarus on Friday.

"We looked a bit heavy and looked to defend at 1-0, but what can you do," he concluded.

Meanwhile goal-scorer Ramos admitted that the lateness of the French goal, which came in the last action of the game was deeply frustrating.

"You end up feeling bad after all the work you have done, with the time over, they have drawn and you end up looking stupid. The goal was an error but you can't blame anyone, we had chances and didn't take them: that is football," said a frustrated Ramos, who produced an excellent display despite having been a doubt beforehand with a muscle injury.

"I am happy for the goal, but it's not worth anything when you don't win," he concluded.

Poor Intel, IBM earnings lower US stocks

US stocks fell in opening trade on Wednesday after two days of solid gains, dragged down by disappointing earnings from Intel and IBM.

Five minutes into trade, the Dow Jones Industrial Average was down 46.02 points (0.34 per cent) to 13,505.76.

The broad-based S&P 500 slipped 0.79 (0.05 per cent) to 1454.13, while the tech-rich Nasdaq fell 11.47 (0.37 per cent) to 3089.70.

Intel shares fell 3.4 per cent and IBM 4.0 per cent after their disappointing third-quarter reports following the close of trade on Tuesday.

-  AAP

Headline Oct18,2012/

''SHARPENING THE CORPORATE KNIVES!''





As the recession and credit crunch bites hard, one can hear the ominous sound of long and short knives, curved knives and daggers being sharpened in the corporate halls.The question therefore is, whether to become a model team player or a full on idiot boss.

Unlikely people in unlikely situations can get along provided one condition is met: they have to deal with each other, day after day. Soldiers in the first world war trenches often found ways to avoid shooting each other; when both sides had machine guns, who wanted to start a fight over Belgian mud that would only be recaptured by the enemy the next week? Frustrated used to break the impasse by launching artillery attacks from miles behind the enemy lines, or bringing in fresh troops who hadn't learnt to live and let live.


The recession isn't exactly trench warfare -although if you listen to the hysteria from the business journalists you might think differently. Yet the same principle applies. If you are doing business with the same people everyday, you'll find a way to stay friends.However, one shot contracts with big rewards are fair game for back stabbing! Hahaha! oh, dear! That's the primary reason why people don't trust estate agents and car salesmen.


The long game is important during recession, because surprisingly  -your colleagues are sticking around. According to the US Economist Robert Shimer, people are no more likely to leave their jobs in a recession. Any increase in dismissals is counterbalanced by a fall in voluntary departures as fewer good jobs are advertised. Therefore, people cling on tenaciously to what they have. So smile at your colleagues, no matter how sick you are of them, because you are likely to be stuck with them for a long long time! Hahaha!


But for heaven sake, Don't get Red-carded. As job cuts continue, you are going to meet colleagues and clients who are feeling the pressure. Be very very careful: they will be under the temptation to play dirty. That's the conclusion Spanish Economists Luis Garicano and Ignacio Palacios Huerta, who wondered what would happen if stakes were raised in the football matches. In Spain, La Liga rules were changed in 1995. Three points were awarded for a win instead of two. The idea was to encourage free flowing attacking football with lots of goals.It didn't work. The ingenious economists proved their pointing by comparing La Liga games with cup-ties, in which the incentives hadn't changed.


After the changes were introduced, league games became dirtier relative to cup-ties. There were more fouls and yellow cards. Teams fielded more defenders. So keep your cool in the corporate world and watch out for two-footed tackles. For sure it is going to be tough all around and your colleagues won't be shy of elbowing you around!


So, don.t miss the marrow's post in which ''Nice Guys Finish First!'' With many thanks to !WOW! 

Good night & God bless!

SAM Daily Times - the Voice of the Voiceless

Temple "Angkor Wat" Big Secret Exposed By Google Earth


Although it’s already known that the mighty ancient temple Angkor Wat and some other mighty structures at that time built using sandstone blocks which were extracted from the quarries. The architecture of this building suggest that round about 5 to 10 million of such sandstone blocks were used in its construction and some of them weighing about 1500 kg.Now the question in the researchers mind is that how these heavy blocks were carried to the temple from quarries? What was the way of transportation at that time? But recently by virtue of Google Earth, some lines that looked like a transportation network were observed. Field surveys revealed that the lines are a series of canals (some of them still hold water) connected by short stretches of road and river that lead from the quarries straight to the temple.
So it has assumed that these canals would have carried those heavy blocks from quarries down to temple of a distance of 37 km.But still researches not confirmed whether the blocks would've floated down the canals on rafts, boats or by virtue of some other method but it would have take thousands of workers and lots of methods to carry those blocks and the construction of this temple.

Chile’s student leaders to receive international human rights award

Student movement leaders Camila Vallejo and Noam Titelman
will accept an award from the Institute for Policy Studies on
behalf of the movement Wednesday.
Leaders from Chile’s student movement are set to receive the 2012 International Letelier-Moffitt Human Rights Award, presented by the Institute for Policy Studies (IPS), in Washington D.C. Wednesday.

Camila Vallejo and Noam Titelman, representatives of the country’s two most influential student federations, will accept the award on behalf of the broader movement.

“We have been inspired not just by the action of the Chilean students, but by their ideas – ideas toward true democracy and changing the system so that it works for the many, not just the few,” IPS Director John Cavanagh told The Santiago Times. “Chilean struggles have been in our hearts for a long time.”

The Chilean student movement has been active consistently since mid-2011, as students, parents and teachers have fought for education reform in Chile. Student marches continue to draw thousands of protesters, though they are also frequently marred by violence.

“During 2011 we saw almost all schools and universities paralyzed for almost six months, over one million people marching in the streets and students willingly losing their academic year,” Titelman told Democracy Now. “All of this is because something is obviously not working with this extremely privatized educational system.”

Vallejo, vice president of the Student Federation of Unversidad de Chile (FECH), and Titelman, president of the Santiago Catholic University Student Federation, traveled to the United States on Monday to meet with student groups at New York University and City University of New York.

As part of a speaking tour facilitated by IPS, the two student leaders will also visit American University in Washington D.C. and Harvard University in Boston where they will discuss education reform in Chile, students organizing in Chile and how these relate to students organizing in the United States.

Cavanagh said IPS hopes this global recognition and speaking tour will “spur further conversation and collaboration in the global student movement.”

- The Santiago Times

Global cyber war: New Flame-linked malware detected


A new cyber espionage program linked to the notorious Flame and Gauss malware has been detected by Russia's Kaspersky Lab. The anti-virus giant’s chief warns that global cyber warfare is in “full swing” and will probably escalate in 2013.

The virus, dubbed miniFlame, and also known as SPE, has already infected computers in Iran, Lebanon, France, the United States and Lithuania. It was discovered in July 2012 and is described as “a small and highly flexible malicious program designed to steal data and control infected systems during targeted cyber espionage operations,” Kaspersky Lab said in a statement posted on its website.

The malware was originally identified as an appendage of Flame – the program used for targeted cyber espionage in the Middle East and acknowledged to be part of joint US-Israeli efforts to undermine Iran’s nuclear program.

But later, Kaspersky Lab analysts discovered that miniFlame is an “interoperable tool that could be used as an independent malicious program, or concurrently as a plug-in for both the Flame and Gauss malware.”

The analysis also showed new evidence of cooperation between the creators of Flame and Gauss, as both viruses can use miniFlame for their operations.

“MiniFlame’s ability to be used as a plug-in by either Flame or Gauss clearly connects the collaboration between the development teams of both Flame and Gauss. Since the connection between Flame and Stuxnet/Duqu has already been revealed, it can be concluded that all these advanced threats come from the same 'cyber warfare' factory,” Kaspersky Lab said.

High-precision attack tool

So far just 50 to 60 cases of infection have been detected worldwide, according to Kaspersky Lab. But unlike Flame and Gauss, miniFlame in meant for installation on machines already infected by those viruses.

“MiniFlame is a high-precision attack tool. Most likely it is a targeted cyber weapon used in what can be defined as the second wave of a cyber attack,” Kaspersky's Chief Security Expert Alexander Gostev explained.

“First, Flame or Gauss are used to infect as many victims as possible to collect large quantities of information. After data is collected and reviewed, a potentially interesting victim is defined and identified, and miniFlame is installed in order to conduct more in-depth surveillance and cyber-espionage.”

‘Cyber warfare in full swing’

Meanwhile, Kaspersky Lab’s co-founder and CEO Eugene Kaspersky warned that global cyber warfare tactics are becoming more sophisticated while also becoming more threatening. He urged governments to work together to fight cyber warfare and cyber-terrorism, Xinhua news agency reports.

Speaking at an International Telecommunication Union Telecom World conference in Dubai, the anti-virus tycoon said, "cyber warfare is in full swing and we expect it to escalate in 2013."
Rt.com

Ten years on, trial over Prestige oil spill opens in Spain


Ten years after the sinking of the Prestige oil tanker off Spain, the ship's Greek captain and three other men went on trial Tuesday over the disaster, which caused the worst oil slick in the country's history.

The first day of the trial, held at an exhibition centre in the northern port city of A Coruna, was dominated by procedural questions, with the accused only expected to take the stand in November.

Apostolos Mangouras, 78, the Prestige's captain, is charged along with two other officers and a Spanish official over the oil spill, which polluted thousands of kilometres (miles) of coastline in Spain, Portugal and France.

Prosecutors are demanding 12 years in jail for Mangouras, who is charged with harming the environment along with Greek chief engineer Nikolaos Argyropoulos and first mate Irineo Maloto, a Filipino whose whereabouts are unknown.

The fourth defendant is Jose Luis Lopez-Sors, head of the Spanish merchant navy at the time, who ordered the ship out to sea when it was losing fuel.

But environmental groups complain that key people responsible for the disaster were not on trial and warned that the lessons from the spill had not been learnt.

"There are many people who should be in the dock as well who are not there," said the coordinator of Greenpeace Spain campaigns, Maria Jose Caballero.

Among those who should also be held accountable is Spanish Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy, who was deputy prime minister and government spokesman at the time of the accident, she added.

"We feel that the government's management of the accident bordered on negligence," said Caballero.

The conservative Popular Party government in power at the time ordered the Prestige out to sea away from the Spanish coast instead of following an emergency contingency plan prepared by experts that called for it to be brought to port where the leaking oil could be confined.

Rajoy initially downplayed the gravity of the accident, repeatedly describing the black spots that appeared in the sea where the tanker went down as "small threads of clay".

Spanish non-government group Environmentalists in Action said charges should be brought against ABS, the marine classification company that certified the ageing Prestige as seaworthy, and complained that such single-hull tankers are still being used to transport petrol.

The total cost of the environmental damage caused by the oil slick has been calculated at more than four billion euros ($5.2 billion), most of it for the Spanish state.

The Prestige leaked 50,000 tonnes of fuel into the Atlantic after it sank off northern Spain. It took on water in a storm on November 13, 2002, and drifted for six days before breaking up and sinking.

Over the weeks that followed 300,000 volunteers from Spain and the rest of Europe joined local people in scraping the oil from the rocks and beaches, armed with little more than buckets and their bare hands.

A study published by Spanish researchers in 2010 said fishermen that joined in the clean-up suffered genetic and lung problems.

According to data provided by Greenpeace, the Prestige was built in 1976. It belonged to a Liberian-based shipping company and sailed under a Bahamas flag of convenience.

Mangouras, wearing a dark blue suit and tie, attended the opening session of the trial along with Argyropoulos and Lopez-Sors.

He wore headphones to listen to a simultaneous translation of the proceedings.

Outside the court about 300 people braved rainy weather to demonstrate against the way the government dealt with the oil spill and call for more to be done to avoid a repeat of the disaster.

Several held up signs bearing a picture of Rajoy above the caption "100 percent liar" or placards that read "Never Again".

After three days of procedural matters this week, the court is due to hear from the defendants from November 13, the 10th anniversary of the disaster.

The trial is due to last until May and hear testimony from 133 witnesses and 100 experts.

(AFP)

Seven masterpieces stolen from Rotterdam museum


Seven masterpieces, including paintings by Picasso, Matisse, Monet and Gauguin, were stolen in a pre-dawn heist Tuesday at Rotterdam's Kunsthal museum, the biggest such theft in the Netherlands in two decades, police said.

Alerted by an alarm but arriving on the scene after the thief or thieves had fled, police said they had launched a major investigation that includes interviewing possible witnesses and examining closed-circuit television.

"On Tuesday morning seven artworks were stolen from the Kunsthal in Rotterdam," police said in a statement, adding the burglary took place at around 3:00 a.m. (0100 GMT).

After having initially declined to name the stolen paintings, they said that after consulting with the owners, they can now release photographs of the works.

"A major investigation is under way and forensics are at the scene," Rotterdam police spokeswoman Patricia Wessels told AFP. "We're investigating how they got access, what time it happened and who did it."

Dutch state television showed a police forensic team dusting one of the Kunsthal's outer doors for fingerprints. The museum's director is flying back from Turkey after hearing news of the theft, television said.

The NOS broadcaster said the haul was worth "millions and millions of euros (dollars)", but the paintings are so famous that it will be difficult to get anything like their real value on the black market.

It is the biggest art theft in The Netherlands since 20 paintings were stolen from Amsterdam's Van Gogh museum in 1991.

The paintings are Pablo Picasso's "Tete d'Arlequin", Henri Matisse's "La Liseuse en Blanc et Jaune", Claude Monet's "Waterloo Bridge, London" and "Charing Cross Bridge, London", Paul Gauguin's "Femme Devant une Fenetre Ouverte, dite La Fiancee", Meyer de Haan's "Autoportrait" and Lucian Freud's "Woman with Eyes Closed".

"We're a bit shocked that something like this happens here and at the same time we have some respect for thieves who got away with something likes this," said student Ibo Bose, disappointed not to be able to visit the museum.

"Police are interviewing possible witnesses and examining closed-circuit video footage," the police statement said. "An initial investigation suggests that the robbery was well prepared."

The police spokeswoman said that police were alerted during the night when an alarm went off but the thief or thieves had made off by the time police arrived at the scene.

A statement on the museum's website quoted director Willem van Hassel as saying that the museum would be closed to the public on Tuesday.

The museum is in Rotterdam's museum park where few people go at night.

The works were among the 150-strong Triton Foundation's collection, which was being shown in its entirety to the public for the first time to mark the museum's 20th anniversary, the Kunsthal's website said.

The collection "has developed into one with an international reputation and which comprises representative works by the most important and influential artists of the late 19th century to the present day," it said.

The exhibition "comprises works from almost every significant art movement", it added.

The Kunsthal, which means "art hall", has no permanent collection of its own.

(AFP)