Archive for October, 2014

Secular talk | Schools Protest ‘Conservative Censorship’ Of Textb| secular talk full 2014 – Video


Secular talk | Schools Protest #39;Conservative Censorship #39; Of Textb| secular talk full 2014
Secular talk | secular talk full | secular talk full 2014 | new secular talk full 2014 | New Secular talk | secular talk funny. Subcribe for more: http://goo.gl/EPvJwv Secular talk Secular...

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Secular talk | Schools Protest 'Conservative Censorship' Of Textb| secular talk full 2014 - Video

TRIST: Circumventing Censorship with Transcoding-Resistant Image Steganography – Video


TRIST: Circumventing Censorship with Transcoding-Resistant Image Steganography
Christopher Connolly, Patrick Lincoln, Ian Mason, and Vinod Yegneswaran, SRI International.

By: USENIX Association Videos

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TRIST: Circumventing Censorship with Transcoding-Resistant Image Steganography - Video

Ga. educators grapple with Internet censorship

Educators are grappling with questions over how much of the Internet should be accessible to students as they distribute tablets and laptops to supplement classroom learning.

"It's a balance between arming our kids with the ability to make really smart choices and making those choices for them in a filtering environment," said Scott Muri, Fulton deputy superintendent for academics told the Atlanta Journal-Constitution (http://bit.ly/1w1vQN7 ).

The American Library Association reviewed how school systems comply with the Children's Internet Protection Act, which was passed in 2000 and is meant to block students from accessing sites that are considered obscene or harmful. However, some school systems have gone beyond what federal law requires and have banned social media, email and media streaming sites, according to the AMA.

"We're censoring big chunks of the Internet because we're afraid of certain content," said Deborah Caldwell-Stone, a deputy director with the American Library Association. "Rather than teaching kids how to handle that and . how to be responsible Internet users, we're just blocking things."

The newspaper reported that Fulton County uses a web-filtering committee of teachers, principals and administrators who can make exceptions to which sites are blocked on school-issued devices.

DeKalb County schools Chief Information Officer Gary Brantley said teachers can override filters to show sensitive material if it's determined to have educational value. Brantley said educators should be given the flexibility to make their own judgment calls in terms of what students are able to access online.

Gwinnett schools spokeswoman Sloan Roach said the district allows a review process to allow restricted sites for instructional reasons.

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Ga. educators grapple with Internet censorship

Some adolescents adept at media multitasking, Research by high school students reveals

Telling youths who are juggling multiple electronic devices to "focus on the task at hand" may not always be good advice, according to research to be presented by two high school students on Saturday, Oct. 11 at the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) National Conference & Exhibition.

Sarayu Caulfield and Alexandra Ulmer, seniors at Oregon Episcopal School in Portland, Ore., will present their study "Capacity Limits of Working Memory: The Impact of Media Multitasking on Cognitive Control in the Adolescent Mind" from 1-1:30 p.m. in Marina Ballroom Salon E at the San Diego Marriott Marquis.

Contrary to popular belief that multitasking leads to poor performance, the young researchers found the opposite is true for adolescents who spend a lot of time switching between media devices and tasks.

"Maybe practice really does make perfect," Ms. Ulmer said.

"In our current multimedia environment, there are people who are multitasking at an exceedingly high rate, and the reality is that they may have become really good at it," Ms. Caulfield added.

To study how media multitasking affects adolescents' ability to process information, the young researchers recruited 196 females and 207 males ages 10-19. All participants answered questions about their daily media habits and completed the Stanford Multitasking Media Index, which assesses how often a person multitasks (e.g., texts, instant messages and emails at the same time).

Participants then completed tests to assess their ability to switch between tasks and to focus on a single task. They were randomly assigned to complete these tasks sequentially with no distractions (non-multitasking) or simultaneously with auditory, visual and cognitive distractions such as responding to emails (multitasking).

Results showed that those who scored low on the media multitasking index spent an average of about 20 minutes a day multitasking. They also averaged about 2.5 hours of homework per day and were multitasking 0.08% of this time. Meanwhile, those who scored high on the multitasking index averaged more than three hours per day of multitasking. They did homework for about 3.5 hours a day and juggled multiple tasks for more than 50% of this time.

When asked to complete the study tasks, high media multitaskers were better at filtering out distractions but performed worse when made to focus on a single task. Low multitaskers were less able to filter out distractions but focused better on single tasks.

"We must emphasize that most people performed best when focused on just one task," Ms. Caulfield said. "However, there was a group that provided us with an exception to that finding -- the high media multitaskers."

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Some adolescents adept at media multitasking, Research by high school students reveals

Census Harassment: "They won’t take no for an answer"; "the NSA listens to everybody" – Video


Census Harassment: "They won #39;t take no for an answer"; "the NSA listens to everybody"
This is audio of a real phone call that transpired on October 6, 2014. The Census representative issued veiled threats and promised ongoing harassment if I would not respond to a questionnaire...

By: Census Harassment

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Census Harassment: "They won't take no for an answer"; "the NSA listens to everybody" - Video