Archive for March, 2017

Pitts: Five years after his death, a few words about Trayvon – Baltimore Sun

A few words on the innocence of Trayvon Martin.

The very idea will outrage certain people. Experience says the notion of Trayvon Martin being innocent will offend them deeply.

But they can get over it. Or not.

Because it is five years now since Sybrina Fulton and Tracy Martin's unarmed son died, five years since he was killed in Sanford, Fla. by a neighborhood watchman who dubbed him, on sight, a "f------ punk" and one of "these a--holes." Five years. And there are things that need saying. His divorced parents say much of it in "Rest in Power," their new book about the tragedy.

"My son had been intensely alive!" writes Martin. "My son had been a life force, a teenager who had hopes and dreams and so much love. But in death, he became a figure we could only see through the dark mirror of evidence and testimony, a cursed single night when our son and all that life inside him was reduced to a stranger, a black kid in a hoodie, a young man in the shadows. A suspect."

George Zimmerman was the first to make that reduction when he stalked Trayvon through a gated community despite a police dispatcher advising him to stay with his car. Then the police did it, testing the shooting victim for drugs and alcohol while telling his killer to "go home and get some rest." Then the jury did it when they set Zimmerman free.

Much of America did it, too. One reader wrote -- without a shred of evidence -- that Trayvon was "casing" houses when he was shot. This was a boy walking back from 7-Eleven to watch a basketball game at his father's girlfriend's house.

Another person, upset that family photos made Trayvon look too young and, well ... innocent, forwarded a chain email showing a tough-looking man, with beard and mustache, tats on his hands and face, insisting, "This is the real Trayvon." It was actually the real Jayceon "The Game" Taylor, a then-32-year-old rapper. Supplied with a death scene image of Trayvon -- darker skin than Taylor, younger, slimmer, no facial hair, no visible tats -- the woman was unmoved. "They're both Trayvon," she insisted.

Because Trayvon could not, at all costs, be innocent. The very idea was a threat.

So people embraced absurdities. Like a 140-pound boy jumping a man 12 years older and 50 pounds heavier. Like the boy hitting the man 25 or 30 times and bashing his head against concrete, though Zimmerman's "injuries" amounted to a bloody nose and scratches on the back of his head that needed no stitches. Like Trayvon, shot point blank in the heart, dying like a villain in some 1950s Western, groaning, "You got me."

They seized upon his suspension from school. For them, it proved not that he was an ordinary boy who needed -- and was receiving -- the guidance of two loving parents. No, it proved he was not, could never be, innocent. Trayvon was no angel, they would announce triumphantly.

But why did he have to be? And why was there no similar requirement of the killer, who had been arrested once for scuffling with a police officer and had been the subject of a domestic violence restraining order? The answer is too obvious for speaking.

Five years ago, a black boy was shot for nothing. And many Americans made him a blank screen upon which they projected their racialized stereotypes and fears. They could not allow him to be a harmless child walking home. No, they needed his guilt. They knew what it proved if Trayvon Martin was innocent.

Namely, that America was anything but.

Leonard Pitts is a columnist for The Miami Herald;lpitts@miamiherald.com.

Read more:
Pitts: Five years after his death, a few words about Trayvon - Baltimore Sun

Have your thoughts Voizd with this social networking app – Stuff

If youve ever held yourself back from posting a thought or opinion on Twitter or Facebook because you were worried about what your friends and followers would think, heres a solution.

Enter Voizd, a social networking platform where you can express your true feelings without fear. The audio-based anonymous social networking app aimed at India's social savvy youngsters let you voice your opinion on a range of issues, be they national and international issues or personal and professional frustrations. Voizd lets you record and post a 30-second audio clip on any topic without the fear of ever being judged, labeled or trolled due to the anonymity factor. Since your identity is protected you dont have to filter out your real opinions.

It also allows you to listen to what others really think about various topics and connect with likeminded people.

Currently, its the only social network in India that combines audio with anonymity. Whats more? The app is available free of cost on iOS and Android stores.

Read more here:
Have your thoughts Voizd with this social networking app - Stuff

Got filmmakers number from a social networking site: Accused – NYOOOZ

Summary: Mumbai: Sandeep Sahu , the Lucknow man arrested for allegedly making extortion calls to Bollywood producer-director Mahesh Bhatt , told anti-extortion cell sleuths that he managed to get the phone number from a social networking website . Police are trying to ascertain whether Bhatt's details are on the site as Sahu has claimed.Experts say people increasingly share their personal details online, which is dangerous. If you post a picture, do not forget that behind the image, the GPS of your location is stored. Cyber expert Vijay Mukhi advises invisibility on social media. V Narayan

Mumbai: Sandeep Sahu , the Lucknow man arrested for allegedly making extortion calls to Bollywood producer-director Mahesh Bhatt , told anti-extortion cell sleuths that he managed to get the phone number from a social networking website . Police are trying to ascertain whether Bhatt's details are on the site as Sahu has claimed.Experts say people increasingly share their personal details online, which is dangerous. Cyber expert Vijay Mukhi advises invisibility on social media.

"Do not show off. The less you speak about yourself the better. If you post a picture, do not forget that behind the image, the GPS of your location is stored.

Source: http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/city/mumbai/got-filmmakers-number-from-a-social-networking-site-accused/articleshow/57436425.cms

See the rest here:
Got filmmakers number from a social networking site: Accused - NYOOOZ

Facebook Will Help You to Get a Job – The TechNews

Facebook Will Help You to Get a Job

Facebook means an open stage for friendship. From taking selfies to finding new friend Facebook comes first. From students to high profile personalities and thinkers all are on this most popular social platform. Now Facebook is coming closer to the mass people. The social networking site, Facebook will help you to get a job. It planned to give vacancy information to its users. There are many different ways to get a job in internet for youths. Job seekers can upload their resumes to different websites. Checking those CVs many employers contact with the job seekers.

But Facebook will help you to get a job like a friend. No matter whether you are looking for a job or not Facebook will inform you about jobs. Facebook took this initiative to actually help those are from low wage and hourly worker and do not job related websites.

Currently Facebook has 1.86 billion users. Facebook wants its users to get job offers from employers regardless of needing a job or not. One of the senior employees of Facebook, Inc. Andrew Bosworth said, lions share of the Facebook users are somehow busy with their different tasks. Consequently, they do not attempt get a new job. In fact, on that note Facebook can give them more suitable job. Eventually, getting a job offer on the largest social network will be a matter of clicking some buttons. The users neednt upload their resumes.

However, this facility is only available for two countries, Canada and USA, presently.

See original here:
Facebook Will Help You to Get a Job - The TechNews

Congress Asks NSA for Estimate of American Surveillance Before Reauthorization – InsideSources

National Security Agency building at Fort Meade, Md. (AP Photo/Charles Dharapak, file)

Congress is still waiting for an intelligence community estimate of the number of American communications swept up in widespread surveillance programs authorized by law due to expire this year.

Lawmakers blasted the intelligence community Wednesday after a classified briefing from members of the National Security Agency, FBI, Office of the Director of National Intelligence and others. Representatives again failed to respond to a year-old request for an estimate of the number of American communications caught up in electronic surveillance programs.

Representatives have asked repeatedly for the information ahead of Congress reauthorization of FISA (Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act) Amendments Act Section 702. The law legalizes broad electronic surveillance programs like Prism, revealed by NSA leaker Edward Snowden in 2013. Section 702 expires Dec. 31.

Michigan Democrat Rep. John Conyers said the intelligence community has not so much as responded to another December request for the estimate. He added lawmakers will not simply take the governments word on the size of the so-called incidental collection.

Section 702 authorizes NSAs upstream surveillance programs when the signals intelligence agency taps the physical infrastructure of the internet, such as undersea fiber cables, to surveil the content of foreign communications including emails, instant messages, etc. as they exit and enter the U.S.

It also allows the agency to submit selectors to U.S.-based communications providers, like e-mail addresses, who then provide the agency with any communications relevant to those selectors.

The programs essentially allow NSA to incidentally sweep up unrelated data belonging to Americans in communication with foreigners. Privacy advocates likeElizabeth Goitein, co-director of the Liberty and National Security Program at NYU Laws Brennan Center for Justice, say such incidental collection likely amounts to millions or tens of millions of warrantless interceptions.

I dont mean to imply that this trust was misplaced, Goitein told the House Judiciary Committee during the unclassified half of Wednesdays briefing. In fact, weve seen essentially no evidence of intentional misuse. But what we have seen is mission creep, so that a law designed to protect against foreign threats to the United States has become a major source of warrantless access to Americans data and a tool for ordinary, domestic law enforcement.

NSA can share raw data it collects absent a warrant with CIA and FBI. All three can hold onto data for five years, but encrypted communications, those reasonably believed to contain secret meaning, and any U.S. person information that has foreign intelligence value or is evidence of a crime, can be kept indefinitely. None estimate how many Americans are swept up annually in what privacy advocates have dubbed back door searches.

Goitein said that data can be used to prosecute Americans for crimes unrelated to the original search. Legal requirements for secrecy and national security allow prosecutors in some instances not to reveal how such information was gathered, making it difficult to surmise if its happened already.

She and others at Wednesdays hearing including California Democrat Rep. Ted Lieu say thats a clear Fourth Amendment violation, and Congress should rewrite the law with reforms instead of a blanket reauthorization. Jeff Kosseff, a professor at the U.S. Naval Academy, argued national security gives the intelligence community exception to the Fourth Amendments warrant requirement.

An anonymous White House official told Reuters Wednesday the Trump administration supports renewal without reforms.

We support the clean reauthorization and the administration believes its necessary to protect the security of the nation, the official said.

Follow Giuseppe on Twitter

Subscribe for the Latest From InsideSources Every Morning

See more here:
Congress Asks NSA for Estimate of American Surveillance Before Reauthorization - InsideSources