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RIMC Expects Vast Number of International Guests for 2012 Event

REYKJAVIK, ICELAND--(Marketwire -02/14/12)- The 2012 Reykjavik Internet Marketing Conference (RIMC) and Expo, to be held in Reykjavik, Iceland, is expecting a vast number of international guests, with participants travelling from the U.S., UK, Norway, Denmark, Italy, and further afield.

During this year's RIMC, the schedule will be spread over two tracks, mixing various topics on Internet communication and marketing, best practice tips, and Social Media techniques over one day.

Amongst the speakers already confirmed for RIMC 2012 include: Eli Pariser, The Filter Bubble; Bill Hunt, Back Azimuth; Ben Chapman, BBC; Charles Dowd, Facebook; Brent D. Payne, Tribune/BaldSEO; Motoko Hunt, Adobe; Phil Greenwood, Microsoft, and Matt Neal of Bright Sparx.

For the first time, the Internet marketing conference will also be holding the miscellaneous 'Dark Sessions,' featuring Mikkel DeMib, Peter Van Der Graaf, and Fantomaster. This session will be focusing on the 'darker side' of Internet Marketing.

The Reykjavik Internet Marketing Conference (RIMC) is an essential networking tool for marketing and advertising people, web editors, sales and marketing managers, as well as directors of small and large businesses. The conference is also ideal for anyone who is interested in business on the Internet.

RIMC 2012 is to be held at the Hilton Nordica in Reykjavik, Iceland on 9th March.

For further information regarding RIMC 2012 and to be tickets, visit http://www.rimc.is/en.

Anchor Tags: RIMC 2012, Reykjavik Internet Marketing Conference, 2012 Internet Marketing Conference, Social Media Conference, Social Media Marketing, 2012 Internet Marketing Event

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RIMC Expects Vast Number of International Guests for 2012 Event

Carl White Keynote Speaker at Internet Marketing Party™ February 16 in Austin, TX.

The Internet Marketing Party™ is scheduled for Thursday, February 16th at The Tap Room in Austin, TX. The keynote speaker for the event is Carl White of themarketinganimals.com, and is well known as the ultimate leverage guy. Hundreds of some of the most famous and successful marketers will be in attendance. The party is open to anyone wishing to attend.

Austin, TX. (PRWEB) February 14, 2012

Carl White of themarketinganimals.com, well known as the ultimate leverage guy is the keynote speaker for the Internet Marketing Party™ in Austin, TX. Carl has become notorious for the fact that he takes email databases as small as 8,000 subscribers and is able to leverage them to the tune of $100,000 a month, and he's going to unveil how he does it to everyone in attendance (for the first time ever). The event is being held at The Tap Room on February 16, 2012 from 6:30 pm to 11:00 pm. After event parties will follow at various locations. Highly successful and well-known internet marketers from around the world will be in attendance. The first Internet Marketing Party™ in San Diego back in May 2011 was keynoted by the highest-paid marketing consultant in the world, Frank Kern, and over 400 internet marketers were in attendance from as far away as Australia and England.

David Gonzalez, Internet Marketing Party™ founder and event promoter has this to say, “Carl is sharing with the party goers in a ‘no pitch’ keynote presentation how to make money online using other people’s email list, other people’s products, and other people doing all the work.” David went on to say, “I expect the ‘who’s who’ of the internet marketing world to be in attendance. People will be meeting their mentors for the first time. And the networking opportunities are unlimited.”

The Internet Marketing Party™ is a place for Online Marketers, Entrepreneurs, and the Professionals who support them to meet regularly in an atmosphere of relaxed, cooperative sharing. The Internet Marketing Party™ was born because of a simple observation: At Internet Marketing industry seminars, conferences and workshops, the real business… and the relationships that lead to business deals were not happening in the seminar/conference room… the REAL deals are often initially made at the bar, over a few drinks.

The event pre registration fee is $19 or $29 the day of the event. Pre registration is required. Registration can be done by clicking this link REGISTER NOW.

David Gonzalez, founder of The Internet Marketing Party™ is available for comments and interviews.

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J.Michael Palka
Internet Marketing Party
619-977-5022
Email Information

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Carl White Keynote Speaker at Internet Marketing Party™ February 16 in Austin, TX.

Censorship fears as Iran's internet disrupted

Millions of Iranians have suffered serious disruptions to email and social networking services, raising concerns authorities are stepping up censorship of opposition supporters ahead of parliamentary elections next month.

Iranians have grappled with increased obstacles to using the internet since opposition supporters used social networking sites to organise widespread protests after the disputed 2009 re-election of President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad.

The government denied any fraud in the vote, which ignited street protests that were crushed violently by security services after eight months.

The country is preparing to hold parliamentary elections on March 2, the first time Iranians will go to the polls since President Ahmadinejad's disputed re-election.

The new internet blockade affected the most common form of secure connections from Friday, according to outside experts and Iranian bloggers.

Traffic was said to have returned to normal on Monday.

"I haven't been able to open pages for days but now it's working again, although slowly," said Hamid Reza, a 20-year-old student in Tehran who was reluctant to give his surname.

The cut-off appeared to target all encrypted international websites outside Iran that depend on the Secure Sockets Layer protocol, which display addresses beginning with https, according to Earl Zmijewski of Renesys, a US company that tracks internet traffic worldwide.

Google, which uses SSL for its Gmail service, reported that traffic from Iran to its email system fell precipitously.

Iran's Ministry of Communications and Technology denied knowledge of the disruption.

"The government is testing different tools," said Hamed Behravan, who reports on Iranian technology issues for the US Government-funded Voice of America.

"They might have wanted to see the public reaction."

National internet system

Many Iranians are concerned the government may be preparing to unveil its much documented national internet system, effectively giving the authorities total control over what content Iranian users will be able to access.

The authorities say it is designed to speed up the system and filter out sites that are regarded as "unclean".

"The internet is an uninvited guest which has entered our country," said Mohammad Reza Aghamiri, a member of the Iranian government's Internet filtering committee.

"Because of [the internet's] numerous problems, severe supervision is required."

He told the daily Arman that internet search engines like Google were a threat to the country.

"We have never considered Google as appropriate to serve Iranian users, because Google is at the service of the CIA," he said. "It has adopted a vivid hostile stance against us."

Iranian authorities have vowed to quell any public protest against the protracted house arrest last year of opposition Green movement leaders, Mirhossein Mousavi and Mehdi Karoubi.

"It could just be a coincidence but my guess is that the system was looking to block communication between opposition supporters," said an Iranian analyst who did not want to be named.

The disruption has riled some Iranian members of parliament and they have vowed to look for those responsible.

An MP, Ahmad Tavakoli, told the semi-official Mehr News Agency that the issue was creating widespread discontent that could "cost the establishment dearly".

"This filtering leads people to break the law, and using proxies makes the blocking of sites and signals ineffective, because using proxies becomes widespread," he said.

Authoritarian Arab governments under popular pressure have sought to shut down Internet service to make it harder for opponents to mobilise protests but with little success.

(Additional reporting by Joseph Menn in San Francisco; Editing by Mark Heinrich)

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Censorship fears as Iran's internet disrupted

Bishops plan aggressive expansion of birth-control battle

(Reuters) - Catholic bishops, energized by a battle over contraception funding, are planning an aggressive campaign to rally Americans against a long list of government measures which they say intrude on religious liberty.

The U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops plans to work with other religious groups, including evangelical Christians, on an election-year public relations campaign that may include TV and radio ads, social media marketing and a push for pastors and priests to raise the subject from the pulpit.

"We want to make it something that will get peoples' attention," said Bishop William Lori of Bridgeport, Conn.

The bishops spent the past few weeks pressing President Barack Obama to exempt religious employers from a federal mandate that all health insurance plans offer free birth control.

Obama agreed to modify the mandate a bit, so that religious employers wouldn't have to pay for contraceptive coverage directly. That satisfied some Catholic groups, but the bishops were not mollified. They want the mandate repealed altogether.

And now, they are aiming higher still, lobbying Congress to enact a law that would let any employer opt out of covering any medical treatment he disagreed with as a matter of his personal faith.

So, for instance, a pizzeria owner who objected to childhood vaccinations on religious grounds would be able to request an insurance plan that did not cover them, in effect overriding a federal requirement that vaccinations be provided free with any health-insurance plan.

Leaving coverage decisions up to each employers' conscience might create chaos in the marketplace, "but chaos is sometimes the price you pay for freedom," said Richard Land, the president of the Southern Baptist Convention's Ethics & Religious Liberty Commission, who is backing the bishops whole-heartedly.

Democrats, who control the Senate, are likely to block any bill with such broad opt-out provisions.

But supporters, including prominent Republicans, say they will keep pushing for the change, which fits into a wider theme of defending individual freedoms against government intrusion which is expected to play prominently in the November election.

MESSAGE FROM THE PULPIT

Along with the Southern Baptist Convention, the National Association of Evangelicals stands ready to contribute money and manpower to the bishops' campaign, said Galen Carey, an association vice president.

The group is also considering the unprecedented step of asking pastors of every evangelical denomination across the country to read their congregations an open letter protesting the contraception mandate as an assault on religious liberty.

Liberal groups are already launching counter-attacks.

This week, NARAL Pro-Choice America, which works to keep abortion legal and expand contraceptive access, spent $250,000 to air radio ads in four swing states that will be crucial to the presidential election -- Colorado, Florida, Virginia and Wisconsin.

The ads urge support for Obama and his effort to ensure that "women of all faiths, no matter where they work," can get free birth control with their health insurance.

More than 30 organizations supporting Obama teamed up to create the Coalition to Protect Women's Health Care, which has started an online petition and plans further action.

The coalition includes two unions that represent millions of workers and have well-honed networks for getting out political messages, the Service Employees International Union and the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees.

Obama's supporters say the president went far enough to accommodate religious institutions when he announced last week that they wouldn't have to pay for free birth control as part of their insurance plans; he said instead their insurers would be required to pick up the costs.

The bishops denounced this as a gimmick that doesn't solve anything, especially for the many religious hospitals and schools that self-insure their employees.

"Reasonable people should be able to work through the details of this and find common ground," said John Gehring, Catholic outreach coordinator for the liberal group Faith in Public Life. "But election-year politics doesn't make for cool heads."

BATTLE FOR RELIGIOUS FREEDOM

The Conference of Catholic Bishops began preparing months ago for a battle royale over religious freedom. Last fall, the conference bulked up its staff, hiring a lawyer who had devoted his career to religious liberty cases and a lobbyist to press the cause in Washington. The group also created a special committee on religious liberty, chaired by Bishop Lori.

In a September letter announcing the committee, Archbishop Timothy Dolan declared that religious freedom "is now increasingly and in unprecedented ways under assault in America." He and other officials offer many examples of that perceived assault.

On the federal level, the Obama administration has cancelled or threatened to cancel contracts awarded to Catholic charities for work to prevent HIV and to help victims of sex trafficking. The administration says the charities have to provide services such as condoms, emergency contraception and abortion referrals to maintain the contracts; the charities protest that such conditions violate their religious faith.

Several states, meanwhile, have required adoption agencies that receive public funds to treat same-sex couples on par with any other prospective foster or adoptive parent. Catholic Charities object, saying the church doesn't sanction gay and lesbian relationships. Rather than comply with the laws, bishops in Illinois, Massachusetts and Washington D.C. have shut down Catholic adoption agencies.

The bishops portray this as an out-and-out war on free exercise of religion.

But secular and liberal groups say no one's assailing the freedom to worship, to proselytize -- or even to perform social services, such as placing needy children in loving homes, according to religious precepts.

It is only when a religious institution accepts taxpayer money to do such work that religious freedom must take a back seat to secular laws, said Marci Hamilton, a constitutional scholar at Cardozo School of Law.

Courts nationwide have repeatedly ruled that religious groups must follow the same rules as everyone else when holding a government contract, Hamilton said. Any institution that can't in good faith follow those rules shouldn't apply for public funding, she said.

GUARDING CONTRACEPTION

With regard to contraceptive care, courts in New York and California have upheld state laws -- similar to the federal mandate -- that insurance plans, including those sponsored by religious employers, must cover birth control if they cover other prescription drugs.

It is unclear whether such nuances will filter into the public debate over religious freedom and contraceptive coverage.

Both sides say they believe public opinion is firmly in their corner -- and they're determined to keep it that way with a steady drumbeat of snappy soundbites.

More than 100 university professors and religious leaders from different faiths released a letter of protest against the administration Tuesday that was headlined with a single word: "Unacceptable." The letter called the Obama administration "morally obtuse" and blasted the contraceptive coverage mandate as "a grave violation of religious freedom."

On the other side, the American Civil Liberties Union held a press conference to accuse the bishops of playing politics in the name of faith. The bishops are promoting "a distorted view of religious liberty -- one that has no basis in law or the Constitution," said Daniel Mach, director of the ACLU Program on Freedom of Religion and Belief.

(Reporting By Stephanie Simon in Denver,; additional reporting by Thomas Ferraro; Editing by David Storey and Marilyn Thompson)

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Bishops plan aggressive expansion of birth-control battle

Google+ Tutorial (Teaching My Dad) – Video

12-02-2012 22:51 My dad: plus.google.com Me: profiles.google.com

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Google+ Tutorial (Teaching My Dad) - Video