Saturday, March 3, 2012

Arizona sheriff Arpaio unveils findings of Obama birth certificate probe



PHOENIX – Maricopa County Sheriff Joe Arpaio has unveiled preliminary results of an investigation, conducted by members of his volunteer cold-case posse, into the authenticity of President Obama's birth certificate.

At a news conference, Arpaio said the probe revealed that there was probable cause to believe Obama's long-form birth certificate released by the White House in April is a computer-generated forgery. He also said the selective service card completed by Obama in 1980 in Hawaii also was most likely a forgery.

Obama's campaign spokesman Ben LaBolt offered a light-hearted dismissal of Arpaio's probe -- he tweeted what he referred to as a "live link" to the sheriff's news conference, but instead provided a link to a snippet of the old conspiracy-theory based TV series, "The X-Files."

UN to propose planetary regulations of water, food



By Kelley Vlahos / FoxNews.com

An environmental report issued by an agency of the United Nations last month has some critics sounding the alarm, saying it is a clarion call for "global governance" over how the Earth is managed.

The report, “21 Issues for the 21st Century,” from the United Nations Environment Program (UNEP) Foresight Process, is the culmination of a two-year deliberative process involving 22 core scientists. It is expected to receive considerable attention in the run-up to the Rio+20 United Nations Conference on Sustainable Development, which will be held in Rio, Brazil, in June.

The scientists who wrote the report say it focuses on identifying emerging issues in the global environment, and that it is not about mandating solutions.

But its critics see an agenda lurking in its 60 pages, which call for a complete overhaul of how the world's food and water are created and distributed -- something the report says is “urgently needed” for the human race to keep feeding and hydrating itself safely.

“This is more utopianism, pie-in-the-sky pleading for ‘global governance,’ including what they acknowledge as ‘novel governance arrangements,’ including, ‘alliances between environmentalist and other civil society groups,’” charged Chris Horner, author of Red Hot Lies: How Global Warming Alarmists Use Threats, Fraud and Deception to Keep You Misinformed, and a senior fellow for energy and environment at the free-market Competitive Enterprise Institute (CEI) in Washington, D.C.

The Foresight Report suggests actions to save humanity from starvation, the overheating planet and the collapse of the world’s oceans -- options that include new “constitutional frameworks,” “international protocols” and a “shared vision” for land and water management that essentially rewire existing treaties and governments.

But the group insists it’s not a call for global governance.

“We are not talking about a world government,” said Dr. Oren Young, professor of institutional and international governance and environmental institutions at the University of California at Santa Barbara, and one of the scientists who issued the report.

He said the panel’s conversations included questions like, “How do we resolve these problems without creating this monster entity?”

Young said the panel wasn’t tasked with finding all the answers.

“We realize that government can be part of the problem,” he told FoxNews.com. “But we can’t close our eyes and say, ‘oh well, everything will work out,’ without us even looking at it.”

Even environmentalists don’t believe that planet-wide accords are particularly popular.

“I don’t think there is a global appetite right now for new institutions … or a world environmental organization like we have, say, with the World Trade Organization,” said Janet Redman, co-director of the Sustainable Energy and Economy Network at the progressive Institute for Policy Studies in Washington, D.C.

“There are a lot of places -- especially the oceans and food security -- where everyone is saying that doing this piecemeal is not going to address the bigger sense of these environmental issues.”

But on the whole, she said, global government probably won’t work.

“I think everyone agrees this is not the right time,” Redman told FoxNews.com.

The State Dept. has already weighed in on many of the issues presented by the Foresight Panel in its own statement, titled “Sustainable Development for the Next Twenty Years United States Views on RIO+20.”

Submitted to the U.N by the Bureau of Oceans and International Environmental and Scientific Affairs (OIES) in November, this policy vision makes it clear the State Dept. will back global government solutions -- whether they be in addressing the overfishing of the oceans, making national laws and regulations more transparent, addressing land and ocean-based pollution, or water management.

The U.S. also is wholly supportive of strengthening the UNEP as “a body through which governments can cooperate to recommend environmental policies, promote best practices, and build national capacity for governance, monitoring and assessment,” according to the vision statement.

Yet UNEP is unsuited for that, by the agency’s own admission.

An internal U.N study obtained by Fox News last June found that the $450 million organization is an administrative mess, not knowing how its money is spent or how many public and private partners it might be working with at any given time.

Questions about the ability of nations to work with global bodies such as the U.N, and whether they should subscribe to transnational guidelines or mandates, will no doubt be a subject of concern in the run-up to the Rio summit.

Just as global governance solutions are raised in the report, so are local solutions that involve local governments, private industry and promoting individual and community shifts in the way people live and tend to the environment in their daily lives and workplaces.

Google’s new privacy policy takes effect sparking global Web privacy fears




by Jameson Berkow / Financial Post

Famous for its ‘Don’t be evil’ mantra, the company behind the world’s largest search engine is facing widespread concerns over what it might do with all the data it started collecting on Thursday.

Google’s new privacy policy is now in effect for all Google services. The key change is all the information Google used to collect from users of Gmail, Google+, YouTube, Docs or Maps separately will now be kept in a single location in hopes of offering a more personalized experience.

“In short, we’ll treat you as a single user across all our products, which will mean a simpler, more intuitive Google experience,” is how Alma Whitten, Google’s director of privacy, product and engineering, explained it in a January 24 post to the company’s official blog.

So if you posted an update to your Google+ account about getting a new job in a different city, your next Google search might show ads for local apartments and your next visit to YouTube might suggest you check out a new up-and-coming band out of that city.

Innocuous as it may sound, reaction from around the Web has been one of anxious discontent. In the five weeks since the change was announced, many have openly expressed their fears over whether the Web giant is beginning to learn too much about what they search for, who they talk to and what they say.

And they are not alone. Governments have also expressed ire over new policy with some going as far as saying it might be illegal.

The data protection watchdog in France, CNIL, said Wednesday the policy was a breach of European policy laws and promised a Europe-wide investigation after Google refused several requests to delay its implementation.

“The CNIL and EU data authorities are deeply concerned about the combination of personal data across services: they have strong doubts about the lawfulness and fairness of such processing, and its compliance with European data protection legislation,” the French regulator wrote in a letter dated February 27.

Japan’s Ministry of Trade and Industry also expressed concerns on Wednesday, releasing a statement saying the new policy must be in line with Japanese laws and that Google must offer “additional explanations or measures to address actual user concerns.”

To be fair, Google’s actions are no different than strategies employed by other leading Internet firms such as Facebook, LinkedIn or Zynga: All of which attempt to learn as much as they possibly can about their users so they can generate more revenues by offering detailed metrics to their advertisers. Many argue this is simply the price users must pay in exchange for otherwise free access to such services.

That does not mean users must simply accept Google’s new privacy policy and continue with their online activities with the implicit knowledge that someone in Mountain View, California is watching them. There are plenty of ways to wade past the watchers.

Clear your history

Google makes it easy for users to erase their previous search terms. There is even a Website — google.com/history — where users can quickly select that option.

While it won’t immediately stop Google from seeing where you’ve been, the Electronic Frontier Foundation notes disabling the ‘record search history’ option will let you browse “partially anonymized after 18 months.”

Take your data and run

If anything “partial” is not enough to make you feel safe, Google has also set up the Data Liberation Front to provide step-by-step instructions for users to export all their data from every Google service quickly and easily.

Go somewhere else to search

Although Google still controls the lion’s share of the search market, there are alternatives out there such as the Bing search engine from Microsoft Corp. — a company which has gone out of its way (see the ad embedded below) to paint itself as less invasive than its largest rival.



Just log off

The only way Google can record information about you is if you are logged into your Google account. So if you don’t want the watchers to see you search for “ear hair removal tips,” all you need to do is hit “logoff” and you are once again once among millions.

In truth, whether or not Google is going against its own “Don’t be evil” mantra by potentially breaking privacy laws along with the trust of its users, or just going with the flow of Web 2.0, is largely irrelevant. The choice still lies with you.

Crude hits 10-month high after Saudi pipelines blast




Oil prices have soared to their highest level in the past ten months following reports of an explosion of pipelines in Saudi Arabia’s oil-rich Eastern Province.

Brent North Sea crude is trading at nearly $ 127 per barrel while West Texas Intermediate is trading above $ 109 a barrel.

Meanwhile, light, sweet crude for April delivery soared to as high as $110.55 a barrel after it settled for Thursday at $108.84 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange, up $1.77 from Wednesday's closing level. Brent crude on the ICE Futures Europe exchange also rose to $128.40 a barrel.

On Thursday evening, an explosion in Saudi Arabian city of Awamiyah in the east of the kingdom destroyed the pipelines feeding one of the most important oil hubs in the world.

The major pipeline starts in Abqaiq and ends at Ras Tanrua oil terminal carrying nearly six million barrels of oil every day.

Last week, oil prices rose to a nine-month high due to Iran's cutting of crude exports to certain European Union states in response to the EU oil sanctions imposed against Iran.

New ‘thinking cap’ technologies that control weaponry ‘step closer’




New technologies that tap into the brain and allow weapons to one day be fired through mind control could soon become a reality, British scientists claim. Researchers believe that new “thinking caps”, could help provide super-human strength, highly enhanced concentration or thought-controlled weaponry, The Telegraph reports.

A British ethics group is investigating the ethical dilemmas posed by inventions that interfere with the brain’s inner workings.

The Nuffield Council on Bioethics (NCB) has launched a consultation on the risks posed by such new technologies, the global market for which it says is worth $8bn (£5bn) and “growing fast”.

With the prospect of future conflicts between armies controlling weapons with their minds, the Council, an independent body, is wanting to identify what issues that come with blurring the lines between humans and machines.

Applications range from medicine to warfare and even human enhancement while some techniques such as deep brain stimulation (DBS) are already used by thousands of patients. The consultation will look at whether having decisions affected by a computer chip in the brain could lead to a sense of diminished responsibility amongst users.

“Intervening in the brain has always raised both hopes and fears in equal measure,” said Prof Thomas Baldwin, from York University, who is leading the study.

“Hopes of curing terrible diseases, and fears about the consequences of trying to enhance human capability beyond what is normally possible. “These challenge us to think carefully about fundamental questions to do with the brain: What makes us human? What makes us an individual? And how and why do we think and behave in the way we do?”

He added, “It is not just science fiction. I don’t think it is unrealistic if you have the unlimited funds of the Pentagon to project ourselves towards some kind of Star Wars future.

“Setting pharmaceuticals aside, the value of the market for the devices and technologies we are dealing with is something in the region of $8 billion, and growing fast.”

The NCB, which investigates ethical issues raised by new developments in biology and medicine, wants to focus on three main areas of neurotechnologies that change the brain.

These include brain-computer interfaces (BCIs), neurostimulation techniques such as DBS or transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS), and neural stem cell therapy.

These technologies are already at various stages of development for use in the treatment of medical conditions including Parkinson’s disease, depression and stroke.

Experts believe they could bring significant benefits, especially for patients with severe brain disease or damage. daily times monitor