Wednesday, February 13, 2013

US plan aimed at keeping China out of US networks

(AP) ? The White House cybersecurity executive order, to be unveiled Wednesday by President Barack Obama's top security officials, will be the most comprehensive plan yet for confronting electronic attacks on America's computer networks, or at least a good-faith effort amid an alarming tide in industrial espionage in the past year that experts blame mostly on China.

The strategy is expected to urge businesses to enforce tougher standards to protect online commerce and direct U.S. intelligence agencies to share even classified threat data with companies considered vital to the U.S. economy, such as transportation and banking.

While symbolic, the plan leaves practical questions unanswered: Should a business be required to tell the government if it's been hacked and U.S. interests are at stake? Can you sue your bank or water treatment facility if those companies don't take reasonable steps to protect you? And if a private company's systems are breached, should the government swoop in to stop the attacks ? and pick up the tab?

The process has exposed how difficult and complex the issue is, turning the long-awaited executive order into a bureaucratic scramble aimed at showing countries like China and Iran that the U.S. takes seriously the protection of consumer secrets. It's been an intensive effort by White House staff and industry lobbyists wary of government intervention but fearful about their bottom line.

"I think in general it means (the U.S.) will advance the case of cybersecurity, and that's important," said Paul Smocer, the head of the technology policy division at The Financial Services Roundtable, a powerful lobbying group that represents the nation's biggest banks. "How much teeth versus how much gum there is, we'll see."

The cyberthreat to the U.S. has been heavily debated since the 1990s, when much of American commerce shifted online and critical systems began to rely increasingly on networked computers. Security experts began to warn of looming disaster, including threats that terrorists could cut off a city's water supply or shut down electricity. But what's emerged in recent years, according to cyber experts, is the constant pilfering of America's intellectual property by U.S. competitors.

"We have, as the U.S. government, set up lawn chairs, told the burglars where the silver is in the bottom drawer, and opened up the case of beer and watched them do it," Rep. Mike Rogers, the Republican chairman of the House intelligence committee, told CBS' "Face the Nation" this week.

The U.S. has been preparing a new intelligence estimate that details cyber espionage as a growing economic problem. One official told the Associated Press last week that the estimate was expected to cite more directly a role by the Chinese government and favor aggressive action against the Chinese government. The official was not authorized to discuss the classified report and spoke only on condition of anonymity.

Richard Clarke, a former White House cybersecurity adviser during the Clinton administration, said that executive orders and intelligence estimates aside, the U.S. in 15 years of debate on the subject still hasn't answered the very practical questions of who exactly is in charge of stopping a cyberattack on commercial networks and at what point the government should deploy its own resources.

___

Associated Press writer Lolita C. Baldor contributed to this report.

___

Follow Anne Flaherty on Twitter at https://twitter.com/AnneKFlaherty

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2013-02-12-Cybersecurity/id-b8ff4e468b1b4021b6ebc14ff6659ee6

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Medicaid expansion in Maine, Arizona provide case studies for Florida

The Senate?s select committee on the Affordable Care Act focused on Medicaid expansion today, listening to advocates on both sides of the debate as well as some touching public testimony.

Early in the meeting, legislators heard from Florida hospital executives who were adamant the state should accept the federal money and expand Medicaid. But the meeting closed with a think tank leader who said two other states' experiences expanding Medicaid years prior outline hidden costs and unexpected issues that make it a bad move for Florida.

Arizona and Maine decided to reduce their uninsured populations well before the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act became law. Both, according to report from the conservative Foundation for Government Accountability, saw Medicaid spending spiral out of control without any substantial improvements in healthcare or reductions in uninsured people showing up at hospital emergency rooms. The foundation, based in Naples, is run by former Maine legislator Tarren Bragdon.

Mary Mayhew, commissioner of the Maine Department of Health and Human Services, also appeared via Skype, adding onto Bragdon's report with numbers of her own that, she said, showed how disastrous Maine's attempt to expand healthcare coverage had been. Mayhew is an appointee of Republican Gov. Paul LePage, who has already said the state will not accept the federal dollars to further expand Medicaid under the Affordable Care Act.

But is Maine a good litmus test for Florida?

Some health care advocates came away from the meeting arguing ?no.? Florida CHAIN, a health advocacy nonprofit group, tweeted that the arguments against Medicaid expansion were ?selective, skewed, and irrelevant.?

Linda Quick, president of the South Florida Hospital and Healthcare Association, listened to the meeting remotely and later expressed concern that the two states were ?apples and oranges.?

?My hospitals see more Medicaid patients in a day than Maine sees in a year,? said Quick, whose association represents about 40 hospitals in a four-county area. She said Miami?s Jackson Memorial Hospital may actually have more daily Medicaid business than Maine has in several weeks' time.

For the record, Maine has about 358,000 Medicaid patients compared to Florida?s 3.4 million, according to the Kaiser Family Foundation. There are 1.3 million people in all of Maine.

Sen. Joe Negron, the Stuart Republican who chairs the Senate PPACA committee, said there was value in hearing from Maine?s experts despite the difference in size. All the information the committee is collecting will help members reach a final decision, he said.

?Every piece of data is helpful, and there?s strengths and weaknesses to any comparison that you make,? he said. ?So I think you can learn from every situation. And I think Arizona is a state that is probably the makeup of the state, demographically, is a lot closer to Florida. And they have some of the same experiences? as Maine.

We reminded him that Arizona Gov. Jan Brewer announced last week that she wants her state to further expand Medicaid under the Affordable Care Act.

Source: http://miamiherald.typepad.com/nakedpolitics/2013/02/medicaid-expansion-in-maine-arizona-provide-case-studies-for-florida.html

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Tuesday, February 12, 2013

Designers take some risks in menswear at New York Fashion Week

NEW YORK (Reuters) - Designers livened up fall and winter 2013 menswear at New York Fashion Week with a few experimental touches in the otherwise staid world of men's clothing.

A bold show came from Duckie Brown, one of the hundreds of designers showing at the official Mercedes Benz Fashion Week at Manhattan's Lincoln Center and venues elsewhere in the city.

Fashion Week in New York, which ends on Thursday, is followed by similar events in London, Paris and Milan.

Reversing the conventions of men's' layering, the Duckie Brown line by New York-based designers Steven Cox and Daniel Silver showed short jackets worn over longer coats or over-sized knee-length sweatshirts, giving the illusion the models were wearing skirts.

Coupled with dark wool trousers with deep inverted ankle cuffs in burgundy or turquoise, the effect evoked the traditional robe-like costume of a Himalayan kingdom.

In another challenge to convention, Duckie Brown showed backward coats -- at the front, a blank facade of wool and at the back, a fastening down to the ankles.

The designers also showed a bright indigo suit cut from thick wool, so bulky and seemingly inflexible it brought to mind a figure made of plastic Lego toy bricks.

Wool in its stoutest forms made its mark at the menswear show by Joseph Abboud, whose creative director Bernada Rojo said he was inspired by "the energy of the determined daredevils and enterprising leaders who put a man on the moon."

Abboud offered a metallic, chainmail-like sweater and bulky wool trousers in rich green, with ribbed patches at the knees, utility pockets and thick elastic ankle cuffs looking like refined versions of what an astronaut might wear as an insulating layer underneath a spacesuit.

At DKNY's menswear, there were slim-fitting, single-breasted two-button suits in gray, black and navy that might make a decent impression on Wall Street.

"The palette is all New York," said notes accompanying the show.

DKNY's casual wear items were safe variations on a familiar slouchy, urban theme -- sweaters, anoraks and bomber jackets in muted greens, blues and grays, accessorized with black beanie caps and no-nonsense black shoes.

Timo Weiland, a label by New York-based designers Weiland and Alan Eckstein, took a similar mood and color scheme in a cuter, more idiosyncratic direction.

Blazers were tweedy, in speckled wool. One outfit, surprisingly successful, resembled a jacket thrown over a pair of pajamas in a natty brown circle-patterned print. A blue sweater bore a folksy image of a dachshund -- Eckstein owns one -- across the chest.

Things were a little more rugged in the Nautica men's collection, where accompanying notes for the show said the season's clothes were inspired by the nautical expeditions of Antarctic explorer Sir Ernest Shackleton.

The collection added flourishes to Nautica's trademark naval jackets and fisherman cable-knit sweaters. One parka featured glowing colored lights woven into the edge of the hood.

Puffer jackets were cut in unusually exaggerated silhouettes, bulky at the shoulders, tightly scooped in at the waist and flaring back out at the thigh.

Nylon and wool utility-style pants fiercely hugged the models' thighs and calves. Turtlenecks, as at Joseph Abboud, were about as high as was practicable.

(Editing by Ellen Wulfhorst and David Gregorio)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/designers-risks-menswear-york-fashion-week-232332888.html

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Reservations

Once Upon A Fairytale

The island once called Disney has collapsed, and two sides are at odds; one queen and one king. The bad, and the good. Who will you choose?

Owner:

Game Masters:

This topic is an Out Of Character part of the roleplay, ?Once Upon A Fairytale?. Anything posted here will also show up there.

Topic Tags:

Forum for completely Out of Character (OOC) discussion, based around whatever is happening In Character (IC). Discuss plans, storylines, and events; Recruit for your roleplaying game, or find a GM for your playergroup.
    I'm going to take a wild guess, and imply that you've read the rules! Now, let me explain the more confusing part: the whole 'days' thing going on. See, I've done this sort of reserving system before, and it worked out fine... except it took way too long waiting for everyone's CS. And I felt bad because it still had a lot of 'first come, first serve' stuff going on. For example, if I submitted a CS and no one reserved it for a few days after I did, then I would get it. But what happens if a way more qualified writer wants that spot, the day after I've given it to myself? Wow, that's weird. But you get the gist, I'm hoping. So here's an example of what will happen:

    I'd like to reserve Peter Pan. So, I submit my CS on time, and wait. On the third day, however, someone else reserves Peter Pan, and that person sends in their CS. Then the three days count begins. The next day would have counted as the fourth day, but because someone else reserved it, the count resets itself, which means the 'fourth' day is the first day. Then, on the second day, someone else sends in a CS! The two days count begins. But the very next day, another person sends in their CS! So the clock once again resets, and there is only one full day to wait. But on that very last day, someone else reserves the spot, and that will be the closing of that role for further reservations. I hope that makes sense, because it does to me!

    I will keep a count up here on which characters are reserved.

User avatar
confidence
Member for 1 years




I would like to reserve Tiger Lily and Tala, please. ^.^

Last edited by Horseygirl on Tue Feb 12, 2013 12:25 am, edited 1 time in total.
User avatar
Horseygirl
Member for 4 years


I would like to reserve Alice; i am working on her right now so u should get her soon

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AuroraDawn
Member for 1 years


I'd like to reserve Rapunzel/Amber Heard, hope to get her up soon.

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Andieland
Member for 0 years


Could I reserve Belle?
I should have her up by tomorrow or wensday

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PsychicBastard
Member for 1 years



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Syria death toll likely approaching 70,000, says U.N. rights chief

UNITED NATIONS (Reuters) - The death toll in Syria is likely approaching 70,000 with civilians paying the price for the U.N. Security Council's lack of action to end the nearly 2-year-old conflict, the U.N. human rights chief said on Tuesday.

Navi Pillay, the U.N. high commissioner for human rights, repeated her call for Syria to be referred by the 15-member council to the International Criminal Court to send a message to both parties in the conflict that there would be consequences for their actions.

Pillay told a council debate on protection of civilians in armed conflict that the death toll in Syria was "probably now approaching 70,000."

On January 2 Pillay said more than 60,000 people had been killed during the revolt against Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, which began with peaceful protests but turned violent after Assad's forces tried to crush the demonstrations.

"The lack of consensus on Syria and the resulting inaction has been disastrous and civilians on all sides have paid the price," she said. "We will be judged against the tragedy that has unfolded before our eyes."

World powers are divided on how to stop the escalating violence in Syria and the Security Council is unlikely to refer the situation in Syria to the International Criminal Court in The Hague, which is not an official U.N. body.

Permanent Security Council members Russia and China have acted as Syria's protector on the council by repeatedly blocking Western efforts to take stronger U.N. action - such as sanctions - against the Syrian government to try to end the war.

Both sides to the Syria conflict have been accused of committing atrocities but the United Nations says the government and its allies have been more culpable.

"Syria is self-destructing," U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon told the Council on Foreign Relations on Monday evening. "After nearly two years, we no longer count days in hours, but in bodies. Another day, another 100, 200, 300 dead."

"Fighting rages. Sectarian hatred is on the rise. The catalogue of war crimes is mounting," he said. "The Security Council must no longer stand on the sidelines, dead-locked, silently witnessing the slaughter."

More than 50 countries asked the U.N. Security Council last month to refer the Syria crisis to the International Criminal Court, which prosecutes genocide and war crimes cases.

Syria is not a party to the Rome Statute, which set up the International Criminal Court, so the only way the court can investigate the situation is if it receives a referral from the Security Council. The council has previously referred conflicts in Libya and Darfur, Sudan to the court.

(Reporting by Michelle Nichols; Editing by Bill Trott)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/syria-death-toll-likely-approaching-70-000-says-175206931.html

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Downloading Firefox on Windows for Mac OS

Sorry, Readability was unable to parse this page for content.

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At Home with Aida - Paper Market

Hello scrappers and welcome to At Home with Aida. First off ?? Happy Chinese New Year and may the Lunar year ahead be filled with much happiness and prosperity for you and your family !

Today let me take you through a simple splatter technique that?s very popular, one you may have seen on layouts in online galleries. It?s really easy to master and all you need is a few minutes of practice and some patience to get the effects you want. For scrappers attempting art journals or collages, this is one more way of adding color to your pages.

Below are the items I?ve used : a small paint brush, a pencil, mists or watered down paints of your choice, cardstock or pattern paper.

To start : load up the brush with the color by dipping the brush fully into the mist or watered down paint. Hold the brush over your paper and gently tap with a pencil. The harder you tap, the the bigger the splatters, gentler taps make tiny splatters. Layer 2 to 3 colors one after the other, beginning with the darkest color to create depth.?It?s essential to understand 1)bigger brushes can hold more liquid and thereby make larger splatters 2)holding the brush higher over the paper results in a wider area of splatter. Experiment and practice on rough paper to see the effects you get with different brush sizes as well as how high you hold the brush above your paper.

I totally LOVE splatters of Heidi Swapp?s Color Shine Gold Lame as it adds a subtle, translucent sparkle when you splatter it over paper. And try splatters over pattern paper, not just cardstock !?Taking this another step : misting water over the splatters creates a dreamy, washed effect.

This is my layout where I wanted light pink splatters with subtle gold hints. I?ve used papers, stickers and brads from My Mind?s Eye Collectable.

Close up details :

This is another layout using Heidi Swapp?s Mint Green Color Shine for splatters. Papers and stickers are from Basic Grey?s Bow Ties.

Splattering is great fun, you can even get the kiddos to do it on their art work.

Thank you for joining me this Monday and enjoy your long weekend with family and friends, keep safe in this wet weather !

*xoxoxo* Aida

Comments are closed.

Source: http://www.papermarket.com.sg/freshnews/2013/02/11/at-home-with-aida-2/

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