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NBC’s Chuck Todd, on Friday’s Today, played defense for the Democrats as he relayed their spin on political commercials, noting that “outside independent groups, mostly Republican, are benefitting from the landmark Supreme Court ruling that allows big corporate donors to spend unlimited money, in some cases anonymously, on political advertising.” Todd even played several clips of the President going after those ads, but never offered a countering soundbite from a Republican. Todd also found time to highlight a Democratic complaint about an ad that dared to use actors instead of real people, as he pointed out a commercial against Democratic Senate candidate and current governor of West Virginia Joe Manchin drew the ire of Dems because it featured actors “hired by a Philadelphia talent agency looking for a quote, ‘hicky blue collar look’.” First up Todd set the table for the President to slam independent groups as “a threat to democracy” but failed to mention that he himself — as reported in a Washington Post story headlined Obama Accepted Untraceable Donations — benefitted from anonymous contributions back in 2008. CHUCK TODD: This year outside independent groups, mostly Republican, are benefitting from the landmark Supreme Court ruling that allows big corporate donors to spend unlimited money, in some cases anonymously, on political advertising. Often using non-controversial sounding names- (Begin ad clip) ANNOUNCER: Americans for Job Security is responsible for the content of this advertising. (End clip) TODD: -something the President made fun of. OBAMA: They’ve got names like Americans for Prosperity or the Committee for Truth in Politics, or Moms for Motherhood. Actually that last one I made up. TODD: But for Democrats getting outspent in Senate and House races across the country it’s a serious concern. OBAMA: This is a threat to our democracy! The American people deserve to know who’s trying to sway their elections! The following excerpt is from the Todd story as it was aired on the October 8 Today show: CHUCK TODD: Earlier the President was in Maryland campaigning for Democratic Governor Martin O’Malley. But Maryland politics was not on the President’s mind. This year outside independent groups, mostly Republican, are benefitting from the landmark Supreme Court ruling that allows big corporate donors to spend unlimited money, in some cases anonymously, on political advertising. Often using non-controversial sounding names- (Begin ad clip) ANNOUNCER: Americans for Job Security is responsible for the content of this advertising. (End clip) TODD: -something the President made fun of. OBAMA: They’ve got names like Americans for Prosperity or the Committee for Truth in Politics, or Moms for Motherhood. Actually that last one I made up. TODD: But for Democrats getting outspent in Senate and House races across the country it’s a serious concern. OBAMA: This is a threat to our democracy! The American people deserve to know who’s trying to sway their elections! [On screen headline: "Race To November, GOP Ad Pulled After Controversial Casting Call"] (Begin ad clip) MAN: Obama is messing things up. (End clip) TODD: And Democrats now also want you to know who’s really appearing in these ads. (Begin ad clip) MAN: And Joe Manchin supported it all. (End clip) TODD: The Republican Senatorial Campaign Committee just pulled this ad, which was running in West Virginia featuring three actors playing West Virginians at a diner attacking Democrat Joe Manchin. (Begin clip) MAN: It’s the only way we’re gonna stop Obama. (End clip) TODD: It turns out the actors weren’t from West Virginia, they were hired by a Philadelphia talent agency looking for a quote: “hicky blue collar look.”…The uproar over the word “hicky” prompted the Republicans to pull the ad. In a statement, a spokesperson said, “No one at the NRSC or associated with the NRSC had anything to do with the language used in this casting call, we do not support it.” Now of course the use of actors in political advertising is not new, it was the actual way that word “hicky” that, of course, made the Republicans have to pull that ad because of how it plays in West Virginia.

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Microsoft licenses dozens of patents from Access and Acacia, including some Palm inventions

Complete details on the deal are still a bit light, but it’s just been revealed today that Microsoft has licensed a total of 74 patents from Acacia Research Corp. and Access Co. Ltd, some of which come from PalmSource , the software company spun off from Palm Inc. in 2003. While Microsoft itself isn’t saying much on the matter beyond the usual formalities, Acacia CEO Paul Ryan says that the patents licensed by Microsoft are “foundational” in the smartphone market and, as The Wall Street Journal reports, they apparently include some of the very same patents that Acacia has sued other companies over, including Apple, RIM, Samsung and Motorola — those specific patents concern things like email synchronization and “providing phone capabilities from personal computer devices.” Guess that’s one potential patent lawsuit you can mark off your list. Microsoft licenses dozens of patents from Access and Acacia, including some Palm inventions originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 08 Oct 2010 13:28:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink

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News publishers looking to the Galaxy Tab and BlackBerry PlayBook for refuge as well

In case you were worried that it was just Apple love that got major news outlets on the iPad so quickly, you should know that the general sense of desperation (or is it their never ending sense of adventure?) pervading the likes of the The New York Times , The Wall Street Journal , and USA Today has them building apps for the Galaxy Tab as well. The news comes courtesy of The Wall Street Journal , and has yet to be announced officially by the parties involved — though we have a hard time doubting any of it. It makes sense, of course: the big cost is producing content for a tablet form factor, not building the reader app, and the Galaxy Tab naturally won’t be the last of its Android kind. The WSJ and The Financial Times are also apparently some possible gets for RIM’s PlayBook, though less is known about those deals. On the Tab, The New York Times is supposed to be pre-loaded with some carrier’s versions of the device, and its app will be free until January of next year when The Times starts charging for its website. News publishers looking to the Galaxy Tab and BlackBerry PlayBook for refuge as well originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 08 Oct 2010 13:06:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink

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It’s an improvement over Jerry Brown’s earlier comment comparing Meg Whitman to Nazi propaganda minister Josef Goebbels: With evident frustration, Brown discussed the pressure he was under to refuse to reduce public safety pensions or … Months earlier, Whitman had agreed to exempt public safety officials from key parts of her pension reform plan. “Do we want to put an ad out? … That I have been warned if I crack down on pensions, I will be – that they’ll go to Whitman, …

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Best Animal Photos of the Week: Rose-colored Hippos, Bug Debute, and More (Slideshow)

Photo: Naskrecki/iLCP The pink-eyed leaf katydid shown here — found in the forest canopy of Papua New Guinea — is just one of the many brand-new additions to the animal kingdom this week: Scientists discovered more than 200 undiscovered species in that region; the Census of Marine Life reports 750,000 species of marine life that remain unknown in the ocean; and one very adorable baby tiger joined her mother at the Frankfurt Zoo. We’ve got this and more in our Best Animal Photos of the Week slideshow.

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NB Exclusive: Chamber of Commerce Blasts Media for Shoddy Coverage of Unsubstantiated ThinkProgress Smear

On Wednesday, the far-left blog ThinkProgress unveiled an “investigation” that alleged, without any conclusive evidence , that the Chamber of Commerce was spending funds acquired from foreign-owned companies on political activities in the United States, a crime under U.S. law. ThinkProgress demonstrated that such funds entered the Chamber’s general fund, and that money from the general fund was used to pay for political activities. But it readily admitted that it could not show the same funds attained abroad were used for those activities. Instead, it demanded the Chamber prove the licit nature of its political funds. Some in the media ran with the story, despite that lack of evidence. So was the Chamber consulted or asked for comment by media outlets that reported on the ThinkProgress post? In an interview with NewsBusters, Chamber COO David Chavern says they were not. And while the New York Times’s initial coverage was an editorial, MSNBC discussed the issue on two separate programs. Neither, Chavern claims, made an attempt at balanced coverage. I asked Chavern during a phone conversation on Thursday how he explained this apparent breach of the most basic standards of journalism. I think it comes back to the old axiom – which has now become a universal law in the media – that you don’t let the truth get in the way of a good story. There is such a demand for eyeballs, that that demand to get people to look at you or read you trumps anything like journalistic integrity or fact-finding. It is important for ThinkProgress to get readers and it is important for them to promote their bloggers. That’s more important to them than the facts of how we fund the Chamber. And similarly, there are traditional news organizations that get pulled into the same trap. If you get in to the world of facts or if you get into the world of two sides to the story, that muddies up the narrative, that makes it less exciting and less interesting to eyeballs. Further, you have the inherent drama of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, which is a major business organization, as somebody to wonderfully paint as a bad guy, whereas unions, who are often much bigger and much better funded, seem to be given a great big pass by the media generally. So that is clearly a double standard. So is the media’s approach to the story indicative of a larger left-wing slant among the news media? I think there’s a couple different things going on. There are some folks who have an axe to grind, and a political slant, and they’re just looking for any narrative that supports that slant. I think there are other folks that just like drama, and certainly business as the bad guy is an easier picture to paint than unions as the bad guy. I do think most broadly there is a common view in the media that business is inherently suspect and that labor unions, because they represent, supposedly, numerous workers out there, have more credibility, even thought the facts state that unions are some of the largest, most intensely self-interested organizations in the world. The burden of proof seems to have fallen on the Chamber to prove that ThinkProgress’s accusations are false. Some individuals in the media have run with these accusations, essentially demanding that the Chamber prove a negative. Is that a fair position for the mainstream media to take? Absolutely not, clearly. Again, ThinkProgress is not a news organization, certainly has no inherent credibility itself, makes an outrageous accusation and then demands that we disprove the accusation in the full hope that we either somehow become complicit or that we then do open up all information to them from which they would then try to develop new lines of attack I have no need to prove myself to ThinkProgress. I would be really interested for somebody to look into who funds ThinkProgress. They don’t seem to be too evocative about that. I know that their parent organization, Center for American Progress, was initially funded by the Sandlers, who were the founders of the subprime giant Golden West Financial. They have also received substantial funding support from George Soros. That seems to all be ok, but the onus is on us to talk about where our money comes form. I feel no obligation to prove myself to ThinkProgress or anybody else. I am quite confident in both our representation of our members’ interests, and also our compliance with the law.

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SanDisk’s 32GB microSDHC card falls below $100, is actually in stock

Holding out on upgrading that paltry 2GB microSD card that shipped in your Android device of choice? Hold no longer. Amazon is now stocking SanDisk’s oh-so-capacious 32GB microSDHC card for just $89.73, which is notably lower than what it retailed for at launch. It’s also readily available elsewhere on the web for around the same amount, with the “readily available” part equally as impressive as the “for really cheap” part. Of course, it’s slower than molasses crawling uphill on a winter day (read: Class 2), but it’s not like you’ll be throwing this in your D3S and firing off 11 shots per second. Right ? SanDisk’s 32GB microSDHC card falls below $100, is actually in stock originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 08 Oct 2010 12:46:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink

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What Samsung Is Doing to Green Our Gadget Lust

“Greenovation” is a new buzz word for Samsung, which held a luncheon yesterday in San Francisco to show of what the company is doing to lighten its environmental footprint as much as possible. Like every electronics manufacturer, Samsung is diligently focused on showing off its energy efficiency and recycling measures. But unlike many manufacturers, the company seems to be making some extraordinary strides at doing more than just talking about best practices. Check out how Samsung is trying to lead the way in trimming our global energy consumption (even as our demand seems to grow) and how it is cleaning up after itself i… Read the full story on TreeHugger

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Newsweek Whacks O’Donnell: ‘Why Masturbation Helps Procreation’

Liberal media people have been amusing themselves endlessly with clips of Republican Senate candidate Christine O’Donnell’s video clip from 1996 saying the Bible says masturbation is wrong. Newsweek’s Sharon Begley is taking this to a whole new realm with a silly article with a link titled “Why Masturbation Helps Procreation.” This is the same “scientific” writer who diagnosed from afar that George W. Bush had a dangerous alcoholic’s “pathological certainty” in sticking to the war in Iraq; and the same writer who saw psychological problems in ObamaCare opponents . Begley began by responding to fellow liberals who might insist you can’t hold this poor woman to an intellectual standard: Since Christine “I’m Not a Witch” O’Donnell is campaigning for the U.S. Senate and not the directorship of the Kinsey Institute, maybe we should give her a pass when it comes to her views on sex and, specifically, masturbation. But that would be a mistake: the stakes are simply too high, going all the way up the very survival of our species…. Evidence from elephants to rodents to humans shows that masturbating is—counterintuitively—an excellent way to make healthy babies, and lots of them. No one who believes in the “family” part of family values can let her claims stand. Newsweek’s list of arguments against O’Donnell is simply too bizarre to believe: 1. Masturbation might remove old, worn-out, broken sperm from the reproductive tract. That would increase the fraction of healthy, speedy sperm, improving a male’s chance of becoming a father. “In humans, masturbation increases sperm quality (by promoting younger sperm) without affecting sperm numbers in the female reproductive tract,” notes biologist Jane Waterman of the University of Central Florida… 2. Masturbation might be a form of advertising. According to this idea, males that engage in autoeroticism signal to possible mates as well as competitors how much they have to offer… 3. Masturbation might be a sort of victory lap. Some animals masturbate after they mate. Since other members of a group know this, then masturbation signifies that the male engaging in this behavior was the chosen partner of other females. Females who are still shopping for a mate might be inspired by that information to copy their choice, as in, “if he was good enough for her …” Result: more mating, more babies. 4. Masturbation can serve a hygiene function. According to this idea, males engage in autoeroticism because it cleans the reproductive tract and reduces the chance of acquiring a sexually transmitted disease from a female that he mated with and who had other recent partners. Result: a lower incidence of STDs, better sexual hygiene, more mating, more babies. Begley concluded with tongue in cheek: “All in all, and across species great and small, autoeroticism (at least among males) is a cornerstone of procreation and thus the formation of families. Were O’Donnell’s unscientific views of the practice to spread, it would be a worrisome threat to family values.” This entire bash-O’Donnell exercise is talking beyond the reality that the young activist on MTV wasn’t making a scientific argument (or an argument for more procreation). She was making a religious argument about staying pure and avoiding sin and selfishness. But Begley has made it a habit to employ “science” like a negative political ad maker. Many humans believe the human race should be more deliberate in its sexual behavior than bonobo monkeys or the “Cape ground squirrels of Namibia,” to use Newsweek’s examples. “Family values” of the human kind are not the laws of the jungle, and it would be entertaining to see Begley go on MTV to explain to young people how “Masturbation is a form of advertising” or “a victory lap.” [Hat tip on image: The Other McCain blog]

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MTV Stacks the Deck for Pre-Election Obama Townhall?

So MTV is holding a “townhall” for President Obama on Oct. 14, at 4 p.m. in Washington, D.C. In this case, a town hall is short-hand for “an event where annoying questions are asked by unemployed hipsters with vintage t-shirts and edgy eyewear.” But a casting call has surfaced, and this is what it says: Seeking-Audience Members: males & females, 18+. To ensure that the audience represents diverse interests and political views, include your name…and what issues, if any, you are interested in or passionate about. Also, provide a recent photo and short description of your political views. So what’s the point of this pre-screening process? Well, it serves three purposes: One:  to make sure the audience reflects America – which, coming from MTV – means it will look like something a Benetton ad might vomit, if it could vomit. Get ready for every nationality you can think of, plus of few you’ve never heard of – along with some amusing piercings and Asian lettered tattoos. My prediction:  there will be a transgendered Eskimo with ADHD there to ask Obama to get her harp seal recognized as an assistant animal. Two:  to make sure the questions asked will reflect the MTV’s earnest concerns. The environment. Health care. Amnesty. Hermaphrodite bathroom rights. The central strategy: to avoid coming down too hard on Obama, and instead placing the criticism on us, for expecting too much from Captain Delicious. And three:  a smattering of hot chicks and some wistful emo dudes, who will fawn over Obama like he’s Justin Bieber with a tan. Me, I can’t wait to watch – I find projectile vomiting is ten times better than the Stairmaster when it comes to losing weight. And if you disagree with me, you’re a racist, homophobic paraphobe. Crossposted at Big Hollywood  

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