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Google and Twitter launch service letting Egyptians tweet by phone

Voice-to-tweet software allows citizens to get news out despite internet blackout inside Egypt Google and Twitter have launched a service to allow people in Egypt to send Twitter messages by leaving a voicemail on a specific number after the last internet service provider in the country saw its access cut off late on Monday. The new service, which has been created by co-ordination between the two internet companies, uses Google’s speech-to-text recognition service to automatically translate a message left on the number, which will be sent out on Twitter with the “#egypt” hashtag. Ujwal Singh, cofounder of SayNow and Abdel Karim Mardini, Google’s product manager for the Middle East and north Africa, said in a blog post that “over the weekend we came up with the idea of a speak-to-tweet service – the ability for anyone to tweet using just a voice connection … We hope that this will go some way to helping people in Egypt stay connected at this very difficult time.” Google listed three phone numbers for people to call to use the service. They are: +16504194196; +390662207294; and +97316199855. No internet connection is required. That will be important for users there after Noor Group, which had been the last internet service provider connecting to the outside world, went dark late on Monday. It had remained online after the country’s four main internet providers – Link Egypt, Vodafone/Raya, Telecom Egypt and Etisalat Misr – abruptly stopped shuttling internet traffic into and out of the country last Friday. At about 11pm local time Monday, the Noor Group became unreachable, said James Cowie, chief technology officer of Renesys, a security firm based in Manchester, New Hampshire which monitors huge directories of “routes”, or set paths that define how web traffic moves from one place to another. The Noor Group’s routes have disappeared, he said. Cowie said engineers at the Noor Group and other service providers could quickly shut down the internet by logging on to certain computers and changing a configuration file. The original blackout on Friday took just 20 minutes to fully go into effect, he said. However it is not clear whether the Noor Group’s disconnection was planned or accidental. Mobile phone service was restored in Egypt on Saturday, but text messaging services have been disrupted during the continuing protests. Google Twitter Internet Blogging Egypt Middle East Charles Arthur guardian.co.uk

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Appalled Canadian authorities are investigating the slaughter of up to 100 huskies used to pull tourist sleds. An employee at a British Columbia company says he was ordered to kill scores of healthy dogs when business dropped off after the 2010 Winter Olympics. The killings came to light after he…

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Mystery remains of some 3,500 patients are being traced at an Oregon mental hospital used as a stand-in for the psychologically sadistic facility in the film One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest. Managers of the 128-year-old Oregon facility have published the names of patients who died there between 1917…

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Al Jazeera report from Tahrir Square 8:30am, February 1

An Al Jazeera web producer reports from Tahrir Square in central Cairo where protesters have gathered, calling on Hosni Mubarak, the Egyptian president, to step down. The footage is shot on Monday night while the voiced report is from 8:30 local time, on Tuesday morning. Our reporter says protesters have been undeterred by authorities’ attempts to completely block internet access and by rumours that the mobile phone network will also be shut down.

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Whistleblower ‘isolated’ in US jail

The man suspected of revealing classified US government documents to the WikiLeaks website is being held in solitary confinement while awaiting trial. Bradley Manning has been kept alone in his cell in a Virginia jail for 23 hours a day, under constant surveillance, for seven months. The Pentagon denies he is being mistreated, sying that he receives visitors, can make phone calls, and routinely meets with doctors. But the UN says the use of solitary confinement for prolonged periods can be a form of torture that should be used sparingly. Al Jazeera’s Kristen Saloomey reports from the Quantico military base.

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Illinois has become the sixth state to recognize civil unions between same-sex couples. A bill signed into law by Governor Pat Quinn Monday afternoon gives gay and lesbian couples many of the same rights as their heterosexual counterparts, including the right to visit a loved one in hospital, the Chicago…

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Pakistani Christians feel unease amid blasphemy controversy

Pakistan’s blasphemy law has been in the spotlight since November, when a court sentenced to death a Christian woman for insulting Islam. The government has repeatedly said it will not scrap or amend the law, and rallies have been held in support of it. The recent furore has left many in the Christian minority feeling increasingly threatened, as Kamal Hyder reports from Lahore.

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While multiple sclerosis has long been thought to be an immune disorder, Italian researcher Paolo Zamboni has posited that it may be something else entirely. Zamboni thinks that the disease may be caused by inflammation created when blood cannot exit the brain because of clogged veins. He calls this chronic…

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There’s a roving eye watching deep space for signs that the truth—or at least other Earth-like planets or even life—is out there, and we’re going to get a glimpse of what it’s watch this week. The $600 million Kepler observatory is tracking a small piece of sky filled…

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The spirit of new government in Egypt: Steve Bell

Egypt’s president Hosni Mubarak now has few options left Steve Bell

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