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Online privacy concerns are migrating to the real world. A researcher at Carnegie Mellon was able to identify 31% of students passing by with the help of facial recognition software, reports Mashable . First he collected 25,000 photos from Facebook profiles. Then he asked passersby to pose for a quick…

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Yuan Xinquan was holding his baby daughter at a bus stop when a handful of men leapt out of a government van, and demanded he present his marriage license or pay a $745 fine. When he could do neither, they confiscated the baby. “They are pirates,” he says. For years,…

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Coming into office after a series of crises, Dwight Eisenhower knew that part of his job as president was to calm us down. “He set out to project an aura of calm command” and, “through patient and temperate negotiation,” he sought to balance rival factions in the government, writes Jim…

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Potter fans beware: Cybercriminals are looking to hex users of JK Rowling’s new website, Pottermore, a security firm warns. The site, which offers ebooks and new material, is currently in beta, with limited accessibility—and some hackers are trying to sell early-access accounts for up to $100, the Telegraph reports….

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Turns out one medical marijuana dispensary in Los Angeles wasn’t so chill. A police raid of the place netted 9 kilos of cocaine, oxycodone, an AK-47 assault rifle and other guns, and 300 pot plants, according to authorities. An investigation of the White Oak Healing Center was launched last year…

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Elisabeth Murdoch opts not to join board of News Corporation

Statement from conglomerate says she suggested it would be ‘inappropriate’ for her to join board of father’s company Elisabeth Murdoch will not be joining the board of her father Rupert Murdoch’s News Corporation conglomerate, despite expectations that she would do so. The company said in a statement that she had suggested to its directors it would be “inappropriate” for her to make the move. She had been expected to join the board after News Corp bought Shine Group, the television production company she runs, in a deal worth £415m. Viet Dinh, chairman of the nominating and corporate governance committee of the News Corporation board of directors, said: “Elisabeth Murdoch suggested to the independent directors some weeks ago that she felt it would be inappropriate to include her nomination to the board of News Corp at this year’s AGM, as had been announced by chairman and CEO Rupert Murdoch at the time of the acquisition of Shine Group earlier this year. “The independent directors agreed that the previously planned nomination should be delayed. Both Elisabeth and the board hope this decision reaffirms that News Corp aspires to the highest standards of corporate governance and will continue to act in the best interests of all stakeholders, be they shareholders, employees or the billions of consumers who News Corp content informs, entertains and sometimes provokes every year.” Murdoch founded Shine, which has produced shows such as The Tudors, Ashes to Ashes and Masterchef, a decade ago, and built it into a powerhouse in the British independent television sector and a transatlantic business. Other popular programmes for the group include Merlin, and Spooks. It is understood Murdoch, who owned a 53% stake in the company, with Sony holding 20% and BSkyB a further 13%, made £153m after completing the sale to News Corp. She is is married to the public relations executive Matthew Freud. Reports have suggested that some shareholders believe the 16-member board of News Corp is too beholden to Rupert Murdoch. The Murdoch family controls nearly 40% of the company’s voting shares through a family trust, and Murdoch’s sons James, 38, and Lachlan, 39, already sit alongside him on the board. In February, after announcing News Corp’s plans to buy Shine, Rupert Murdoch said: “Shine has an outstanding creative team that has built a significant independent production company in major markets in very few years, and I look forward to them becoming an important part of our varied and large content creation activities. I expect Liz Murdoch to join the board of News Corporation on completion of this transaction.” Elisabeth Murdoch News Corporation Media business Rupert Murdoch Television industry Newspapers Newspapers & magazines Damien Pearse guardian.co.uk

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US stripped of AAA credit rating by S&P as agency blames political weakness

The US government’s credit rating has been lowered to AA+, the first downgrade in modern US history, despite furious lobbying The credit rating agency Standard & Poor’s has stripped the US of its top-notch AAA credit rating, downgrading it to AA+ and warning of further future downgrades because of political and economic uncertainty. The downgrade and negative outlook came late on Friday night, after news surfaced of a furious rearguard attempt by the White House to convince S&P that its calculations were flawed. The move shifts long-term US government debt into the same level as Britain, Japan and other countries, but below that of Canada, Australia and France. As a rule, a lower credit rating means higher borrowing costs for debtor nations. But because of the size of the US and its deep capital markets, it remians to be seen what impact the move will have when financial markets reopen on Monday. Republicans were quick to highlight the downgrade – the first in modern US history – as a humiliation for President Obama. But S&P’s statement explaining the move blamed both parties for the US fiscal mess – and had harsh words for the Republican party for ruling out any taxes increases. “We have changed our assumption … because the majority of Republicans in Congress continue to resist any measure that would raise revenues,” S&P said. S&P also said the budget savings agreed by Congress at the start of the week were too feeble, and blamed political weakness and instability for triggering the downgrade: More broadly, the downgrade reflects our view that the effectiveness, stability, and predictability of American policymaking and political institutions have weakened at a time of ongoing fiscal and economic challenges to a degree more than we envisioned when we assigned a negative outlook to the rating on April 18, 2011. Since then, we have changed our view of the difficulties in bridging the gulf between the political parties over fiscal policy, which makes us pessimistic about the capacity of Congress and the Administration to be able to leverage their agreement this week into a broader fiscal consolidation plan that stabilizes the government’s debt dynamics any time soon. The credit rating agency also said the outlook on its long-term rating was negative, warning that it could lower the long-term further rating to AA within the next two years “if we see that less reduction in spending than agreed to, higher interest rates, or new fiscal pressures during the period result in a higher general government debt trajectory than we currently assume”. S&P notified the US Treasury on Friday afternoon that it was planning to downgrade the credit rating, according to government officials, and the company sent a draft of its analysis to the White House. White House officials then claimed to have discovered a $2tn-sized hole in S&P’s calculations, and briefed journalists. But it failed to wring a delay out of the agency, which went ahead with the downgrade. US economy Ratings agencies Obama administration Republicans Market turmoil Economics US politics United States Richard Adams guardian.co.uk

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Bear Grylls grapples with crocodiles for a living , so is it any surprise that his son Jesse saved a girl’s life—at just seven years old? “They were in a little base in a stream and she fell in,” Grylls tells the Daily Mail . “I wasn’t there, you know, and…

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The debt ceiling deal has so inflamed liberals that “the chances of there being a challenge to Obama in the primary are almost 100%,” Ralph Nader said yesterday in an interview with the Daily Caller . Nader has said for a while that he’s trying to get someone to run against…

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Rough story from a Philadelphia college: A math professor walked out of his class and dove headfirst over a second-floor balcony to his death, falling as far as 30 feet to the marble floor of a hall at Chestnut Hill College, reports the Philadelphia Daily News . “He had a history…

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