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Rodney King was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence yesterday after officers observed him committing “multiple infractions,” TMZ reports. The 46-year-old King—whose videotaped beating by LAPD officers led to the 1992 Los Angeles riots—has had multiple run-ins with the law in the years since the riots….

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Iran tightens online censorship to counter US ‘shadow internet’

Tehran fury at ‘internet in a suitcase’ prompts upgrade to web filtering system blocking forbidden websites Iran has stepped up online censorship by upgrading the filtering system that enables the Islamic regime to block access to thousands of websites it deems inappropriate for Iranian users. The move comes one month after the United States announced plans to launch new services facilitating internet access and mobile phone communications in countries with tight controls on freedom of speech, a decision that infuriated Tehran’s regime and prompted harsh reactions from several Iranian officials. The upgrade had at first appeared as a relaxation of the censorship machine. Iran’s online community said on Monday that filtering was temporarily lifted for the entire country, giving users access to banned websites such as Twitter and Facebook. But hopes for an end to censorship were dashed when news agencies reported later in the day that the respite was due to the process of making the upgrade. Despite the filtering, many Iranians access blocked addresses with help from proxy websites or virtual private network (VPN) services. The upgrade is aimed at stopping users bypassing censorship. More than 5 million websites are filtered in Iran. Media organisations including the Guardian, BBC and CNN are blocked, though access to the New York Times website is allowed. On Google, the Farsi equivalents for words such as “condom”, “sex”, “lesbian” and “anti-filtering” are filtered out. Iran is believed to be worried about the influence of the internet and especially social networking websites as pro-democracy activists across the Middle East use them to promote and publicise their movements. Iran’s semi-official Fars news agency quoted an unnamed official as saying: “The ministry of communications and information technology is strengthening the filtering system and recent disruptions were the result of this upgrade.” At the same time, Nasimonline.ir , an agency that publishes short Twitter-style bursts of news, said it had received information that “a new filtering system that targets Google and Yahoo search engines” had been installed and tested on Monday. “I think that the new upgrade in the filtering system is a signal from Iran that the regime is prepared to stop any attempt by the US to challenge the country’s online censorship,” said an Iranian who spoke to the Guardian by phone from Tehran on condition of anonymity. The New York Times reported last month that the Obama administration is leading a global effort to deploy what is known as “shadow internet” or “internet in a suitcase” by spending $2m (£1.25m) on secretive projects to create “independent cellphone networks inside foreign countries”. The aim is to provide services that allow “wireless communication over a wide area with a link to the global internet” in support of dissidents in countries that have tightened their grip on freedom of speech. In reaction to the US move, Iran’s intelligence minister, Heidar Moslehi, was quoted by Fars as saying: “We had predicted these actions, such as the internet in suitcase, and we have planned proper ways to combat them.” In an interview with the semi-official Mehr news agency, Iran’s minister for communications and information technology, Reza Taghipour, accused the US of “cyber terrorism” for its plans to launch “internet in suitcase”. In April, the Tehran government announced that it intended to launch “halal internet”, a country-wide intranet and a parallel network that conforms to Islamic values with the ultimate goal of substituting for the global internet. Iran’s opposition believe that Iran is buying its filtering technology from China. In September 2009 Iran’s powerful Revolutionary Guards, a body under the direct control of the supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, purchased 51% of the Telecommunications Company of Iran, which monitors internet filtering in the country. Iran Internet United States Censorship Freedom of speech Saeed Kamali Dehghan guardian.co.uk

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News Corp pulls out of BSkyB bid

BSkyB bid dropped by Rupert Murdoch’s media group after pressure from the public and parliament Rupert Murdoch’s media group News Corporation bowed to pressure from the public and parliament on Wednesday and withdrew its bid to take full control of pay-TV company BSkyB. All three main political parties were poised to call on News Corp to abandon its offer in a vote in the House of Commons later on Wednesday. The move leaves News Corp’s key strategy for UK corporate growth in tatters. The proposed £8bn deal has been in train for more than a year, with the first offer tabled in June 2010. It is the one of the biggest setbacks the 80-year-old media mogul has ever suffered and follows 10 days of revelations about the true scale of phone hacking at the News of the World, the paper Murdoch shut down last week. The decision to abandon the deal is also a major blow to James Murdoch, who is third in command at the company and has responsibility for News Corp’s UK businesses, including its Sky stake and News International. It is likely to lead to criticism from investors over the way the company has handled the phone-hacking affair. James Murdoch initially took charge of the scandal but his father has twice flown in to the UK to oversee matters, most recently at the weekend. News Corp’s deputy chairman and chief operating officer, Chase Carey, said it had become clear that the Sky takeover “is too difficult to progress in this climate”. Carey, who is also News Corp’s president, said: “We believed that the proposed acquisition of BSkyB by News Corporation would benefit both companies but it has become clear that it is too difficult to progress in this climate. “News Corporation remains a committed long-term shareholder in BSkyB. We are proud of the success it has achieved and our contribution to it.” News Corp will have to pay BSkyB a break fee of around £38.5m after walking away from the deal. BSkyB’s share price immediately began to fall. It was down by 23.5p, or 3.4%, to 669p at about 2.30pm on Wednesday, shortly after the announcement that the deal was off, far below the 700p level at which News Corp originally tabled a bid. More than £3bn has been wiped from the value of BSkyB shares since the Guardian revealed on Monday 4 July that News of the World journalists had hacked into a mobile phone belonging to murdered teenager Milly Dowler. The decision to walk away from the deal was taken earlier on Wednesday before prime minister’s questions, which was followed by an announcement by David Cameron about the details of two separate inquiries, one into phone hacking and the other into media standards. Carey was at News International’s Wapping offices on the fringes of the City of London briefly, where the decision is believed to have been finalised. Nick Clegg, the deputy prime minister, said withdrawing the bid was the “decent and sensible” thing do to. The Liberal Democrat leader briefly threatened to cause a coalition split when he declared Murdoch should abandon the Sky offer earlier this week, before Cameron decided he would also back a Labour motion to call for it to be dropped. The shadow culture secretary, Ivan Lewis, said: “It’s a victory for the public of this country, it’s a victory for parliament and it’s a victory for the tremendous leadership that Ed Miliband has shown.” • To contact the MediaGuardian news desk email editor@mediaguardian.co.uk or phone 020 3353 3857. For all other inquiries please call the main Guardian switchboard on 020 3353 2000. If you are writing a comment for publication, please mark clearly “for publication”. • To get the latest media news to your desktop or mobile, follow MediaGuardian on Twitter and Facebook News Corporation Media business BSkyB Television industry BSkyB Rupert Murdoch Phone hacking Newspapers & magazines National newspapers Newspapers News of the World James Robinson guardian.co.uk

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A Southern California woman prepared a drugged dinner for her estranged husband and then tied him to a bed, cut off his penis, and ground it up in the garbage disposal, police say. Catherine Kieu Becker, 48, was arrested after she called 911 and told police what she had done,…

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Apple customers will no longer be able to grind to the Dancing Cuddle Bear app. It seems the hairy mammal is actually a well-known mascot for pedophiles so, no, he’s not going to be teaching moves any longer, notes Gawker . Apple officials apparently got a clue after coverage of the…

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If French voters had to choose between Dominique Strauss-Kahn and Nicolas Sarkozy in next year’s presidential election, the incumbent would be out of a job, a new poll finds. Some 54% would opt for the former IMF chief currently charged with attempted rape, according to the Independent , which notes that…

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Mitt Romney has become the first Republican presidential contender to reject an anti-gay-marriage pledge concocted by an Iowa Christian group. The controversial 14-point pledge, already signed by Michele Bachmann and Rick Santorum, calls on candidates to “defend and uphold” marriage as uniting one man and one woman, and to reject…

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Betty Ford’s funeral is attended by US first ladies

Speakers praise Betty Ford for her warmth and honesty at her funeral in California US first ladies past and present have joined other former White House residents to remember Betty Ford at her funeral. Speakers hailed Ford for reshaping the role of first lady with her plain-spoken candour and as an inspiration for the addiction rehabilitation centres that bear her name. “Millions of women are in her debt today and she was never afraid to speak the truth even about the most sensitive subjects, including her own struggle with alcohol and painkillers,” said Rosalynn Carter, who succeeded her in the White House. “She got some criticism, but I thought she was wonderful and her honesty gave to others every single day.” Michelle Obama, Nancy Reagan, Hillary Clinton and former president George Bush were among those at the service in Palm Desert, California. Ford, who died aged 93 on Friday , helped bring previously taboo subjects such as breast cancer into public discussion and openly discussed her own battle with the disease. She was equally candid about her struggles with drug and alcohol abuse, and spearheaded the Betty Ford Centre to treat those addictions. Cokie Roberts, a TV interviewer, noted that Gerald Ford confided to her privately that his wife badgered him relentlessly into stronger public support of equal rights for women. Bush, accompanied by Nancy Reagan, arrived a few minutes before Michelle Obama. The former president chatted quietly with Reagan as they waited for the services to begin, greeting Clinton as she took a seat next to him. After the funeral, members of the public were invited to file past the casket and sign a guest book. Ford’s body will be flown on Wednesday to Grand Rapids, Michigan, where Lynne Cheney, wife of the former US vice-president Dick Cheney, and historian Richard Norton Smith will speak at a church service. The former first lady Barbara Bush is expected to attend that event. Ford will be buried alongside her husband at Gerald Ford’s presidential museum in Grand Rapids on Thursday, which would have been his 98th birthday. Ford, the accidental first lady, was thrust into the White House when Richard Nixon resigned as US president over the Watergate scandal and Gerald Ford, then vice-president, assumed the US’s highest office. Rosalynn Carter recalled that she met Ford when the first lady visited Georgia, where Carter’s husband was governor. “We invited Betty to stay at the governor’s mansion. She was the most distinguished guest we had ever had but when she arrived she was so warm and friendly that she immediately put me at ease and we had a good time together. “Of course I didn’t tell her then that my husband was thinking of running for president,” Carter added. A lifelong friendship remained intact after Gerald Ford lost his re-election bid to Jimmy Carter. Outside the church passersby, some walking dogs or out for a jog, stopped to reflect on the former first lady’s life. “I don’t know where a lot of people would be if it weren’t for her,” said Randy Gaynor, 47, a recovering alcoholic. “There’s been a lot of first ladies and they did a lot of things, but this will be long remembered after she’s gone.” United States US politics guardian.co.uk

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Betty Ford’s funeral is attended by US first ladies

Speakers praise Betty Ford for her warmth and honesty at her funeral in California US first ladies past and present have joined other former White House residents to remember Betty Ford at her funeral. Speakers hailed Ford for reshaping the role of first lady with her plain-spoken candour and as an inspiration for the addiction rehabilitation centres that bear her name. “Millions of women are in her debt today and she was never afraid to speak the truth even about the most sensitive subjects, including her own struggle with alcohol and painkillers,” said Rosalynn Carter, who succeeded her in the White House. “She got some criticism, but I thought she was wonderful and her honesty gave to others every single day.” Michelle Obama, Nancy Reagan, Hillary Clinton and former president George Bush were among those at the service in Palm Desert, California. Ford, who died aged 93 on Friday , helped bring previously taboo subjects such as breast cancer into public discussion and openly discussed her own battle with the disease. She was equally candid about her struggles with drug and alcohol abuse, and spearheaded the Betty Ford Centre to treat those addictions. Cokie Roberts, a TV interviewer, noted that Gerald Ford confided to her privately that his wife badgered him relentlessly into stronger public support of equal rights for women. Bush, accompanied by Nancy Reagan, arrived a few minutes before Michelle Obama. The former president chatted quietly with Reagan as they waited for the services to begin, greeting Clinton as she took a seat next to him. After the funeral, members of the public were invited to file past the casket and sign a guest book. Ford’s body will be flown on Wednesday to Grand Rapids, Michigan, where Lynne Cheney, wife of the former US vice-president Dick Cheney, and historian Richard Norton Smith will speak at a church service. The former first lady Barbara Bush is expected to attend that event. Ford will be buried alongside her husband at Gerald Ford’s presidential museum in Grand Rapids on Thursday, which would have been his 98th birthday. Ford, the accidental first lady, was thrust into the White House when Richard Nixon resigned as US president over the Watergate scandal and Gerald Ford, then vice-president, assumed the US’s highest office. Rosalynn Carter recalled that she met Ford when the first lady visited Georgia, where Carter’s husband was governor. “We invited Betty to stay at the governor’s mansion. She was the most distinguished guest we had ever had but when she arrived she was so warm and friendly that she immediately put me at ease and we had a good time together. “Of course I didn’t tell her then that my husband was thinking of running for president,” Carter added. A lifelong friendship remained intact after Gerald Ford lost his re-election bid to Jimmy Carter. Outside the church passersby, some walking dogs or out for a jog, stopped to reflect on the former first lady’s life. “I don’t know where a lot of people would be if it weren’t for her,” said Randy Gaynor, 47, a recovering alcoholic. “There’s been a lot of first ladies and they did a lot of things, but this will be long remembered after she’s gone.” United States US politics guardian.co.uk

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Japan PM calls for nuclear-free future

Naoto Kan says Fukushima crisis has convinced him to aim for a society not dependent on nuclear power Prime minister Naoto Kan said on Wednesday the Fukushima nuclear crisis had convinced him that Japan should aim at a society that does not depend on nuclear energy and eventually has no atomic plants. The unpopular leader denied he was considering calling a snap election over energy policy and sidestepped a question on when he would keep a promise to step down, saying he wanted to do his best to work on nuclear policy and rebuild the country from the devastating 11 March earthquake and tsunami that triggered the world’s worst nuclear crisis in 25 years. “Given the enormity of the risks associated with nuclear power generation, I have realised nuclear technology is not something that can be managed by conventional safety measures alone,” Kan told a news conference. “I believe we should aim for a society that is not dependent on nuclear power generation.” He said it was premature to set a timeframe for achieving that goal. Kan also said Japan would be able to avoid summer and winter power shortages because of energy conservation efforts and companies’ in-house power supplies, despite the large number of reactors now offline for inspections or other work. The unpopular prime minister has become increasingly sensitive to growing public concern about nuclear power, but whether he oversees an overhaul of energy policy is in doubt since he has promised to resign, although he has not said when. Nuclear energy accounted for about 30% of Japan’s power supply before the 11 March disasters crippled Tokyo Electric Power Co’s Fukushima plant 240km (150 miles) north of the capital. That ratio slipped to 18% in June. Nuclear power Energy Japan disaster Japan guardian.co.uk

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