Apr
14
2008
0

If I can’t dance

The United States Park Police made a terrible mistake when they broke up a flashmob of 20 people who had converged upon the Thomas Jefferson Memorial in Washington over the weekend to celebrate the 265th birthday of the principle author of the Declaration of Independence because they underestimated who they were dealing with; Libertarians.

Brooke Oberwetter was among those who were dancing to their own individual iPods – so not to bother other people – who challenged the police officers who were trying to kick out the flashmobbers and for that, she was arrested and detained without notice of her crime. The other participants, Oberwetter’s friends, were quick to distribute the video and photos of her arrest via the Internet.

From the Arstechnica article on the incident:

Sgt. Robert Lachance, a spokesman for the United States Park Police, explains that this charge includes the failure to obey a lawful order by a park officer, and quoted from the arrest report, which referred to “one subject” who “did not comply with multiple requests to leave the area.” As for the dance party itself, Lachance notes that federal regulations designate certain areas that are “meant to be tranquil and quiet,” including the inner chamber of the Jefferson Memorial. That precludes making too much noise—signs at the Memorial enjoin quiet—or any behavior that “has a propensity to draw a crowd of onlookers.”

The dancers contend that they were making no more noise than a similar number of ordinary tourists might, and that there were only five or six “onlookers” around to be drawn. But even if they were in the wrong, I wondered, wasn’t it odd to arrest someone just as the event was essentially over? That was up to the judgment of the arresting officer, says Lachance. Since he “can’t determine from the video what the situation was,” Lachance cautions against second-guessing the officer’s decision on the basis of the partial portrait there.

Perhaps more remarkable than the severe reaction to an intransigent dancer is how quickly her friends settled on a division of labor after the arrest. Five or six would travel to the station to await her release; the rest pulled out their cell phones and began sending Twitters, e-mails, and photographs to friends at home. Dozens of blogs soon linked accounts of the arrest, and one outraged reader in Wisconsin has even posted a call on Craigslist for others to repeat the dance party next weekend in protest. If charges are not dismissed before a scheduled April 29 court date—since the incident occurred on federal property, the case will be handled by the U.S. Attorney’s Office—the video and photos of the arrest are likely to figure in Oberwetter’s defense.

Categories of logic: //
Apr
10
2008
0

Clean Water Africa campaign

Categories of logic: //
Apr
10
2008
0

The Yahoo vs Microsoft battle heats up

Following a two-month hostile takeover bid from Microsoft, Yahoo signed a two-week deal with Google to display the latter’s search engine advertising platform yesterday and is still in talks to merge with Time Warner’s AOL. Google will be able to place ads alongside 3% of search results on Yahoo’s website.

Now News Corp, the owners of Fox and MySpace, have said they may side with Microsoft to pressure a takeover of Yahoo.

The Times reports:

Although billed as a test in the US only, analysts at Citigroup estimated that if Yahoo! were to outsource its search engine advertising to Google worldwide, it could generate an extra $1 billion in cash flow to the company.

Google wants Yahoo! to remain independent, arguing that the Yahoo! Silicon Valley culture is not compatible with the Seattle software giant. But the leading internet company is also unlikely to welcome the greater competition that a Microsoft-owned Yahoo! would bring.

Separately, Capital Resarch & Management, the big US mutual fund, doubled its stake in Yahoo to 10.1 per cent.

Categories of logic: //
Apr
09
2008
0

Adobe’s new desktop video player

The final version of Adobe’s desktop video player is now available (here).

The Adobe Media Player (AMP) lets you download and stream videos from a variety of mainstream content partners, import video feeds via RSS and play videos stored their computer.

AMP uses Flash to handle all of the video playback and also runs on AIR, Adobe’s cross-platform runtime for applications built with web technologies re-tooled to run on the desktop. This is the first real HD quality Flash video player for your desktop.

Categories of logic: //
Apr
08
2008
0

Canadian ISPs complain against Bell Canada

The Welland Tribute reports that the Canadian Association of Internet Providers has complained to the CRTC to order Bell Canada to stop a practice known as “traffic shaping”. The complaint came about after some members noticed an increase in customer complaints.

In its complaint to the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission, the association contends that Bell’s traffic shaping activity is in breach of a number of regulated activities and an abuse of its market dominance.

Categories of logic: //

Alex Reid is a Canadian who likes a lot of things. Welcome to my world.