LED HEALTH EFFECTS MUST BE RESEARCHED: HEALTH COUNCIL

There may be risks to health from the bluer light of LED, found investigations by the Health Council of the Netherlands.
HP tablet (Source: Wikimedia/Janto Dreijer)Light-emitting diodes, or LEDs, are being used in increasing amounts, lighting the screens of many smartphones and tablets. In addition to the benefits of LED light, the Council warns that it can cause damage to eyes and disruption of the biological clock.
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A person’s biological clock “controls numerous physiological and behavioral processes”, reads an investigatory and advisory report released by the Council. “It operates autonomously, but may be affected due to external factors. One of the most important factors is light.”
The researchers found that people are interfering with their melatonin (sleep hormone) production and thus reversing their biological clocks by exposing themselves to LED light in the evenings. “The short-term effects are shorter sleep, reduced attention, and increased risk of accidents. The long-term risks include development of cancer, obesity, cardiovascular disease and mental disorders,” reads the report.
The Council says consumers must be alerted to opportunities to reduce those risks.
The Council has also called for research and development into products that emit less blue light, and further research into the health effects of LED light.
“We know that the blue light from LED light is potentially harmful to the eyes, but it is unclear whether the degree to which we are exposed to it is harmful”, said a spokesperson for the Health Council, according to nu.nl.
In the advisory report, the Council explains that more products are being manufactured with LED lighting, and that with each generation they are becoming brighter. The Council also said that the increased amount of time that people are spending in front of screens contributes to the health impacts.
This is not a new discovery by scientists. Research by Harvard University in 2012 reported that exposure to blue light at night reduced alertness during the day, and suggested staying away from blue light several hours before going to bed.

EMAIL SCAM TARGETS 40 DUTCH MEMBERS OF PARLIAMENT

Plenary meeting hall of the Tweede Kamer, Dutch Parliament's lower house (Photo: Wikipedia/Sisyfus)Dutch MPs were the intended victims of a phishing scam this week, police in the Hague reported Thursday. An investigation is underway.
The email scam was sent to the official work addresses of “40-something” MPs in the Tweede Kamer, the lower house of Dutch parliament, police spokesman Thomas Aling told NL Times. The email was made to appear like an internally transmitted message, pointing recipients to enter personal information on a site claiming to offer increased email safety.
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Police believe that a television show is responsible for the attack. “Several points are pointing that way,” said the spokesman. But when asked what technical evidence led to the preliminary conclusion, he refused to comment because the investigation is ongoing. The spokesman also refused to comment when asked if the show was, as de Telegraaf has suggested, located in the media hub of Hilversum.
No email recipients are known to have fallen for the scam. Access to the phishing site has been blocked from the Tweede Kamer’s network. The police praised parliament’s security, who had intercepted the emails.
“They did the right thing. They look very quickly and they saw there was phishing,” the spokesman told NL Times.

LIFEBOAT, DEAD BODY FOUND DURING HUNT FOR MISSING SHIP

Area where ships are looking for the missing Z-85  Morgenster (Picture: Twitter/@Keessie84)Search and rescue crews trying to track down the fishing trawler missing in the English Channel found an empty life-raft on the French coast just south of Boulogne-sur-Mer. The serial number on the raft links it to the missing ship, which was found with some wooden debris, the Dover Coast Guard reported late Thursday morning.
Later on Thursday, a rescue boat found a corpse in the water about 17 kilometers off the coast of France. It is not known if the deceased person had been on the missing ship, the Z-85 Morgenster.
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Hope is fading as the search continues. The Dutch Coast Guard expressed pessimism when the search restarted on Thursday morning. “If the crew are in the water since yesterday, the survival rate is virtually zero”, said Réjane Gyssens, head of the Maritime Rescue and Coordination Centre (MRCC) in Oostende.
The Coast Guard estimated the water temperature to be nine degrees Celsius at the time the ship disappeared from the radar, according to Belgian news source hln.be.
The Belgian-registered Z-85 Morgenster was carrying a crew of two Dutchmen (Jan Kramer and Bert Woort), one Portuguese (Martins dos Santos) and one Belgian (Maurice Coussaerd).
Mayor Pieter van Maaren of Urk, Flevoland where the Dutch fishermen are from, has taken to Twitter to tell his citizens to “fold their hands and bend their knees” for the missing sailors.
The last signal from the vessel was received at 2:45 p.m. on Wednesday when the vessel was 20 miles off the coast of Dover.

Muslim Sex Groomer was Unaware UK Didn’t Allow Raping 13-Year-Olds

This seems to be a serious and ongoing problem with Muslims in the UK, Australia, New Zealand. The only alternative may be to ask them to stay in Pakistan, Afghanistan, etc to avoid any more rape misunderstandings. (via Religion of Peace)
muslim feminism 2A pedophile illegal immigrant who had sex with a 13-year-old girl claimed he was not aware it was against British “cultural norms”, a court has heard.
Married father Zia Maroof Khail, 29, carefully groomed the victim and fooled her into believing they were “boyfriend and girlfriend”.
Khail, originally from Afghanistan, persuaded her to meet him at his home twice a week, said Mark Lamberty, prosecuting.
He sexually abused her there, and had sex with her in an alleyway and at her own home.
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   “He was abusive to her if she refused to co-operate in sexual conduct,” Mr Lamberty added.
His sex crime came to light when the girl made a complaint about other men she said had abused her.
Police tracked Khail down using DNA evidence which matched his on a database at Colnbrook Immigration Centre, Heathrow, where he was waiting to be deported.
He told officers he did not think he had done anything wrong because he was not aware of the “culturSpecifically raping non-Muslim unattended teenage girls is not against Afghan Muslim cultural norms. Which is a problem for any non-Muslim country they visit.
Simon Mintz, defending, said Khail’s jail term would be “harder to bear” because of his lack of English. He added: “But bear it he must.”
Or the UK could just deport him now. On a plane. From 10,000 feet in the air.
But it seems that Khalil had enough English when he was pursuing a teenage  girl. He’ll manage in prison which is full of Muslims these days because of their “unawareness of cultural norms” about rape, drug dealing, terrorism, etc
The cultural norm excuse has been accepted by some judges though.
A Muslim pedophile in Nottingham was given a suspended sentence after he claimed that he had attended a Muslim school where he was taught that women are worthless.  Adil Rashid told a psychologist that his Muslim school had taught him that, “Women are no more worthy than a lollipop that has been dropped on the ground.”
Esmatullah Sharifi, an Afghan refugee, offered an Australian woman a ride home and then put his right hand around her neck and his left hand over her mouth and raped her. Sharifi’s lawyers claimed that due to cultural differences he was confused about the nature of consent.
This wasn’t Sharifi’s first misunderstanding of the difference between rape and sex. He had already been sentenced to 7 years in jail for raping an Australian teenager on Christmas Day in 2008.
The sentencing judge rejected Sharifi’s excuse, but a court of appeals judge found that claiming cultural differences was a valid basis for an appeal.
Islamic law. You may not be interested in it, but it’s interested in you. And very interested in your daughter.al norms” in Britain.


Miss Colombia Crowned Miss Universe, With Miss USA as Runner-Up

MIAMI — Miss Colombia, Paulina Vega, was crowned Miss Universe on Sunday night, while Miss USA, Nia Sanchez, came in second. The other finalists, chosen from among 88 contestants, were Miss Jamaica, Kaci Fennell; Miss Ukraine, Diana Harkusha; and Miss Netherlands, Yasmin Verheijen.
Vega, of Barranquilla, Colombia, granddaughter of the legendary tenor Gastón Vega, said the contests leading to MIss Universe were the first she'd participated in and would be her last as she's eager to return to her studies in business administration.
Sanchez, 24, of Las Vegas, has a fourth-degree black belt in Tae Kwon Do and has traveled the country teaching others. She spoke in the competition about equipping women to defend themselves against crime. "It's just something that's so prevalent in our society and why not empower women to take control of a dangerous situation into their own hand," she said.
TODAY anchor Natalie Morales hosted the show.
IMAGE: Miss Colombia, Paulina Vega, smiles after being crowned Miss UniverseANDREW INNERARITY / REUTERS
Miss Colombia, Paulina Vega, smiles after being crowned Miss Universe in Miami on Sunday.

Play-Doh Enrages Parents With a Penis-Shaped Baking Toy

Play-Doh Enrages Parents With a Penis-Shaped Baking ToyPlay-Doh, by most standards, is an exceedingly innocuous toy. Kids can use the pliable dough to build all manner of things—rather than level cities and shoot people—and they can even eat moderate amounts of it without ending up in the emergency room. But over the holiday season, some parents made a rather unpleasant discovery: a tool in a Play-Doh kit that strongly resembles a penis. Pictures of the offending part circulated on Twitter with clever wordplays like "Dil-Doh." 
Included in the $20 Sweet Shoppe Mountain Playset is an extruder for squeezing out "icing" onto Play-Doh cakes, similar to a baker's pipette. But when the plunger is removed, the case takes a different (less family-friendly) form. Enraged parents havereportedly been complaining about the tool since November, but following Christmas—when the playsets were presumably doled out in relatively large numbers—angry comments on Play-Doh's Facebook page garnered more attention. The comments have now been removed. 
Play-Doh is owned by Hasbro, whose brand portfolio includes Transformers, Monopoly, and My Little Pony. Asked to comment on the snafu, Hasbro's publicist, Julie Duffy, responded thusly: "We have heard some consumer feedback about the extruder tool in the Play-Doh Cake Mountain playset and are in the process of updating future Play-Doh products with a different tool." Customers can contact Hasbro's consumer care number, 800-327-8264, to request a replacement.
The event caps a notable year of design scandals that included Hallmark's swastika-covered Hanukkah wrapping paper, Zara's kids' T-shirt resembling a concentration camp uniform, and Airbnb's new logo, which was compared to breasts, buttocks, a uterus, a vagina, and, yes, male genitalia. Indeed, 2014 will go down as the year when a handful of designers, somehow blind to history and uncanny resemblances, made some woefully egregious mistakes. 

The Cheapest Tax Prep Software for 2015 (Hint: It's Not TurboTax)

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The Cheapest Tax Prep Software for 2015 (Hint: It's Not TurboTax)Last year, TurboTax changed how it categorized its options for online filing, which looked to many users like a price-hike. A $20 “basic” return was gone. The $30 “deluxe” package no longer worked for filers with stock or mutual fund sales. Customers who’d been using "deluxe" for years discovered they needed to upgrade to the $50 “premier” package. Faced with a $20 charge after spending hours entering their tax information, many just forked over the up-charge.
This year, TurboTax made the same changes to the software it sells in stores. Loyal customers started complaining, loudly, when they realized they’d bought the wrong box. Almost 1,500 negative reviews were posted on Amazon, and H&R Block saw its opening: it made its tax prep software free to anyone affected.  
TurboTax apologized and is offering deluxe buyers $25. “While we made the best long-term decision, our good intent was not matched with good execution," says Julie Miller, a spokeswoman for Intuit Inc., which owns TurboTax. 
What it didn't apologize for was the fact that the reclassification simply makes it harder to compare prices. The three major players online – TurboTax, H&R Block and low-cost TaxACT – each divide their tax prep services into different buckets. Here's how it breaks down: 
TaxACT is the cheapest option for most people. With only 115 full-time employees, TaxACT spends little on marketing but handles 7 million returns a year. Its pricing is relatively simple: Nothing at all for a basic federal filing tool with all the necessary forms, plus $15 for state filing. A deluxe package — federal return, state return and more guidance — costs $20. 
H&R Block claims the cheapest option – $20 for a state and federal return. But that’s only available to those who fit narrow criteria, homeowners or others who file a 1040 form with Schedule A. And it’s only a better deal than TaxACT's $20 option if you take into account H&R Block’s “in-person audit support.” Other H&R Block federal options cost $30 and $50 online.
TurboTax charges $37 for a state return on top of a federal return (the same as H&R Block). TurboTax raised prices by $5 this year, bringing "premier" to $55, or more than $90, if you include a state return. TurboTax says it can charge more because it’s a better product than its rivals; Intuit’s Miller cites the software's “intuitiveness.”
TurboTax does offer one bargain. For a limited time, people with very simple taxes – using 1040A or 1040EZ forms – can file for free. That includes a state return, which competitors' "free" options charge for. This is an effort to grab more share in the slow-growing tax prep market, Oppenheimer & Co. analyst Scott Schneeberger says.
An in-person preparer, meanwhile, will cost $200 or more. Last year, the U.S. Government Accountability Office went incognito to 19 tax prep offices. In one scenario, a “waitress” was charged fees ranging from $160 to $408. A fictional “mechanic” was charged $300 to $587. 
One more tip: File early. The earlier you file, the cheaper it tends to be. (The IRS started accepting returns Jan. 20.) Early filers tend to be lower-income Americans getting big refunds, and special offers aimed at them, like TurboTax’s entirely free returns, often disappear by late February, Schneeberger says. Prices jump again in the last week of March. Procrastinators, don't say we didn't warn you. 

WikiLeaks demands answers after Google hands staff emails to US government

  • Search giant gave FBI emails and digital data belonging to three staffers
  • WikiLeaks told last month of warrants which were served in March 2012

Google HQGoogle took almost three years to disclose to the open information groupWikiLeaks that it had handed over emails and other digital data belonging to three of its staffers to the US government, under a secret search warrant issued by a federal judge.
WikiLeaks has written to Google’s executive chairman, Eric Schmidt, to protest that the search giant only revealed the warrants last month, having been served them in March 2012. In the letter, WikiLeaks says it is “astonished and disturbed” that Google waited more than two and a half years to notify its subscribers, potentially depriving them of their ability to protect their rights to “privacy, association and freedom from illegal searches”.
The letter, written by WikiLeaks’ New York-based lawyer, Michael Ratner of theCenter For Constitutional Rights, asks Google to list all the materials it provided to the FBI. Ratner also asks whether the California-based company did anything to challenge the warrants and whether it has received any further data demands it has yet to divulge.
Google revealed to WikiLeaks on Christmas Eve – a traditionally quiet news period – that it had responded to a Justice Department order to hand over a catch-all dragnet of digital data including all emails and IP addresses relating to the three staffers. The subjects of the warrants were the investigations editor of WikiLeaks, the British citizen Sarah Harrison; the spokesperson for the organisation, Kristinn Hrafnsson; and Joseph Farrell, one of its senior editors.
When it notified the WikiLeaks employees last month, Google said it had been unable to say anything about the warrants earlier as a gag order had been imposed. Google said the non-disclosure orders had subsequently been lifted, though it did not specify when.
Harrison, who also heads the Courage Foundation, told the Guardian she was distressed by the thought of government officials gaining access to her private emails. “Knowing that the FBI read the words I wrote to console my mother over a death in the family makes me feel sick,” she said.
She accused Google of helping the US government conceal “the invasion of privacy into a British journalist’s personal email address. Neither Google nor the US government are living up to their own laws or rhetoric in privacy or press protections”.
The court orders cast a data net so wide as to ensnare virtually all digital communications originating from or sent to the three. Google was told to hand over the contents of all their emails, including those sent and received, all draft correspondence and deleted emails. The source and destination addresses of each email, its date and time, and size and length were also included in the dragnet.
The FBI also demanded all records relating to the internet accounts used by the three, including telephone numbers and IP addresses, details of the time and duration of their online activities, and alternative email addresses. Even the credit card or bank account numbers associated with the accounts had to be revealed.
Alexander Abdo, a staff attorney and privacy expert at the American Civil Liberties Union, said the warrants were “shockingly broad” in their catch-all wording.
“This is basically ‘Hand over anything you’ve got on this person’,” he said. “That’s troubling as it’s hard to distinguish what WikiLeaks did in its disclosures from what major newspapers do every single day in speaking to government officials and publishing still-secret information.”
Google has not revealed precisely which documents it handed over by the deadline of April 2012. But it has told the three individuals that it provided “responsive documents pursuant to the Electronic Communications Privacy Act”.
Google told the Guardian it does not talk about individual cases, to “help protect all our users”. A spokesperson for the company said: “We follow the law like any other company.
“When we receive a subpoena or court order, we check to see if it meets both the letter and the spirit of the law before complying. And if it doesn’t we can object or ask that the request is narrowed. We have a track record of advocating on behalf of our users.”
The data grab is believed to be part of an ongoing criminal investigation into WikiLeaks that was launched in 2010 jointly by the US departments of Justice, Defense and State. The investigation followed WikiLeaks’ publication, initially in participation with international news organisations including the Guardian, of hundreds of thousands of US secrets that had been passed to the organisation by the army private Chelsea Manning.
The vast stash of leaked documents including embassy cables, war logs from Afghanistan and Iraq, and a video of an Apache helicopter attack that killed civilians in Baghdad.
The warrants were issued by a federal judge in the eastern district of Virginia – the jurisdiction in which a grand jury was set up under the criminal investigation into WikiLeaks. The investigation was confirmed to be still active and ongoing as recently as May last year.
Testimony given during the prosecution of Manning indicated that at least seven “founders, owners or managers or WikiLeaks” were put under the FBI spotlight in the wake of Manning’s disclosures. Manning was sentenced to 35 years in military prison for crimes related to the leaks and is currently being held in Fort Leavenworth, Kansas.
The WikiLeaks warrants cite alleged violations of the 1917 Espionage Act and the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act – the same statutes used to prosecute Manning. The data seizures were approved by a federal magistrate judge, John Anderson, who a year later issued the arrest warrant for the former National Security Agency contractor Edward Snowden.
Julian Assange, WikiLeaks’ founder and editor-in-chief, said the search warrants were part of a “serious, and seriously wrong attempt to build an alleged ‘conspiracy’ case against me and my staff”. He said that in his view the real conspiracy was “Google rolling over yet again to help the US government violate the constitution – by taking over journalists’ private emails in response to give-us-everything warrants”.
The FBI warrants will be presented to the United Nations human rights council in Geneva on Monday by the Spanish judge Baltasar Garzón, who is director of Assange’s defence team. Assange remains in asylum in the Ecuadorian embassy in London, facing extradition to Sweden following sexual assault and rape allegations that he denies and for which he has never been charged.
Google’s behaviour stands in stark contrast to Twitter, which has challenged similar US government demands. In its letter to the search giant, WikiLeaks notes that “Twitter challenged the government so it could notify its subscribers of the orders, and prevailed”.
In Twitter’s case, the Justice Department demanded access to the social-media accounts of Birgitta Jonsdottir, an Icelandic MP and former Wikileaks volunteer who was part of the team that released the secret Apache helicopter footage.
Twitter informed Jonsdottir that the US government had asked for access to her messages, allowing her to mount a legal campaign to stop them. In July 2012 an appeals court ruled against Jonsdottir and two other defendants, allowing the Justice Department to keep secret information about its attempts to obtain their information without a warrant.
All the major tech companies now disclose how many requests they receive from US authorities for users’ information but it is extremely rare for them to divulge specific targets of those investigations and in most cases they are limited in what they can disclose.
In the first six months of 2014, Google received close to 32,000 data requests from governments, an increase of 15% compared with the second half of 2013, and two-and-a-half times more than when Google first started publishing it’s semi-annual Transparency Report, in 2009.

Malaysia Airlines website hacked by 'Lizard Squad'

The image of a Lizard in a top hat replaced the Malaysia Airlines official portalGroup claiming to represent the ‘Cyber Caliphate’ posts phrase ‘Plane Not Found’ on MH370 airline’s portal


The Malaysia Airlines website was commandeered on Monday by hackers who referenced the Islamic State jihadists and claimed to be from the “Lizard Squad”, a group known for previous denial-of-service attacks.
The website’s front page was replaced with an image of a tuxedo-wearing lizard, and read “Hacked by LIZARD SQUAD - OFFICIAL CYBER CALIPHATE”.
It also carried the headline “404 - Plane Not Found”, an apparent reference to the airlines’ puzzling loss of flight MH370 last year with 239 people aboard.
Media reports said versions of the takeover in some regions included the wording “ISIS will prevail”.
The airline did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
The Lizard Squad is a group of hackers that has caused havoc in the online world before, taking credit for attacks that took down the Sony PlayStation Network and Microsoft’s Xbox Live network last month.
The Islamic State, an extremist Sunni Muslim group, has seized large swathes of Syria and Iraq, where it has declared an Islamic “caliphate”.
It has drawn thousands of fighters from across the globe to its anti-Western cause, and shocked the world with its video-taped executions of journalists and other foreigners it has captured, the most recent being a Japanese security contractor it claimed Sunday to have beheaded.
A second Japanese captive being held by the militants has also been threatened with execution.
The IS group, which uses social media in recruiting and spreading its message, is believed to harbour ambitions of launching a cyber-war against the West.
It is unclear why Malaysia Airlines was targeted.
But concern has been rising in Malaysia after scores of its citizens were lured to the IS cause in the Middle East. Malaysian authorities last week said they have detained 120 people suspected of having IS sympathies or planning to travel to Syria.

#Game: Grim Fandango Remastered Preview

We finally got a chance to play Grim Fandango Remastered, and now nothing else matters.
Based on various legends of Mexican folklore, Grim Fandango is packed to the hilt with dancing skeletons, crime, romance, and much more. You play Manny Calavera, a mid-level worker at the Department of Death (the DOD) who's trying to work off his sins in life so that he can get to his final reward. As a reaper, Manny frees incoming souls from their shrouds, finds out what kind of underworld travel packages their goodness in life has earned them, and then sends them on their way. Unfortunately, business hasn't been very good for Manny of late. As the game begins, Calavera is told that he must sell a premium travel package to a soul or lose his job. In his search, Manny uncovers a hideous plot, a beautiful woman, and a crew of loyal friends (not necessarily in that order).
Based on the acclaimed 1998 classic, this remake of Tim Schafer's original adventure title employs the stunning technology used to bring Broken Age to life for a fresh new way to experience Grim Fandango.
Release Date: January 27, 2015
GenreAdventure

Be the first to submit a cheat for Grim Fandango Remastered. Or read the IGN Guide.



Sex, style and a happy New Year at Paris’s Crazy Horse

FRANCE 24 dropped in at Paris’s infamous Crazy Horse cabaret, where visitors from the four corners of the world celebrated New Year’s Eve with champagne, caviar and a stage-full of barely clad dancers.

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The 20 Best Job Search Sites for Finding a Job

When it comes to job hunting, navigating the vast expanse of the internet for the ideal job search website can feel like searching for a nee...