UK To Stop Passengers From Boarding With Uncharged Devices As Well

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Acting on intelligence reports that terrorists have created new explosives that might be able to pass through current security checks the U.S. has now made it mandatory for passengers to demonstrate that any and all electronic devices they’re carrying on board are able to turn on. If the devices run out of charge or simply do not turn on the passengers will not be allowed to take them on board. The UK has followed suit as well with the Department of Transport announcing that passengers on flights in and out of the UK will have to show that their devices have enough charge to turn on.

The UK’s Department of Transport says that this policy will be applied to passengers “on some routes both to and from the UK.” For security reasons it has not revealed the routes on which the policy is going to be strictly enforced, but The Telegraph believes that routes in Middle East and part of Asia are most likely to be affected.

At first British Airways said that passengers on these routes will not be allowed to board with or without the devices if they did not turn on. However the airline has since changed its position and will allow passengers to board flights. Their devices can either be left with the airline to be picked up on return, it can be forwarded to any address they like or passengers can rebook on a later flight and charge their devices in the meantime.

All of this may seem troublesome but it is after all being done in the interest of security. Since this is likely to prolong queues at security, passengers on routes to Middle East or parts of Asia should consider heading to the airport a bit earlier than usual.

UK To Stop Passengers From Boarding With Uncharged Devices As Well , original content from Ubergizmo. Read our Copyrights and terms of use.

Verizon: U.S. Government Made 150,000 Customer Info Requests This Year

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Ever since last summer’s leaks about the U.S. government’s secret electronic spying programs internet companies as well as mobile carriers have been trying to be more transparent about the customer information requests that they receive from the government. The country’s largest mobile carrier Verizon reported yesterday that it had received nearly 150,000 customer information requests from the U.S. government in the first half of this year, most of them were subpoenas.

According to Verizon it was presented with 72,342 subpoenas with almost half of them requesting the carrier to divulge information on a phone number or IP address. Others requested transactional information such as the list of phone numbers called by a particular customer.

The carrier received over 37,000 court orders which included orders for 714 wiretaps that allow the government to access content of communications. More than 3,000 pen registers and trap and trace orders were handed down to provide the government with real-time access to outgoing and incoming phone numbers.

The carrier also touched briefly on international requests for information, with France making the bulk of requests for identifying customers with either an IP address or a phone number. The country made 762 such requests.

The government’s argument is often that all this is required to keep the nation safe, whereas privacy advocates don’t buy that logic. Its a never ending debate really, but at least now the companies and corporations are being open about how much information they’re giving to the government.

Verizon: U.S. Government Made 150,000 Customer Info Requests This Year , original content from Ubergizmo. Read our Copyrights and terms of use.

2 Arrested For Flying Drone Close To New York Police Chopper

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While the Federal Aviation Administration has until next year to come up with rules that govern the use of drones in the National Airspace System there’s no denying the fact that drones have already taken to the skies. Available for a couple of hundred dollars, with models offering better altitude and range costing thousands, its fairly easy for anyone to get their hands on a drone.

This means that inevitably there would be a situation where someone lands in trouble even when they think they aren’t doing anything wrong. That’s exactly what happened to Wilkins Mendoza and Remy Castro who were arrested for flying a DJI Phantom 2 drone too close to a New York Police helicopter.

According to the NYPD the drone was flying at 2,000 feet and was only 800 feet from the helicopter. Under the current rules that govern model airplanes, these apply to drones as well, pilots must never lose sight and must fly them at altitudes of less than 400 feet. But both Mendoza and Castro say their drone wasn’t flying that high.

They say that their drone was hardly at 300 feet when it began to be chased by the NYPD chopper. Castro’s brother Jonathan tells The New York Daily News that they were trying to get the drone away from the helicopter but “it keeps on following the drone.” He also claims to have video proof of the helicopter following the drone and not the other way around.

Even though the DJI Phantom 2 can reach heights of 2,000 feet it is usually flown at lower altitudes, and since its battery powered, it wouldn’t have been able to fly for more than 20 minutes anyway.

Both Mendoza and Castro have been charged with felony reckless endangerment but it looks like they won’t go down without a fight.

2 Arrested For Flying Drone Close To New York Police Chopper , original content from Ubergizmo. Read our Copyrights and terms of use.

Xiaomi Reportedly Launching Fitness Tracker Soon

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We often feature Chinese manufacturer Xiaomi in the news even though it has little footprint outside of its home country. The company is merely four years old yet it is ahead of some of its biggest rivals in terms of market share in China. Its units sales have already witnessed a 271 percent growth this year. Xiaomi sells powerful devices at highly competitive prices and now it appears that the company is taking that same strategy to wearable devices as well.

As per reports originating from China Xiaomi will soon be launching a fitness tracker. Since its ultimate aim is to offer devices at low prices it is unlikely that Xiaomi’s upcoming wearable device will be anything more than a fairly basic fitness tracker.

Nevertheless it would allow the company to cut the likes of Jawbone and Fitbit on its home turf. Both companies offer similar wearable devices though they cost above $100 at the very least. Xiaomi’s fitness tracker will reportedly cost about 199 Yuan or roughly $30.

It may even compete against similar wearable devices from its rivals in other emerging markets as well. Xiaomi recently listed a handful of countries in the region where it is expanding operations next. By introducing its low cost wearable device there alongside its competitively priced mobile devices, Xiaomi may very well be able to capture significant market share.

The Chinese manufacturer has ambitions of making it to the U.S. but that plan could take up to a year to materialize.

Xiaomi Reportedly Launching Fitness Tracker Soon , original content from Ubergizmo. Read our Copyrights and terms of use.

Fox News' Keith Ablow Says Marriage Equality Leads To Marrying Your Dog

When discussing gay rights on Fox News, who better to consult than the network’s reliable source Dr. Keith Ablow?

“Fox & Friends” asked Ablow on Wednesday for his thoughts on a new California bill that replaces the words “husband” and “wife” with “spouse” under state laws. The new bill has been described as a “milestone in the journey towards full equality” and an end to the last barrier to same-sex marriage in California.

“Nuts,” Ablow said of the new bill. “There’s no way that the state of California can deny a marriage license to four spouses now. Eight spouses, or I would say three human spouses and the canine they absolutely love because if love is the foundation of marriage, they can love their dog, too.”

That’s right folks. You heard it here first. A step forward for marriage equality will only lead to polygamy and marrying your dog.

Watch the video for the full clip on Fox News.

Elizabeth Mitchell Joins 'Once Upon A Time'

ABC’s “Once Upon A Time” just made another huge casting announcement.

After finding the actors who will take on the roles of Elsa, Anna and Kristoff in next season’s “Frozen” crossover, the storybook drama is adding a “Lost” alum to the cast for Season 4. Elizabeth Mitchell, who played Dr. Juliet Burke on “Lost,” has just signed on for a mysterious new role on the hit ABC series. Mitchell’s character, who may or may not be the show’s new villain when it returns, will have ties to the trio from Arendell and her story arc will also have her crossing paths with some of our favorite residents in Storybrooke.

Are the Rich Any Good? Think Immigrant Women Leaders

Attacking the Rich

Resentment against the rich seems to be growing around the world. The recent recession exacerbated feelings already running high: demonstrations, Occupy Wall Street in New York City and elsewhere, the Daily Show where Stewart openly mocks rich Americans, a recent Gallup poll finding that one in five Americans struggled to afford food in the last year — all ingrain in us the idea that American extreme levels of inequality are morally unacceptable. Money has become be a touchy-touchy topic.

So, are the rich of America under attack? Yes. I believe it’s a waste of time though. Let’s look into this issue focusing on some trailblazing tendencies in the rich world that counteract its mainstream, and see how immigrant women leaders, the subjects of my upcoming book, fit them.

Marx, Picketty, and Plutocracy

I grew up in the country where higher education was free — but we had to read/learn a lot of Karl Marx in return, so I have a good idea of his theory and desire to tear down the rich. A recent book by Thomas Picketty, Capital in the Twenty-First Century, has repeated the titanic effort of Marx on a new level of the free market — showing severe signs that social inequality is even more entrenched. Some think it’s discriminatory that the world’s top 1 percent has 50 percent of the wealth. In fact, such inequality is no big news: In 1906, the Italian economist Vilfredo Pareto was the first to come up with the similar numbers: According to his 80-20 rule, about 1 percent of the population should own about 51 percent of the wealth.

Whatever holes one may pick in Picketty and other economists, plutocracy is rooted deeply and rules the world. If this is indeed inevitable, what’s to be done?

Oh, the Wonderful Things that the Money Can Do

Oh, the wonderful things Mr. Buffett can do

Mr. Buffett is a dynamic driver of the new ideas: the so-called Buffett Rule would apply a minimum tax rate of 30 percent on individuals making more than a million dollars a year. Although the rule was blocked by a Republican filibuster, Warren Buffett and the like-minded 1 percent-ers make their contributions through charity — since the U.S. tax system does not re-distribute wealth enough, to the mind of this significant minority. Thus, The Giving Pledge campaign, started in 2010 by Warren Buffett and Bill Gates, encourages the wealthiest people to make a commitment to give most of their wealth to philanthropic causes. As of February 2014, 122 billionaires have signed the pledge, including such famous Americans as Michael Bloomberg, Ted Turner, and Mark Zuckerberg; quite a few individuals from around the world; and some immigrant Americans, like Diane von Furstenberg and Manoj Bhargava.

I’ve interviewed several American immigrant women philanthropists while researching for my book. They’ve been through hurting and humiliating immigration/exile experiences that enhanced their innate understanding of those less fortunate. Some became very rich in America, and now they contribute big-time to America’s well-being and culture, for example:

Rosa de la Cruz, from Cuba — Art for the People

Rosa de la Cruz, a prominent philanthropist and collector of art, has redefined a public role for private art collectors. She went a long way to be where she is today: Exiled at 16, she learned to be responsible with money. Rosa married her Cuban youth sweetheart Carlos who made a fortune that eventually put them among the 50 most powerful families.

Taking care of the 30,000-square-foot de la Cruz Collection in the Design District of Miami, is Rosa’s alter ego. The Collection is open to the public free of charge and conducts diverse educational programs — including scholarships and group travels to Italy where Rosa and Carlos take the talented schoolchildren to learn art in-depth.

Rosa’s commitment to cultivating contemporary art — and bringing art to the people on a broader scale than ever before — became a unique form of community service. Her zealous wish to stretch art philanthropy into a new, more people-centered shape — and provide art education to the young generation and opportunities to emerging artists — can be broadly consequential in shaping the future of American culture.

Loida Nicolas-Lewis, from the Philippines — Fate and Fortune

Loida Nicolas-Lewis, a millionaire achiever, has her fate and fortune intricately intertwined. Loida had a Catholic upbringing, passed the bar exam in the Philippines, and — after a fateful blind date — she married an ambitious African-American lawyer who built a great fortune from scratch. But it was not her marriage or money that made Loida a star with both black and white business communities. On succeeding her late husband at TLC Beatrice, she was able to turn around the flagging global empire she inherited, earning her net worth — and then putting the money to good use, for many philanthropic and activist causes.

Recognizing the exceptional philanthropic capability of the American nation — which resonated with her own values — Loida embraced it, donating to many institutions: $3 million to her late husband’s alma mater, Harvard Law School; $1.5 million to the business school at Virginia State University; $5 million for the Reginald F. Lewis Museum of Maryland African American History and Culture in Baltimore, to name a few. As an activist, Loida is backing the U.S. Democratic Party and some civic causes in the Philippines.

What Money Can’t Buy

Not all the rich are narrow-minded money-makers consumed with self-interest or busy doing nothing. A significant minority acts to better the world — a tendency worth noting! Therefore, I believe that a positive approach will work better than attack on the rich, specifically: putting the philanthropically-minded rich — those who have already signed “The Giving Pledge” and those who haven’t — on a pedestal. In many ways, their heart-felt open-handedness makes them good role models. America should know its heroes/heroines — and this salutation is the honor that money can’t buy.

Let’s raise the national discussion of these issues and stretch public opinion into a pragmatic new shape.

Patti Austin's 5 Tips For Aspiring Singers

With 60 years of show-biz experience, jazz and R&B superstar Patti Austin has gained a lot of hard-earned wisdom about singing professionally.

Austin — whose godparents are Quincy Jones and Dinah Washington — began her career in 1954, when she performed at Harlem’s Apollo Theater as a 4-year-old. In addition to her string of hits (including “Do You Love Me” and “Baby, Come to Me”), Austin has sung with Michael Jackson, George Benson and Billy Joel, among others. Is it any wonder AARP chose her to judge its Boomer Superstar Contest?

Over 10,000 People Just Applied To Be 'Game Of Thrones' Extras

The extras are coming.

Fresco Film Services, a production company in Spain that’s working with HBO to fill roles for the next season of “Game of Thrones,” got a bit more than they bargained for when their casting call made its rounds on the Internet. In just 24 hours, over 10,000 people sent in their applications to be extras for when the show starts filming later his year. Thanks to the barrage of hopefuls sending in their headshots, the company took to their Facebook page to let candidates know they’d be responding in as timely a manner as possible.

Besides proving how obsessed the entire planet has become when it comes to George R.R. Martin’s fantasy series, the casting call also confirmed some theories on what fans can expect from the fifth season of the show. Some leaked script details reveal the country will probably be substituting for Dorne, the home of Prince Oberyn Martell, and we’re sure to see his famous offspring, collectively known as the Sand Snakes, before Season 5 ends.

'The Israeli People Demand Revenge' … or Peace?

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Photo courtesy of Eliran Levy

On June 30, the bodies of three kidnapped Israeli teens, Gil-Ad Shaer, Eyal Yifrah and Naftali Fraenkel were found in the West Bank. Since then, Israel has ramped up its aggression against Palestinians. Across Israel, a country seemingly once in mourning appeared to be transitioning to one steeped in anger and vengeance.

While this story and the history behind the conflict and occupation is one that is highly politicized and emotional, I do not seek to make a political point, nor do I seek to speak on behalf of anyone. While I do have my own personal opinions about what is happening in the region, I am writing this article simply to share a story… of one man, a Facebook page, and the power of hope in the face of hatred.

I Skyped with Eliran Levy a day after I stumbled across the Facebook page he created. After learning of the multiple Facebook pages created under the monikers of “The Israeli People Demand Revenge,” I was pleased to find amidst the fray and flurry of hate speech, racist anger, and violent rhetoric, a page that sought not to incite but unite.

The page Levy created, עם ישראל דורש שלום – The Israeli People Demand Peace, asks those who like it to “break the blood cycle”. The page, which some would call ironic because of its title, boasts a header reading, “Israelis unite against racism and hatred” and “A mother should never bury her child.” As of now the page has garnered nearly 1,500 likes. The page is filled with hundreds of images posted by Israelis with signs in Hebrew, English, and Arabic reading “Israelis Demand Peace.”

While it’s obvious that not all Israelis are represented by the nation’s Prime Minister and political establishment, it was refreshing to see Levy’s willingness to stray away from the mainstream rhetoric and say what millions of Israelis and Palestinians alike have been saying for decades: enough is enough. Our conversation gleamed many insights that I would like to share.

Eliran is a 27-year-old Israeli citizen and freelance media consultant from Tel-Aviv. A former journalist and Foreign Desk Coordinator for Israeli Channel 10, Levy created the Facebook page while in a meeting. “There was no group ‘looking for peace’,” he says. He believed that the vengeful Facebook pages already online did not accurately represent all Israelis and thus, his page was created.

The page has 3 objectives, he says. One of the objectives is to “remind Israelis that they are peaceful, and let Palestinians know in an unfiltered manner that not all Israelis are interested in continued violence. This page is not about how we can achieve this peace,” he says. “Our agenda is to say to both parties, Israeli and Palestinian societies, we have to stop the cycle of revenge.” Faced with an onslaught of media coverage from Israel, Levy says he wanted “to show the world that there are,” in fact, “Israelis who stand for peace.”

After the death of the three boys, most Israelis mourned the deaths in unison. But, as the government politicized the murders and individuals began to use the tragedy to score political points, tempers began to rise.

“They are our enemy, they all want to kill us,” Levy says of many Israelis’ perception of Palestinians immediately after the murders. “How can we start to talk about human rights when we think they’re all terrorists?” Levy asks. His question remains largely unanswered.

Levy says that many people who do believe in peace have expressed fear in supporting the page. He says that to say to the hysterical Israeli society ‘be calm and think rationally’ is a priority of many young liberals in the country. “Yes, it is the time to stop and think,” he says.

Of the current atmosphere in the country Levy says, “The situation here is tense–they [young, radical Israeli teens who spout racist ideologies] are our source of shame–even among the settlers there is criticism about them.” Pointing to unemployed, high school dropouts, Levy says that some young Israelis have nothing better to do than spew much of the hate that has been unleashed on a profound level sense the murders.

Still, whether or not most Israelis support the violence exerted upon the Palestinian people is not a question I can answer in this article without claims of bias.

When I asked Levy whether or not any friends of his had criticized him over the page, his response was surprising. “Yes, criticism from the radical left,” he said, noting that many of his friends argued that there are numerous rights that must be given before any peace can be established. His response: “Our end goal is peace so we should stop the violence now.

When I asked Eliran what he hoped for the page in the future, he took a deep breath and talked about hope.

“Some people believe there will never be peace,” he said, speaking of friends in Tel-Aviv and Ramallah. “But do not give up on us. The radical right is not really representing most of Israeli society; people are handling economic and social problems, and self-consumed, they do not occupy themselves with the occupation. They only think about Palestinians when they’ve been hurt by them,” he says.

“We still need to be educated on what is happening on the other side,” he says. “We need the help.”