Google Removes Pirate Bay Related Apps From Play Store

the pirate bay most popular file sharing siteInterestingly enough despite Google deciding not to blacklist certain pirate websites from its search, the company has recently started to delete apps related to piracy in its Google Play Store. According to reports, Google has been actively deleting apps that are related to piracy, such as The Pirate Bay Proxy, The Pirate Bay Premium, The Pirate Bay Mirror, and PirateApp.

These apps have been completely removed from Google Play so if you were wondering where they went, well they have been deleted. According to the developers of these apps, they were sent a warning message which also informed them as to the reason why their apps were removed in the first place.

The message reads, “REASON FOR REMOVAL: Violation of the intellectual property and impersonation or deceptive behavior provisions of the Content Policy. Please refer to the IP infringement and impersonation policy help article for more information.” However for those who have already downloaded the apps, you can keep using them as per usual, assuming that future Android updates won’t break the app.

We suppose an official download of these apps are no longer available, but enterprising users should be able to find them on third-party app stores or maybe even by downloading the APK and installing it manually, but as far as Google is concerned, they have done their part in attempting to curb piracy attempts.

Google Removes Pirate Bay Related Apps From Play Store

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What to Ask a Thoughtful Billionaire

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Imagine you’re in a room in which the level of creativity and passion cannot be measured. In which positive influences from many corners of our economy, that too often go unnoticed, are on full display. In which authentic conversations propel audience members and guest speakers alike to contribute to a powerful discourse. Where no one would have thought beforehand that in one single room magical exchanges take place.

I had the privilege of attending the Wealth & Giving Forum’s 2014 symposium this past October and it turned out to be both an uplifting and emotional experience for me. I shared my personal journey as a social entrepreneur, surrounded by highly regarded individuals who have made such meaningful contributions to various communities locally and beyond: on hand were William Louis-Dreyfus, Silda Wall Spitzer, Ron Baron, Christina Lewis Halpern and Natalia Oberti Noguera, to name a few.

At first, I thought I was simply there as a dreamer — someone still in the early stages of my career, striving towards success and trying to make the best of my potential. I thought I was there solely to learn from the remarks of great and more seasoned individuals. Little did I know, I was also in attendance to provide insight or better yet, knowledge. It was at the Wealth & Giving Forum’s symposium, that I realized more than ever, that I have much relevance and add value.

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In the course of the day, I was able to meet Ron Baron, an exceptional man and CEO of Baron Capital Group management firm, whom Forbes magazine reports is worth $2.1 billion. One of Mr. Baron’s key messages to me, and everyone in the room, was how much he counts on and invests in individuals, more so than a brand, a company or a product. He made it clear just how rigorously diligent he is about getting to know the individuals running a company before making an investment. That diligence includes questions about the person’s personal history, family and values.

During the Q&A session, I asked Mr. Baron if he had ever invested in a Benefit Corporation, a new legal form of incorporation pioneered and championed by B-Labs. He responded with a question of his own: “What is a Benefit Corporation?” I proceeded to share with him the basic elements of Benefit Corporations and realized I, a young social entrepreneur, was having an exchange with a seasoned and respected Wall Street investor and philanthropist. It stuck me that we too often forgot just how powerful dialogue can be as a form of learning. From a simple question, a dialogue unfolded in which I was able to share a piece of knowledge with Mr. Baron and everyone in the room. What one learns through curiosity and exchange benefits not just the curious, but others around you. The forum provides a special space where mutual respect is the unspoken mode, questions were unfiltered, exchange is encouraged and new insights emerge. The unspoken motto is: “We all add value to one another” no matter our place or stage in life.

As someone still in the formative stages of my endeavors, The Wealth & Giving Forum gave me more courage to be curious, to learn through dialogue and to spread love as much as I can. It taught me that when you express your passions, it is an act of growth and kindness — and that asking a question is a form of giving. A question posed is an opportunity for everyone to ponder the reply for themselves and with respect to their own journey. Lastly, I was reminded at the forum to not judge groups and to avoid preconceived notions about, for example, “the wealthy.” Too often we assume that the wealthy are all-knowing and more aware than the rest of us. What Mr. Baron taught me is that sometimes folks attain wealth because they are curious and ask the right questions before making an important decision. And they are not always born into wealth. Many members of the Baron family struggled mightily during the Depression.

Mr. Baron also shared an inspiring story about his giving, pre-billionaire days. When he was a college student in Washington, D.C. his parents, who were comfortable but of modest means, gave him $50 to buy a dressy blazer. However, Mr. Baron was troubled by the challenges the young state of Israel was facing soon after a war broke out with the country’s Arab neighbors. Mr. Baron decided to forego the blazer and gave the money instead to an organization collecting money for people under duress in Israel. As Mr. Baron noted, that gift was meaningful because “I felt it, knowing that was a lot of money for me and my parents.”

In the end, the forum is a place where the sharing of knowledge is the gift, one that makes the participants on hand wealthier in ways much more of consequence than more money in the bank. It was a real honor for me to share a stage with such genuinely good people.

Damali Elliott — Petals-N-Belles Founder | Chief Dream Builder

Obamacare Impacts Primary Care Doctor Shortage

MIAMI (AP) — When Olivia Papa signed up for a new health plan last year, her insurance company assigned her to a primary care doctor. The relatively healthy 61-year-old didn’t try to see the doctor until last month, when she and her husband both needed authorization to see separate specialists.

She called the doctor’s office several times without luck. “They told me that they were not on the plan, they were never on the plan and they’d been trying to get their name off the plan all year,” said Papa, who recently bought a plan from a different insurance company.

It was no better with the next doctor she was assigned. The Naples, Florida, resident said she left a message to make an appointment, “and they never called back.”

The Papas were among the 6.7 million people who gained insurance through the Affordable Care Act last year, flooding a primary care system that is struggling to keep up with demand.

A survey this year by The Physicians Foundation found that 81 percent of doctors describe themselves as either over-extended or at full capacity, and 44 percent said they planned to cut back on the number of patients they see, retire, work part-time or close their practice to new patients.

At the same time, insurance companies have routinely limited the number of doctors and providers on their plans as a way to cut costs. The result has further restricted some patients’ ability to get appointments quickly.

One purpose of the new health law was connecting patients, many of whom never had insurance before, with primary care doctors to prevent them from landing in the emergency room when they are sicker and their care is more expensive. Yet nearly 1 in 5 Americans lives in a region designated as having a shortage of primary care physicians, and the number of doctors entering the field isn’t expected to keep pace with demand.

The Association of American Medical Colleges projects the shortage will grow to about 66,000 in little more than a decade as fewer residency slots are available and as more medical students choose higher-paying specialty areas.

For now, experts say most patients are receiving the care they need, even if they have to drive farther, wait longer or see a nurse practitioner or physician assistant rather than a doctor.

More importantly, many are getting care for the first time. The surge also has forced many doctors to streamline their practice and rely more on mid-tier professionals instead of seeing every patient themselves.

“Family doctors are seeing a pretty significant increase in requests for appointments from new patients,” said Dr. Wanda Filer, a primary care doctor in York, Pennsylvania, and president of the American Academy of Family Physicians.

In response, the academy of more than 115,000 doctors say they’re adding new physicians to their practices, relying more on nurse practitioners and physician’s assistants, adding evening and weekend appointments. Despite the demand, Filer said most patients can get same-day appointments with someone on their team.

Dr. Laura Byerly has seen a surge of more than 2,000 new patients since January at her chain of health clinics in Hillsboro, Oregon, about 30 minutes west of Portland. Many had sporadic or no medical care for many years.

She hired new primary care doctors, receptionists and nurses whose sole role is to see new patients and prepare the chart for the first visit with the doctor. They even opened a new clinic so patients who used to drive 45 minutes for a visit could now see a doctor five minutes from home.

“The new patients required a significant amount of work to understand just what medications they should be on, what are their active diagnoses, what studies are needed now, and just who they are and what their life is like,” said Byerly, who is the medical director of the Virginia Garcia Memorial Foundation health clinics.

Dr. Jack Chou takes patients only during open enrollment. Otherwise, it’s a six to nine-month wait at his Los Angeles-area practice, where most of the new patients were covered through Medicaid expansion.

“The initial visit takes much longer because we’re trying to learn about patients who had fragmented care or no care at all,” said Chou. Despite the staffing struggles, “it’s actually a godsend for some of my patients.”

While most doctors are successfully juggling the influx, there have been cases like that of the Papas, in which consumers call multiple doctors only to find they are not in network or the doctors are not taking new patients.

Insurance agent Anthony Halby heard similar complaints from his clients in Grass Valley, California, a Sierra foothill community about an hour east of Sacramento. He said half a dozen consumers wanted him to switch their health plans as soon as the second round of open enrollment started earlier this month. They told him the plan they chose last year made it extremely difficult to find primary care doctors.

Only two insurance companies in the Gold Rush-era town offer coverage through the state exchange, and just four or five primary care doctors out of about 135 signed up with one insurer.

The other insurer has more doctors, but most are considered out of network. That means patients who use them will pay 60 percent of the bill, he said.

“Coverage does not equal access,” said Halby, who instead recommends his clients choose a plan outside the exchange that has a much broader provider network but also will not come with the government premium subsidies given to most of those who buy insurance through the exchange. “I tell people this up front: The premiums are going to be higher because there’s no subsidy. However, I’m going to guarantee you can keep your doctor.”

Princeton Has A Shadow Fraternity System Nobody Controls

When Princeton University officials learned that a student had mass-e-mailed a photo of a woman performing oral sex at one of its 11 eating clubs (social clubs that resemble fraternities), it quietly began investigating the matter. Despite the fact that passing around a photo of a sex act without the consent of those pictured is a crime in New Jersey, the university did not inform local police. The school’s squeamish approach to the incident raises questions about how it can discipline its students—and abide by stricter government guidelines for handling sexual assault—when so much social life at the institution lives outside campus confines.

On Oct. 12, Adam Krop, a vice president at the Tiger Inn, one of Princeton’s oldest eating clubs, sent an e-mail to all members that included a “crude joke” and a description of an “Asian chick,” along with the photo, according to the New York Times. “Our investigation began as soon as we received a report, just days after the alleged incident,” says Martin Mbugua, a University spokesman.

Indian Ambassador In U.S.: 'Growing Convergence Of Our Interests' Shifted Relationship

WASHINGTON — Dr. S. Jaishankar, one of India’s most experienced diplomats, has a knack for being in crucial places at crucial times: Moscow in the early ’80s, the U.S. (as a political attaché) during President Ronald Reagan’s second term, Eastern Europe in the early ’90s, Tokyo in the late ’90s, and India’s ambassador to China from 2009 to 2013. He returned to the U.S. as ambassador last year at a time when ties were deepening dramatically between the two countries.

On the eve of the launch of HuffPost India, Jaishankar touched on the U.S.-India relationship, media and yoga, when he spoke with HuffPost via email just before he left for a trip home to India:

Dr. Jaishankar, thank you for taking the time to speak with us on the occasion of the launch of HuffPost India. We’re very excited to do our part in expanding the global conversation. What’s your sense of the role of social and digital media in India today?

First of all, welcome to the party. Clearly, social and digital media have a significant role in India. As in other areas, we see the phenomena of leapfrogging on one hand and co-existence of successive generations [of media] on the other. Professionally, it calls for a different set of skills to make the most out of them.

Well, thanks for using that skill on our behalf. We both can remember when the U.S. and India were wary, distant allies — if allies at all. India was famously “nonaligned” during the Cold War. Now our two countries have moved much closer to each other. I know it’s a complex question, but why?

We have had shared values for a long time. What has changed in recent years is the growing convergence of our interests. As for being nonaligned, its Cold War context is overplayed. At the end of the day, it was about freedom of choice and independence of thought. Both remain relevant even if times have changed. The U.S., I believe, is also coming to terms with the reality that partnerships are more appropriate now than alliances.

India is an “Eastern” country with a “Western” commitment to free speech and democracy. Does that give India a uniquely important role in the global politics of the 21st century as they relate to, say, China and even groups such as the Islamic State?

Free speech and democracy are not just Western commitments. India has a very long history of pluralism, which is the underlying value. We have chosen a political model that suits us best. Obviously we would not have done so if we did not think highly of it.

Trade and investment between the U.S. and India have expanded enormously, and I see that India recently announced measures to remove more bureaucratic barriers. What else needs to be done in both countries? Be as blunt and specific as you want!

I prefer a broader answer. We are trying to make India an easier place to do business. It is as easy as that. Which, on the ground, of course, is easier said and more challenging to get done. A lot of that is overcoming process issues rather than changing laws. The bottom line, however, is a change of mindset — instill that commitment to improve the business climate, as much for our own business as for foreign investors.

What more can our two countries do together to deal with the challenge of climate change?

We are focusing on renewables and trying to get nuclear power cooperation restarted.

The Indian-American community is fast-growing and increasingly influential; the new U.S. ambassador-designate to your country, as you know, is Richard Verma, the first Indian-American named to that post. What’s the role — and what should be the role — of that community in relations between our countries? How have they been helpful?

The community is a game changer. It has shaped the American view of India and Indians. Much of the credit for the upswing in our ties goes to those people. As the relationship expands and feeds into the transformation of India, I am confident they will play a still bigger role.

Two related questions. For our U.S. readers, and those elsewhere around the world, what’s the most important thing for them to know about India that they probably don’t know? And for our new Indian readers, what’s the most important thing they need to know about America that they don’t know?

Funnily enough, the answers to the two are the same. At both ends, people don’t fully appreciate how alike we are. We have a work ethic, an individualism, family values and patriotism that are similar. That is why Indians do so well in the U.S.

What do you like most about life in the U.S.? I would ask what you like least, but you are a diplomat.

Like the most? The American attitude. The “can do” approach. Least? Baseball. It blocks cricket.

Any advice for us on how to cover the news in India?

Localize.

Can Indian-Americans do us a favor and explain the rules of cricket to sports fans, or have you concluded that that would be a waste of time?

Definitely a waste of time.

I read that Indian officials want to take back control — marketing and branding control, if you will — of yoga, the practice of which is booming in the U.S. and around the world. I’m curious to see what that marketing campaign is going to look like! I’m hereby giving you space in The Huffington Post to make the pitch. Which is?

Yoga is a lifestyle, an awareness. Don’t approach it as a product. No one is trying to control it. It is a grass-roots phenomenon, which is why it is growing.

Buy You a Beer?

Although I am generally cynical about human nature, I am always gratified by displays of generosity. Lately, I have been impressed by the importance of reciprocity. My intermittent hope for our species is thereby renewed.

What I have been doing is this. I fly often. I have started to buy drinks or a snack for the people seated in my aisle. Domestic airlines nowadays charge for everything, and the seating is so cramped that we become better acquainted with our fellow travelers than perhaps we would prefer.

The first time I picked up the tab for a stranger was after he switched rows so I could be seated with my wife. While I felt I should make the gesture, I was happy to do so.

The next few iterations, however, I realized I had created what social scientists refer to as a natural experiment. I had no ulterior motive, though I could not help noticing how the scenario played out. Without any specific expectations, I nonetheless was surprised.

Some people turn down the offer. I take no offense. A woman especially might suppose the fellow next to her was some creep trying to hit on her, and she’d be trapped for hours.

On just about every other occasion, when I succeed in being generous, the recipient of the kindness has returned the favor. This has happened spontaneously.

During a recent flight, for example, two business consultants across the aisle covered a round each. We all enjoyed the trip on the puddle-jumper more than we would have otherwise.

More than once, the flight attendant has taken notice. Instead of my treating someone else, I have ended up being comped the beer or glass of wine.

These random encounters over the course of a three-hour plane ride reveal our unscripted selves. They are as significant as friendships in describing our personalities.

Evolutionary psychologists ponder altruism. They wonder why anybody behaves in a manner that appears less than self-interested. They speculate that charity is a charade; it is not benevolent but serves another purpose. We are willing to sacrifice ourselves for our cousins, if we save a sizable number of them, because our genes may be within certain probabilities propagated by our relatives.

Many of the hypotheses turn on versions of the classic Prisoner’s Dilemma. Two persons allegedly participating in the same criminal conspiracy have been captured and are being held in separate cells with modest evidence against them: each is offered the opportunity to inform on the other. If one does but the other doesn’t, the former will be set free, the latter will serve a longer sentence; if both do, they each will serve an intermediate sentence; if neither does, they each will serve serve shorter sentences. In game theory modeling about this hypothetical, the best strategy is called “tit for tat:” an individual remains loyal until betrayed.

The mutuality of obligations is not only rational but also just. We are nice because the social contract is always tacit if not innate. The genuinely solicitous would regard any quid pro quo as obvious but not to be pointed out.

I do right by you. Even if neither of us has said anything about it, you will return the favor sooner or later. There is an informal ledger we maintain on each other, discreet so as to preserve our sense of free will as well as goodwill.

Aware of these dynamics, the more cautious among us avoid overcommitting themselves by happenstance. As a corollary, they recognize the ratcheting aspect of our relationships: abuse returns itself.

Yet the world is as it should be. Cooperation requires the slight risk of initiating a cycle and then the effort to sustain it should come more readily.

'RuPaul's Drag Race' Season Seven Cast Revealed (PHOTOS)

Hello, hello, hello!

“RuPaul’s Drag Race” is back for its seventh season with one of its most diverse line-ups of queens to date. Fourteen lucky ladies will once again go head-to-head for the coveted title of “America’s Drag Superstar” and a cash prize of $100,000.

Logo announced this year’s cast Sunday at the 2014 NewNowNext Awards, after airing a show celebrating 15 fan-favorite queens from the past six seasons.

“This year we have some of the youngest and oldest contestants in ‘RuPaul’s Drag Race’ herstory,” RuPaul said in an email statement sent to The Huffington Post. “Study each queen closely. Do not underestimate anyone. The girls that make it to the top this season will shock you.”

So who made the cut? Check out the list below and be sure to tune into the premiere of “RuPaul’s Drag Race” season seven, slated for January 2015.

This Flying Photog's Haunting Images Reminds Us Of Pearl Harbor Attack

This Flying Photog's Haunting Images Reminds Us Of Pearl Harbor Attack

Acclaimed warbird photographer, Cockpit 360 app impresario and good friend of Foxtrot Alpha, Lyle Jansma , takes us to the Hawaiian island of Oahu for an incredible visual tour of historic Ford Island on this the 73rd anniversary of the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor.

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Report: The Father Of Video Games, Ralph Baer, Has Passed Away

Report: The Father Of Video Games, Ralph Baer, Has Passed Away

Some very sad news this evening: Gamasutra reports that Ralph Baer, widely regarded as the father of the video game industry, has passed away at the age of 92.

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Another Near Collision Confirms That Drones' Biggest Problem Is People

Another Near Collision Confirms That Drones' Biggest Problem Is People

BBC News is reporting that the Civil Aviation Authority (CAA) has confirmed that another (stupid) amateur drone pilot almost hit an Airbus A320 as it was landing at Heathrow Airport on July 22nd, threatening the lives of nearly 180 people on board.

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