YouTube: 1 Billion Plus Viewers, Zero Profit

youtube-new-logoYouTube certainly has an interesting problem on their hands – they might have more than a billion viewers on the site, clearly making it one of the most popular websites in the world by far and large, but the even more amazing thing about it is, it continues to show that it is unable to churn a profit for Google – YouTube’s owners in essence.

The Wall Street Journal has reported that folks who are familiar with the matter claim that YouTube is finding it difficult and challenging to break even, and this is in spite of its revenue that rings up a tune of $4 billion. YouTube managed to account for just 6% of Google’s ad sales, which is a rather surprising development after taking into consideration just how ubiquitous video content from YouTube as well as its corresponding links are.

Perhaps the reason that majority of people access the website through shared links and embedded videos could be the problem, rather than having to drop by the YouTube page directly. If you were Google, how else do you think you would be able to monetize YouTube? It is a real tough nut to crack, this, and you can be sure that in due time, there will be some other organization or upstart that would like to challenge YouTube’s dominance – and make some money in the process, of course.

YouTube: 1 Billion Plus Viewers, Zero Profit , original content from Ubergizmo. Read our Copyrights and terms of use.

The Best Apps in Microsoft's "Garage"

Looks like we’ll have Android Pay to answer to Apple Pay, and the RadioShack name may wind up in the hands of some millionaire . Welcome to Bitstream, all the best news tidbits and rumors you missed in the last 24 hours. Goes down great with a cup of coffee.

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U.S.-Led Airstrikes Hit Area Of Syria Where Islamic State Took Christians, Says Monitoring Group

BEIRUT, Feb 26 (Reuters) – A U.S.-led alliance launched air strikes on Thursday against Islamic State positions in an area of northeastern Syria where the group is estimated to have abducted at least 220 Assyrian Christians this week, a group monitoring the war reported.

The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said the air strikes had targeted Islamic State fighters near town of Tel Tamr, where the militants attacked a string of Assyrian villages earlier this week.

(Writing by Tom Perry; Editing by Alison Williams)

Me, Myself, And Authenticity

Those who go looking for evidence of increasing self-absorption seem to find it everywhere these days. Inflated egos are apparently smiling in the selfies people snap, self-obsession woven into their compulsive online sharing. Even the tiniest language choices are revealing. First-person pronouns like “I” and “me” are crowding out “we” and “our” in all kinds of communication—from advertising copy to academic writing to newspaper articles to song lyrics.

The shift, some academics warn, is proof of narcissism run amok. It’s popular to blame millennials, of course.

More Ambition Needed to Finish the Job for Out of School Children

2015-02-25-DSC01339.JPG
photo credit: OPEQ, DRC

This year is particularly important for our work on creating a more just and equitable world. It’s the deadline world leaders set for the achievement of the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs). Among these goals was the commitment to get all children everywhere access to at least a basic education by the end of 2015–MDG 2.

Progress has been made, but not nearly enough. At this pace we will not finish the job. At this pace, the last poor girl in Africa will not have a seat in the classroom until 2086. At least 58 million children remain out of school and it is estimated that at least 250 million more are in the classroom but are not learning.

Today A World at School released a ‘scorecard‘ on MDG 2. It’s a quick look at 29 of the countries with more than 500,000 children out of school (some with several million) yet to achieve MDG 2. The scorecard shows that with 10 months to the 2015 deadline (and nearly 15 years having passed) many countries have yet to even establish solid strategies to get all children in school. Only 13 of 29 have anything they would describe as a strategy for MDG 2 and only 4 of the 29 countries have achieved the recommended levels of domestic education financing–20% of the national budget.

While the scorecard and the questions it asks give a basic overview of what is not happening, the reasons why are unendingly complex. For some countries it is a very obvious lack of political will and leadership to prioritize education. The poorest countries lack the resources to scale-up or lack the domestic reforms (like taxes) necessary to generate more resources. Some countries have made progress since 2000, but the scale of the problem was so large that even cutting the number of out of school children in half still leaves them with hundreds of thousands or even millions of children still out of school. Many countries are plagued by conflict, fragility or both–only 3 out of 29 are neither. And most importantly, those children left out of school at this point are the hardest to reach, the most vulnerable children in our world. Reaching them will be harder than those we have reached so far.

Many of these countries–some of the poorest in the world–have also seen significant declines in donor aid for education. Since 2012 at least 12 African countries have seen cuts in aid to basic education of $10 million or more.

Donor aid for education is nowhere more inadequate than in the countries and situations where it is needed most–those in conflict. In 2014 only 1% of humanitarian funding went to education–despite the fact that more than half of all out of school children live in conflict areas. This lack of investment is due to a widespread lack of understanding of the ways that education saves lives in the short and long-term, an ignoring of the demands of those living in crisis (who ask for education for their children), and a significant failure of the current funding architecture (between humanitarian relief and development) to work with donors to do whatever it takes to finish the job.

It’s a bleak picture. But it can change. The changes needed to finish the job include:

  • Countries yet to achieve MDG 2 must have strong, costed plans to get all children in school and scale-up education financing to at least 20% of their budget.
  • Donors must keep the promise made in 2000 that “no countries seriously committed to education for all will be thwarted in their achievement of [universal access] by a lack of resources.” Donors need to step up rather than continuing to fall back in terms of total funding and must better coordinate with each other and governments to avoid sudden shocks to countries when individual donor priorities change
  • The gross underfunding of education in conflict and emergencies should be urgently addressed. Development and humanitarian agencies must collaborate better to mitigate the short and long-term impacts of crisis on the futures of children.

We’re set up at the moment for failure at the end of 2015. Not for all children but for many of the children whose lives literally depend on the options that education will give them.

We must do better. And we must do it quickly.

Kolleen Bouchane is the Director of Policy and Research for the Global Business Coalition for Education and the Director of Policy and Advocacy for A World At School.

5 Ways To Take Your Veggie Dish To The Next Level

Forget the cheese sauce. Jennifer Tyler Lee, creator of a website that gets families to eat more vegetables, shows us a few ways to take everything from asparagus to radicchio to new levels.

By Lynn Andriani

Read more at Oprah.com

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New ISIS Video Shows Militants Smashing Ancient Iraq Artifacts

BAGHDAD (AP) — The Islamic State group released a video on Thursday purportedly showing militants using sledgehammers to smash ancient artifacts in Iraq’s northern city of Mosul, describing them as idols that must be removed.

The destructions are part of a campaign by the IS extremists, who have destroyed a number of shrines — including Muslim holy sites — in order to eliminate what they view as heresy. They are also believed to have sold ancient artifacts on the black market in order to finance their bloody campaign across the region. The five-minute video shows a group of bearded men inside the Mosul Museum using hammers and drills to destroy several large statues, which are then shown in pieces and chipped. The video then shows a black-clad man at a nearby archaeological site inside Mosul drilling through and destroying a winged-bull Assyrian protective deity that dates back to the 7th century B.C.

The video was posted on social media accounts affiliated with the Islamic State group and though it could not be independently verified it appeared authentic, based on AP’s knowledge of the Mosul Museum.

Mosul, Iraq’s second-largest city and the surrounding Nineveh province fell to the militants during their blitz last June after Iraqi security forces melted away.

In their push, the extremists captured large swaths of land in both Iraq and neighboring Syria, declared a self-styled caliphate on territories that are under their control, killing members of religious minorities, driving others from their homes, enslaving women and destroying houses of worship.

The region under IS control in Iraq has nearly 1,800 of Iraq’s 12,000 registered archaeological sites and the militants appear to be out to cleanse it of any non-Islamic ideas, including library books, archaeological relics, and even Islamic sites considered idolatrous.

“Oh Muslims, these artifacts that are behind me were idols and gods worshipped by people who lived centuries ago instead of Allah,” a bearded man tells the camera as he stands in front of the partially demolished winged-bull.

“The so-called Assyrians and Akkadians and others looked to gods for war, agriculture and rain to whom they offered sacrifices,” he added, referring to groups that that left their mark on Mesopotamia for more than 5,000 years in what is now Iraq, eastern Syria and southern Turkey.

“Our prophet ordered us to remove all these statues as his followers did when they conquered nations,” the man in the video adds. The video bore the logo of the IS group’s media arm and was posted on a Twitter account used by the group.

Among the most important sites under the militants’ control are four ancient cities — Ninevah, Kalhu, Dur Sharrukin and Ashur — which were at different times the capital of the mighty Assyrian Empire.

The Assyrians first arose around 2500 B.C. and at one point ruled over a realm stretching from the Mediterranean coast to what is present-day Iran. Also in danger is the UNESCO World Heritage Site Hatra, which is thought to have been built in the 3rd or 2nd century B.C. by the Seleucid Empire. It flourished during the 1st and 2nd centuries as a religious and trading center.

The damage to Iraqi artifacts in Mosul is the latest episode in that has targeted the nation’s heritage.

The day after Baghdad fell to U.S. troops in April 2003, looters burst into the Iraqi National Museum in the Iraqi capital, making off with scores of priceless artifacts and leaving the floor littered with shattered pottery. The U.S. was widely criticized at the time for failing to protect the site.

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Follow Sinan Salaheddin on Twitter at https://twitter.com/sinansm

Neill Blomkamp's 'Alien' Sequel Will Probably Forget About Two 'Alien' Movies

“Aliens” fans upset that Hicks and Newt die at the beginning of “Alien 3” are maybe in for a treat. It appears Neill Blomkamp’s “Alien” movie will possibly pick up the franchise’s narrative after the events of “Aliens.”

Speaking to Sky News, in a video that has since been made private but was widely disseminated beforehand, Blomkamp said, “I want this film to feel like it is literally the genetic sibling of ‘Aliens.’ So it’s, ‘Alien,’ ‘Aliens,’ this movie.”

Which doesn’t mean that “Alien 3” and “Alien Resurrection,” the third and fourth “Alien” films, will be retconned out of existence, but maybe: In the same interview, “Alien” star Sigourney Weaver — who dies in “Alien 3” and is a clone in “Alien Resurrection” — said she hoped to give her character, Ellen Ripley, a “proper finish.”

Not that any of this should come as a total surprise. Blomkamp’s concept art for the sequel included a rendition of Hicks, alive and well.

Was working on this. Don’t think I am anymore. Love it though. #alien #xenomorph

A photo posted by Brownsnout (@neillblomkamp) on Jan 1, 2015 at 5:30pm PST

Wtf?

Una foto publicada por Brownsnout (@neillblomkamp) el Ene 1, 2015 at 5:32 PST

Woulda rocked. Was a mental stroll into the world Ridley Scott created.

A photo posted by Brownsnout (@neillblomkamp) on Jan 1, 2015 at 5:40pm PST

#ripley #hicks

A photo posted by Brownsnout (@neillblomkamp) on Jan 1, 2015 at 5:49pm PST

#weyland corp

Zdjęcie zamieszczone przez użytkownika Brownsnout (@neillblomkamp) Sty 1, 2015 at 5:56 PST

Oh shit

A photo posted by Brownsnout (@neillblomkamp) on Jan 1, 2015 at 6:06pm PST

Awesome Art by Geoffroy Thoorens #hicks

Una foto publicada por Brownsnout (@neillblomkamp) el Ene 1, 2015 at 9:43 PST

And Doug Williams – maybe I’ll go back to it ….love the world

A photo posted by Brownsnout (@neillblomkamp) on Jan 1, 2015 at 9:44am PST

The Ingredient That Makes These Simple Pancakes Super Healthy

The typical old-fashioned pancake recipe calls for all-purpose flour and plenty of butter — not exactly the best way to start your day. But since nothing beats a stack of fluffy pancakes in the morning, Janice Lavine of Breakaway Bakery in Los Angeles shares her healthy alternative: buckwheat pancakes. “Buckwheat is known as a great gluten-free grain,” she says. “But it’s actually not a grain at all. It’s a fruit seed related to rhubarb and sorrel and it’s loaded with vitamins and minerals.”

While they pack on the nutrition, Lavine says they don’t skimp on flavor, either. “They have a hearty, nutty flavor that pairs perfectly with maple syrup or your favorite jam,” she says.

Buckwheat Pancakes

own ownshow buckweat pancake recipe

Makes 20 pancakes

Ingredients
2 cups buckwheat flour
2 tablespoons sugar
1 tablespoon + 1 teaspoon brown sugar
2 teaspoons aluminum-free baking powder
1 teaspoon kosher salt
1/4 teaspoon ground cinnamon
1/8 teaspoon ground nutmeg
1 teaspoon pure vanilla extract
1 1/2 cups rice milk
2 eggs

Directions
With hand mixer, mix together ingredients until just combined. When ready to cook, batter should be able to come off a spoon easily; if too thick, add a little more rice milk.

Preheat skillet on medium high and grease. Spoon batter onto skillet, flip when ready.

“This batter also freezes really well,” Lavine says. “You can put it into your freezer and then when you’re ready to have them, make sure you defrost in your refrigerator overnight. Then you’re ready to go in the morning.”

More guilt-free treats: A wholesome, allergy-friendly cookie recipe.

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Extremism on One Side Strengthens Extremism on the Other Side

I am a Shia Muslim who came back to his home country of Lebanon in 2004. I immediately embarked on my political career by launching the Lebanese Option Party (LOP).

I twice ran unsuccessfully in parliamentary elections, together with fellow party members in 2005 and in 2009 (the last Parliament Election which was supposed to take place in 2013 has been repeatedly postponed). We chose to run against Hezbollah in the regions that are considered its strongholds, namely the South and the Bekaa.

Despite the intimidation and various physical attacks by Hezbollah — including firebombed homes and cars — against my party members, my supporters and myself, I received 35 percent of the votes in the 2009 election. If we had run elsewhere than in Hezbollah’s strongholds, we would probably have picked up a couple of parliament seats. However, this is not what the LOP is all about and it is definitely not what I am made of. There is no hope and no future for Lebanon as long as it is controlled by Hezbollah. The only way to weaken this party, that has the audacity to call itself the “Party of God,” is to weaken it from within.

No matter what their slogan or name is, be it Hezbollah, Isis, Hamas or Nosra, these extremists and terrorists are exactly the same.

The vast majority of the people that live in this part of the world want what good people everywhere want — stability, jobs, a good education and economic growth. The extremists want the complete opposite. They want chaos, poverty and ignorance to reign.

They want to bring us back to the Stone Age because they know that this is the fertile ground upon which they can thrive.

A young man with no education, no job and no hope whatsoever for his future would easily join and fight with any of these extremists groups if he is offered a few hundred dollars a month. But, instead, give the same young man a decent education that allows him to get a decent job with a decent income that enables him to raise a family. If a radical group asked him to join them, he would undoubtedly say, “the hell with you and your wars, I have something better to do with my life.”

Extremists groups reign in areas where there is poverty and poor education. This is why these extremists do not exist in the United Arab Emirates. There, almost everyone is educated and has a decent income.

While I admire and respect the American people for having elected Barack Obama, I am very concerned about his agenda — particularly his Foreign Policy agenda. When I listened to Mr. Obama speak during the election campaign of 2008, I heard a man with a good heart who knew very little about the world, especially about the Middle East. I also saw a man who went too far by over-promising the American people, tired at the time of the Iraqi War.

Today, the Obama administration is seeking to strike a nuclear deal with the regime in Tehran.

Any deal with these kinds of regimes is unsustainable. The Obama administration does not understand that tyrants care little, if at all, about the economic well-being of their people. All they care about is remaining in power. These tyrants need the West and the U.S., in particular, to remain their enemies in order to blame them and to justify their oppressive rule with hideous propaganda — the so-called “Zionist, Imperialist and American” conspiracy against their country.

The Iranian Regime is actually part of the problem and not part of the solution in the Middle East. ISIS has become more powerful on the ground because, among other things, it is a way for Sunni people to counter the ever-increasing Iranian influence in the Middle East. From Iraq to Syria, from Lebanon to Yemen, more and more countries are falling under the influence and control of the regime in Tehran.

This is why groups like ISIS have become stronger in Syria and in Iraq. Sunnis there feel that they have to free their countries from the puppets who run it under the control of the Shia Iranian Regime.

Extremism on one side strengthens extremism on the other side.

By talking to the Iranian Regime that sponsors terrorist organizations such as Hezbollah, Hamas, the Sadrists in Iraq and Houthis in Yemen, the American administration is sending a double standard message that’s playing into the hands of groups like ISIS: “The US is ready to negotiate and strike a deal with the Shia Radicals led by the Iranian Regime — however it wants to fight the Sunni Radicals.”

The growth of extremists in our region motivated me. I had to devise and execute a plan to start countering the expansion of these fanatics.

In 2011, “Saving the Next Generation” was born.

SNG goes to the very same ghettos where these radicals operate to recruit kids who later become their fighters. We deal with the same kids. But we offer them a different — and far better — path.

We have in the SNG program 1,560 kids ages 10-to-17 and 156 scholarship students attending the finest private universities in Lebanon.

We advise our university students regarding their majors, based on the needs of the Lebanese labor market. Because, when they find a decent job, the extremists can no longer get to them.

In 2013, we began granting scholarships for the best students to study at colleges and universities in the U.S..

The reason we started this additional program is not only because of the great level of education that exists in the US universities, but also because we want to change the image of the US in the Middle East.

Once our U.S. students experience how great this country is, how fair and decent the American people are, they become great ambassadors for the United States. They know that whomever calls America “The Great Satan” is probably himself “The Great Satan.”

The world needs a different foreign policy to fight these extremists. But this alone will not do it.

The world also needs foundations like Saving the Next Generation that can get to these desperate kids before the radicals do.

_____________
Ahmad El Assaad is founder of the Lebanese Option Party and Saving the Next Generation.