300 empty desks were placed in the street outside Los Angeles Unified School District headquarters e

300 empty desks were placed in the street outside Los Angeles Unified School District headquarters earlier today as part of a protest demanding extra funding for disadvantaged youth. The 300 desks are meant to represent the approximate number of students who drop out of LAUSD every week. [Photo by Alicia M. Banks]

Read more…




Debt, Salt Shortages, Protests: What's Ruining Our Cities This Week

Debt, Salt Shortages, Protests: What's Ruining Our Cities This Week

Detroit outlines a plan to get itself out of debt, salt shortages are making a snowstorm near you even worse, and another week of violence is igniting in Kiev. It’s this week’s look at What’s Ruining Our Cities.

Read more…


    



Sudanese protesters use crowdmapping to get around internet shutdowns

Sudan protesters using crowdmapping to get around internet shutdowns

Like past regimes, Sudan’s government is trying to silence protests by periodically shutting off internet access. Activists have found a way to keep everyone informed, however, by launching the Abena Crowd Map. The tool sends SMS-based reports of demonstrations and other events to a crowdmapping platform where contributors verify, locate and post stories. Observers can both filter the report stream and get alerts when incidents take place within a given area. The map won’t always help protesters on the ground, but it will share their ordeal with the outside world — and prevent Sudan’s rulers from controlling the narrative.

Filed under: ,

Comments

Via: Vice

Source: Abena Crowd Map

Hackers Hit Google Palestine and Defaced the Front Page

Hackers Hit Google Palestine and Defaced the Front Page

A team of hackers successfully broke into Google Palestine on Monday, covering the home page with protest literature. "Uncle google," wrote Cold z3ro, Haml3t, Sas and Dr@g, "we say hi from palestine to remember you that the country in google map not called israel. its called Palestine."

Read more…


    



Turkish Police Shoot Down Drone As It Flies Over Protestors

Screen Shot 2013-06-24 at 1.00.15 PM

As personal drones become more usable – and more ubiquitous – I think we’ll see more and more scenes like this one. The video, taken in Istanbul by a protester named Jenk Kose, shows the quadcopter falling out of the sky after being shot at by the police. The quadcopter’s camera failed when it was hit, but Jenk was able to save some of the footage.

Jenk wrote:

Tuesday afternoon on June 11th 2013, Police was violently attacking peaceful protestors. Police fired guns at one of our RC drone during the protests in Taksim square, Istanbul. Police aimed directly at the camera. Due to the impact on the camera (it did have a housing) the last video was not saved properly on the SD card. The camera and drone were both broken. Managed to keep the SD card. Here is the footage from that camera! This footage you are about to see is from the prior flights minutes before the incident.

I contacted Jenk about the event and he had a few things to say. “I have no idea why they shot it down,” he said. “I’ve been flying that model every day for the last four weeks.”

He said he will be uploading more video later this week.

FOOTAGE FROM RC DRONE THAT WAS SHOT DOWN BY POLICE / Polis Tarafindan Dusurulen Helikopter [HD] from Jenk K on Vimeo.

This video, accompanied by some stirring music, shows some of the footage Jenk took with the quadcopter before it was blasted out of the sky. While I could see the danger inherent in having a quadcopter flying over a big crowd, I would say the violent reaction was a bit much.

ACTUAL SCENE OF TURKISH POLICE SHOOTING RC DRONE / Polisin Ucan Kamerayi Vurma Ani [HD] from Jenk K on Vimeo.

Watch Police Shoot Down a Drone Flying Over Istanbul

The tension in Turkey is quickly approaching its breaking point as thousands of protesters gear up for a third week occupying Istanbul’s Gezi Park. This being the modern age, where computers fit in our pockets and everybody’s a potential terrorist, some locals decided to take their little camera-enabled, radio-controlled quadcopter for a spin. This, again, being the modern age, police promptly shot it down. And yes, a drone was harmed in the making of this movie.

Read more…

    

Canon and Panasonic halt production in China amid anti-Japan protests

Canon and Panasonic halt production in China amid antiJapan protestsCanon could be facing a costly drop in production of both its digital cameras and laser printers, following reports that widespread protests in China have forced it close most of its factories in that country. It’s a similar story at Panasonic, which is said to have had one of its plants “sabotaged” by Chinese workers. The anti-Japan protests concern the status of disputed islands in the East China Sea and were triggered by the Japanese government’s move to purchase some of the land in question — check the More Coverage link below for a more detailed explanation.

Filed under: , ,

Canon and Panasonic halt production in China amid anti-Japan protests originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 17 Sep 2012 09:37:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceReuters (1), (2)  | Email this | Comments

Twitter hands over Occupy Wall Street protestor’s updates under pressure

Twitter hands over Occupy Wall Street protestor's updates under pressure

Twitter has been building a modest reputation for siding with the little guy (or girl) when it comes to communication privacy, and it just demonstrated how far it’s willing to go in a showdown with Manhattan’s Criminal Court over a demand to hand over tweets from Occupy Wall Street protestor Malcolm Harris. The social network has been pushed into delivering the claimed evidence, but only as it faced a deadline and the threat of a fine — it even tried one last request for a stay before producing hard copies of the messages. However much the handover affects Harris’ chances at winning during trial, it emphasizes that public posts have serious consequences — companies ultimately can’t shield you from the law.

[Image credit: Paul Stein, Flickr]

Filed under: ,

Twitter hands over Occupy Wall Street protestor’s updates under pressure originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 14 Sep 2012 13:24:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink Forbes  |  sourceReuters  | Email this | Comments

Theory of cliodynamics uses science to predict history, sees violence erupt in cycles

Theory of cliodynamics uses science to predict history, sees violence erupt in cycles

Ever get the feeling that you’ve seen it all before? University of Connecticut researcher Peter Turchin has, and he (along with Russian partners Sergey Nefedov and Andrey Korotayev) has even crafted an entire scientific theory around the idea. Cliodynamics, as it’s called, works on the view that broad trends of history occur in predictable patterns based on common factors like government strength, population size and social inequality. The surprise to Turchin is that violence outside of wars, at least in the US, triggers roughly every 50 years like clockwork: people rebel against a social crisis, but their children stay out of the fray and lead to the conditions that ultimately trigger another outbreak, like the 1970s civil rights and peace movements. Don’t set your watch to cliodynamics just yet. Many historians are still skeptical, and even supporters note that one-off events or major wars fall through the cracks. If the theory pans out, however, science could be used to help governments do the right thing before they’re made to do it at gunpoint.

[Image credit: Steve Wilson, Flickr]

Filed under:

Theory of cliodynamics uses science to predict history, sees violence erupt in cycles originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 02 Aug 2012 20:55:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceNature  | Email this | Comments