Thursday, May 3, 2012

Cod Liver Oil: Like It Or Not, Apple?s Gatekeeper Makes Sense

Screen Shot 2012-05-01 at 11.21.11 AMElectronic Freedom Fighters and knee-jerk reactionaries: prepare your big drums because here comes the cause of the week. We learned about Gatekeeper, Apple's app signing solution that ensures "rogue" apps can't infect your computer, a few months ago when the company announced the coming of a new OS, Mountain Lion. Developers recently received a note reminding them to begin implementing Gatekeeper features or, well, nothing bad will happen:
"The Mac App Store is the safest place for users to get software for their Mac, but we also want to protect users when they get applications from other places. Gatekeeper is a new feature in OS X Mountain Lion that helps protect users from downloading and installing malicious software. Signing your applications, plug-ins, and installer packages with a Developer ID certificate lets Gatekeeper verify that they are not known malware and have not been tampered with. Mac Developer Program members can sign applications with their Developer ID now to get ready for Gatekeeper. If you?re not already a member, join the Mac Developer Program today."

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Wednesday, May 2, 2012

Israel elections to be announced in 'coming days'

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Monday looked set to call early elections, and Defence Minister Ehud Barak said he expected parliament to name a date within days.

Netanyahu, said to favour early elections in a bid to strengthen his position before a potential fight over austerity measures and US elections in November, has so far made no official announcement on a change to the date, currently scheduled for October 2013.

"Apparently the Knesset will decide on elections within the coming days," Barak, a close confidante of Netanyahu, was quoted by his office as telling members of his Independence party on Monday.

"Whether the elections themselves are set for the middle of August or the middle of October I don't see much difference. We are entering an election campaign."

"It's final," said Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman, who heads the ultra-nationalist Yisrael Beitenu party. "Now it is only a question of dates."

Lieberman, whose party is a key partner in Netanyahu's coalition government, told the Ynet news website he was eager for the vote to take place as quickly as possible.

"If the decision to go to elections has been made, we should hold them as quickly as possible," he said.

Israeli public radio said Netanyahu favours a date between mid-August and the beginning of September, while the head of the main opposition Kadima party, Shaul Mofaz, is pushing for October 16.

Commentators said there were plenty of reasons for Netanyahu to favour bringing the vote forward, including the desire to consolidate his position before having to implement budget cuts later this year.

He is also looking to bolster domestic support before US elections in November, which could return US President Barack Obama to office.

Netanyahu has differed with Obama on issues ranging from the stalled Israeli-Palestinian peace process to Iran's nuclear programme.

Another key reason for bringing the vote forward is a dispute over the issue of drafting Orthodox Jews into the army, which has threatened the stability of Netanyahu's coalition.

The so-called Tal Law, which allowed ultra-Orthodox Jews to defer their service in the Israeli military, is strongly opposed by Lieberman's staunchly secular Yisrael Beitenu party.

Netanyahu has pledged to replace the law, which expires this year, with a more "egalitarian" rule, but is caught between Yisrael Beitenu and the ultra-Orthodox factions in his coalition, who adamantly oppose military service.

The Knesset is expected to debate a replacement law on May 9.

Whenever the elections are held, polls have consistently showed Netanyahu and his Likud party coming out on top, with no credible rival to the prime minister.

A poll published by the Yediot Aharonot newspaper on Monday showed Likud increasing its strength from 27 to 30 seats in the 120-seat Knesset, if elections were held today.

The Labour party stands to make the biggest relative gain, winning 18 seats, from the nine it currently holds, while Yisrael Beitenu would lose two seats, leaving it with 13, the poll showed.

Kadima is expected to suffer crushing losses, with its standing reduced from 28 seats to 11, while the newly formed Yesh Atid (There is a Future) party would win 11 seats, the poll found.

The shape of any future coalition remains unclear, however, with Labour, Kadima and Yesh Atid all having expressed willingness to join a government led by Netanyahu.

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Video: Pelley on Obama visit and Afghan pact (cbsnews)

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Ryan Gosling Drives Away With Three MTV Movie Award Noms

The actor's busy 2011 could earn him a trio of Golden Popcorn statuettes.
By Amy Wilkinson


Ryan Gosling in "Drive"
Photo: Bold Films

In between brokering peace in New York's East Village, suffering a snub at the hands of the People's Sexiest Man Alive nomination committee and giggling over his own Internet meme, Ryan Gosling somehow found time to release three well-received films in 2011. So it should come as no surprise that the actor acquired a number of nods Monday when the 2012 MTV Movie Awards nominations were announced.

The 31-year-old racked up three nominations: Best Male Performance and Best Gut-Wrenching Performance for the action flick "Drive" and Best Kiss (along with co-star Emma Stone) for the romantic comedy "Crazy, Stupid, Love." Gosling's other 2011 film, "The Ides of March," was not nominated.

Gosling is no stranger to MTV's Golden Popcorn, having won a statuette in 2005 for Best Kiss with his "Notebook" co-star (and former girlfriend) Rachel McAdams. Their onstage re-creation of the smoldering smooch is still one of the Movie Award ceremony's most memorable moments. This year, however, Gosling and Best Kiss co-nominee Stone face stiff competition in the form of "Twilight" lovebirds Kristen Stewart and Robert Pattinson, who've won the honor three years running.

Elsewhere, Gosling will face Bryce Dallas Howard ("The Help"), Channing Tatum and Rob Riggle ("21 Jump Street"), Tom Cruise ("Mission: Impossible - Ghost Protocol"), and the women of "Bridesmaids" for Best Gut-Wrenching Performance, while Daniel Radcliffe ("Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, Part 2"), Joseph Gordon-Levitt ("50/50"), Josh Hutcherson ("The Hunger Games") and Channing Tatum ("The Vow") will be his competition for Best Male Performance.

Find out which (if any) honors Ryan Gosling takes home by tuning in to the MTV Movie Awards on June 3 at 9 p.m. ET/8 p.m. CT.

Head over to MovieAwards.MTV.com to vote for your favorite flicks now! The 21st annual MTV Movie Awards air live Sunday, June 3, at 9 p.m. ET.

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Tuesday, May 1, 2012

David R. Jones, Esq.: Some Business Leaders Still Fighting Basic ...

There is a debate raging in New York City as to whether employers should provide their employees with paid sick leave. Most people I mention this to assume that employees, when ill or when their kids are sick, can get a couple of days to deal with it lest they infect the people they work with, customers, et al, or pass out while using the food slicer.

But, in fact, over 60 percent of low-wage workers in New York City, those working in fast food restaurants and many dealing with children and the elderly, don't have any paid sick leave ("Still Sick in the City," Community Service Society, January 2012). They face a stark choice: either go to work no matter how sick they or their child are or face - at best - the loss of a day's wages or -- at worst -- the loss of their employment in one of the worst economies in modern history. Not surprisingly, when we polled workers without sick leave as to what they do, the almost universal answer was "I go to work" ("Sick in the City," Community Service Society, October 2009).

Paid sick leave has already become law in San Francisco, Washington, D.C., and the state of Connecticut. When the public is polled, people overwhelmingly support the rights of workers who are legitimately ill to not face loss of wages or a job.

We've even tested this here at the Community Service Society. We ran a petition seeking support from Mayor Bloomberg for sick leave, which cited the fact that the New York City Council, as an act of extraordinary decency, passed a law signed by the mayor providing for five weeks of vacation a year for the carriage horses that take tourists around Central Park, but currently doesn't provide any similar protection for low-wage workers who get ill. Nearly 10,000 New York City residents signed our petitions (online petitions at www.Change.org).

But paid sick leave legislation introduced by Councilmember Gale Brewer with 37 sponsors has run into a firestorm of resistance from some members of the business community and the mayor. In the last legislative session of the City Council, despite also having a veto proof margin of 37 supporters, City Council Speaker Christine Quinn refused to let the bill come to vote. A similar situation is shaping up in the current session, with the mayor once again promising to veto the legislation, if passed.

The crux of the opposition to paid sick leave isn't that the city shouldn't have such a law, but rather that this legislation would hurt small businesses and actually slow down the hiring of low-wage workers. It's argued that when the impact of the Great Recession abates, that's the time to consider such a law.

No one can say that members of the business community lack "chutzpa." No one denies that the cause of the current crisis had nothing to do with benefits provided to low-wage workers and everything to do with the lack of government oversight of the financial sector. Now that the recession lingers on, it's being used as a reason to deny workers at White Castle and Wendy's paid sick leave because it would potentially hurt business.

In fact, the evidence is already in from San Francisco that its much stronger paid sick leave legislation had no impact on small business, or big business for that matter. It tended to level the playing field for businesses that were already providing the benefit and was used only sparingly by employees overall. It was often cited by employers as decreasing the number of employees who were infected by their co-workers.

This isn't the first time these arguments against expanding basic worker rights have been advanced because they would be a drag on business and would cause less opportunity for jobs. In fact, when one reviews the history of the city and nation over the past 100 years, virtually every effort to protect workers has be met with the same "job killing" argument.

A perfect example was business reaction to proposed fire safety standards for workplaces in the aftermath of the Triangle Shirt Waist Factory fire in 1911 in which 146 workers perished, almost all of whom were young women, many of them child workers. A spokesman for Associated Industries of New York, a business trade association of its day, asserted that the new fire safety rules would mean, "the wiping out of industry in this state."

Business reaction to placing safety guards on machines, child labor restrictions, ventilation standards, and length of workdays have all been met with the same arguments that such laws would harm business and lead to a reduction in job opportunity. Suffice it to say, no dire consequences have occurred and workplace productivity continues to go up in New York and the nation.

In some ways the mayor's opposition to paid sick leave is the most perplexing. Perhaps more than any mayor of a major American city in recent times, he has led the way on improvement in municipal public health. His efforts at restaurant safety, on smoking cessation, obesity, and even his crusade against guns have all been among programs which will be a significant part of his legacy as a three term mayor. But when it comes to paid sick leave, which virtually every expert agrees would have a significant impact in decreasing communicable disease and workplace injury, it's as if he forgets his public health mission and becomes a businessman who wants no government intrusion on how workers are treated.

The current bill being considered by the New York City Council has been carefully rewritten to avoid serious impact on small employers. Maybe the mayor will put his public health hat back on and come around to endorsing it. It would be another position which would burnish his legacy as the foremost municipal leader in the realm of public health.

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The Wanted Apologize To Christina Aguilera, Sort Of

'We shouldn't have said it,' says Tom Parker of group's calling singer 'scary.'
By Gil Kaufman


The Wanted
Photo: Derek Storm/ Splash News

Sometimes, sorry is the hardest word to say. That's the tough new celebrity lesson learned by The Wanted member Tom Parker, who got hit pretty hard by Christina Aguilera's fans last week after he went on a New York radio station and tore into
 "The Voice" coach Christina Aguilera, calling her a "total bitch."

After dropping the b-bomb several more times and claiming that the singer-turned-reality competition judge refused to look at or speak to the British lad band, fellow member Siva Kaneswaran added, "she was quite rude."

Well, Xtina's fans were not impressed and started flaming the group, and two days after dissing her, Parker walked the comments back a bit, according to TMZ. Caught by the gossip site's cameras outside Hollywood's Mondrian hotel on Sunday, Parker said, "We shouldn't have said it, to be honest with you. We just think manners cost nothing, you know what I mean? The rest of the judges were really nice, and she didn't even walk over to us and talk to us. We apologize for the comment."

Told that the original dis was all over Google when The Wanted's name was searched, Parker shook his head and lamented, "I know!" During the original radio appearance, The Wanted were also asked to compare their interactions with Aguilera on "The Voice" with an earlier meeting with "American Idol" judge Jennifer Lopez, when Max George planted a kiss on J.Lo and then the boys openly pined for her hand in marriage backstage. And, as you can probably expect, they definitely preferred one experience to the other. "[Aguilera] was a bit scary, to be honest," George said. Then, when asked about smooching Lopez, he laughed: "Yeah, well J.Lo's hot, Christina's nothing special."

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Monday, April 30, 2012

Beyonce Breaks Silence on "Fake Pregnancy" Rumors

During her pregnancy with daughter Blue Ivy, Beyonce refused to indulge the speculation that she was faking her baby bump. When Katie Couric brought up the rumor during Beyonce's 20/20 visit, the singer scoffed that it was so ridiculous that "it doesn't even upset you." However, in her new cover story for People (which just named her the World's Most Beautiful Woman), first-time mother Beyonce admits that she was flustered by the secret-surrogate conspiracy theories.

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