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Thursday, February 28, 2013

‘Harlem Shake’ Protests in Tunisia and Egypt

The rapid evolution of the “Harlem Shake,” from a dance to a song to a viral video craze to a new form of Middle East protest, continued apace on Thursday. Hundreds of protesters danced outside the headquarters of the Muslim Brotherhood in Cairo, and students and ultraconservative Islamists known as Salafists clashed in Sidi Bouzid, the Tunisian town where the wave of uprisings in the Arab world began with a very different gesture of defiance.

The clashes in Tunisia came one day after conservative Salafists had tried and failed to stop the recording of a “Harlem Shake” video at a language school in the capital, Tunis.

A “Harlem Shake” video recorded at a language school in Tunis on Wednesday.

On Monday, Agence France-Presse reported, Tunisia’s education minister ordered an investigation into another video made over the weekend at a school outside Tunis that included the mockery of Islamists.

A “Harlem Shake” video recorded in Tunisia last weekend, in which some dancers wore fake beards and robes to imitate conservative Islamists.

The rally by about 400 activist dancers in Cairo on Thursday night, outside the offices of President MohamedMorsi’s Muslim Brotherhood, was streamed live to the Web by activists and caught on video by the news site Egyptian El Badil.

A video report on the “Harlem Shake” protest outside the headquarters of the Muslim Brotherhood in Cairo on Thursday.

The protest in Egypt followed the arrest last week in Cairo of four pharmaceutical students. They were charged with violating the country’s decency laws by dancing in their underwear to emulate the Australian “Harlem Shake” video that sparked the craze and has been viewed more than 18 mi! llion tim! es in the past four weeks.

Before the arrests, one popular remix of the video in Egypt appeared to show police officers getting in on the act.



Facebook Buys Service to Show Targeted Ads Across the Web

Facebook fired another salvo at its archrival Google on Thursday with its acquisition of an advertising technology that can help Facebook put its piles of personal data to greater use for behaviorally targeted advertising.

Facebook bought the advertising platform in question, called Atlas Advertiser Suite, from Microsoft. The acquisition, long speculated, was announced on Thursday afternoon, though the terms of the deal were not specified. It further solidifies the social network’s partnership with Microsoft; Facebook offers users Microsoft’s search engine, Bing, for Web searches on its site.

The acquisition allows Facebook to use the vast amounts of personal information it has about its billion users to send them targeted messages as they browse the Web. It potentially allows Facebook to increase advertising revenue, its chief source of income, and not just when its users log into Facebook.

“If marketers and agencies can get a holistic view of campaign performance, they will be ale to do a much better job of making sure the right messages get in front of the right people at the right time,” Brian Boland, the company’s director of product marketing, wrote in a blog post.

Marketers were delighted by the news. “Targeting and retargeting ads based on users’ social habits and behaviors will indeed give marketers another valuable tool to add to their overall digital marketing mix,” Andrew Bloom, a vice president of the advertising agency  DG, said in an e-mailed statement.

It is likely to please Wall Street, too, which is hungry for Facebook to increase profits faster.

How consumers will react is another matter. Facebook has long argued that targeted advertisements are more “relevant” to users.



Video of Turkish Premier Comparing Zionism to Anti-Semitism and Fascism

One day after Turkey’s prime minister, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, told a United Nations forum the world should consider Islamophobia a crime against humanity, “just like Zionism or anti-Semitism or fascism,” his Israeli counterpart lashed back. “I strongly condemn the remarks made by Prime Minister Erdogan of Turkey, comparing Zionism to fascism,” Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu replied on Twitter.

Senator Seeks More Data Rights for Online Consumers

Before his planned retirement from Congress at the end of next year, Senator John D. Rockefeller IV, the West Virginia Democrat, intends to give American consumers more meaningful control over personal data collected about them online.

To that end, Mr. Rockefeller on Thursday introduced a bill called the “Do-Not-Track Online Act of 2013.”

The bill would require the Federal Trade Commission to establish standardized mechanisms for people to use their Internet browsers to tell Web sites, advertising networks, data brokers and other online entities whether or not they were willing to submit to data-mining.

The bill would also require the F.T.C. to develop rules to prohibit online services from amassing personal details about users who had opted out of such tracking.

Mr. Rocefeller proposed the same bill two years ago. But he did not push it in the Senate at the time because industry groups had pledged to voluntarily develop systems to honor the browser-based don’t-track-me flags. Last year, however, negotiations between industry groups and consumer advocates over how to execute these mechanisms essentially broke down and have since made little progress.

The new Rockefeller bill indicates that the senator believes the industry has not acted in good faith.

“The privacy of Americans is increasingly under assault as more and more of their daily lives are conducted online,” Mr. Rockefeller, the chairman of the Senate Committee on Commerce, Science and Transportation, wrote on Thursday in an e-mail sent to a reporter. “Industry made a! public pledge to develop do-not-track standards that will truly protect consumer privacy â€" and it has failed to live up to that commitment. They have dragged their feet long enough.”

Industry representatives said that legislation was unnecessary because advertising networks and data brokers several years ago voluntarily introduced their own opt-out program for consumers, called Your AdChoices. Unlike the Do Not Track signals which would allow users to make a one-time decision about all online tracking from their own browsers, the industry program requires people to go to a site and individually select the companies, among several hundred, from whom they prefer not to receive marketing offers based on data-mining.

Stuart Ingis, a lawyer for the Digital Advertising Alliance, an industry consortium, said the program, which involves consumers installing individual cookies on their browsers, demonstraes that users already have choices about data collection.

“It’s a lot easier to use a system that is already built and works,” Mr. Ingis said.

Over the last few years, the number of companies that collect information about the reading habits, health concerns, financial capacity, search queries, purchasing patterns and other activities of online consumers has skyrocketed. Industry representatives argue that this benefits people because it enables companies to show them relevant ads, and that the ads themselves finance online sites and services that are free to consumers. Moreover, they say, the data collection is “anonymous” because online services typically use numerical customer codes, not real names or e-mail addresses, to track the behavior of individuals.

But consumer advocates warn that such profiling systems, which can collect thousands of details on nearly every adult in the United States, can be used to segment some people for preferential offers while relegating o! thers to ! inferior treatment. Despite industry claims that online tracking is anonymous, a few computer scientists have reported that sites often leak information that can identify individuals, including names, addresses and other details, to third parties.

“Nowadays, there is an incredible proliferation of tracking,” said Dan Auerbach, a staff technologist at the Electronic Frontier Foundation, a digital rights group in San Francisco. “Data brokers, companies that you never heard of, are collecting massive dossiers about you as you browse around the Web and, right now, there are no limitations on the collection or use of those dossiers.”

To give people greater control over their own surveillance online, the Federal Trade Commission in a report on consumer privacy last March urged industry groups to adopt Do Not Track mechanisms by the end of 2012. In fact, the major browsers â" Firefox from Mozilla, Google’s Chrome, and the more recent iterations of Internet Explorer â€" already offer the don’t-track-me buttons. When these options are turned on, they send out signals to sites, and third parties like ad networks operating on those sites, that certain users do not want to have their information collected.

But industry groups and consumer advocates have been at odds for more than a year over how “Do Not Track” mechanisms should be presented to users and how online services should respond to the signals. In the absence of legislation or industry consensus, companies are free to ignore those user preferences.

Some browsers have responded to this standstill by taking matters into their own hands and blocking third-party tracking cookies, as m! y colleague Somini Sengupta reported this week.

But Mr. Rockefeller’s bill indicates that legislative action could pre-empt voluntary industry measures.

“This is a signal that Senator Rockefeller is serious about getting Do Not Track done,” said David C. Vladeck, a professor at Georgetown Law. Until last month, Mr. Vladeck served as the director of bureau of consumer protection at the F.T.C. “I think industry writ large - browser companies, advertising networks, data brokers - are going to understand that he is serious about getting across the finish line.”



Senator Seeks More Data Rights for Online Consumers

Before his planned retirement from Congress at the end of next year, Senator John D. Rockefeller IV, the West Virginia Democrat, intends to give American consumers more meaningful control over personal data collected about them online.

To that end, Mr. Rockefeller on Thursday introduced a bill called the “Do-Not-Track Online Act of 2013.”

The bill would require the Federal Trade Commission to establish standardized mechanisms for people to use their Internet browsers to tell Web sites, advertising networks, data brokers and other online entities whether or not they were willing to submit to data-mining.

The bill would also require the F.T.C. to develop rules to prohibit online services from amassing personal details about users who had opted out of such tracking.

Mr. Rocefeller proposed the same bill two years ago. But he did not push it in the Senate at the time because industry groups had pledged to voluntarily develop systems to honor the browser-based don’t-track-me flags. Last year, however, negotiations between industry groups and consumer advocates over how to execute these mechanisms essentially broke down and have since made little progress.

The new Rockefeller bill indicates that the senator believes the industry has not acted in good faith.

“The privacy of Americans is increasingly under assault as more and more of their daily lives are conducted online,” Mr. Rockefeller, the chairman of the Senate Committee on Commerce, Science and Transportation, wrote on Thursday in an e-mail sent to a reporter. “Industry made a! public pledge to develop do-not-track standards that will truly protect consumer privacy â€" and it has failed to live up to that commitment. They have dragged their feet long enough.”

Industry representatives said that legislation was unnecessary because advertising networks and data brokers several years ago voluntarily introduced their own opt-out program for consumers, called Your AdChoices. Unlike the Do Not Track signals which would allow users to make a one-time decision about all online tracking from their own browsers, the industry program requires people to go to a site and individually select the companies, among several hundred, from whom they prefer not to receive marketing offers based on data-mining.

Stuart Ingis, a lawyer for the Digital Advertising Alliance, an industry consortium, said the program, which involves consumers installing individual cookies on their browsers, demonstraes that users already have choices about data collection.

“It’s a lot easier to use a system that is already built and works,” Mr. Ingis said.

Over the last few years, the number of companies that collect information about the reading habits, health concerns, financial capacity, search queries, purchasing patterns and other activities of online consumers has skyrocketed. Industry representatives argue that this benefits people because it enables companies to show them relevant ads, and that the ads themselves finance online sites and services that are free to consumers. Moreover, they say, the data collection is “anonymous” because online services typically use numerical customer codes, not real names or e-mail addresses, to track the behavior of individuals.

But consumer advocates warn that such profiling systems, which can collect thousands of details on nearly every adult in the United States, can be used to segment some people for preferential offers while relegating o! thers to ! inferior treatment. Despite industry claims that online tracking is anonymous, a few computer scientists have reported that sites often leak information that can identify individuals, including names, addresses and other details, to third parties.

“Nowadays, there is an incredible proliferation of tracking,” said Dan Auerbach, a staff technologist at the Electronic Frontier Foundation, a digital rights group in San Francisco. “Data brokers, companies that you never heard of, are collecting massive dossiers about you as you browse around the Web and, right now, there are no limitations on the collection or use of those dossiers.”

To give people greater control over their own surveillance online, the Federal Trade Commission in a report on consumer privacy last March urged industry groups to adopt Do Not Track mechanisms by the end of 2012. In fact, the major browsers â" Firefox from Mozilla, Google’s Chrome, and the more recent iterations of Internet Explorer â€" already offer the don’t-track-me buttons. When these options are turned on, they send out signals to sites, and third parties like ad networks operating on those sites, that certain users do not want to have their information collected.

But industry groups and consumer advocates have been at odds for more than a year over how “Do Not Track” mechanisms should be presented to users and how online services should respond to the signals. In the absence of legislation or industry consensus, companies are free to ignore those user preferences.

Some browsers have responded to this standstill by taking matters into their own hands and blocking third-party tracking cookies, as m! y colleague Somini Sengupta reported this week.

But Mr. Rockefeller’s bill indicates that legislative action could pre-empt voluntary industry measures.

“This is a signal that Senator Rockefeller is serious about getting Do Not Track done,” said David C. Vladeck, a professor at Georgetown Law. Until last month, Mr. Vladeck served as the director of bureau of consumer protection at the F.T.C. “I think industry writ large - browser companies, advertising networks, data brokers - are going to understand that he is serious about getting across the finish line.”



Ask About the Papal Transition

Pope Benedict XVI attends a meeting with his cardinals during a farewell ceremony in the Clementine Hall of the Vatican's Apostolic Palace on Thursday in Vatican City.L’Osservatore Romano Pope Benedict XVI attends a meeting with his cardinals during a farewell ceremony in the Clementine Hall of the Vatican’s Apostolic Palace on Thursday in Vatican City.

Pope Benedict XVI formally resigned at 8 p.m. Thursday night in Rome, leaving the Vatican by helicopter to begin his new life as pope emeritus. As our colleague , Benedict will stay at the papal summer residence in Castel Gandolfo for the first months of his retirement, until workers complete the restoration of “more permanent lodgings in a convent inside the Vatican where he will live out his life.”

More than 100 cardinals will gather for a conclave next month to elect the next leader of the Roman Catholic Church.

The Times wants to hear your questions concerning the transition to a new pope, the future of the Catholic Church and the plans for the first retired pope in modern times. Are you curious about what to call Benedict Want more details on how a conclave operates Are you wondering how the role of pope might change in its next incarnation Post a comment below with your question or send us a tweet using the hashtag #AskNYT. Next week we will publish 25 questions and answers to them from reporters or experts on the! papacy on The Lede.



A Start-Up Aims to Upend E-Commerce by Selling Nail Polish

It is hard to imagine Silicon Valley venture capitalists analyzing nail polish shades. But a number of prominent technology investors are making a big bet on Julep, a start-up that makes nail polish and other beauty products.

On Thursday, Julep announced it had raised $10.3 million in financing from Andreessen Horowitz, a well-known venture capital firm, and Maveron, the investment firm of Howard Schultz, founder of Starbucks. Previous financiers include investment firms affiliated with Will Smith and Jay-Z.

Julep aims to use innovations in e-commerce to upend the beauty industry. It sells paraben-free products including 186 colors of nail polish as well as mascara, lip gloss and face scrub.

“We think the next major beauty brand is not going to be built over the counter, it’s going to be built online,” said Jane Park, a former Starbucks executive who founded Julep five years ago.

Julep designs, produces and sells its products. It works wit scientists and manufacturers that develop products for big beauty brands. The streamlined approach means there are no markups for third parties, and it can make available a new nail polish shade soon after it is shown on the runway.

A similar strategy is employed by many e-commerce companies, including Warby Parker, which sells eyeglasses, and others selling products from office supplies to bedding. Though the economics are better than in traditional retailing, the challenge is to persuade consumers to discover the brand when it is not sold by a major company.

Julep dealt with the challenge by selling its products not just in its stores and online, but also places like Sephora and QVC. Ms. Park sai! d she had focused on brand-building, describing Julep as a brand that encourages women to connect over beauty instead of compete.

Julep also taps into other current trends in e-commerce. It asks its customers for ideas about what to sell (think ModCloth), uses social media to build brand loyalty (think Nasty Gal) and sells subscription boxes of products (think Birchbox.) An Instagram feed invites people to share photos of their nails and a blog has tips from professional stylists.

Julep does market research offline, too. It has four parlors in its hometown, Seattle, where women go to have their ails done, socialize and give Julep tips on what they like and dislike, from package design to new colors.

As for pitching tech venture capitalists, most of whom are men, Ms. Park said she had to do some teaching. Men are often interested in how many times a customer could use one bottle of nail polish, like toothpaste. But women rarely finish nail polish, she explained.

“It’s about fashion,” Ms. Park said. “You want access to color for your outfit or your mood, not squeezing every last drop before you buy the next color.”



Video of Man Being Dragged Behind Police Van Prompts Murder Inquiry in South Africa

An independent police review board in South Africa opened a murder investigation into the death of a man in custody this week after video of the arrest obtained by a newspaper showed officers dragging the man behind a police van.

According to a statement issued by the Independent Police Investigative Directorate in Pretoria, two officers said they first approached the man, a 27-year-old taxi driver, because he was “obstructing traffic” at a market in Daveyton township east of Johannesburg on Tuesday evening. The officers claimed that the man assaulted one of the officers and grabbed his gun, before the other officer “overpowered the taxi driver and handed the firearm back to his colleague.”

Video recorded by a witness and posted on Facebook

About two hours after the arrest, the review board said, the taxi driver was found dead at the police station where he had been driven. At a post-mortem on Wednesday, “the cause of death was found to be head injuries with internal bleeding.”

The dead man was identified by The Daily Sun as Mido Macia, an immigrant from Mozambique. The newspaper’s report on the incident quoted unnamed witnesses at both the market and the police station who accused the officers of ! brutality. “They killed him,” an unnamed prisoner at the police station in Daveyton said. “They beat him up so badly in here.”

“He was in pain, he cried and asked the cops to stop but they continued anyway,” a woman at the market said of the arrest. A man added: “If he was parked on the wrong side of the road, they were supposed to give him a ticket, not kill him.”

In a television interview, a spokesman for the review board, Moses Dlamini, said that investigators “need to speak to the person who took the footage and have the footage authenticated” to use it in court.

A South African television report on the death of a suspect in police custody this week.

Mr. Dlamini added that the officers had filed routine paperwork calling for a reviw board investigation before the video came to light, but “the report that we got from the police is totally different from what â€" the statements that we are getting from members of the community who are witnesses, who witnessed this incident, so we changed that inquest docket to a murder docket.” The spokesman added, “we are shocked ourselves,” by the video in part because it appears to show the officers had no fear that they might be held accountable for torturing a man in broad daylight in front of dozens of witnesses. On the evidence of the clip, Mr. Mr. Dlamini said, “the police don’t even care that there are people who are watching, there are witnesses.” As of Wednesday, he added, the officers involved in the incident remained on duty.

As The Guardian notes, Amnesty International’s 2012 annual report on the state of human rights in South Africa revealed that the police oversight body, “reported a 7 per cent decline between April 2010 and March 2011 in recorded deaths in custody and resulting from’“police action.’” Still, the report said, there were 797 such deaths in that one-year period.



Video of Man Being Dragged Behind Police Van Prompts Murder Inquiry in South Africa

An independent police review board in South Africa opened a murder investigation into the death of a man in custody this week after video of the arrest obtained by a newspaper showed officers dragging the man behind a police van.

According to a statement issued by the Independent Police Investigative Directorate in Pretoria, two officers said they first approached the man, a 27-year-old taxi driver, because he was “obstructing traffic” at a market in Daveyton township east of Johannesburg on Tuesday evening. The officers claimed that the man assaulted one of the officers and grabbed his gun, before the other officer “overpowered the taxi driver and handed the firearm back to his colleague.”

Video recorded by a witness and posted on Facebook

About two hours after the arrest, the review board said, the taxi driver was found dead at the police station where he had been driven. At a post-mortem on Wednesday, “the cause of death was found to be head injuries with internal bleeding.”

The dead man was identified by The Daily Sun as Mido Macia, an immigrant from Mozambique. The newspaper’s report on the incident quoted unnamed witnesses at both the market and the police station who accused the officers of ! brutality. “They killed him,” an unnamed prisoner at the police station in Daveyton said. “They beat him up so badly in here.”

“He was in pain, he cried and asked the cops to stop but they continued anyway,” a woman at the market said of the arrest. A man added: “If he was parked on the wrong side of the road, they were supposed to give him a ticket, not kill him.”

In a television interview, a spokesman for the review board, Moses Dlamini, said that investigators “need to speak to the person who took the footage and have the footage authenticated” to use it in court.

A South African television report on the death of a suspect in police custody this week.

Mr. Dlamini added that the officers had filed routine paperwork calling for a reviw board investigation before the video came to light, but “the report that we got from the police is totally different from what â€" the statements that we are getting from members of the community who are witnesses, who witnessed this incident, so we changed that inquest docket to a murder docket.” The spokesman added, “we are shocked ourselves,” by the video in part because it appears to show the officers had no fear that they might be held accountable for torturing a man in broad daylight in front of dozens of witnesses. On the evidence of the clip, Mr. Mr. Dlamini said, “the police don’t even care that there are people who are watching, there are witnesses.” As of Wednesday, he added, the officers involved in the incident remained on duty.

As The Guardian notes, Amnesty International’s 2012 annual report on the state of human rights in South Africa revealed that the police oversight body, “reported a 7 per cent decline between April 2010 and March 2011 in recorded deaths in custody and resulting from’“police action.’” Still, the report said, there were 797 such deaths in that one-year period.



Samsung Is Forming an Army in Barcelona

Samsung Electronics had no new phone to show at Mobile World Congress this week. But it was ubiquitous in Barcelona nonetheless.

The South Korean company’s presence was unavoidable even outside the conference. The walls of Barcelona’s metro stations were plastered with enormous posters showing Galaxy phones. Samsung even had a booth where people could try Galaxy devices right by the exit of the metro stop near the convention center.

Samsung, of course, had one of the biggest booths on the conference floor. Other companies, like Visa, were largely interested in discussing their new partnerships with Samsung.

One of the companies at the conference was NTT Docomo, the Japanese phone carrier. It gave a modest presentation about mobile wallets. After the briefing, a Samsung employee approached a Docomo executive and introduced himself. Another partnership, perhaps, in the works.

Afer a day of reporting I met an old colleague for dinner. He now works at a small start-up in San Francisco.

“What brings you to the show” I asked.

“We have a collaboration with Samsung,” he said.

For years, many technology companies, analysts and journalists have argued that trade shows have become less relevant when it comes to showing new products. The consensus: There’s too much noise, and businesses can always use Twitter and Facebook or simply hold their own news conferences to avoid competing for attention with other companies. Therefore, less news comes out of these shows.

Apple was one of the most vocal to say it was done with trade shows. It pulled out of the Macworld Expo conference after 2009, saying its retail stores were like mini Macworlds all over the world where it could reach out to customers â€" so what was the point

Google is taking a page from Apple. Its presence at this trade show was minimal â€" there was no Google booth, just a small roun! d-table meeting with journalists where it had no news to share.

Apple, the most successful technology company in the world, knows that it doesn’t need to try hard to get other companies to work with it. So it stayed home this week (though at least a few folks from Cupertino were probably here in stealth, scoping out the competition). Samsung, which has been steadily creeping up on the industry leader, was forming an army in Barcelona, striking partnerships with companies big and small from all over the world, and proactively searching for even more to form alliances.

If you were No. 1, wouldn’t that make you feel a little nervous



Samsung Is Forming an Army in Barcelona

Samsung Electronics had no new phone to show at Mobile World Congress this week. But it was ubiquitous in Barcelona nonetheless.

The South Korean company’s presence was unavoidable even outside the conference. The walls of Barcelona’s metro stations were plastered with enormous posters showing Galaxy phones. Samsung even had a booth where people could try Galaxy devices right by the exit of the metro stop near the convention center.

Samsung, of course, had one of the biggest booths on the conference floor. Other companies, like Visa, were largely interested in discussing their new partnerships with Samsung.

One of the companies at the conference was NTT Docomo, the Japanese phone carrier. It gave a modest presentation about mobile wallets. After the briefing, a Samsung employee approached a Docomo executive and introduced himself. Another partnership, perhaps, in the works.

Afer a day of reporting I met an old colleague for dinner. He now works at a small start-up in San Francisco.

“What brings you to the show” I asked.

“We have a collaboration with Samsung,” he said.

For years, many technology companies, analysts and journalists have argued that trade shows have become less relevant when it comes to showing new products. The consensus: There’s too much noise, and businesses can always use Twitter and Facebook or simply hold their own news conferences to avoid competing for attention with other companies. Therefore, less news comes out of these shows.

Apple was one of the most vocal to say it was done with trade shows. It pulled out of the Macworld Expo conference after 2009, saying its retail stores were like mini Macworlds all over the world where it could reach out to customers â€" so what was the point

Google is taking a page from Apple. Its presence at this trade show was minimal â€" there was no Google booth, just a small roun! d-table meeting with journalists where it had no news to share.

Apple, the most successful technology company in the world, knows that it doesn’t need to try hard to get other companies to work with it. So it stayed home this week (though at least a few folks from Cupertino were probably here in stealth, scoping out the competition). Samsung, which has been steadily creeping up on the industry leader, was forming an army in Barcelona, striking partnerships with companies big and small from all over the world, and proactively searching for even more to form alliances.

If you were No. 1, wouldn’t that make you feel a little nervous



Fraternity Raises Money Online for a Brother’s Transgender Operation

Fraternity brothers of the Emerson College sophomore Donnie Collins raised money for his gender reassignment operation through Indiegogo, a crowd-financing Web site.Facebook Fraternity brothers of the Emerson College sophomore Donnie Collins raised money for his gender reassignment operation through Indiegogo, a crowd-financing Web site.

Fraternities are not typically considered to be champions of the L.G.B.T. community, but members of Phi Alpha Tau at Emerson College in Boston appear to have shaken the stereotype with a successful online fund-raising appeal to help one of their brothers cover the cost of top surgery, a procedure that is part of a female-to-male transgender transition.

Donnie Collins, a sophomore at Emerson who was born female, was told this month that his university-backed health insurance plan would not cover the cost of the procedure, a double mastectomy and chest reconstruction that is common among female-to-male transgender people who opt for surgery. In a video posted to YouTube, he said the insurance company’s decision left him distraught. “I cried in front of an H&M in the middle of the street,” he said in the video. “It was awkward.”

Mr. Collins began rushing his college’s chapter of Phi Alpha Tau on Feb. 3 and received news that his insurance would not pay for the procedure only three days later. Nevertheless, his new fraternity brothers responded to the situation by raising money for the operation on Indiegogo, a popular crowd-sourced fund-raising Web site.

Video posted by members of the Phi Alpha Tau fraternity at Emerson College as part of a fund-raising appeal to pay for an operation for their transgender fraternity brother Donnie Collins.

The initial goal was to raise $2,000 to contribute toward the cost of the roughly $8,000 operation, a target they met in the first week and a half, according to a video statement posted to YouTube by Mr. Collins on Monday. By Wednesday afternoon, the campaign raised over $17,000, a figure that climbed higher and higher as the hours ticked past.

Chuck Bergren-Aragon, a member of Phi Alpha Tau who appeared in the video, described Mr. Collins in atelephone interview as “a great guy who always puts other people above himself,” and said that his situation provided the fraternity, which he said is focused in part on “philanthropy, giving back and community service” with a chance “to really show the Emerson community and people everywhere what we stand for, which is brotherhood.”

How does he feel about the amount of money they have raised so far “The word we are using right now is overwhelmed,” he said.

In the video posted Monday, Mr. Collins appeared at a loss for words in the face of his friends’ efforts. “I don’t even know what to say because the word, thank you, doesn’t even do it anymore,” he said. “What to get out of this is if you are coming out and you are needing support right now, like, find the people who are willing to give it and just accept it.”

A Human Rights Watch video report on the aftermath of apparent missile strikes in Syria’s largest city, Aleppo.

Human Rights Watch investigators who visited Aleppo, Syria’s largest city, have concluded that the Syrian government fired at least four ballistic missiles into civilian neighborhoods there last week, killing more than 141 people, including 71 children. As my colleague Anne Barnard explained, the rights group released details of the four documented strikes, and video of aftermath of one attack, on Tuesday.

On Wednesday, opposition activists added Engish subtitles to an emotional account of the devastation caused by one missile strike on Aleppo from a young boy who said he survived the bombing, but lost several family members and neighbors.

A video interview with a young boy who said that he had survived a missile attack on a civilian neighborhood in Aleppo, Syria’s largest city.

The original interview with the boy was posted on YouTube on Monday by Orient News, a private Syrian satellite channel that began broadcasting from Dubai before the anti-government uprising began. Within a week of the first protests in Syria, Ghassan Abboud, the Syrian businessman who owns the channel, told a Saudi broadcaster that senior government officials had threatened to kidnap his journalists if they did not stop covering demonstrations against President Bashar al-Assad.

The boy’s testimony was subtitled by the ANA New Media Association, a group of opposition video activists led by Rami Jarrah, who blogs as Alexander Page.

The new reports come weeks after experts told The Lede that video of a huge explosion at Aleppo University last month suggested that the campus had been hit by a ballistic missile.

When Liz Sly of the Washington Post visited Aleppo’s Ard al-Hamra neighborhood after two missile strikes, residents gave similarly graphic accounts of pulling the mangled bodies of victims from wrecked buildings. The scenes of devastation, she wrote, “more closely resembling those of an earthquake, with homes pulverized beyond recognition, people torn to shreds in an instant and what had once been thriving communities reduced to mountains of rubble.”

Ole Solvang, a Human Rights Watch researcher who helped document the damage in Aleppo, drew attention to video posted online by opposition activists, said to show the desperate search for survivors in the immediate aftermath of the strike on Ard al-Hamra.

Video said to show a neighborhood in Syria’s largest city, Al! eppo, aft! er a missile strike last week.

As Mr. Solvang assessed the wreckage in person on Thursday and Friday, he described the damage to the Aleppo and a neighboring town in words and images posted on Twitter.

Late Tuesday, an Aleppo blogger who supported the uprising but has been critical of the armed rebellion on his @edwardedark Twitter feed, reported that another huge blast shook the city.

Ms. Sly reported on Twitter Wednesday night that two more missiles were fired at rural Aleppo. “They landed in fields,” she observed. “That’s how accurate they are. Seems a bit pointless.”

Late Wednesday, Mr. Solvang pointed to video posted on YouTube by opposition activists, showing what they said were distant images of a missile being launched from Damascus in the direction of Aleppo.

Video said to show a missile being fired by Syrian government forces outside the capital, Damascus, on Wednesday night.



One on One: Sugata Mitra, 2013 TED Prize Winner

Are teachers keeping students from learning in the digital age Sugata Mitra, a professor of educational technology at Newcastle University, believes so. Dr. Mitra is best known for an experiment in which he carved a hole from his research center in Delhi into an adjacent slum, placing a freely accessible computer there for children to use.

The children quickly taught themselves basic computer skills. The “hole in the wall” experiment, as it is known, led Dr. Mitra to develop the idea of learning environments in which teachers would merely be supervisors as children taught themselves by working together at computer terminals. On Tuesday Dr. Mitra was given the 2013 TED Prize, which grants him $1 million to build a learning laboratory based on this principle.

Q.

What did you learn from the original “hole in the wall” experiment

A.

The first thing to point out is that it was done 14 years ago, at a time when few children in India had access to computers. I noticed therich parents saying that their sons and daughters must be gifted, because they were so good with computers. And since we know that gifted kids are not born only to rich parents, why would there not be similar children in the slums I was curious to see what would happen if I gave an Internet-connected computer to the kind of kids who never had one.

We noticed that they learned how to surf within hours. It was a bit of a surprise. Long story short, they would teach themselves whatever they had to to use the computer, such was the attraction of the machine.

Q.

What does this mean for education

A.

In those days, the main question was what does it mean for training, because back then people were trained to use computers. So I said it looks like we don’t have to do that.

But I got curious about the fact that the children were teaching themselves a smattering of English. So I started doing a whole range of experiments, and I found that if you left them alone, working i! n groups, they could learn almost anything once they’ve gotten used to the fact that you can research on the Internet. This was done between 2000 and 2006.

I came to England in 2006, and the schools said, why aren’t you doing it here So I did, and I realized that what I’ve got has nothing to do with poor children. It probably is just a new way in which children learn in this new environment. It needs two things. First, broadband. That’s fine, everybody loves that. The second thing is, it needs the teacher to stand back.

At first I thought that the children were learning in spite of the teacher not interfering. But I changed my opinion, and realized this was happening because the teacher was not interfering. At that point, I didn’t become entirely popular with teachers. But I explained to them that the job has changed. You ask the right kind of question, then you stand back and let the learning happen.

Q.

Do schools need to be radically changed to implement this, or is thisa technique that fits into the current structure of schools

A.

At the moment I pitch it as a technique that you can bring into your schools. But that’s not the real story, which is that the current schooling system is a leftover from the Victorian age of empire. In that world, there were no computers, no telegraphs and data was carried around on ships. This meant that the pillars of education were reading, writing and arithmetic. That age is gone. The system was wonderfully engineered, but we don’t need it anymore; we need something else. But you can’t just say that without saying how you do it.

What I’m doing is I’m putting my foot in the door by saying here’s a new way. Try it. If you’re happy with it, then I’ll say let’s look at the curriculum top to bottom. If we can convert the curriculum into big questions, if we can turn assessment into peer assessment, then neurophysiology tells us that learning gets enhanced. Finally, if you add admiration â€" what I call! the gran! dmother’s method, where you stand behind and encourage them. Put all of this together and you get a new way to do schooling.

Q.

So it seems that you’re saying we don’t need teachers at all.

A.

We need teachers to do different things. The teacher has to ask the question, and tell the children what they have learned. She comes in at the two ends, a cap at the end and a starter at the beginning.

Teachers are not supposed to be repositories of information which they dish out. That is from an age when there were no other repositories of information, other than books or teachers, neither of which were portable. A lot of my big task is retraining these teachers. Now they have to watch as children learn.

Q.

Is there a problem with this in that it will serve the good students well, but leave those who need more coaching behind

A.

Well, yes, to some extent. But there are some interesting things about children working in groups if those groups are self-made.Once you let children do that, the system has a self-correcting ability. Having said that, will there be good students and bad students Of course.

Q.

Does this work for all levels of instruction

A.

It doesn’t work the same way with adolescents, and definitely not with adults. With 8- to 12-year-olds, that’s the age where big questions turn them on.

Q.

What are your specific plans with the prize

A.

In order to see if this sort of self-organized learning environment is suitable I need to have one in which I have some control over and can do measurements with. So I want to build one of these learning spaces somewhere.

It will be totally automatic, completely controlled from the cloud. There will be a supervisor, but that person is not going to be a computer expert or a teacher in anything. She â€" and it will probably be a she â€" will be there only for health and safety requirements.

The rest of the school, if we call it a school, is a ! facility ! that I can hand over to a mediator from the cloud. She logs in from her home, wherever her home is, and she’s able to control everything inside, the lights, the air-conditioning, you name it. Then there are four mediators who Skype in and use the pedagogical method. That’s going to take a lot of work.

The second bit is that schools all over the world have been using this method. We need to do a massive multiplication, and TED is going to help me do that. I am going to try to put that into homes; get your children and their friends together. Then, every time they do it, I’ll ask them to collect data and send it to a Web site. If I succeed, in two years I’ll have massive data from all over the world. By that time I’ll be done building the facility and I’ll be ready to build a new model.

Q.

Where do you think this school will be

A.

I’d like to do it in India, because I’d know how to get it done. There will be less of a learning curve, I know who the contractors ar, and I know how not to get cheated. So I’d like to do it there, but it’s not set in stone.



More Retailers at Risk of Amazon ‘Showrooming’

Target and Best Buy have made it pretty clear they are fighting back against the phenomenon of showrooming, in which customers browse for television sets and other products in stores and then buy them online from Amazon and other etailers for less. Both companies recently made their seasonal practices of matching prices at online retailers a year-round policy.

A new study of Amazon customers who research products in stores by Placed, a mobile analytics company, offers some insight into who else could be at the greatest risk of losing business to showrooming. The study relies on Placed’s panl of more than 14,000 mobile phone users who consent to have their locations tracked in exchange for store gift cards and other perks. Placed can tell when those people visit a particular retailer without them having to proactively report their store visits.

Mobile phones are an indispensable tool of showroomers for comparing prices. Amazon has even given users of its mobile shopping app the ability to simplify price lookups on its site by letting them scan product bar codes using their smartphone cameras.

Among the people on its panel who reported buying items on Amazon after looking at the same item in physical stores, Placed found that Bed Bath and Beyond, PetSmart and Toys ‘R’ Us were the retailers that Amazon showroomers visited the most, with Amazon showroomers 27 percent, 25 percent and 21 percent more likely to visit the three stores, respectively, than the average consumer.

When Placed examined Amazon showroomers by gender, it found Best Buy, the Home Depot and Lowe’s! were the three retailers men were most likely to visit, while Kohl’s, PetSmart and Bed Bath and Beyond held the top spots for women.

Another interesting nugget in Placed’s study shows how much overlap there is between Amazon’s Prime customers, who get free two-day shipping and other benefits for an annual fee, and other membership-based retailers. People who told Placed that they were Amazon Prime customers were 45 percent more likely to visit Costco and 39 percent more likely to visit BJ’s Wholesale Club than the average shopper.

It’s possible that at some point those shoppers might choose to ditch their memberships at physical stores as Amazon offers more goods and delivery service that more directly compete with the instant gratification and selection of its offline competitors. For now, though, a lot of people seem to be choosing Amazon Prime without sacrificing other store memberships.



Test Run: Sleepytime, a Bedtime Calculator

I’m not a morning person, not even close. Over the years, I’ve devised several systems to get myself out of bed at a reasonable hour in the morning and curb the bouts of chronic oversleeping that have plagued me since high school. But setting multiple alarms proved futile, as did programming automatic wake-up calls. I’ve tried bribing my mom and close friends to call me when they wake up and hidden alarm clocks under the bed to force myself out of it. Nothing has worked for more than a day or two.

But earlier this week, a fellow tech reporter told me about Sleepyti.me, a service that he’s had some luck using.

It’s fairly bare bones, less of a fancy app than more like a nifty Web hack. Its premise is simple. You tell the application what time you’d like to wake up, and it calculates your bedtime. Since most sleep cycles last around 90 minutes, and it is thought to be easier to get out of bed in between those cycles than while in the midst of on, the application counts in 90-minute intervals.

But after testing it out for a few nights, I was surprised to discover that it works relatively well.

One night, for example, I decided I wanted to wake up at 7 a.m. to catch up on e-mail and maybe squeeze in a run before work. I typed in my desired wake-up time and the app told me to get in bed by 11:55 p.m. or 1:25 a.m. Although I was exhausted, it was already 11:30 p.m., and I still had a few more work-related tasks to slog through. I kept myself up until around 1 a.m., and then got ready for bed. The next morning, I woke up naturally around 6:45 a.m. Although I got less sleep, I felt more refreshed than I expected.

Sleepytime is not a new product, although I heard about it only earlier this week. It was created in 2010 and hummed along unnoticed until early this year, said David Shaw, the 24-year-old engineer who created it. In January, the site received 1.6 million visits.

Mr. Shaw, who is the director of engineers at Redsp! in, a computer security company in Santa Barbara, Calif., said he first built the site “as a project for my own use, so that when I had to get up or fall asleep at strange times I didn’t need to do any math in my head.”

The basic concept behind the Sleepytime Web app is not unique to this particular service. It’s been also available in several smartphone applications for Android devices and iPhones. But many of those monitor your sleep activity to analyze your sleep cycles and wake you within a window of time. I preferred the simplicity of Sleepyti.me’s Web interface and not relying on it to replace my pre-set alarms, but more as a guide to structure the end of my day so I could start the next one rested and alert.



Dowd: Get Off of Your Cloud

Get Off of Your Cloud

WASHINGTON

When Marissa Mayer became queen of the Yahoos last summer, she was hailed as a role model for women.

The 37-year-old supergeek with the supermodel looks was the youngest Fortune 500 chief executive. And she was in the third trimester of her first pregnancy. Many women were thrilled at the thought that biases against hiring women who were expecting, or planning to be, might be melting.

A couple months later, it gave her female fans pause when the Yahoo C.E.O. took a mere two-week maternity pause. She built a nursery next to her office at her own expense, to make working almost straight through easier.

The fear that this might set an impossible standard for other women â€" especially women who had consigned “having it all” to unicorn status â€" reverberated. Even the German family minister, Kristina Schröder, chimed in: “I regard it with major concern when prominent women give the public impression that maternity leave is something that is not important.”

Almost two months after her son, Macallister, was born, Mayer irritated some women again when she bubbled at a Fortune event that “the baby’s been way easier than everyone made it out to be.”

“Putting ‘baby’ and ‘easy’ in the same sentence turns you into one of those mothers we don’t like very much,” Lisa Belkin chided in The Huffington Post.

Now Mayer has caused another fem-quake with a decision that has a special significance to working mothers. She has banned Yahoos, as her employees are known, from working at home (which some of us call “working” at home).

It flies in the face of tech companies’ success in creating a cloud office rather than a conventional one. Mayer’s friend Sheryl Sandberg of Facebook wrote in her new feminist manifesto, “Lean In: Women, Work, and the Will to Lead,” that technology could revolutionize women’s lives by “changing the emphasis on strict office hours since so much work can be conducted online.”

She added that “the traditional practice of judging employees by face time rather than results unfortunately persists” when it would be more efficient to focus on results.

Many women were appalled at the Yahoo news, noting that Mayer, with her penthouse atop the San Francisco Four Seasons, her Oscar de la Rentas and her $117 million five-year contract, seems oblivious to the fact that for many of her less-privileged sisters with young children, telecommuting is a lifeline to a manageable life.

The dictatorial decree to work “side by side” had some dubbing Mayer not “the Steinem of Silicon Valley” but “the Stalin of Silicon Valley.”

Mayer and Sandberg are in an elite cocoon and in USA Today, Joanne Bamberger fretted that they are “setting back the cause of working mothers.” She wrote that Sandberg’s exhortation for “women to pull themselves up by the Louboutin straps” is damaging, as is “Mayer’s office-only work proclamation that sends us back to the pre-Internet era of power suits with floppy bow ties.”

Men accustomed to telecommuting were miffed, too. Richard Branson tweeted: “Give people the freedom of where to work & they will excel.”

While it is true that women have looked to technology as a leveling force in the marketplace, it is also true that tech innovators â€" even as far back as Bell Labs scientists â€" have designed their campuses around the management philosophy that intellectual ferment happens when you force smart people to collaborate in person and constantly bounce creative ideas off each other.

Mayer has shown that she is willing to do what it takes, with no coddling. She has a huge challenge in turning around Yahoo â€" she was the third of three C.E.O.’s at the company in 2012 alone. She had success brainstorming face to face during her years at Google, where she was the 20th employee, the first female engineer and the shepherd of more than 100 products. The Times’s Laura Holson wrote that when meeting with Google subordinates, Mayer came across like a “meticulous art teacher correcting first-semester students.”

Mayer’s bold move looks retro and politically incorrect, but she may feel the need to reboot the company culture, harness creativity, cut deadwood and discipline slackers before resuming flexibility.

Coming into the office, Yahoo H.R. chief Jackie Reses wrote in a memo, ensures that “some of the best decisions and insights come from hallway and cafeteria discussions, meeting new people, and impromptu team meetings,” adding tartly that if “Yahoos” “have to stay home for the cable guy, please use your best judgment in the spirit of collaboration.”

Maybe as Mayer rejuvenates “the grandfather” of Internet companies, as she calls Yahoo, she needs the energy and synergy of a start-up mentality.

She seems to believe that enough employees are goofing off at home that she should bring them off the cloud and into the cubicle. But she should also be sympathetic to the very different situation of women â€" and men â€" struggling without luxurious layers of help.

Mayer has a nursery next to the executive suite. But not everyone has it so sweet.

A version of this op-ed appeared in print on February 27, 2013, on page A25 of the New York edition with the headline: Get Off Of Your Cloud.

Internet Sleuths Add Evidence to Chinese Military Hacking Accusations

Regular users of the Internet have been busy in the week since The New York Times reported that Mandiant, a computer security firm, had tied a prolific Chinese hacking group to a specific People’s Liberation Army unit in Shanghai.

Chinese-speaking users and amateur hackers have scoured the Internet for traces of the online personas of those who Mandiant claims work on behalf of China’s P.L.A. Unit 61398.  The new evidence, while circumstantial, adds to the signs suggesting Chinese military efforts to hack into American corporate computer systems. Mandiant said that in one case, people were able to trace one of the P.L.A.’s hackers to an apartment building located 600 meters from the military unit’s headquarters. In another, they were able to trace one hacker back to the P.L.A.â€s Information Engineering University, described by American computer security researchers as one of the Chinese military’s top training schools for computer hacking.  They also found recruitment notices for Unit 61398, suggesting the group has been active since at least 2004, despite the fact that the unit’s headquarters were not built until later.

In its report, Mandiant singled out a hacker named “DOTA,” possibly shorthand for the video game “Defense of the Ancients,” which is often abbreviated to DotA. That hacker created e-mail accounts that were used to begin several cyberattacks. The password for several of those accounts were a play on the Chinese military unit’s designation.  To register the accounts, DOTA used a Shanghai phone number.

This past week, Chinese-speaking Internet users disclosed on Twitter that DOTA’s telephone number was listed in a 2009 ad for a Shanghai apartment rental. The apartment is 6! 00 meters from Unit 61398’s headquarters.

Another online persona that Mandiant singled out was of a military hacker named “Superhard.” The author of a cybercrime blog, Cyb3rsleuth, connected the user name “Superhard_M” to the e-mail address mei_qiang_82@hotmail.com. That e-mail address was also used in a job posting, in which the person lists his skills and interests as “network security and developing hacking tools.” The address listed in the post matched the address for the Information Engineering University. In a Northrop Grumman report for the U.S.-China Economy and Security Review Commission last year, defense analysts said the school, in Zhengzhou, Henan Province, “is perhaps the military university with the most comprehensive involvement in information warfare and computer network operations training, planning and possibly also execution.”

Cyb3rsleuth found that a P.L.A. university stuent named Mei Qiang was co-author of two papers about hacking in 2007 and 2008, one titled “HTTP Session Hijacking on Switch LAN and Its Countermeasures” and the other “Stack Protection Mechanisms in Windows Vista.”

Mandiant’s report found that Unit 61398’s headquarters in the Pudong new area of Shanghai was not built until early 2007. But China Digital Times found a 2004 military recruitment notice on a Zhejiang University Web site: “Unit 61398 of China’s People’s Liberation Army (located in Pudong District, Shanghai) seeks to recruit 2003-class computer science graduate students.”

“This corroborates our assertions concerning the kinds of personnel that Unit 61398 recruits,” Mandiant said in a blog post online. “This also indicates Unit 61398 has been operating in Pudong since 2004, even though the current headquarters facility was not built and operational until years la! ter.”