The clashes in Tunisia came one day after conservative Salafists had tried and failed to stop the recording of a âHarlem Shakeâ video at a language school in the capital, Tunis.
A âHarlem Shakeâ video recorded at a language school in Tunis on Wednesday.
On Monday, Agence France-Presse reported, Tunisiaâs education minister ordered an investigation into another video made over the weekend at a school outside Tunis that included the mockery of Islamists.
A âHarlem Shakeâ 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 MohamedMorsiâs 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 âHarlem Shakeâ 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 countryâs decency laws by dancing in their underwear to emulate the Australian âHarlem Shakeâ 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 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 networkâs partnership with Microsoft; Facebook offers users Microsoftâs 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.
âIf 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,â Brian Boland, the companyâs director of product marketing, wrote in a blog post.
Marketers were delighted by the news. âTargeting and retargeting ads based on usersâ social habits and behaviors will indeed give marketers another valuable tool to add to their overall digital marketing mix,â 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 ârelevantâ to users.
One day after Turkeyâs prime minister, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, told a United Nations forum the world should consider Islamophobia a crime against humanity, âjust like Zionism or anti-Semitism or fascism,â his Israeli counterpart lashed back. âI strongly condemn the remarks made by Prime Minister Erdogan of Turkey, comparing Zionism to fascism,â Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu replied on Twitter.
I strongly condemn the remarks made by Prime Minister Erdogan of Turkey, comparing Zionism to Fascism.This is a dark and false statement,
In his remarks, Mr. Erdogan bemoaned âa lack of understanding between religions and sectsâ and said that the way ahead was âemphasizing the richness that comes from diversity.â After he praised âcountries which see cultural and ethnic differences not as a reason for division or conflict but as a richness,â he complained of what he called the worldâs indifference to the suffering of Muslims in Syria and elsewhere.
About seven minutes into the video, Mr. Erdogan said:
Unfortunately the modern world has not passed the test when it comes to Syria. In the last two years, we have seen close to 70,000 people lose their lives, and every single day we see innocet children, women, civilians, killed. And the fact that the world has not reacted to this situation seriously injures the sense of justice. In the same way, rising racism in Europe is a serious, problematic area, vis-Ã -vis the Alliance of Civilizations project.
In addition to indifference vis-Ã -vis the Muslim countries, we also see harsh, offending, insulting behavior towards Muslims who live in countries other than their own, and this continues to be an inconscionable act that has been ongoing around the world. We should be striving to better understand the beliefs of others but instead we see that people act based on prejudice and exclude others and despiuse them. And that is why it is necessary that we must consider â" just like Zionism or anti-Semitism or fascism â" Islamophobia as a crime against humanity.
Mr. Erdogan immediately went on to condemn those, including politicians, who use âthe media or mass communication vehiclesâ for âprovoking the sensitivities ! of a reli! gion or a sect or a society.â
The Turkish prime minister has expressed his anger with Israeli policies in blunt terms at international forums in the past, most notably at Davos in 2009, when he stormed off the stage at the end of a heated discussion of Israelâs Gaza offensive, after telling President Simon Peres: âWhen it comes to killing, you know well how to kill.â
Video of an argument between Turkeyâs prime minister and Israelâs president at Davos in 2009.
Relations between the two countries suffered another blow in 2010, when Israeli commandos killed nie Turks during a bloody raid on the ship leading an effort to break the Israeli blockade of Gaza organized by a Turkish aid organization.
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 âDo-Not-Track Online Act of 2013.â
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 donât-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.
âThe privacy of Americans is increasingly under assault as more and more of their daily lives are conducted online,â Mr. Rockefeller, the chairman of the Senate Committee on Commerce, Science and Transportation, wrote on Thursday in an e-mail sent to a reporter. âIndustry 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.â
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.
âItâs a lot easier to use a system that is already built and works,â 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 âanonymousâ 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.
âNowadays, there is an incredible proliferation of tracking,â said Dan Auerbach, a staff technologist at the Electronic Frontier Foundation, a digital rights group in San Francisco. âData 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.â
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, Googleâs Chrome, and the more recent iterations of Internet Explorer â" already offer the donât-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 âDo Not Trackâ 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. Rockefellerâs bill indicates that legislative action could pre-empt voluntary industry measures.
âThis is a signal that Senator Rockefeller is serious about getting Do Not Track done,â 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. âI think industry writ large - browser companies, advertising networks, data brokers - are going to understand that he is serious about getting across the finish line.â
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 âDo-Not-Track Online Act of 2013.â
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 donât-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.
âThe privacy of Americans is increasingly under assault as more and more of their daily lives are conducted online,â Mr. Rockefeller, the chairman of the Senate Committee on Commerce, Science and Transportation, wrote on Thursday in an e-mail sent to a reporter. âIndustry 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.â
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.
âItâs a lot easier to use a system that is already built and works,â 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 âanonymousâ 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.
âNowadays, there is an incredible proliferation of tracking,â said Dan Auerbach, a staff technologist at the Electronic Frontier Foundation, a digital rights group in San Francisco. âData 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.â
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, Googleâs Chrome, and the more recent iterations of Internet Explorer â" already offer the donât-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 âDo Not Trackâ 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. Rockefellerâs bill indicates that legislative action could pre-empt voluntary industry measures.
âThis is a signal that Senator Rockefeller is serious about getting Do Not Track done,â 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. âI think industry writ large - browser companies, advertising networks, data brokers - are going to understand that he is serious about getting across the finish line.â
LâOsservatore RomanoPope Benedict XVI attends a meeting with his cardinals during a farewell ceremony in the Clementine Hall of the Vaticanâs Apostolic Palace on Thursday in Vatican City.
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.
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.
âWe think the next major beauty brand is not going to be built over the counter, itâs going to be built online,â 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.
âItâs about fashion,â Ms. Park said. âYou want access to color for your outfit or your mood, not squeezing every last drop before you buy the next color.â
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 âobstructing trafficâ 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 âoverpowered the taxi driver and handed the firearm back to his colleague.â
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, âthe cause of death was found to be head injuries with internal bleeding.â
The dead man was identified by The Daily Sun as Mido Macia, an immigrant from Mozambique. The newspaperâs report on the incident quoted unnamed witnesses at both the market and the police station who accused the officers of ! brutality. âThey killed him,â an unnamed prisoner at the police station in Daveyton said. âThey beat him up so badly in here.â
âHe was in pain, he cried and asked the cops to stop but they continued anyway,â a woman at the market said of the arrest. A man added: âIf he was parked on the wrong side of the road, they were supposed to give him a ticket, not kill him.â
In a television interview, a spokesman for the review board, Moses Dlamini, said that investigators âneed to speak to the person who took the footage and have the footage authenticatedâ 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 âthe 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.â The spokesman added, âwe are shocked ourselves,â 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, âthe police donât even care that there are people who are watching, there are witnesses.â As of Wednesday, he added, the officers involved in the incident remained on duty.
As The Guardian notes, Amnesty Internationalâs 2012 annual report on the state of human rights in South Africa revealed that the police oversight body, âreported a 7 per cent decline between April 2010 and March 2011 in recorded deaths in custody and resulting fromââpolice action.ââ Still, the report said, there were 797 such deaths in that one-year period.
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 âobstructing trafficâ 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 âoverpowered the taxi driver and handed the firearm back to his colleague.â
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, âthe cause of death was found to be head injuries with internal bleeding.â
The dead man was identified by The Daily Sun as Mido Macia, an immigrant from Mozambique. The newspaperâs report on the incident quoted unnamed witnesses at both the market and the police station who accused the officers of ! brutality. âThey killed him,â an unnamed prisoner at the police station in Daveyton said. âThey beat him up so badly in here.â
âHe was in pain, he cried and asked the cops to stop but they continued anyway,â a woman at the market said of the arrest. A man added: âIf he was parked on the wrong side of the road, they were supposed to give him a ticket, not kill him.â
In a television interview, a spokesman for the review board, Moses Dlamini, said that investigators âneed to speak to the person who took the footage and have the footage authenticatedâ 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 âthe 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.â The spokesman added, âwe are shocked ourselves,â 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, âthe police donât even care that there are people who are watching, there are witnesses.â As of Wednesday, he added, the officers involved in the incident remained on duty.
As The Guardian notes, Amnesty Internationalâs 2012 annual report on the state of human rights in South Africa revealed that the police oversight body, âreported a 7 per cent decline between April 2010 and March 2011 in recorded deaths in custody and resulting fromââpolice action.ââ Still, the report said, there were 797 such deaths in that one-year period.
Samsung Electronics had no new phone to show at Mobile World Congress this week. But it was ubiquitous in Barcelona nonetheless.
The South Korean companyâs presence was unavoidable even outside the conference. The walls of Barcelonaâs 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.
âWhat brings you to the showâ I asked.
âWe have a collaboration with Samsung,â 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: Thereâs 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 doesnât 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, wouldnât that make you feel a little nervous
Samsung Electronics had no new phone to show at Mobile World Congress this week. But it was ubiquitous in Barcelona nonetheless.
The South Korean companyâs presence was unavoidable even outside the conference. The walls of Barcelonaâs 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.
âWhat brings you to the showâ I asked.
âWe have a collaboration with Samsung,â 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: Thereâs 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 doesnât 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, wouldnât that make you feel a little nervous
FacebookFraternity 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 companyâs decision left him distraught. âI cried in front of an H&M in the middle of the street,â he said in the video. âIt was awkward.â
Mr. Collins began rushing his collegeâs 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 âa great guy who always puts other people above himself,â and said that his situation provided the fraternity, which he said is focused in part on âphilanthropy, giving back and community serviceâ with a chance âto really show the Emerson community and people everywhere what we stand for, which is brotherhood.â
How does he feel about the amount of money they have raised so far âThe word we are using right now is overwhelmed,â he said.
In the video posted Monday, Mr. Collins appeared at a loss for words in the face of his friendsâ efforts. âI donât even know what to say because the word, thank you, doesnât even do it anymore,â he said. âWhat 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.â
Emerson College has a reputation as a liberal bastion. Mr. Bergren-Aragon said there are two openly transgender people in his fraternity, and the group thought Mr. Collinsâs predicament provided an opportunity to not only âraise awareness of transgender issues,â but also ârally around someone in need who could not help himself.â
âEmerson is a very accepting community,â he said.
Mr. Collins turned to social media for money toward a medical procedure once before, creating an account on the crowd-financing Web site Chip In that he used to raise $1,458. He also blogged about his transition from female to male, including changing the name on his driverâs license and takng male hormones, which he has been doing for 14 months.
He also wrote about his efforts to get his insurance company, Aetna, to contribute to the cost of top surgery. According to a post on Dec. 28, the company would agree to pay 80 percent of the cost of the operation if he met a list of criteria establishing himself as a âtrue transsexual,â including letters from a doctor and a therapist. In early February, he was told that insurance would not cover the cost of the procedure.
Mr. Collins is not the first transgender person whose insurance company has turned down his claim, said Vincent Villano, a spokesman for the National Center for Transgender Equality, an advocacy group. He said many companies consider procedures like top surgery to be âcosmetic.â
âIt is a huge challenge to convince health insurance companies that transition related care and procedures are medically necessary,â Mr. Villano said. âThey are operatin! g under a! n outdated and misguided understanding of what trans-health care means.â
Mr. Villano said there was a âgrowing trendâ among colleges and universities to change their health care plans to be more trans-inclusive, and pointed to the example of Brown University, which announced this month that it would extend its student health plan to cover gender reassignment operations.
Many transgender people turn to crowd-financing Web sites to raise money for gender reassignment operations, Mr. Villano said, either because they are uninsured or their insurance company does not cover transition-related medical care. On Wednesday afternoon, there were at least 21 different active fund-raisingcampaigns for transgender health care on Indiegogo, many for the same operation that Mr. Collins is seeking.
âThis is the first time I have ever heard of a fraternity raising money to pay for surgery for a fellow member,â Mr. Villano said. âThatâs a really positive sign of the times. People are becoming more aware of trans issues and building community. A lot of trans folks rely on their communities to pay for procedures, and I think this is just great.â
I.B.M. is attempting to expand its artificial intelligence technology and turn its Jeopardy-winning computer Watson into something that actually makes commercial sense, Steve Lohr reports in The New York Times.
One glaring omission in the list of services that have been transformed by the Internet: postal mail.
A start-up, Outbox, is trying to change that by digitizing your mail. For $5 a month, you can skip trips to the mailbox and sorting and recycling your mail, and instead view and organize all your correspondence on an app and do away with junk mail with the swipe of a finger.
The Postal Service is particularly vulnerable, mired in debt, ending Saturday delivery and desperate for change.
Outbox is starting small. It has been operating in Austin, Tex., where the company is based, and this week expanded to San Francisco.
âFrom anywhere, anytime, you have exposure to your postal mail for the first time, in really a way that the postal netwrk should be constructed in the 21st century,â said Will Davis, co-founder of Outbox, who calls the Postal Service the original social network.
With the app, going through your mail becomes easier and more convenient. Your letters and envelopes are picked up from your mailbox and scanned so theyâre accessible on a pretty app. You can unsubscribe from junk mail, file mail in virtual folders to look up later and form to-do lists for responding to time-sensitive mail.
E-mail is broken, Mr. Davis and his co-founder, Evan Baehr, said, which is one reason that only about one-fifth of people choose to receive bills electronically. That is why they built an app for users to interact with postal mail separately from their in-boxes.
If there is a piece of mail you want physically, whether itâs the J. Crew catalog or a hand-drawn card from your niece, you can ask Outbox to deliver it. Otherwise, Outbox shreds and recycles it.
It all sounds very elegant for the user, but things get ! much more complicated from the companyâs perspective. Outbox spent months interviewing 100 families about their habits and desires regarding mail.
Identity theft can occur when thieves dig through recycling bins and steal paper mail. So how can you protect yourself when you are paying someone to fetch your mail and open it Outboxâs founders said the company carefully screens employees, even doing credit checks to make sure they do not have a motive to steal a customerâs identity, and has a $1 million insurance policy to protect customers if its safeguards donât work. Digitized mail is on a secure site and paper mail is shredded.
For now, Outbox sends employees call âunpostmenâ door-to-door to physically gather your mail and take it to a warehouse. (If your mailbox has a lock, you send them a photo of your key and they re-create it, a technical feat of its own.)
The idea of sending people door-to-door seems impossible to expand nationally. That is why Outbox is starting in densecities, the founders said, and doing pickups just three days a week.
Its master plan is to partner with companies that send mail, like retailers and cable companies, or with the Postal Service. Then, catalogs, bills and other mail could be sent directly to Outbox.
In rural places where Outbox canât afford to operate, people would at least have much less mail in their mailboxes because most would be digital, Mr. Davis said.
Mr. Davis and Mr. Baehr met at Harvard Business School and worked in Washington, where they said they developed the urge to try to solve big bureaucratic problems more quickly than bureaucracies do.
They talked to the Postal Service before starting, they said, but it moved too slowly for them.
Personal data is a valuable asset that ought to be put to work.
Fluid data markets will benefit economies, societies and individuals.
Privacy rules should focus on how data is used rather than on the widespread collection of personal data.
That is the gist of a new report from World Economic Forumâs Personal Data project, âUnlocking the Value of Personal Data: From Collection to Usage.â
The modern digital world, with its explosion of data, has made the traditional approach to privacy based on ânotice and consentâ typically between two parties â" a marketer and a consumer â" obsolete, in the view of the reportâs authors.
âThe technology has overrun the classical model,â said Craig Mundie, a senior adviser to Microsoftâs chief executive, Steven A. Ballmer.
Mr. Mundie was on the five-member steering board for the report. All five people represent corporatons that stand to gain from tapping personal data.
Privacy advocates and regulators in Europe and the United States have been reluctant to give up on efforts to control the collection of data. Their concern is that once personal data is collected, its use is very difficult to monitor and control. Information brokers that consumers never see â" and few know about â" market personal data to advertisers, retailers, financial institutions and others. That problem prompted the Federal Trade Commission in a report last year to recommend that Congress enact legislation âto provide greater transparency for, and control over, the practices of information brokers.â
But while recognizing the privacy challenges, the companies participating in the World Economic Forum project say what was needed was a careful balance. In a blog post on Wednesday, Raymond J. Baxter, a senior vice president of Kaiser Permanente, a major health care provider and insurer, emphasized the value of personal data, when! used properly. He cited Kaiserâs use of personal medical data for research.
For example, mining family data and outcomes over years, Kaiser scientists found that the children of women who took anti-depressant drugs while pregnant had more than twice the risk of developing autism disorders. âBy discovering this correlation and leveraging this data in new ways, lives are improved,â Mr. Baxter wrote.
According to Mr. Mundie of Microsoft, technology can help strike the right balance between individualsâ concerns about privacy and the benefit of a fluid market in personal data. He said independent organizations, most likely nonprofits, would develop automated privacy preference services that individuals could subscribe to. A person would check off what he or she wanted his data to be used for and not. Those preferences, he explained, would then be encoded as software tags that traveled with the personâs data.
Those preferences, Mr. Mundie added, could vary depending on context. For eample, a person might say he or she did not want personal medical data shared beyond a family doctor and one or two specialists â" unless the person was taken to an emergency ward.
âYou can intelligently use computing technology to provide the benefits and curtail abuse,â Mr. Mundie said.
Personal data is a valuable asset that ought to be put to work.
Fluid data markets will benefit economies, societies and individuals.
Privacy rules should focus on how data is used rather than on the widespread collection of personal data.
That is the gist of a new report from World Economic Forumâs Personal Data project, âUnlocking the Value of Personal Data: From Collection to Usage.â
The modern digital world, with its explosion of data, has made the traditional approach to privacy based on ânotice and consentâ typically between two parties â" a marketer and a consumer â" obsolete, in the view of the reportâs authors.
âThe technology has overrun the classical model,â said Craig Mundie, a senior adviser to Microsoftâs chief executive, Steven A. Ballmer.
Mr. Mundie was on the five-member steering board for the report. All five people represent corporatons that stand to gain from tapping personal data.
Privacy advocates and regulators in Europe and the United States have been reluctant to give up on efforts to control the collection of data. Their concern is that once personal data is collected, its use is very difficult to monitor and control. Information brokers that consumers never see â" and few know about â" market personal data to advertisers, retailers, financial institutions and others. That problem prompted the Federal Trade Commission in a report last year to recommend that Congress enact legislation âto provide greater transparency for, and control over, the practices of information brokers.â
But while recognizing the privacy challenges, the companies participating in the World Economic Forum project say what was needed was a careful balance. In a blog post on Wednesday, Raymond J. Baxter, a senior vice president of Kaiser Permanente, a major health care provider and insurer, emphasized the value of personal data, when! used properly. He cited Kaiserâs use of personal medical data for research.
For example, mining family data and outcomes over years, Kaiser scientists found that the children of women who took anti-depressant drugs while pregnant had more than twice the risk of developing autism disorders. âBy discovering this correlation and leveraging this data in new ways, lives are improved,â Mr. Baxter wrote.
According to Mr. Mundie of Microsoft, technology can help strike the right balance between individualsâ concerns about privacy and the benefit of a fluid market in personal data. He said independent organizations, most likely nonprofits, would develop automated privacy preference services that individuals could subscribe to. A person would check off what he or she wanted his data to be used for and not. Those preferences, he explained, would then be encoded as software tags that traveled with the personâs data.
Those preferences, Mr. Mundie added, could vary depending on context. For eample, a person might say he or she did not want personal medical data shared beyond a family doctor and one or two specialists â" unless the person was taken to an emergency ward.
âYou can intelligently use computing technology to provide the benefits and curtail abuse,â Mr. Mundie said.
The Customs and Border Protection agency deploys drones capable of âidentifyingâ a human figure, according to documents obtained by an advocacy group that tracks the use of surveillance technology.
The border agency says it does not use facial recognition technology, but cameras that can distinguish between a beast and a human being and glean whether someone is carrying a rifle or a backpack.
Since 2005, the agency has contracted with the San Diego-based General Atomics Aeronautical System and bought 10 Predator drones for use on land and sea borders. The contracts were unearthed this week in response to a Freedom of Information Act request filed by the Washington-based Electronic Privacy Information Center. The advocacy group has pressed for laws and regulations to ensure privacy, as civilian drones become more common inside the United States.
The United States military has used drones, including the Predator, overseas to gather intelligence and carry out targeted strikes on the batleground. Drones within domestic airspace are still largely limited to border surveillance, though law-enforcement agencies around the country have lately sought to purchase smaller, lighter vehicles for policing purposes. In so doing they have faced opposition from civil liberties groups and roughly a dozen state and local governments have proposed measures to limit how they can be used.
The Obama Administration last year paved the way for the Federal Aviation Administration to authorize drones for civilian use. In principle, they can be applied for a variety of activities, from dusting crops to monitoring wildlife.
They have also engendered fears of government surveillance, because there is no consensus in law on how the data collected can be used, shared or stored.
A Customs and Border Protection spokesman said the drones used by his agency offe! r field agents âenhanced situational awareness.â According to the contract documents, the sensors attached to the drones would be capable of âidentifying a standing human,â and ârecognizing a backpack.â The agency spokesman said they cannot identify a particular individual. They can only tell if it is a person or something else.
The documents further specify that the drone systems include signals interception receivers. That, said Ginger McCall, director of the open government project at the electronic privacy center, raised concerns about whether the agency could âintercept communications, including phone conversations.â
The agency spokesman said it does not engage in any communications surveillance.
The Predator systems weigh about 10,500 pounds and can fly for 20 hours nonstop. They are based in North Dakota, Arizona and Texas; another in Florida specializes in keeping an eye on the water and s used in drug interdiction missions. The border agency has stepped up its use of the unmanned vehicle systems: They flew a total of 5700 hours in 2012. âThis is not an aircraft thatâs looking through windows,â the spokesman said.