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Tuesday, September 17, 2013

Russia’s Foreign Minister Cites Questions Raised by Nun in Syria on Chemical Attacks

A Euronews video report on remarks by the foreign ministers of Russia and France in Moscow on Tuesday.

Sitting next to his French counterpart in Moscow on Tuesday, Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov of Russia insisted that there were still “serious grounds to believe” the deadly chemical attack in Damascus last month “was a provocation,” staged by Syrian rebels, despite evidence in a United Nations report that seemed to suggest government forces were to blame.

Asked about the report, Mr. Lavrov told reporters the findings of U.N. weapons experts â€" who reported that the poison was delivered in shells with Cyrillic writing on them by rockets known to be in the possession of the Syrian government â€" should be weighed alongside other information circulating online.

Russia’s top diplomat made a similar argument over the weekend in Geneva, even as he worked out a deal to take Syria’s chemical weapons out of the hands of President Bashar al-Assad’s generals. But on Tuesday he drew attention to an unusual source: a skeptical analysis of the online video evidence produced by a Lebanese nun who did not witness any part of the attack.

Mr. Lavrov has previously had cause to regret endorsing Internet speculation. Last month, he cited the inaccurate claim by pro-Hezbollah bloggers that video of the attack’s victims had been posted online the day before the event, which was subsequently debunked. On Tuesday, though, he again pointed to what he called information published online, “including evidence provided by nuns at a nearby convent” to bolster his argument that rebel forces had carried out the Aug. 21 attack on the outskirts of Damascus.

As the Human Rights Watch emergencies director Peter Bouckaert suggests, it seems likely that Mr. Lavrov intended to highlight the arguments of Mother Agnes Mariam de la Croix, a Carmelite nun born in Lebanon who is frequently quoted in the Russian media, and by American critics of Islam, defending the Assad government.

Despite Mr. Lavrov’s endorsement, however, Mother Agnes has not presented any concrete evidence on the attack and was not nearby when it was carried out. (Her monastery is north of Damascus, not near the site of the attack.) Instead, she has written a rambling, 50-page analysis of the video posted on opposition YouTube channels that contains nothing but speculation that some or all of it was staged.

It seems likely that the nun’s idiosyncratic study of the video evidence would have attracted little attention, but for the fact that she was subsequently presented as an expert witness to events by Russia Today, the Kremlin-owned news network that is promoted on the Russian foreign ministry’s Web site.

In an interview with RT two weeks ago, Mother Agnes said that she was convinced, based on her study of the footage posted online, “that the whole affair was a frame-up. It had been staged and prepared in advance with the goal of framing the Syrian government as the perpetrator.”

“The key evidence is that Reuters made these files public at 6:05 in the morning,” she continued. “The chemical attack is said to have been launched between 3 and 5 o’clock in the morning in Ghouta. How is it even possible to collect a dozen different pieces of footage, get more than 200 kids and 300 young people together in one place, give them first aid and interview them on camera, and all that in less than three hours? Is that realistic at all?”

However, a close look at what appears to be the early Reuters report Mother Agnes cited as evidence suggests that her suspicion was ill-founded. The report’s time stamp indicates that it was posted online on Aug. 21 at “6:05 a.m. EDT,” or Eastern Daylight Time, the time zone used in New York, which is seven hours behind Syria. That means that the report, based on video of the attack’s victims, appeared just after 1 p.m. in Syria that day â€" ten, not three, hours after the first video of the victims was posted online.

The nun also described her suspicions a week earlier in a Skype interview with the Canadian Web site GlobalResearch â€" whose founder has called the 9/11 attacks “a pretext” for invading Afghanistan, and asserted that there is “not a scrap of evidence” that Al Qaeda was responsible. She told the site that at the time of the attack she was in Damascus, not far from the hotel where the U.N. investigators were staying, and did not believe there had been a chemical attack. “How is it possible, you know, for a chemical weapon to be blown up” on the outskirts of the city, she asked, if no one in the city noticed any unusual smell after the event.

She then asserted that since those rebel-held neighborhoods on the outskirts of Damascus had been so badly pummeled by a government counter-offensive that it was unrealistic that so many civilians could have remained behind to be killed. In her study of the videos, Mother Agnes presented the theory, unsupported by evidence, that the dead children seen in Ghouta that day might have been brought there from another part of Syria and killed by jihadists intent on framing the government.

(As Muhammad Idrees Ahmad reported in The New Republic, a blog post on the GlobalResearch site promoting the idea that the attacks were staged, endorsed by Rush Limbaugh, was later quoted without attribution in an open letter to President Obama from a group of former U.S. intelligence professionals. That letter has also been cited as evidence by Mr. Lavrov.)

Mr. Lavrov also said Tuesday that the report did not reach a conclusion about “whether the munitions used in the attack were produced at a factory or were home-made.”

As my colleagues Rick Gladstone and C.J. Chivers reported, the U.N. investigators “were unable to examine all of the munitions used, but they were able to find and measure several rockets or their components. Using standard field techniques for ordnance identification and crater analysis, they established that at least two types of rockets had been used, including an M14 artillery rocket bearing Cyrillic markings and a 330-millimeter rocket of unidentified provenance.”

In his remarks on Tuesday, The Washington Post reported, Mr. Lavrov “said the discovery of Cyrillic lettering on one of the rockets that delivered the gas was not significant. He suggested that other nations, including some in the West, have been counterfeiting old Soviet weaponry, and he called on them to stop doing so.”

As my colleagues also explained, the U.N. findings did contain evidence suggesting that the rockets carrying dozens of liters of chemical weapons had come from the direction of a Syrian military base:

One annex to the report also identified azimuths, or angular measurements, from where rockets had struck, back to their points of origin. When plotted and marked independently on maps by analysts from Human Rights Watch and by The New York Times, the United Nations data from two widely scattered impact sites pointed directly to a Syrian military complex.

A map produced by Human Rights Watch using the findings of a United Nations report on the Aug. 21 rocket attack on rebel-held areas outside Damascus shows the likely flight path of the munitions. A map produced by Human Rights Watch using the findings of a United Nations report on the Aug. 21 rocket attack on rebel-held areas outside Damascus shows the likely flight path of the munitions.


French Teacher Killed in Cairo Jail as Detained Canadians Begin Hunger Strike

Students of John Greyson, a Canadian filmmaker detained in Egypt and held without charge since Aug. 16, produced a video calling for his release.

A French citizen arrested for violating an army curfew was beaten to death in a Cairo jail cell late Monday night, on the same day that two Canadians held without charge for more than a month began a hunger strike â€" a grim pairing of events that drew attention both to the dysfunctional Egyptian police force and to rising xenophobia in a country whose economy once relied largely on its booming tourism sector.

The dead man’s name was not publicly released on Tuesday, but a report by the French news agency Agence France-Presse said he had been detained in the upscale island neighborhood of Zamalek on Monday while walking in the street after a nighttime curfew imposed by the military. Soldiers discovered that his visa was no longer valid, arrested him and took him to the Qasr al-Nil police station, a major police facility in downtown Cairo, where he was later beaten to death by other prisoners in a crowded jail cell.

Six of his cellmates are being investigated for “bodily harm resulting in death,” according to Agence France-Presse, which reported that his death was caused by “internal hemorrhaging” and a skull fracture. A report by The Associated Press said that the man was drunk at the time of his arrest and that, although he was beaten inside the jail cell, he was not declared dead until he was taken to a hospital later.

The man died on the same day that supporters of two Canadians arrested and held without charge since Aug. 16 announced that the men, Tarek Loubani and John Greyson, would begin a hunger strike “to protest the arbitrary nature of their detention by Egyptian authorities.”

In the Egyptian legal system, prisoners can be held without charge for 15 days at a time, but their detention can be repeatedly renewed for additional 15-day periods. In a statement, Mr. Greyson’s sister, Cecilia Greyson, cited the specter of indefinite detention without charge as part of the rationale behind the hunger strike.

“We can only imagine the anguish that John and Tarek feel after realizing that their detention could be extended for so long in what can only be described as an arbitrary process that lacks any credibility,” she said. “We know that they did not take the decision to begin a hunger strike lightly, and we want them to know we will do everything we can to support them and get them home soon.”

The two men were arrested during riots in Cairo on Aug. 16 near the Ramses Hilton, a towering hotel in the city center, when they stopped to ask police officers for directions to the hotel after the 7 p.m. curfew. Egyptian prosecutors have accused them of “participating with members of the Muslim Brotherhood” in an armed assault on a police station and “taking part in bloody crimes of violence.”

Supporters of Mr. Loubani and Mr. Greyson call those charges absurd. The men were in Cairo as part of a trip to the Gaza Strip, where Mr. Loubani, a respected emergency room physician and professor of emergency medicine at Western University in London, Ontario, intended to provide training to Palestinian doctors as part of an exchange program he helped establish. Mr. Greyson, a professor at York University in Toronto and a well-known film and television director, accompanied him to document the trip to Gaza for a possible film about Mr. Loubani’s work.

The detention of the two men has been widely condemned. Amnesty International has called for their release, as did a number of artists at the Toronto International Film Festival last week, including the filmmakers Alex Gibney and Sarah Polley and the writer Michael Ondaatje. In late August, some of Mr. Greyson’s students posted a video appeal to YouTube calling for their professor and Mr. Loubani to be released.

Robert Mackey contributed reporting.



Spokesman and Social Media Activist for the Muslim Brotherhood Arrested in Cairo

CAIRO â€" Security forces on Tuesday arrested Gehad el-Haddad, a senior official of the Muslim Brotherhood who handled the group’s communication with the foreign media, Egyptian officials said. His arrest was part of a continuing round-up of hundreds or thousands of Brotherhood leaders in the two months since the military ouster of President Mohamed Morsi, an ally of the group.

Mr. Haddad is an aide to Khairat el-Shater, an top Brotherhood leader who was arrested last month, and he is also the son of Mr. Morsi’s top foreign policy adviser, Essam el-Haddad, who was detained with Mr. Morsi at the time of the takeover. The arrests have already swept up much of the group’s leadership hierarchy, effectively crippling its organizational ability.

Mr. Haddad’s main role in recent months was speaking to the English-language media, and critics of the Brotherhood have often accused him of misinformation and exaggeration, especially in comments posted on the Internet.

Even as he sought to evade arrest by going into hiding over the past month, he continued the Brotherhood’s effort to look for backing from overseas by posting links on Twitter to photographs and video clips that sought to mobilize support for the restoration of President Mohamed Morsi, the Islamist deposed by the military in July.

As news of his arrest circulated online Tuesday, along with images of a smiling Mr. Haddad in custody, some anti-Brotherhood bloggers mocked him, while others who had chided him on the social network for passing on false or exaggerated reports criticized his arrest.

Although he constantly repeated the group’s renunciation of violence to the news media, news reports said Tuesday he would nonetheless be charged with inciting violence. Prosecutors have brought the same charge against Mr. Morsi, Mr. Shater and many others.

Mr. Haddad has lived as a fugitive since August 14, when security forces broke up a Brotherhood-led sit-in against the takeover here, and he moved daily between apartments while avoiding telephones for fear of surveillance. Prior to working full time for the Brotherhood, Mr. Haddad was educated primarily in Britain and worked in Egypt for the Clinton Foundation, established by former President Bill Clinton.

His arrest was confirmed by @ikhwanweb, the Brotherhood’s official English-language Twitter feed, which quoted his brother.

The police appear to have targeted several Brotherhood spokesmen in recent weeks. Among others recently arrested was Mourad Aly, a volunteer consultant to the group’s political party whose main job for the last ten years was as a marketing executive for the Danish pharmaceutical company Lundbeck. Mr. Aly was apprehended at the airport attempting to board a flight to a corporate meeting abroad, and a spokesman for the company said it working with Egyptian lawyers and the Danish embassy in Cairo to seek his release.



Can Minecraft Be Educational? Readers Respond

When I published my Disruptions column this weekend about Minecraft, a relatively simple computer game that children today are utterly obsessed with, I was fully prepared for a barrage of angry e-mails and comments from readers. After all, I wasn’t just writing about the game, I was noting that a video game could actually be a good thing for children.

But the response to the column, “Disruptions: Minecraft, an Obsession and an Educational Tool,” was completely the opposite. To my surprise, the majority of parents who commented or wrote e-mails about the piece agreed the game can be great for kids.

“It’s not like when we were kids. Being capable and comfortable with technology is important - children use computers for school assignments now more than ever,” wrote KidManiaBlog from Ithaca, N.Y.

Another reader quoted Katie Salen, a game designer, animator, and educator: “Playing video games is a kind of literacy. Not the literacy that helps us read books or write term papers, but the kind of literacy that helps us make or critique the systems we live in…. When we learn to play games with an eye toward uncovering their procedural rhetorics, we learn to ask questions about the models such games present.”

To my surprise, several readers noted that they have set up password-protected servers in their homes so their children can play with their friends in a safe and secure environment.

Some parents even encourage their children to play. “If the games were getting in the way of homework, sports, or sleep, we would have to make an adjustment. But to date, I have seen no downside whatsoever. Only a bunch of bright kids using their brains and having fun,” wrote one reader.

But not everyone agreed with my view that games can be good. Aimee Yermish, a clinical psychologist, likened Minecraft to a weekend in a Las Vegas casino.

“Far too often, I see Minecraft, as with other video games, functioning as an addiction. The kids are playing Minecraft many hours per day, to the exclusion of other activities. They’re not playing with other kids face to face, they’re not playing outside, they’re not getting their homework done, they’re flunking out of college. Minecraft overuse is *rampant* amongst bright-to-gifted kids,” Ms. Yermish wrote. “Video games, like slot machines, function as low-risk variable-ratio reinforcement â€" highly reinforcing.”

Perhaps one of my favorite comments came from Joseph Moulton, a 13-year-old reader from Connecticut, who seems to have taken to computers and programming because of the game.

“I’ve been playing this game for almost 3 years now (Since Feb. 2011), and being 13, I’ve pretty much been growing up on it. Minecraft has introduced tons and tons of new things into my life, such as programming, proper language skills (heh), and some negative stuff as well,” he wrote. “These are the people that inspired me to learn Java, the language Minecraft is written in. Since then, I’ve learned all I can about computer programming, learning languages such as PHP, CSS, C#, and Python.”

But Joseph also noted that he got into some trouble with his parents when they found him lurking on a Minecraft hacker forum. “All in all, the game in amazing. I love every aspect of it.”



Content Creators Use Piracy to Gauge Consumer Interest

You would think that Netflix, HBO and the like don’t think too highly of video piracy Web sites. After all, two of the biggest hits on Netflix â€" Orange Is the New Black, a show about a women locked up in prison, and House of Cards, about a conniving politician â€" are among the most pirated content online. HBO’s Game of Thrones was the most pirated show of 2012.

But last week, a senior Netflix executive said the company itself used pirating Web sites  â€" to determine the genre of new shows viewers might be interested in, and the type of content Netflix produces or licenses.

“With the purchase of a series, we look at what does well on piracy sites,” Kelly Merryman, vice president of content acquisition at Netflix, told the Web site Tweakers, a Netherlands-based news outlet. “Prison Break” is exceptionally popular on piracy sites,” Ms. Merryman said, while noting that this was part of the reason Netflix decided to license the show.

While piracy proponents have been arguing that companies should embrace illegal downloads for some time, it seems that companies like Netflix are finally agreeing.

Laurence H. Tribe, a professor of constitutional law at Harvard Law School, said Netflix, HBO and others can gain important information on customers by paying attention to online pirates.

“I have little doubt that some companies are starting to see how they might benefit from the information they can reap by being subjected to online piracy,” Mr. Tribe said in an interview. “Whether they see those benefits as large enough to offset their losses discounted by the high costs of constructing sufficiently strong anti-piracy protections is likely to be a function of a hard-headed, context-based cost-benefit calculation framed by imagination.”

In the past Reed Hastings, Netflix’s chief executive, has seemed nonplussed by the reality that people illegally download shows from his company.

“Certainly there is some Torrenting that goes on and that’s true around the world, but some of that just creates the demand,” Mr. Hastings told Tweakers in an interview when asked how he feels about people pirating content on the site. “Netflix is so much easier than Torrenting.”

In the interview, Mr. Hastings implied that pirating builds demand, and then when the service becomes available in a new country, people switch to the easier, paid product. ”In Canada BitTorrent is down by as much as 50 percent since Netflix launched three years ago,” he said.

It seems that Netflix isn’t alone in lauding piracy Web sites, or at least nodding to the importance of them as a barometer for the public’s interest in a show.

Earlier this year Time Warner’s chief executive, Jeffrey L. Bewkes, said on an earnings call that pirated content can be “a tremendous word-of-mouth thing.” While talking about HBO’s Game of Thrones, Mr. Bewkes said the discovery that the show was the most pirated TV brand of 2012 could be “better than an Emmy.”

Even the music industry is learning that piracy can pay. According to a study issued in March by the European Commission’s Joint Research Centre, a scientific and technical arm of the European Commission, illegal downloads of songs do very little to harm music industry sales.

The study of 16,000 Europeans found that “piracy can actually provide a boost to music revenues online, irrespective of the genre, and that it should not be viewed as a pressing issue by the industry at all.” In many instances, the study found, if the music was available in a digital form for a fee people would be willing to pay for it. This is the same reality HBO and Netflix seems to be learning, too.

Of course, as I’ve noted before, some of this could be content producers choosing to throw their hands in the air when it comes to illegal downloads. Stopping online piracy is like playing the world’s largest game of Whac-A-Mole.



Content Creators Use Piracy to Gauge Consumer Interest

You would think that Netflix, HBO and the like don’t think too highly of video piracy Web sites. After all, two of the biggest hits on Netflix â€" Orange Is the New Black, a show about a women locked up in prison, and House of Cards, about a conniving politician â€" are among the most pirated content online. HBO’s Game of Thrones was the most pirated show of 2012.

But last week, a senior Netflix executive said the company itself used pirating Web sites  â€" to determine the genre of new shows viewers might be interested in, and the type of content Netflix produces or licenses.

“With the purchase of a series, we look at what does well on piracy sites,” Kelly Merryman, vice president of content acquisition at Netflix, told the Web site Tweakers, a Netherlands-based news outlet. “Prison Break” is exceptionally popular on piracy sites,” Ms. Merryman said, while noting that this was part of the reason Netflix decided to license the show.

While piracy proponents have been arguing that companies should embrace illegal downloads for some time, it seems that companies like Netflix are finally agreeing.

Laurence H. Tribe, a professor of constitutional law at Harvard Law School, said Netflix, HBO and others can gain important information on customers by paying attention to online pirates.

“I have little doubt that some companies are starting to see how they might benefit from the information they can reap by being subjected to online piracy,” Mr. Tribe said in an interview. “Whether they see those benefits as large enough to offset their losses discounted by the high costs of constructing sufficiently strong anti-piracy protections is likely to be a function of a hard-headed, context-based cost-benefit calculation framed by imagination.”

In the past Reed Hastings, Netflix’s chief executive, has seemed nonplussed by the reality that people illegally download shows from his company.

“Certainly there is some Torrenting that goes on and that’s true around the world, but some of that just creates the demand,” Mr. Hastings told Tweakers in an interview when asked how he feels about people pirating content on the site. “Netflix is so much easier than Torrenting.”

In the interview, Mr. Hastings implied that pirating builds demand, and then when the service becomes available in a new country, people switch to the easier, paid product. ”In Canada BitTorrent is down by as much as 50 percent since Netflix launched three years ago,” he said.

It seems that Netflix isn’t alone in lauding piracy Web sites, or at least nodding to the importance of them as a barometer for the public’s interest in a show.

Earlier this year Time Warner’s chief executive, Jeffrey L. Bewkes, said on an earnings call that pirated content can be “a tremendous word-of-mouth thing.” While talking about HBO’s Game of Thrones, Mr. Bewkes said the discovery that the show was the most pirated TV brand of 2012 could be “better than an Emmy.”

Even the music industry is learning that piracy can pay. According to a study issued in March by the European Commission’s Joint Research Centre, a scientific and technical arm of the European Commission, illegal downloads of songs do very little to harm music industry sales.

The study of 16,000 Europeans found that “piracy can actually provide a boost to music revenues online, irrespective of the genre, and that it should not be viewed as a pressing issue by the industry at all.” In many instances, the study found, if the music was available in a digital form for a fee people would be willing to pay for it. This is the same reality HBO and Netflix seems to be learning, too.

Of course, as I’ve noted before, some of this could be content producers choosing to throw their hands in the air when it comes to illegal downloads. Stopping online piracy is like playing the world’s largest game of Whac-A-Mole.



Today’s Scuttlebot: Kids Tweet the Darndest Things, and the Influence of Anger

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Today’s Scuttlebot: Kids Tweet the Darndest Things, and the Influence of Anger

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Remembering the Victims of the Washington Navy Yard

To honor the 12 victims in the Washington Navy Yard mass shooting, the secretary of defense and the secretary of the Navy placed a wreath at the Navy Memorial on Thursday morning as police officials released the identities of all those who were killed.

The victims, nine men and three women, ranged in age from 46 to 73. They arrived at the navy yard before 8:15 a.m. Monday for their jobs. They worked as a financial analyst, a computer network security expert, a maintenance foreman and a logistics specialist. One of the victims, Arthur Daniels, 51, was installing furniture that day.

The names of the victims are Michael Arnold, 59; Martin Bodrog, 54; Arthur Daniels, 51; Sylvia Frasier, 53; Kathy Gaarde, 62; John Roger Johnson, 73; Mary Francis Knight, 51; Frank Kohler, 50; Vishnu Pandit, 61; Kenneth Bernard Proctor, 46; Gerald L. Read, 58, and Richard Michael Ridgell, 52.

They were all members of what the Secretary of the Navy, Ray Mabus, said was the “Navy family,” speaking directly to all those affected by the shooting in a video posted on YouTube Monday night.

Secretary of the Navy Ray Mabus delivers a message to the “Navy family” in the aftermath of the mass shooting at the Washington Navy Yard.

Friends and family, neighbors and co-workers, shared memories of the victims: http://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2013/09/17/us/washington-navy-yard-victims.html

Michael Arnold, 59, from Lorton, Va., retired from the Navy as a commander or lieutenant commander and had previously been stationed at Pearl Harbor in Hawaii, according to a report by The Associated Press. He worked at the navy yard on a team that designed vessels like the U.S.S. Makin Island, a Wasp-class amphibious assault ship used by the Marine Corps.

The A.P. quoted his uncle, Steve Hunter, as saying that he and his wife, Jolanda, had been married for more than 30 years, and they had two grown sons, Eric and Christopher. He had recently returned to Michigan, according to an interview with his mother by WJBK-TV News in Detroit.

Mr. Arnold returned to Michigan for Labor Day to visit his 80-year-old mother, Patricia

Kathleen Gaarde, 62, of Woodbridge, Va., was a financial analyst who supported the organization responsible for the shipyards. In an e-mail sent on Tuesday to The Associated Press, her husband, Doug, wrote:

“Today my life partner of 42 years (38 of them married) was taken from me, my grown son and daughter, and friends,” he wrote. “We were just starting to plan our retirement activities, and now none of that matters. It hasn’t fully sunk in yet but I know I already dearly miss her.”

In this photo, Ms. Gaarde is with her 94-year-old mother. She cared for her until she died last year.

Kathleen Gaarde, a victim of the Navy Yard shootings, with her 94-year-old mother, who she cared for until she passed away last year.Courtesy of the Gaarde Family Kathleen Gaarde, a victim of the Navy Yard shootings, with her 94-year-old mother, who she cared for until she passed away last year.

Ms. Gaarde’s sister-in-law, Janice Hustvet, from Shoreview, Minn., described Ms. Gaarde in an interview as a “hard worker” who was “getting ready to retire.”

Madelyn Gaarde, of Grand Junction, Colo., who is married to Doug Gaarde’s brother, said her sister- and brother-in-law met while he was studying electrical engineering at the University of South Florida in Tampa. Doug Gaarde, an Illinois native, also worked for the Navy until his retirement last year, Madelyn Gaarde said, according to The A.P.

“She loved her animals and was a bluebird counter for the local refuge. She also loved hockey and the Washington Capitals and has been a season-ticket holder for over 25 years,” Mr. Gaarde’s statement said.

Sylvia Frasier, 53, worked at Naval Sea Systems Command as an information assurance manager since 2000, according to a LinkedIn profile. She studied at Strayer University in Virginia, and received a bachelor of science in computer information systems in 2000 and a master’s degree in information systems in 2002.

Her duties at Navsea included providing policy and guidance on network security, and assuring that all computer systems operated by the headquarters met Department of Navy and Department of Defense requirements, according to The A.P. Ms. Frasier also led efforts “to establish and implement procedures to investigate security violations or incidents,” according to the profile.

Kenneth Proctor, 46, was born and raised in Charles County, Md., He worked as a civilian utilities foreman at the navy yard. He and his former wife, Evelyn Charlene Newman, were high-school sweethearts who spoke regularly even after they divorced in 2013 after 19 years of marriage. She said the couple remained “best friends.”

Kenneth Proctor, one of the victims of the Washington Navy Yard shootings.Evelyn Charlene Newman Kenneth Proctor, one of the victims of the Washington Navy Yard shootings.

As our colleague, Sarah Maslin Nir reports, Mr. Proctor would fix a car for any one, just for the fun of it. He adored his bright yellow Mustang, and his two sons, Kenneth Jr. 17, and Kendull, 15.

“His kids they were everything to him, he was a very loving caring father,” Ms. Newman said. Before Kenneth Jr. left for basic training for the Army in Oklahoma, weekends were spent at movies and the local miniature golf course.

In his spare time he visited race car tracks, and hung out with his many friends, kicking back with them and his boys at places like Buffalo Wild Wings and T.G.I. Fridays. But what stood out for his ex-wife was his compassion. “He was always being there for me,” she said, “even after the divorce.”

Ms. Proctor said her ex-husband often went to the building where the shooting took place to have breakfast. “He didn’t even work in the building,” she said. “It was a routine thing for him to go there in the morning for breakfast, and unfortunately it happened.”

Martin Bodrog, 54, of Annandale, Va., was a senior analyst working at the Navy yard who spent much of his career overseeing the design and procurement of ships for the Navy. He leaves behind his wife, Melanie of 25 years and three daughters Isabel, 23, Sophie,17, and Rita,16.

Born in Woodbury, NJ., Mr. Bodrog spent his high school years in Audubon, N.J. He was graduated from the United States Naval Academy in 1981 and served as a surface warfare officer for 22 years. After he retired, he continued to work for the Navy as a senior analyst.

His family described him in his obituary as lifelong Boston Bruins fan, “a humble, loving father and neighbor” who was a “source of great inspiration to his family and friends.” They said he could “frequently be seen in all types of weather, even post blizzard bitter cold, in shorts and his trademark Boston Bruins jersey, walking his dog and helping shovel all the driveways of his elderly neighbors.” For 16 years, Mr. Bodrog and his family attended Immanuel Bible Church, where they taught pre-school on Sundays. He was also active in the “Young Life”, a Christian outreach to high school students.

Arthur Daniels, 51, was a father of five and grandfather of nine. He was installing furniture at the navy yard that day for District Furniture Repair in Arlington County, according to a report in The Washington Post. His son, Arthur Jr. told The Post the family was struggling to understand how this could have happened. “All he did was go to work,” he said. “That was his only crime.”

John Roger Johnson, 73, lived in Derwood, Md., for more than 30 years. He could have retired years ago but enjoyed working, a neighbor told WJLA-TV, an ABC news affiliate in Washington. He was married and the father of four daughters.

“John didn’t know a person he didn’t like,” the neighbor told a WJLA reporter. “He loved kids, family and treated all with respect.”

Mary Francis Knight, 51, lived in Reston, Va. She had a long career in cybersecurity and was an adjunct professor of information technology at Northern Virginia Community College, according to a report on RestonPatch.

Ms. Knight, formerly Mary DeLorenzo, moved to Virginia from Fayetteville, N.C., about five years ago, a family spokesman told WITN-TV in eastern North Carolina. She was the mother of two daughters.

“She was a great patriot who loved her country and loved serving the U.S.A.,” said Theodore Hisey, a family spokesman.

Frank Kohler, 50, of Tall Timbers, Md., a longtime senior program manager at Lockheed Martin, according to his LinkedIn profile, was a graduate of Slippery Rock University in northwestern Pennsylvania. His friends described him as a Pittsburgh Steelers fan.

Frank Kohler, 50, from Tall Timbers, Md.  Mr. Kohler was one of the 12 victims killed in the shooting at the Washington Navy Yard on Monday.Rotary Club of Lexington Park, via Associated Press Frank Kohler, 50, from Tall Timbers, Md.  Mr. Kohler was one of the 12 victims killed in the shooting at the Washington Navy Yard on Monday.

Bob Allen, Mr. Kohler’s former boss at Lockheed Martin in southern Maryland, told The Associated Press that he had taken over for him as site manager for the defense contractor but he was unsure what business his friend had at the navy yard on Monday. Mr. Kohler leaves behind his wife, and two college-age daughters. He was also a former president of the Rotary Club in Lexington Park, Md.

Vishnu Pandit,, 61, lived in North Potomac, Md. He was a marine engineer and naval architect, according to The A.P. Speaking outside the home of Mr. Pandit on Tuesday, a friend, M. Nuns Jain, told The A.P. that Mr. Pandit was “very dedicated to improving the performance of naval ships and systems.”

“The only saving grace in this horrible incident is that he died doing what he loved the most in the service of his nation,” Mr. Jain said.

He said Mr. Pandit, a native of Mumbai, earned a bachelor’s degree in marine engineering in India in 1973 before coming to America and receiving a degree in naval architecture from the University of Michigan. He said Mr. Pandit sailed with the United States merchant marine before joining the Naval Sea Systems Command, headquartered at the Washington Navy Yard. He was married to his wife, Anjali, since 1978, and they had two sons and a granddaughter, Mr. Jain said.

“He was a real family man and he loved dogs,” including the family’s golden retriever, Bailey, Mr. Jain said.

His neighbor, Satish Misra, said Mr. Pandit was on the homeowners association board in their subdivision, and was active in the local Hare Krishna Hindu temple.

Gerald L. Read, 58, lived in Alexandria, Va. He was an information assurance specialist at Naval Sea Systems Command, according to a profile in LinkedIn.

Richard Michael Ridgell, 52, lived in Westminster, Md. and was a 17-year veteran of the Maryland State Police, as our colleague, Emma Fitzsimmons reports. He worked there from 1983 until 2000 and resigned at the rank of corporal, according to Sgt. Marc Black, a spokesman for the state police. He was the father of two daughters.



Improving the Big Data Toolkit

Open source software tends to march into the marketplace step by step, a quiet but steady strategy compared with the grand marketing events of the commercial software world. And Hadoop, the bedrock software of the fast-growing Big Data business, is on the march.

Hadoop allows for relatively inexpensive data analysis, and the next generation will make that analysis possible across many thousands of computers. Hadoop 2.0, as it is known, was released for testing last month and the “general availability” release is planned for October.

Hadoop 2.0, said Merv Adrian, an analyst at Gartner, is “an important step,” making the technology “a far more versatile data operating environment.” The new version of Hadoop, he said, can handle larger data sets faster than its predecessor and it opens the door to analyzing data in real-time streams. So far, Hadoop has been used mostly to divvy up huge sets of data for analysis, but only in batches, not streams. The new Hadoop has also been tweaked to work more easily with traditional database tools, like SQL.

Hadoop 2.0, Mr. Adrian said, was built to include “requirements for the commercial mainstream.” Historically, Hadoop’s most avid users were Internet companies like Yahoo, Facebook and Amazon.

Hadoop 2.0 has been in the works for years, with many programmers designing, refining, testing and debuging the code â€" the open-source development model. And the history of Hadoop itself is a neat technology tale of sharing, failure, persistence and serendipity. Hadoop traces its origins to research papers published by Google. Hadoop’s creators, Doug Cutting and Mike Cafarella, integrated those concepts into their own code. The project was named after the toy elephant of Mr. Cutting’s son and was originally meant as a tool for Nutch, an open-source search engine.

Today, corporations in many industries are trying to find cost-cutting or sales-improving insights in sensor, Web and social media data. “Everybody has the amount of data Yahoo and Google did five years ago,” said Arun Murthy, who is overseeing the development of Hadoop 2.0 as its release manager in the Apache Software Foundation.

Mr. Murthy is also a co-founder of Hortonworks, a start-up that distributes and provides technical support for Hadoop to companies. Hortonworks is one of a handful of Hadoop distributors, each with its own business model for making money off of the open-source software, including Cloudera and MapR Technologies. Cloudera, which Mr. Cutting helped start, is considered furthest along as a business, with about $100 million in yearly revenue, analysts estimate.

Whether one of these companies will emerge as a clear winner in the emerging Hadoop marketplace is uncertain. The much-mentioned goal is to follow the path of Red Hat, the leading distributor of the Linux operating system, which left its early rivals behind in another open-source software competition.

But analysts say the situation may well be more fluid in the Hadoop marketplace. Hadoop uses a more permissive open-source license than Linux, allowing for companies to mix additional features into Hadoop of their own choosing. And large technology companies like I.B.M. offer products using Hadoop, not just start-ups.

“There are different elements in these distributions,” Mr. Adrian said. “And the question for corporate customers is, Who am I going to place my bet with?”

Vibrant competition and uncertainty are hallmarks of a young, fast-growing market. But it may also hold off investment by companies who are wavering about embarking on advanced data analysis projects.

In a survey of 720 companies in June, Gartner found that 64 percent were investing in or plan to invest in Big Data projects within the next two years. That is an increase from 58 percent last year.

Still, 31 percent of the companies surveyed said they had “no plans at this time” to make Big Data investments. And that compares with 30 percent of the companies that have actually made Big Data investments, as opposed to those who plan to do so.

Those results suggest that so far, many companies are taking a prove-it stance rather than plunging in to the Big Data game.



Daily Report: Twitter Makes Plans to Increase and Enrich Advertising Channels

When it comes to making money, Twitter is all about keeping it simple. There are no banner ads, no dancing animations, no ads inserted between screens that you must click to get past, Vindu Goel reports.

Virtually all of Twitter’s revenue, which is projected to be nearly $600 million this year and $950 million next year, comes from three basic advertising formats that blend smoothly into its core microblogging service, whether users are accessing it from a mobile phone or a Web browser. But as Twitter prepares to sell stock to the public, the company is planning initiatives that will add complexity to its advertising business while also diversifying its revenue stream.

Last week, for example, it announced that it had agreed to acquire MoPub, a start-up that acts as a middleman in placing ads from marketers inside mobile applications. MoPub does something quite different from Twitter, auctioning off two billion ad slots a day in apps like Songza and OpenTable through dozens of ad networks and delivering the ads so quickly that a user firing up the app barely notices.

But Jim Payne, chief executive of MoPub, said the two companies shared a common DNA. Like MoPub, he said, Twitter “was designed to be mobile and it was designed to be real-time.” He said Twitter had promised to let MoPub continue expanding its business even as the two worked together to improve the ad offerings on Twitter itself.

Through its Amplify program, Twitter is also aggressively promoting joint ad sales with television channels. ESPN, for example, can show game clips on Twitter that are sponsored by an advertiser, with Twitter and the channel sharing revenue. Read more »