Sunday, February 26, 2012

NATO and MOD UK Tap Argus for Enhanced NT Security.

SAVOY, Ill., Oct. 13 /PRNewswire/ -- Argus Systems Group, Inc., an international vendor of Internet security software products, announced today that agencies in both NATO and the UK Ministry of Defence will utilize Argus' Deep Purple to improve security in their Microsoft Windows NT platforms. Both organizations have purchased Deep Purple to provide automated security labeling and user access control within test environments at their respective agencies.

Deep Purple allows government, military, and corporate agencies to control user access to shared files based on a customizable security policy and user clearance levels. The product is tightly integrated with Windows NT Administrator services, as well as Microsoft Internet Explorer and MS Word 97. Future development plans will expand this integration to all applications within MS Office 97, as well as MS Exchange Server and the Outlook 98 Email Client.

The Deep Purple product was initially developed by the Defence Evaluation and Research Agency (DERA) within the United Kingdom's Ministry of Defence (MOD) as a proof of concept prototype called Purple Penelope. Argus licensed and further developed this technology into a viable and capable commercially-available product.

"This product is a shining example of a government-industry partnership. Deep Purple represents the best ideas in government IS security combined with the engineering and manufacturing efficiencies of industry," said Gene Bulla, vice president for government systems with Argus.

DERA itself has purchased the Deep Purple product for early testing at its Great Malvern, England facility. Robert Rankin, DERA's CIS Sector said, "Our initial perception of Deep Purple is very positive. We are examining closely its potential for our domain-based security concepts."

NATO has begun an evaluation of the product in an effort meet its recently documented requirement for discretionary labeling, one of several core capability security requirements. The NATO Consultation, Command, and Control Agency (NC3A) has purchased the product and is testing at the Den Hague facility in the Netherlands. Expanded testing is expected during Q4 1998.

Argus Systems Group, Inc., a privately held company headquartered in Savoy, Ill., offers a full suite of security solutions and applications. Argus is committed to providing state-of-the-art security solutions for emerging client-server environments. Argus supplies the only ITSEC certified trusted platform available to support multiple platforms, from desktop to mainframe, in a networked configuration. For more information about Argus Systems Group, visit the Company's web site at http://www.argus-systems.com.

Google+ encircles your friends; PersonalTechnology.(Business)

Byline: Patrick Marshall; Special to The Seattle Times

Godzilla vs. King Kong? Is the introduction of Google+ going to bring on a titanic online battle with that other behemoth of social networking, Facebook?

Probably not. While Google's soon-to-be-released social network introduces some powerful new capabilities, the two online giants are likely to appeal to different sets of users.

At first glance, Google+ looks very similar to Facebook, with navigation tools in a bar on the left, streaming information in the main panel in the middle and links to connect with friends on the right.

One of the first things I noticed when I logged in was a welcome lack of clutter from sponsored advertisements and links. How long that holds remains to be seen. According to a Google spokesperson, the company is not currently accepting advertising for Google+ pages, though it "will continue to look for new ways for businesses to engage users in the project."

Google will also encourage third-party application developers, a decision I understand but regret. Third-party applications are popular and generate revenue. For my part, however, I'd rather keep Google+ as a messaging platform. Although third-party applications can be entertaining, they also tend to bleed privacy because we can't possibly keep on top of everything we agree to in accepting the applications.

When I clicked on the "Circles" feature, I began to appreciate the cultural differences between Google+ and Facebook. The Circles tool is employed to cluster your contacts into groups -- family, friends, associates. You can also create circles based on activities or interests, such as politics or sailboarding. Yes, Facebook offers the same functionality with its "Groups," but creating circles with Google+ couldn't be more intuitive. You simply drag and drop users into the circle or circles of your choice.

What's more, Google+ circles work in bidirectional fashion. When you post to your stream -- you can post text, videos, links and photos, though, unfortunately, not files -- you're selecting which groups of individuals will see that information, rather than broadcasting the message to the entire online world. And the same is true when it comes to viewing posts by others. You click on a circle to view posts by the individuals in that group.

That's dramatically different -- and, for me at least, reassuringly different -- than the Facebook paradigm of anything you post being by default routed to friends of friends of friends. Yes, you can control access to your Facebook data, but Google+ makes such control easier and a part of the way you work with the site.

I do wish, however, that it was as intuitive to work with individuals as it is with groups. In what must be an oversight rather than a design decision, there is no one-step way to send an email to an individual. The closest you can come to emailing an individual is to share a post or, when it comes time to select the circle you want to share with, you manually enter an email address instead.

Another potentially powerful feature of Google+ is "Hangouts," a multiuser videoconferencing tool. Assuming you've got your videocam and microphone working -- and that you've downloaded and installed the GoogleTalk plug-in -- you can get Hangout going by clicking on the "Start a Hangout" button, then selecting which circle or circles of contacts you want to invite. Those contacts will receive a notice that you are "live" and they need only click on "Join this Hangout" to be face to face with you and any other joiners in a teleconference.

Facebook this week introduced a similar capability that employs Skype for video conferences. But Google+ may have the edge, since the Google solution has implemented a client-server architecture that promises smoother performance than the peer-to-peer architecture employed by Skype.

Google+ also offers a flexible Chat feature that allows you to employ video and voice, as well as texting. And you can communicate with entire circles or individuals simultaneously, an excellent option if you're, say, traveling with a group and need to arrange to meet up for drinks. (Yes, Google+ works when you're on the go because you can access it via the Web on Android, iPhone and BlackBerry devices, and there's already a native application for Android.)

Another major feature -- and one that is less likely to be emulated by the competition -- is Sparks, data feeds that Google selects based on your indicated areas of interest. Have a passion for fashion? Or an abiding interest in artificial intelligence? Just call up Sparks, enter the search term and then click on the "Add interest" button. Each interest you create will show up in the Sparks section of your home page, and when you click on it, Google will deliver the most current items.

"Google crawls information from all over the Internet," said a Google spokesperson. "Sparks is weighted toward interesting, shareable content, which means we tend to favor documents from news publishers, blogs and video sites."

The emphasis here is on "shareable." You won't run across many if any items from The New York Times or The Washington Post, but you will find material from the likes of Reuters, Fox News, the Huffington Post and "The Daily Show."

Like Facebook, Google+ tries to help you expand your network by offering suggestions of those with whom you might want to connect. The list is based on mutual connections or interactions you've had with individuals using other Google products.

But the emphasis in Google+ is clearly more on interacting efficiently with people you already know.

Thanks to its streamlined interface, its focus on data channels and its emphasis on selecting groups with whom to share data, chat or videoconference, Google+ is more likely to appeal to those more interested in networking in areas of interest than to individuals looking for new friends or who want to share details of daily life with friends and family.

Google+ is definitely the social network of choice for those concerned about privacy. No, that doesn't mean you have nothing to worry about. In fact, Google+ doesn't actually offer more protection than Facebook.

Both networks, for example, broadcast posts to entire network by default. But Google+ offers more warnings about privacy risks and makes it easier to control privacy settings.

Google+'s privacy settings are easy to find and easy to understand. But even more important, at each stage of sharing data, Google+'s procedures encourage users to think about who will have access to the data.

Patrick Marshall writes the weekly Q&A column in Personal Technology and coordinates Plugging In: A Tech Users Forum at seattletimes.com/pluggingin.

Google+ rundown

PATRICK MARSHALL views Google's upcoming social network.

Pros: Group-centric focus, procedural reminders about privacy risks, Sparks data feeds, lack of advertising.

Cons: While it's easy to share photos, videos and links, you can't post files; no way to send email directly to a contact.

Availability: Google+ is still in test and is not available on the market. Asked when it will be released, Google would only say "soon."

CAPTION(S):

Google: Circles: Circles lets you share with ''friends,'' ''family,'' ''acquaintances'' and ''following.'' You can create new circles, too, such as ''co-workers'' and ''cousins.'' (0417495687)

Google: Stream: When you post to your stream, you can post text, videos and links. (0417495682)

Google: Sparks: This feature lets you get videos and articles of interest to you. So when you're free, there's always something to be watched, read or shared. (0417495678)

Copyright (c) 2011 Seattle Times Company, All Rights Reserved.

Felix Sturm Vs. Matthew Macklin World Middleweight Championship on EPIX.

"The middleweight division is one of boxing's most storied and exciting divisions and EPIX looks forward to exclusively broadcasting the Sturm-Macklin middleweight title fight to the U.S. It should be a very exciting match-up," said Mark Greenberg, President and CEO of EPIX.

Sturm (35-2-1, 15 KOs), of Leverkusen, Germany, is a three-time middleweight champion. His current reign as WBA champion, now in its fourth year, began on April 28, 2007 with a 12-round decision victory over defending champion Javier Castillejo, avenging a previous world title loss. Sturm has successfully defended the title nine times since with the most recent title defense taking place in February, a seventh-round TKO of Ronald Hearns, son of the Hall of Famer Tommy Hearns.

Macklin (28-2, 19 KOs), hails from Birmingham, England, though the proud Irishman travels on an Irish passport. He enters this world championship battle riding a four-year, 11-bout winning streak, including a third-round TKO victory of Wayne Elcock for the British middleweight title in 2009 and European middleweight championship victories over Amin Asikainen (TKO 1) in 2009 and Shalva Jomardashv (TKO 6) and Ruben Varon (W 12) in 2010. He is currently world-rated No. 2 by the WBA and No. 4 by the World Boxing Organization. About EPIX EPIX, a joint venture between Viacom Inc. (NYSE: VIA and VIA.B), its Paramount Pictures unit, Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Studios Inc. (MGM) and Lionsgate (NYSE: LGF), is a next-generation premium entertainment channel, video-on-demand and online service launched on October 30, 2009. With access to more than 15,000 motion pictures spanning the vast libraries of its partners and other studios, EPIX provides a powerful entertainment experience with more feature films on demand and online and more HD movies than any other service. It is the only premium service providing its entire monthly line-up of new Hollywood titles, classic feature films, original series, music and comedy specials through the linear channel, video-on-demand and online at EpixHD.com, the leading online destination for movies.

EPIX has made the commitment to deliver the industry's most expansive online collection of movies, making more than 3,000 titles available on EpixHD.com. The service is available to over 30 million homes nationwide through distribution partners including Charter Communications, Cox Communications, DISH Network, Mediacom Communications, NCTC, Suddenlink Communications and Verizon FiOS. In addition, Netflix members can instantly watch an array of new releases and library titles from EPIX streamed over the Internet from Netflix 90 days after they premiere in premium pay TV and on demand, giving EPIX another distribution channel to bring its films to more consumers. For more information about EPIX, go to www.EpixHD.com.

Photos/Multimedia Gallery Available: http://www.businesswire.com/cgi-bin/mmg.cgi?eid=6744569&lang=en

Keywords: EPIX, Entertainment, Movies.

This article was prepared by Telecommunications Weekly editors from staff and other reports. Copyright 2011, Telecommunications Weekly via VerticalNews.com.

DISASTER UNEMPLOYMENT ASSISTANCE ANNOUNCED FOR FIVE ADDITIONAL COUNTIES.

NASHVILLE, TN -- The following information was released by the Tennessee Emergency Management Agency:

The Tennessee Department of Labor and Workforce Development announced today that Disaster Unemployment Assistance (DUA) benefits are now available for workers in Carroll, Crockett, Hardin, Henry and Madison counties as a direct result of severe storms, straight-line winds, tornadoes and associated flooding for the incident period beginning April 25, 2011 to April 28, 2011. This is amendment 2 to declaration number FEMA-1974-DR.

This brings the total to 22 counties that have been approved for individual assistance.

Individuals who are not covered for regular unemployment benefits may qualify for disaster unemployment benefits. This includes self-employed workers and others not covered by the state unemployment insurance program whose source of income has been interrupted by the disaster damage. If possible, individuals should have access to their 2010 income tax return, Social Security Number, and any papers with wage and employment information prior to the disaster.

If your unemployment claim is a direct result of the disaster, do not file your claim by internet to avoid delays. You may call 1-866-331-1271, extension 7599, between the hours of 8:00 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. weekdays.

Persons affected by the disaster under FEMA-1974-DR Amendment 2 for the approved counties of Carroll, Crockett, Hardin, Henry and Madison will have until June 30, 2011, to file for disaster unemployment benefits.

Persons affected by the disaster under FEMA-1979-DR Amendment 1 for the approved counties of Gibson and Lauderdale will have until June 27, 2011, to file for disaster unemployment benefits.

Persons affected by the disaster under FEMA-1979-DR for the approved counties of Dyer, Lake, Obion, Shelby and Stewart will have until June 9, 2011, to file for disaster unemployment benefits.

Persons affected by the disaster under FEMA-1974-DR Amendment 1 for the approved counties of Bledsoe, Cocke, Johnson, McMinn, Monroe and Rhea have until June 6, 2011, to file for disaster unemployment benefits.

Persons affected by the disaster under FEMA-1974-DR for the approved counties of Bradley, Greene, Hamilton and Washington have until June 2, 2011, to file for disaster unemployment benefits.

Weekly DUA benefit amounts are determined in the same way as regular unemployment benefits. Benefits range from $112 to $275 per week and are payable up to 26 weeks after the day of declaration, which was May 1, 2011. DUA benefits will end if unemployment is no longer the direct result of the disaster.

Persons who are unemployed as a direct result of the severe storms, tornadoes, straight-line winds, and associated flooding for incident period beginning April 25, 2011 to April 28, 2011, who need to file a Tennessee unemployment claim or DUA claim may call 615-253-0800, extension 7599, or 1-866-331-1271, extension 7599, from 8:00 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. weekdays or report in person to one of the following TDLWD Career Centers. Designated Career Centers take claims on Mondays and Thursdays at 8:30 a.m.

These are the 22 career centers that take mass lack-of-work claims on a regular basis.

Athens410 Congress Parkway

Bristol1712 West State Street

Chattanooga5600 Brainerd Road , Suite A-5

ClarksvilleVeterans Plaza , 350 Pageant Lane, Suite 406

Columbia119 Nashville Highway, Suite 106 , Northway Shopping Ctr.

Cookeville580 South Jefferson Ave. , Suite A

Crossville60 Ridley Street

Dyersburg439 McGaughey Street

Gallatin175 College Street

Humboldt1481 Mullins Street

Jacksboro1016 Main Street

Jackson362 Carriage House Drive

Johnson City2515 Wesley Street

Knoxville1610 University Avenue

Lawrenceburg702 Mahr Avenue

McMinnville107 Lyon Street

Murfreesboro1313 Old Fort Parkway

Nashville2200 Rosa L. Parks Blvd. (previously Metro Center Blvd.)

Paris1023 Mineral Wells Avenue , Suite F

Rogersville1112 East Main Street

Talbott/Morristown6057 W. Andrew Johnson Highway, Alpha Square, Suite A

Tullahoma111 East Lincoln Street

If persons affected by the disaster are located in Shelby County they may file their DUA claim by calling 615-253-0800, extension 7599, or 1-866-331-1271, extension 7599. The following Tennessee Career Centers process walk-in unemployment claims from 8:00 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., Monday through Friday:

Memphis - Mendenhall5368 South Mendenhall Mall

Memphis - Raleigh 2850 Austin Peay Hwy., Suite 132

Memphis - Poplar 1295 Poplar Avenue

Collierville 942 West Poplar, Suite 4

Somerville121 West Court Square

Ripley301C Lake Drive

Covington973 Highway 51 North Bypass

For updates, please check our agency's Web site at www.tn.gov/labor-wfd/.

Saturday, February 25, 2012

3 of 4 Online Users in New Zealand Watch Online Video.

comScore, Inc. (Nasdaq: SCOR), a leader in measuring the digital world, released its latest study of online video viewing habits in New Zealand based on data from the comScore Video Metrix service, which was launched in New Zealand earlier this year. The report found that 2.1 million online users in New Zealand watched online video in February 2011, representing 77 percent of the total online population. Google Sites led the market as the top online video property, driven largely by viewership at YouTube.com.

"Video viewing is an important and growing online activity for New Zealanders, with online viewers watching more than one video every day on average," said Amy Weinberger, comScore vice president for Australia and New Zealand. "Online video offers an especially engaging experience for consumers that translates into the potential for high quality advertising impressions from desirable audiences that can be delivered at scale."

Fueled by YouTube.com, Google Sites Ranks as Top Video Property in New Zealand

In February 2011, 2.1 million Internet users age 15 and older watched a total of 157.3 million online videos from a home or work location with an average viewer watching 73 videos during the month. Google Sites ranked as the top video viewing destination in New Zealand reaching more than 1.7 million viewers who watched 81.6 million videos. Viewership at Google Sites was largely driven by YouTube.com which accounted for 81.2 million videos, representing 51.6 percent of all videos viewed in New Zealand during the month. Facebook.com ranked second with 562,000 viewers and 2.4 million videos viewed, while VEVO ranked third with 370,000 viewers. New Zealand based properties TVNZ Sites and MediaWorks NZ Limited both ranked among the top 10 video properties reaching 201,000 and 149,000 viewers, respectively.

Keywords: Advertising, comScore, comScore Inc.

This article was prepared by Marketing Weekly News editors from staff and other reports. Copyright 2011, Marketing Weekly News via VerticalNews.com.

GAA club criticised by minister; DISPUTE.(News)

GLORIFICATION of terrorism at a GAA club is a relic of a bygone age, the Sports Minister claimed yesterday.

The sporting association is to investigate August's hunger strike commemoration at Galbally, Co Tyrone.

Photos of people dressed in balaclavas carrying replica weapons were placed on the internet although Sinn Fein disputes whether they were connected to the club.

DUP Minister Nelson McCausland used the Assembly to call for a debate about the practices of some of the organisation's constituent members.

He said: "Many of these are no doubt products of a bygone age.

"They have no place, in my view, in a modern 21st century sports body or in a shared and better future."

Why U.S. Catholics are heading for the exits.(Column)

The recent Pew survey on religion found that 10 percent of American adults describe themselves as ex-Catholics. That is a very large number, over 20 million. Almost as alarming, according to Catholic Answers, the nation's largest Catholic Internet community, "anywhere from one-third to one-half of many fundamentalist congregations once belonged to the Catholic church." And in the Southwest, "with its substantial Hispanic population, former Catholics are the congregation."

These numbers support my own experience in the classroom, where a disproportionate number of students tell stories of why they left the Catholic church.

There are at least three reasons for the exodus.

1) Fundamentalist Protestantism powerfully appeals to people looking for an easy and certain ride to eternal life. All one has to do is to believe in five fundamentals of the faith: the infallibility of scripture; the deity of Jesus, born of a virgin; Jesus' atonement for our sins on the cross; his bodily resurrection following his death; and his second coming. What anchors these beliefs is a one-to-one personal relation with Jesus as lord and savior. Once achieved, there is no more worry, no matter how grievously one has sinned or will sin. The rest of the world, including Christians, especially Catholics, who have not had this experience, may find themselves in hell for eternity, but the "true Christian" will go directly to heaven at death, his sins entirely wiped clean.

Catholicism does not offer such assurance. Faith in doctrine is not enough, and many sins are defined as "mortal." Even if one dies as a "good Catholic," there is no instantaneous entry into heaven. Purgatory intervenes. Then there are the strictures surrounding the sacraments, especially the warning to avoid holy Communion for unabsolved sins. So many ways to wander off the path. And so much danger if one does.

Simple, anxious, often uneducated souls are easy prey to a charismatic pastor who tells them the Catholic way is unnecessarily complex, artificial and rule-bound.

No wonder Catholics are leaving the faith for fundamentalism.

2) But there is more than an aggressive fundamentalism accountable for the downturn. Many Catholics, especially whites, are defecting for the same reasons that Episcopalians, Presbyterians, Lutherans and Methodists are defecting from their churches. They find problems within the religion. The sense of meeting God in church that I enjoyed as a boy and young man is usually missing these days. The romance of religion, the sense of awe in the presence of the Divine is seldom evident--not in the liturgy, not in the sermon, not in the music, not even in the dress. In my youth, Catholics made "visits" to church during the week to pray quietly by themselves, and these "visits" were often times of deep spiritual experience. Sometime in the '70s, "visits" stopped being something that Catholics did.

The Second Vatican Council rattled many a Catholic. Superficial believers held in place by fear of hell suddenly realized that men, and not God, were at the helm of a thoroughly human institution, and many left because they were no longer afraid to. But the deeper spirits left for the reason pointed out above: They weren't getting anything out of their religion. Many found a new spiritual home in some sort of Eastern or New Age spirituality, quite a few in the more accepting environment of Anglicanism. Many, regrettably, became atheists. These trends continue today.

3) Finally, the Catholic church is losing members because of poor leadership. The child sex abuse scandal that surfaced in Boston in 2002 was the last straw for many U.S. Catholics already fretting over Vatican decrees on such matters as divorce and birth control. The church seemed to them like an out-of-touch bully quick to exclude and punish--the very opposite of a Christ presence urging forgiveness seven times 70.

But an even bigger problem today is the shortage of priests. Fifty years ago average-sized churches had three to five priests to share the work. Now the work too often falls on only one man, the beleaguered pastor. Our overworked priests are exhausted, torn in a hundred directions, spiritually undernourished, and too often burned out. As a result, parishes are relying more and more on "supply clergy." Usually these are foreign-born, speak poor English, and have almost no understanding of the culture they've been thrown into.

Another casualty of the priest shortage is the religious education of our youth. Our children aren't getting good instruction in the faith, especially in confirmation classes. Too often, these are taught by any adult who volunteers, and smart kids just aren't buying what they are told. The in-depth instruction I received as a boy from priests and nuns is missing. My son came back from his first confirmation class convinced that he was wasting his time. Well, not quite. "There was a pool table, foosball, a big-screen TV and cute girls." In contrast, his Mormon friends were getting daily instruction before school started from well-prepared volunteers. Mormonism is growing by leaps and bounds in Bakersfield. But the population of church-attending Catholics has only slightly increased since I arrived here years ago, although the city has grown fivefold during that time.

There are other reasons the church is losing ground, but these three strike me as the most basic.

[Stafford Betty is professor of religious studies at California State University at Bakersfield.]