Wednesday, July 24, 2013

MaskMe hides your phone, credit cards online behind working replacements?

Technology

22 hours ago

MaskMe

MaskMe

If folks at the NSA really want to get at your data, they probably can ? but that doesn't mean you have to make it easy for them. A new service called MaskMe lets you create new logins, credit cards and phone numbers that act as proxies for your own. If they get compromised, just erase them.

It's done through a Web browser extension, and detects when you are signing up or logging into a service, offering to create a new email and password for it. You just remember a single master passphrase and it does the rest. Email will be forwarded to your real address, and if you start getting spammed you or suffer a security breach, a click means that email address no longer exists.

Of course, your email isn't the only thing you give out on the Internet. Your phone number and credit cards are just as often disclosed when you buy things online. MaskMe will also make proxies for these ? for $5 a month (email and passwords are free). Every time you have to put in a credit card, it invents a new one that will be charged instead, passing on the cost to your actual card.

Maskme interface

MaskMe

MaskMe lets you create fake but working emails, phone numbers and credit cards.

The only question seems to be whether you're OK with entrusting Abine, which makes the extension, with all your private information. Well, it may not be any worse than the 30 or 40 companies that already have that data, and it may help stem losses resulting from future abuses or hacks. And Abine seems dedicated to helping create privacy on the Web.

You can download MaskMe for free here; if you like how it works, you can shell out the $5 per month for phone and card masking as well.

Devin Coldewey is a contributing writer for NBC News Digital. His personal website is coldewey.cc.

Source: http://feeds.nbcnews.com/c/35002/f/663301/s/2f1107f8/sc/4/l/0L0Snbcnews0N0Ctechnology0Cmaskme0Ehides0Eyour0Ephone0Ecredit0Ecards0Eonline0Ebehind0Eworking0Ereplacements0E6C10A721764/story01.htm

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Tuesday, July 23, 2013

Iraq's spectacular Abu Ghraib prison break: Is al Qaeda back?

As many 500 prisoners were freed, including hardcore militants, a victory for al Qaeda-linked groups

On Tuesday, al Qaeda's affiliate in Iraq claimed responsibility for violent attacks on the high-security prisons of Abu Ghraib and Taji, which, according to Iraqi officials, resulted in up to 500 prisoners escaping ? including convicted al Qaeda militants.

The deadly raids involved a blitzkrieg of coordinated attacks utilizing rocket-propelled grenades, mortars, and suicide bombers. Iraqi officials put the death toll at 56, which included security forces, prisoners, and militants, while al Qaeda claimed that 120 government forces were killed.

SEE ALSO: WATCH: The Daily Show's John Oliver gleefully welcomes the royal baby

The worst attack happened at Abu Ghraib, the same site where the U.S. military was accused of prisoner abuses in 2003. The fighting started on Sunday night, as militants drove cars packed with explosives into the gates of the compound, and then fired on security forces and military reinforcements sent from Baghdad. The battle lasted through Monday morning, when military helicopters arrived on the scene to back up government soldiers.

Iraqi and U.S. officials are now grappling with the implications of such a brazen attack. Dan Murphy of The Christian Science Monitor called it a "stunning symbolic defeat" for Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki and his majority Shiite government, noting that the prison held special significance to Sunni militants:

Abu Ghraib was long ago returned to Iraq's government, but succeeding Iraqi governments have made torture far more widespread and routine than it was when the U.S. was running the country. While the worst abuses under Maliki's rule have taken place in secret prisons co-located with Iraqi Army bases and Interior Ministry facilities, Abu Ghraib remains a symbol of central government abuse. [The Christian Science Monitor]

The attack is also a sign that Iraq's worsening sectarian violence isn't likely to end soon. In May, a wave of attacks in Sunni-majority areas of Baghdad caused some observers to wonder whether Iraq was returning to the violence of 2006, when the country was engulfed in what amounted to a bloody civil war. The violence has only gotten worse since May; more than 700 people were killed in July, making it the country's deadliest month since 2008.

SEE ALSO: A federal bailout for Detroit is a terrible idea

Al Qaeda's branch in Iraq could be inspired by the fighting in neighboring Syria, where Sunni fighters, most notably the al Qaeda-linked Al Nusra Front, are competing for influence, against the backdrop of a larger struggle against the Alawite regime of President Bashar al-Assad.

"They've got the wind at their backs from the Syrian rebellion," Kenneth Katzman, a Congressional Research Service analyst, told TIME. "Their goal is to destabilize and bring down the Maliki government, and they think igniting sectarian conflict might accomplish that."

SEE ALSO: How big banks are making your can of beer more expensive

Charles Lister, a member of London's IHS Jane's defense consultancy, agreed.

"There's no underestimating the boost to morale," he told The Washington Post. "The fact that the Islamic State [an al Qaeda affiliate] has managed to secure territory of its own in northern Syria all adds to a gradual trend of increasing confidence and strength of al Qaeda in Iraq and in Syria."

SEE ALSO: 10 annoying sounds you need to stop making

As al Qaeda gains strength in Iraq, some officials are regretting asking U.S. military forces to leave, noted TIME's Michael Crowley, who added that it's probably too late to hope for American intervention:

But while it's possible the U.S. will offer help at the margins, Iraqis shouldn't expect an American cavalry. Leaving Iraq is one of Barack Obama's proudest accomplishments, and the president clearly has no desire to undo it ? possibly even at the cost of seeing Iraq slip back into chaos. [TIME]

Meanwhile, the Pentagon and Congress are trying to decide how to best arm rebels in Syria. The news that experienced al Qaeda operatives have escaped Abu Ghraib and could be headed across the border doesn't make their decision-making process any easier.

SEE ALSO: WATCH: Southwest Flight 345's landing gear collapses in New York

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Source: http://news.yahoo.com/iraqs-spectacular-abu-ghraib-prison-break-al-qaeda-125300513.html

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Monday, July 22, 2013

The Navy Accidentally Bombed The Great Barrier Reef . . . Sort Of

The Navy Accidentally Bombed The Great Barrier Reef . . . Sort Of

Okay so this whole thing isn't ideal, but it's also not as bad as it sounds. Basically on Tuesday there were two Navy AV-8B Harrier fighter jets that had launched from the USS Bonhomme Richard aircraft carrier and were doing a training exercise. They planned to drop bombs on Townshend Island bombing range, but were told by controllers that the area wasn't clear. The problem was that they didn't have enough fuel to land with such heavy loads. So they, you know, unloaded. Right onto the Barrier Reef.

Read more...

    


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/rWhfvwo7UBo/the-navy-accidentally-bombed-the-great-barrier-reef-858694397

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Sunday, July 21, 2013

9 Ways that 3D Printing is Going to Change Business - The Next Web

I think we can all agree that the evolution of 3D printing technology thus far has been stunning. But I wanted to know what specific ways entrepreneurs are actually looking to use the technology in business, and why ? so I asked a panel of nine founders the following:

As an entrepreneur, what?s most exciting to you about 3D printing? Where do you see it being utilized most in the near term?

Their most compelling responses are below.

Liam Martin 9 ways that 3D printing is going to change business1. Fewer manufactured goods
?Things? will no longer be manufactured and shipped to customers. Instead, you?ll purchase designs for everything from glasses to housing, and the input costs of having them printed on site will be cheaper than the current supply-chain process we have today.

Once it becomes more cost-efficient to build this way (and it will) you?ll have an ?app store? of objects you can download and print out at your leisure. I believe this will be the biggest revolution since the Internet itself.

- Liam Martin, Staff.com

?

 9 ways that 3D printing is going to change business2. Printable knickknacks

I love the idea of having a 3D printer to build all the little knickknacks in my life, from the screw that I lost in my IKEA coffee table to an extra pair of earbuds for running. I see 3D printers being utilized as personal Lowes and Home Depot stores in our homes.

- John Meyer, Lemon.ly

?

avatar 140x140 9 ways that 3D printing is going to change business3. Cheaper samples

One of the most expensive aspects of the fashion world is creating samples before production. Getting one sample made can range anywhere from $200 to $400.

I love the idea that 3D printers can help make that process easier for young designers, especially as more wearable materials are sourced for 3D printing.

- Benish Shah, Vicaire NY

?

avatar 140x140 9 ways that 3D printing is going to change business4. Reduced manufacturing costs

What?s most exciting about 3D printing is that it will significantly reduce manufacturing costs for aspiring entrepreneurs. As it begins to gain more of a foothold, you?ll see it take the place of the manufacturing segment of a startup.

- Andrew Schrage, Money Crashers Personal Finance

?

avatar 140x140 9 ways that 3D printing is going to change business5. Testable ideas

Manufacturing needs have always been a limiting factor for small businesses. Due to high minimum quantities, the starting cost is often prohibitive. With the ?Lean Startup? movement underway, tech startups think about testing a minimum viable product before they try to build an ?A+? product.

Physical product companies can test ideas with 3D printing before investing the time and money needed to for full-blown production. More ideas will be tested, and more good companies will be started thanks to the proliferation of this technology.

- Aaron Schwartz, Modify Watches

avatar 140x140 9 ways that 3D printing is going to change business6. Printable necessities

The potential of 3D printing seems endless. I?ve seen and heard of small houses being built for the less fortunate, as well as medicine and even food being produced from the technology. It?s fascinating how fast these things can be made.

It seems that anything you can see or feel can somehow be printed! In the near future, I see small accessories such as mobile phone cases and jewellery being produced.

- Shahzil (Shaz) Amin, Blue Track Media, LLC

?

avatar 140x140 9 ways that 3D printing is going to change business7. At-home startups

As an entrepreneur, I?m very excited by the newly streamlined ability to scan and reproduce 3D objects. This scanning capacity was unveiled at the 2013 SXSW Interactive Festival in Austin as MakerBot Industries demonstrated its desktop ?digitizer? device. Using this device, the possibilities are nearly endless, but I am especially excited by the opportunities of scale.

Prior to 3D printing, there was no middle ground for manufacturing between tiny artisan quantities and large mass production. Now, I can create a prototype, scan it and begin production in my home.

- Jay Wu, Best Drug Rehabilitation

avatar 140x140 9 ways that 3D printing is going to change business8. Increased efficiency

I?m really excited to see what 3D printing is going to do for design and manufacturing. People are going to be able to prototype 10 times faster with optimal use of space and materials, which greatly increases their efficiency.

I think we?ll see more ideas become actual products as 3D printing becomes more accessible.

- Arjun Arora, ReTargeter

?

Sam Saxton 9 ways that 3D printing is going to change business9. Old parts for machines

As a manufacturer, the most immediate impact will be in replacing parts for machines that are no longer being produced. We have machines built by a manufacturer that went out of business, and replacing the part will cost more than the original machine.

- Sam Saxton, Salter Spiral Stair and Mylen Stairs

?

The?Young Entrepreneur Council (YEC) is an invite-only organization comprised of the world?s most promising young entrepreneurs. In partnership with Citi, the YEC recently launched #StartupLab, a free virtual mentorship program that helps millions of entrepreneurs start and grow businesses via live video chats, an expert content library and email lessons.

Image credit:?EMMANUEL DUNAND/AFP/Getty Images

Source: http://thenextweb.com/insider/2013/07/21/9-ways-3d-printing-is-going-to-change-the-tech-world/

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Saturday, July 20, 2013

Rich Clune Learns to Use His Mac Computer, Turns to Facebook for Philanthropy (and Possibly Trolling)

Nashville Predators pest and shootout specialist (100 percent, no lie) Rich Clune told ESPN's Scott Burnside the story of his youthful passion for hockey, fall from grace, and recovery from alcoholism and addiction in a March 2013 feature-length piece.

Fresh off a two-year, $1.7 million contract extension that will go into effect after the upcoming 2013-2014 season, Preds agitator Rich Clune will be joined by his mother Anne Marie as the two share their story as a family that has grappled with alcoholism and addiction at the Toronto, Ontario-based Renascent treatment center Recovery Shot Golf Tournament next Wednesday, July 24.

- DONATION LINK -

(Video used with permission from Rich Clune)

Rich and Anne Marie are looking to raise $10,000 for the event, and every penny raised will go toward helping people who need, but cannot afford, a full course of treatment. Sometime between recording himself playing music into Colin Wilson's and Taylor Beck's voicemail boxes, Clune recorded the video above, making a heartfelt appeal to friends and family to join him in his fundraising efforts. In true Internet sensation fashion, Clune also teases a series of videos, touting a "method to [his] madness." Wouldn't it be great to see Clune using Facebook video to troll his Conference III arch-nemesis Vernon Fiddler next season?

Last year, on my 32nd birthday, I asked readers of this blog to contribute $32 to either the Predators Foundation, or to charities for which the Foundation is a benefactor. This year (my 33rd birthday is tomorrow, Friday, July 19), I'd like to ask that OTF readers give the gift of recovery to someone who needs it. Click here to donate $33 at Rich and Anne Marie's personal fundraising page, and if you can't give $33, please remember that no donation is too small.

The Recovery Shot Golf Tournament will take place at the Angus Glen Golf Club in Markham, Ontario. If you happen to be in Canada next week, you can contribute $100 to attend lunch, or $1,800 for you and the rest of your foursome to play in the tournament. I would also like to encourage the Nashville Predators, the Predators Foundation, and any of the Nashville Predators' corporate partners to consider a hole sponsorship for $3,250.

Source: http://www.ontheforecheck.com/2013/7/18/4534902/rich-clune-facebook-video-renascent-recovery-shot-golf-tournament-fundraising

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Friday, July 19, 2013

Scientists Created an Impossible Supermaterial Totally by Accident

Scientists Created an Impossible Supermaterial Totally by Accident

For more than a century, scientists have been saying the same thing: It?s impossible to create a water-free disordered magnesium carbonate. It?s too difficult. You?ll never amount to anything! Well, suck it, haters: Researchers at Uppsala University in Sweden have unveiled a super-absorbent version of magnesium carbonate that breaks the world record for surface area and water absorption.

Read more...

    


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/G3sDSecwsoc/scientists-created-an-impossible-supermaterial-totally-842324181

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Thursday, July 18, 2013

GRAVITY INK - Area Club London, London, GB

Gravity, London's after hour, every Thursday night/Friday morning; the only way to start your weekend. Gravity brings you the deeper sound of house, with London's finest djs week in and week out without taking itself too seriously! Whatever you end up there after a night out, or is your first protocol for the weekend you can rely on Gravity to have a great time. In its new home at the State Of The Art AREA in Vauxhall, Gravity is taking Thursday night clubbing to the next level!

Hosted by ISAAC JONES, JAKE COOK, JOHN BROOKS & NEIL WYAT ON ROTATION

Super advance tickets at?www.orangenation.co.uk

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Source: http://ticketabc.com//orangenation.ticketabc.com/events/gravity-i-2/

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Wednesday, July 17, 2013

Secret surveillance court orders U.S. to declassify Prism-related Yahoo ruling

By Gerry Shih

SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - A secret court overseeing U.S. government domestic surveillance activities has sided with Yahoo Inc and ordered the Obama administration to declassify and publish a 2008 court decision justifying Prism, the data collection program revealed last month by former security contractor Edward Snowden.

Judge Reggie Walton of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court issued Monday's ruling. The government is expected to decide by August 26 which parts of the ruling may be published, according to a separate court filing by the Justice Department.

Controversial U.S. data collection activities are overseen by the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court and its appeals body, the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court of Review. Both have been shrouded in secrecy since their creation more than three decades ago.

The 2008 ruling stemmed from Yahoo's challenge of the legality of broad, warrantless surveillance programs like Prism.

Publication of the ruling could provide a rare glimpse into how the government has legally justified its far-reaching data collection programs under the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA).

Legal experts who follow surveillance cases said the 2008 ruling may not reveal any strikingly novel legal reasoning by the government or the courts. But civil liberties advocates said the significance of the ruling may lie in the court's decision itself to declassify the previously secret 2008 ruling.

"Unless the public knows what the laws mean, it can't really assess how much power (it has) given its government," said Patrick Toomey, a national security fellow at the American Civil Liberties Union.

Monday's ruling "is a suggestion that the FISA court is primed now to consider the government's assertion of the necessity of secrecy," Toomey said. "It's a promising first step."

The decision is also a victory for Yahoo Inc, which ultimately complied with government orders to turn over user data. Other Internet companies, including Google Inc and Facebook Inc, began participating in Prism in early 2009 soon after Yahoo lost its appeal before the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court of Review.

It is not known if Yahoo, or any other party, has sought to appeal to the U.S. Supreme Court.

Until recent weeks, Yahoo was prohibited from discussing its activities in the secret courts or even acknowledging the existence of its legal challenge.

In June, after Snowden leaked information about Prism to the Washington Post and the Guardian newspapers, Yahoo's lawyers asked the courts and government to declassify and publish decisions upholding the constitutionality of the program.

In the coming weeks, the government is expected to publish the lower FISA court's 2008 ruling in the Yahoo case and legal briefs related to the case. In an uncommon move, the government had previously agreed to declassify a heavily redacted version of the appeals court ruling in the case.

The government has long argued on the grounds of national security that the surveillance courts' proceedings must be secret. Public and political reaction to Snowden's revelations has put pressure on that position.

In June, Senators Jeff Merkley, a Democrat from Oregon, and Mike Lee, a Utah Republican, introduced a bill that would require the government to declassify significant court rulings concerning the FISA court and its supervision of secret wiretapping programs.

"Americans deserve to know how much information about their private communications the government believes it's allowed to take under the law," Merkley said.

(Reporting by Gerry Shih; Editing by Toni Reinhold)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/secret-surveillance-court-orders-u-declassify-prism-related-220849389.html

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U.S. Military Prepares for Global Unrest Amid Climate Fears (Op-Ed)

Marlene Cimons of Climate Nexus contributed this article to LiveScience's Expert Voices: Op-Ed & Insights.

Though Earth's shifting climate evokes many images, civil unrest usually isn't one of them. Yet, a warming planet could have a profound impact on national security, both in the United States and abroad. This time, the threat isn't from terrorism or a single enemy, but from natural disasters occurring on an unprecedented scale.

Acts of nature fueled by a warming climate ? for example, floods and prolonged drought ? may lead to disrupted migration, food and water shortages, and other public health crises ? which, in turn, could prompt civil and political instability. Those impacts would pose a particularly profound threat for people in countries with fragile governments, including key U.S. strategic interests.

This threat has Pentagon officials worried enough to speak out and to invest in research to better understand the relationships among conflict, socioeconomic conditions and climate. The U.S. Department of Defense (DOD) plans to use the data to predict future threats and develop ways to cope with them.

Under its highly selective Minerva social-science program, the DOD has awarded researchers at the University of Maryland a three-year, $1.9 million grant to develop models that will help policymakers anticipate what could happen to societies under a range of potential climate-change scenarios.

"It's likely that physical and economic disruptions resulting from climate change could heighten tensions in sensitive areas of the world," said Elisabeth Gilmore, an assistant professor at the University of Maryland's school of public policy and the study's lead researcher. "The environmental changes from climate change can have important effects on our well-being and security. We need to better understand these interactions."

Her team plans to use statistical models and case studies to identify the best predictors of climate-related conflict, and then use the data and a novel simulation method to generate forecasts of conflict over a range of socioeconomic and climate-change scenarios. Finally, the project will identify a range of military and policy interventions that could reduce the occurrence of climate-related civil conflict.

The Pentagon has been concerned about the national security implications of climate change for quite some time, and military officials have continued to speak out about them.

For example, Navy Adm. Samuel J. Locklear III, who leads the U.S. Pacific Command, repeatedly has warned of the national security dangers of climate change. In fact, earlier this year, he said global warming was "the most likely thing ... [to] cripple the security environment, probably more likely than the other scenarios we all often talk about."

In 2007, CNA, a Pentagon-funded think tank that conducts in-depth research and analysis, released a report from a panel of retired senior military officers and national security experts who predicted that extreme weather events prompted by climate shifts could disrupt the U.S. way of life and cause already weak governments to fall, particularly in many Asian, African and Middle Eastern nations where marginal living standards already exist.

Moreover, the report warned that the United States may find itself drawn into these situations to help provide stability before conditions worsen, before they are exploited by extremists or after a conflict has begun. Even stable governments, like the United States' and those of nations in Europe, could be pressured to take in large numbers of immigrants and refugees as drought increases and food production dwindles in Latin America and Africa, the report added.

Some researchers have suggested that framing climate change as a threat to national security and public health, rather than to the environment, might make the issue more relevant and meaningful to many conservative Americans and others who tend to deny or dismiss it. But, surprisingly, recent research published in Climatic Change by Teresa Myers of George Mason University and her colleagues indicated that such seems to make those individuals angry.

The researchers weren't sure why this approach elicited an angry response, but they wonder whether the climate-change deniers resented an attempt to connect national security ? an issue they care about ? with climate change, an issue they tend to dismiss. Or, they may have been upset with the researchers for presenting claims about global warming and national security they did not think were authentic or credible.

Instead, perhaps the doubters should read the words of retired U.S. Gen. Gordon R. Sullivan, chairman of CNA's military advisory board and the U.S. Army's former chief of staff. He seems to believe that enough scientific evidence of climate change's impact exists to be sobering ? and that it deserves the U.S. government's attention.

"We seem to be standing by ?and, frankly, asking ? for perfectness in science,"' Sullivan wrote in the 2007 CNA report. "People are saying they want to be convinced, perfectly. They want to know the climate-science projections with 100 percent certainty. Well, we know a great deal, and even with that, there is still uncertainty. But the trend line is very clear. We never have 100 percent certainty. We never have it. If you wait until you have 100 percent certainty, something bad is going to happen on the battlefield. That's something we know. You have to act with incomplete information. You have to act based on the trend line. You have to act on your intuition sometimes."

Cimons' most recent Op-Ed was 'Another 1930s Dust Bowl Drought Possible This Century,' and additional contributions are available on her profile page. The views expressed are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of the publisher. This article was originally published on LiveScience.com.

Copyright 2013 LiveScience, a TechMediaNetwork company. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/u-military-prepares-global-unrest-amid-climate-fears-214356511.html

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Monday, July 15, 2013

Brent holds near $109 as China growth meets forecast

By Manash Goswami

SINGAPORE (Reuters) - Brent crude futures hovered near $109 a barrel on Monday as worries about demand growth ebbed after data from China showed the world's second-biggest economy expanded in line with expectations.

China's GDP grew 7.5 percent in April-June, and while that marked a slow down in nine of the last 10 quarters, it was a relief for some investors who were primed for a lower number. Industrial output was slightly less than forecast, but crude runs in the country's refineries and implied oil demand both rose in June, supporting oil markets further.

Brent crude had gained 1 cent to $108.82 a barrel by 0503 GMT, swinging between a high of $109.02 and a low of $108.61. U.S. oil was up 3 cents at $105.98, recovering from a low of $105.50 earlier in the day.

"Overall, the latest numbers from China were in line with expectations, there were no huge surprises and it is a continuation of the soft theme," said Ric Spooner, chief market analyst at CMC Markets. "But industrial output numbers were weak, and there is growth risk to the downside, going forward."

China's implied oil demand rose by nearly 10 percent in June over a weak base a year earlier to 9.94 million barrels per day (bpd), Reuters calculations based on preliminary government data showed. Crude runs rose 10.8 percent to 9.636 million bpd, the highest daily output since February, as refineries boosted production after maintenance.

The latest data out of China helped oil futures extend gains. Brent settled $1.08 higher on Friday, while U.S. crude ended up $1.04, led by the biggest surge in gasoline futures this year as a string of refinery outages stoked concerns about fuel supplies in the heart of the U.S. summer driving season.

U.S. crude has outperformed Brent for the past two weeks, narrowing the European benchmark's premium to U.S. crude to a 2-1/2 year-low of $1.32 at one point on Thursday. It was around $3 on Monday.

SPREAD

Big hedge funds built up a near-record long position in U.S. crude oil futures in the week to July 9, helping fuel a resurgence in the U.S. benchmark.

The latest weekly data from the U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission showed funds increased their net long futures and option positions in NYMEX and ICE U.S. crude by more than 26,000 contracts to more than 330,000 during the period, nearing the record they held amid the Libyan civil war in 2011.

Lingering concerns of supply disruption also provided further support. Brent has held above $100 for most 2012 and this year due to tensions between the West and Iran over Tehran's disputed nuclear programme.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said on Sunday that Iran was getting closer to the "red line" he set for its nuclear programme.

Investors are also watching the regime change in Egypt. Egypt's interim prime minister filled senior posts on Sunday in a cabinet that will lead the country under an army-backed "road map" to restore civilian rule following the overthrow of elected President Mohamed Mursi.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/brent-holds-near-109-china-growth-meets-forecast-062832544.html

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Sunday, July 14, 2013

Organic Olive Oil

Organic Mission/Manzanillo Blend - Extra Virgin Olive Oil (12.7 oz)? Certified by the rigorous CCOF, like all of our organic oils. It is a mild oil, with very little bitterness or pungency. It contrasts sharply with other, stronger, organic extra virgin olive oils.

Organic Italian Blend - Extra Virgin Olive Oil (12.7 oz) ?Italian varietal made with a blend of Frantoio, Leccino, Maurino, and Pendolino olives at a mill in Santa Ynez. The olives were harvested from an orchard approximately twenty miles north of Santa Barbara on the coastal slopes immediately above the ocean. This traditionally farmed orchard of almost six thousand trees has a southerly orientation and experiences mild temperatures all year due to its proximity to the ocean. The trees are arrayed across elevations ranging from 100' to 1,000'.

Organic Lemon Infused Olive Oil (12.7 oz) Flavored olive oil made by mixing organic extra virgin olive oil with lemon flavor. It is excellent on fish, chicken, salads and any application where the natural flavor of the olive and lemon is desired.

Organic Basil infused Olive Oil (12.7 oz) ?Flavored olive oil made by mixing organic extra virgin olive oil with oil distilled from basil. Fabulous tossed with pasta for instant pesto flavor, for salads with balsamic vinegar, as a sandwich spread or for bread dipping.???

Organic California Blend Extra Virgin Olive Oil (12.7 oz)?? Our organic California blend extra virgin olive oil is certified by the rigorous CCOF, like all of our organic oils. It is a mild oil, with very little bitterness or pungency. It contrasts sharply with our other, stronger, organic extra virgin olive oils.

Source: http://www.standingsunwines.com/Organic-Olive-Oil_p_229.html

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Saturday, July 13, 2013

U.S. falls to Canada at World University Games

Posted July 12, 2013

Doug McDermott hit 9-of-19 threes for Team USA as they fell to both Canada and Australia.

Doug McDermott hit 9-of-19 threes for Team USA as they fell to both Canada and Australia. (Eric Francis/Getty Images)

In what was essentially a two-game group stage after three opening contests against overmatched foes, the U.S. World University Games team surprisingly crashed out of medal round play on Friday after suffering a second consecutive defeat, this one coming 94-85 to Canada. This loss follows a similar 93-84 setback to Australia yesterday, and leaves the U.S. in third place in the group, with only the top two teams advancing to the quarters.

When I covered a couple days of the trials in Colorado Springs, Colo., the team appeared to be light on perimeter shooting, at least in the traditional sense coming from guards. The wing and frontcourt shooters held up their end of the bargain in both losses, though.?The U.S. made 10-of-25 threes against Australia and then connected on a gaudy 15-of-32 against Canada, with Doug McDermott making 9-of-19 tries in the two games and Luke Hancock connecting on five of his six tries this morning.

The team?s issues, on both ends of the court, lay closer to the basket. The U.S. was played to a standstill on the glass in both games and was hurt badly by both Australia and Canada in terms of points conceded in the paint. Team USA didn?t defend the arc well, either, and the U.S. allowed 1.21 and 1.16 points per possession in the defeats. On offense, the U.S. didn?t finish well around the rim, a large factor in the combined 34-of-87 shooting from two-point range in the two losses. Combine everything, and you have an early exit.

The defensive, (relative) rebounding and inside finishing woes give reason to question Bob McKillop and Co.?s decision to rely primarily on Cory Jefferson at the 5, leaving very few minutes for either Adreian Payne or Alex Kirk. Payne played just 20 minutes in the two defeats and Kirk just two, including a DNP against Australia while New Mexico teammate Cameron Bairstow carved the U.S. up with 22-9-5. Kirk tweeted after the Australia game that he wasn?t injured, so whether he ultimately just was a poor fit for McKillop?s system or something else was going on, the U.S.?s decision to play smaller and less physical players for two straight games clearly didn?t work out.

The team will continue on in the consolation bracket, but can finish no higher than 9th place in the tournament.

Source: http://college-basketball.si.com/2013/07/12/team-usa-world-university-games/?xid=si_ncaab

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Friday, July 12, 2013

Obama attends Democratic Party fundraiser

WASHINGTON (AP) -- President Barack Obama has attended a Democratic Party fundraiser that was closed to media coverage.

Officials say about two dozen supporters were expected at Thursday's event at the Jefferson Hotel, a few blocks north of the White House.

Tickets cost $32,400 a pop, which means Obama filled the Democratic National Committee's coffers with nearly $400,000.

Officials say media coverage was not allowed because Obama was not making any formal remarks.

Across the street from hotel, several dozen people demonstrated against the Keystone XL oil pipeline. They chanted and held signs, including one that said, "Reject Keystone XL, No Tar Sands."

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/obama-attends-democratic-party-fundraiser-124644270.html

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Sunday, July 7, 2013

Blaze destroys Palmyra home while family attends Stadium of Fire ...

Palmyra ? Family displaced; fire began near new barbecue.

A Palmyra family lost everything Thursday night when a fire destroyed their home while they celebrated Independence Day in Provo.

Utah County fire officials learned of the blaze at 10:19 p.m. and soon took up defensive positions around the home at 2189 W. 4000 South.

County fire marshal Dennis Barcker said crews from the county, Mapleton, Salem and Spanish Fork fought the fire until after 3 a.m. A sheriff?s deputy watched the fire through the night, and when it rekindled Friday morning crews used a track hoe to demolish the still-burning structure.

"It was such extensive damage that we couldn?t put it out last night," Barker said.

Late Friday morning, Barker said crews were just finishing up. He called the home a complete loss.

The blaze displaced a mother, father and two or three children, Barker said.

Investigators have been unable to determine exactly how the fire began. Barker said the family had a barbecue Thursday evening, then left to attend the Stadium of Fire in Provo. The fire began in the vicinity of the barbecue, though Barker said it was new and that the family turned it off. He speculated that something hot could have worked its way into the home?s vinyl siding or deck and then ignited later.

"Once that vinyl starts burning it?s just about like gasoline," Barker said. "It goes fast."

Despite the lack of definitive answers about the fire?s origin, investigators did not consider it suspicious Friday morning.

A neighbor and a passer-by both reported the fire. Firefighters took a defensive position outside the home because, Barker said, it was too dangerous to go inside. He added that the second-story floors collapsed.

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In addition, water was not available in the area ? located northwest of Spanish Fork ? for fire crews, who were forced to bring it in with trucks.

According to Barker, the family managed to salvage a few photos and a pair of boots, but lost everything else.

jdalrymple@sltrib.com

Twitter: @jimmycdii

Copyright 2013 The Salt Lake Tribune. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Source: http://www.sltrib.com/sltrib/news/56556232-78/fire-barker-family-crews.html.csp

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Tuesday, July 2, 2013

Celebrity Yearbook Photos: Guess the Cheerleaders!

These stars have spirit, yes they do! See if you can recognize your favorite celebs shaking their pom poms back in the day.

Source: http://www.ivillage.com/celebrity-yearbook-photos-guess-cheerleaders-0/1-b-527073?dst=iv%3AiVillage%3Acelebrity-yearbook-photos-guess-cheerleaders-0-527073

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Hands-On With CE Week's Hottest Wearable Tech

Screen Shot 2013-07-01 at 11.19.59 AMWearable technology is all the rage right now, and I'm not just talking about Google Glass or Apple's forthcoming iWatch. Companies large and small are getting in on the trend, and that was made all the more obvious as we roamed through CE Week's ShowStoppers showroom. As you'll see in the video above, we venture from smart watches to bone-conduction musical hats to wearable portable video recording devices and blue-light therapeutic glasses. It's a wild ride.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/34xVNwxJv5M/

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