FACEBOOK LIKES

Showing posts with label wants. Show all posts
Showing posts with label wants. Show all posts

Friday, November 4, 2011

Gang profiling: UK council wants eye on social networks

UK police can blanket-track mobile phones 01.11, 12:46

Britain’s Metropolitan Police have purchased a system which can identify, track and possibly shut off every cell phone in a 10-square kilometer area. The Orwellian system has raised concerns over potential abuses and violations of privacy.

In the UK, any unpublished media material should be obtained through a court order 01.09, 18:25

London Metropolitan police have reportedly urged British media outlets to hand over footage of the riots that swept the capital in early August voluntarily, without recourse to official procedures.

UK riots British police surround Parliament (AFP Photo / Carl Court) 24.10, 16:47

On Monday the British Parliament is to vote on whether to stage a referendum on the UK’s membership of the EU. The UK Conservative Party MP says Union involvement harms Britain's sovereignty.

Eurozone crisis //

Published: 03 November, 2011, 12:32

British riot policemen stand in front of a burning building in Croydon, South London on August 8, 2011 (AFP Photo / LEON NEAL)

(23.9Mb) embed video
To include this chart in your web page, paste the following HTML tag into your web page HTML:

TAGS: Scandal, UK, Protest, Matt Trezza, Social networks, Laura Smith

The UK is desperately searching for a cure to the spread of gang culture after the summer riots. But a proposed strategy of monitoring social networks and spying on teens may see potential troublemakers totally isolated – with uncertain consequences.

­The reality of life in East London – young teens take part in a workshop on gang violence.  

With the government laying the blame for August’s riots firmly at the door of gangs, one London council is talking about making youth workers spy on gang members and monitor their social network activities.

Anything suspicious would be passed to a special anti-gang unit.

But the MP for Hackney, where some of the worst unrest took place, says it is not the technology to blame.

“There were riots in this country in the 12th century, and there was no internet, there was no text messaging then. So it is nonsense. Time would be better spent looking at the real causes of riots rather than blaming the messenger,” Hackney MP Diane Abbott says.   

For some young people, the youth club is a safe haven in an uncertain world. And message monitoring could undermine the important relationship between a youth worker and vulnerable team, making them less likely to turn to them in a crisis, and so more susceptible to gang overtures, and ultimately crime and violence.

Naz Ali has been working at this youth center in East London for two years. Young people spend time in a relaxed environment, and eventually, he gets to know them and see them when they are in trouble. He says money would be better spent looking at those who are already in gangs.

“The money they are going to spend they should actually spend with the gangs, each gang member, and try getting the gang members, and spend the money with them, where gang members can change their gang members. So that’s how they should spend the money. Monitoring: I don’t think so,” Naz believes.

During the riots, social networks like Twitter and BlackBerry Messenger were used by rioters to pinpoint the next location earmarked for destruction. The government went as far as proposing shutting down the services, while two men were jailed for four years each for inciting rioting on Facebook. But teens say spying risks isolating the very people they are trying to help.

“If that happens, people wouldn’t come to youth centers,” says one of the teenagers, Maten Mechmount.

There are undoubtedly social issues, and solving them requires walking a fine line between coming down hard on troublemakers, and preserving civil liberties for everyone. But it is clear that this measure, which would cost hundreds of thousands of pounds to enforce, could also cost the trust and goodwill of the same at-risk youth the authorities are so concerned about.

Occupy Oakland protesters gather at the Port of Oakland to shut down the facility as they call for a citywide general strike on November 2, 2011 in California (AFP Photo / Kimihiro HOSHINO) 03.11, 11:35

In the US, all eyes are now on Oakland, where anti-corporate protests see their first casualty after a young man was hit by a car. Thousands took to the streets in the Californian city and shut down operations in one of America's major sea ports.

Occupy Wall Street Image courtesy https://twitter.com/reynoldspost 03.11, 12:33

New clashes have erupted in Oakland, California, between anti-corporate protesters and police, who have entered their camp. Up to 100 people have already been arrested, and the standoff at the camp continues.

Occupy Wall Street

View the original article here

Thursday, November 3, 2011

Speaker wants political parties out of upper house

RIA Novosti / Iliya Pitalev 21.09, 11:41

The Federation Council, the upper house of the Russian Parliament, has elected former St. Petersburg Governor Valentina Matvienko as its new speaker.

A Syrian vendor stands at the entrance of his shop in the commercial district of the flashpoint city of Homs, 160 kms northeast of Damascus. (AFP Photo/Joseph Eid) 09.09, 14:50

Russia’s upper house, the Federation Council, is ready to send a fact-finding mission to Syria to assess the situation in the country.

Arab world protests Valentina Matvienko and Sergey Mironov (RIA Novosti / Sergey Kompanichenko) 11.07, 21:13

The former No. 3 man in Russian politics is ready for more work – and for revenge.

Published: 03 November, 2011, 12:45

St Petersburg Governor Valentina Matvienko (RIA Novosti / Vadim Zhernov) St Petersburg Governor Valentina Matvienko (RIA Novosti / Vadim Zhernov)

TAGS: Russia, Politics

Speaker of the Federation Council Valentina Matvienko suggests suspending senators’ party membership for the time of their work in the upper house of the Russian parliament.

­“The upper and lower houses have different tasks. The lower house is made up of representatives of political parties, while the Federation Council is formed from representatives of the regions,” Matvienko told Izvestia daily. “We should be objective in our decisions, without looking back at our political positions.” 

However, she pointed out that “no one can forbid senators to be in sympathy with the ideas of this or that party”.

Former speaker of the Federation Council and ex-leader of the Fair Russia party Sergey Mironov had also supported the idea of suspending party membership for upper house members. Nevertheless, he had not put the idea into practice. 

Valentina Matvienko noted that, intentionally or not, her predecessor used his position of speaker in the interests of his political power.

“No doubt the position of [Federation Council] chairman worked well for his image of party leader and for Fair Russia in general,” she said. “And when Sergey Mironov voiced his stance as party leader, naturally his words were also perceived as a statement from the Federation Council head.”

Valentina Matvienko added that it would be dishonest not to mention that the administrative resources of the upper house were used in the interests of the party. 

“I don’t want to give specific examples, although I have plenty of them. But the fact that the Federation Council chairman was a party leader was to the detriment of the common work. The Federation Council should not be associated with parties,” she concluded.

Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin (RIA Novosti / Igor Zarembo) Today: 12:36

Prime Minister Vladimir Putin, the early favorite in next year’s presidential elections, was listed by Forbes magazine as the second-most powerful man in the world.

Viktor Bout (AFP Photo / NICOLAS ASFOURI) Today: 12:51

Moscow has harshly criticized a US court’s guilty verdict in the Viktor Bout case and vowed to secure the former Soviet military officer’s return to Russia.

Viktor Bout case

View the original article here