Showing posts with label New York Times. Show all posts
Showing posts with label New York Times. Show all posts

Thursday, February 14, 2013

Mayor Bloomberg Hangs "Championship" Banners With Murder Stats On Them At Barclays Center

So it's almost like the Nets won something.









This morning New York Times reporter Mike Grynbaum tweeted that Mayor Bloomberg's staff was hanging banners at Barclays Center for his State of the City address with interesting statistics on them.



This morning New York Times reporter Mike Grynbaum tweeted that Mayor Bloomberg's staff was hanging banners at Barclays Center for his State of the City address with interesting statistics on them.






Source: @grynbaum














Many on the Internet were confused.



Many on the Internet were confused.

















































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Abney and Associates Internet Technology - Der chinesische Angriff gegen die New York Times

http://www.good.is/posts/abney-and-associates-internet-technology-der-chinesische-angriff-gegen-die-new-york-times abney and associates internet technology blog review Journalisten sind auf Notiz. Wenn Sie die chinesische Regierung untersuchen, werden chinesische Hacker Ihnen nachkommen. Das ist,...
By: cottoncandz01

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Olympic wrestling’s vicious takedowns won’t be forgotten

Wrestling has been a fixture of the Olympics since 708 B.C. and is considered by many to be the oldest competitive sport. So when the International Olympic Committee voted Tuesday to cut freestyle and Greco-Roman wrestling from the 2020 games, it came as something of a shock. "I think this is a really stupid decision," the Olympic historian David Wallechinsky told the New York Times. "It has been in the modern Olympics since 1896. This is a popular sport."

Fans worldwide can enjoy freestyle and Greco-Roman wrestling one last time in the 2016 Rio de Janeiro Games. But the days of spandex singlets appear to be numbered -- at least on the Olympic stage. To give the sport a proper send-off, we look back on some of its gnarliest, most brutal moments.

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Tuesday, November 22, 2011

Google News: Facebook phone: who would buy this thing?

Image representing HTC as depicted in CrunchBaseImage via CrunchBase
Google News
CNET - ‎11 minutes ago‎
Remember the HTC Status? That was supposed to be a Facebook phone too--and was a complete bust. commentary Okay, so Facebook is reportedly working on a smartphone with HTC.
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Sunday, November 20, 2011

Google News: Mobile Deals Set to Lure Shoppers Stuck in Line

Google News
New York Times - ‎22 hours ago‎
Mandy Chan, with her daughter Mia, used her smartphone to compare prices online while shopping at a Target in Las Vegas. By STEPHANIE CLIFFORD As retailers battle to draw customers into their stores on Black Friday, online merchants are plotting a ...
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Google News: On the Lighter Side: Super panel has pesky deficit just about licked

Dan Gillmor, American technology writer and fo...Image via Wikipedia
Google News
Sacramento Bee - ‎18 minutes ago‎
The following is a partial transcript of a recent closed-door "working lunch" session of the US Congress Joint Select Committee on Deficit Reduction, aka, the supercommittee, aka "the Dopey Dozen.
all 2,828 news articles »



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Saturday, November 19, 2011

Deficit Panel Facing Political, Fiscal Consequences Without Budget Deal

The Merc's sections vary by day of the week, b...Image via Wikipedia
Google News
Fox News - ‎10 hours ago‎
AP Nov. 18, 2011: Sen. Jon Kyl arrives for a meeting with the bipartisan members of the deficit Super Committee on Capitol Hill in Washington.
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Google News: Protests Confront Egypt's Military Ahead Of Elections

Google News
NPR - ‎54 minutes ago‎
by AP Tens of thousands of Islamists and young activists have massed in Tahrir Square, confronting Egypt's ruling military council with the largest crowd in months to protest the generals' attempt to give themselves special powers over a future elected ...
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Friday, November 11, 2011

Google News: Hope for season fades as players mull unfavorable options

Google News
SI.com - ‎18 minutes ago‎
Union leaders Derek Fisher (left) and Billy Hunter will meet with the 29 player reps early next week to decide their next move. AP The NBA lockout had just taken its latest, not-so-greatest turn when a prominent agent went the all-caps route to express ...
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Google News: Hugh Jackman on Broadway: back where he belongs

Google News
Los Angeles Times - ‎1 hour ago‎
This is the magic of "Hugh Jackman: Back on Broadway," which opened a 10-week run Thursday night. Deep down, the show is little more than a movie star giving you a guided tour of his iPhone (here are my favorite songs, here's some great video of where ...
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Google News: Will Windows Phone Woo Developers?

Google News
New York Times (blog) - ‎2 hours ago‎
Microsoft and Nokia have their eyes set on a luminous prize - competing with Apple and Android to become one of the top smartphone sellers in the world.
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Saturday, September 24, 2011

Three New Books for Kids Cause Wild Rumpus on the Web

Shel SilversteinImage via Wikipedia
Since the introduction of books by Dr. Seuss ("Cat in the Hat"), Maurice Sendak ("Where the Wild Things Are") and Shel Silverstein ("Where the Sidewalk Ends"), childhood has never been the same.

These authors, who began careers in children's literature as long ago as the 1930s, each have a new offering out this month -- which has caused a wild rumpus with fans and a flurry of searches on the Web.

Children of all ages will be happy to hear that Theodor Geisel, better known as Dr. Seuss, has a book of short stories coming out: "The Bippolo Seed and Other Lost Stories." These stories were previously only published in magazines from the 1950s.  According to a review in the New York Times, the newfound treasure "features the kinds of nonsense that blend right in with the Stinky Cheese Man and SpongeBob SquarePants."

Dr. Seuss -- not an actual doctor -- first used that name as a joke when he was a student at Dartmouth College. Before dying in 1991 at the age of 87, the scribe had penned 44 books that sold more than half a billion copies. The book that started it all, "And to Think That I Saw it on Mulberry Street," was rejected 27 times before it was published. Searches on "dr. seuss biography," "dr seuss green eggs and ham," and "quotes by dr seuss" were all popular in the last week.

Twelve years since Shel Silverstein's death, the quirky writer of books like "The Giving Tree," is still giving. His new book of children's poetry, "Every Thing on It," features work, according to the Los Angeles Times, "culled from material Silverstein really liked but never found a place for in his other collections." Searches on Silverstein soared an astonishing 47,000% in one day on news of the new book.

Maurice Sendak, still producing at age 83, has published a children's book for the first time in 30 years, "Bumble-Ardy," about an orphaned pig's beastly birthday party. Searches for Sendak soared 12,000% in one day on word of the new work. Amazingly, 40 years after his book about "wild things" shocked parents, the children's book author is getting flak for his new book too. One reviewer on Amazon described the work as "disturbing."

Sendak told the New York Times it's the parents who are the "scaredy cats," not the kids.

Let the wild rumpus start.

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Forex scam

A forex (or foreign exchange) scam is any trading scheme used to defraud traders by convincing them that they can expect to gain a high profit by trading in the foreign exchange market. Currency trading "has become the fraud du jour" as of early 2008, according to Michael Dunn of the U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission.[1] But "the market has long been plagued by swindlers preying on the gullible," according to the New York Times.[2] "The average individual foreign-exchange-trading victim loses about $15,000, according to CFTC records" according to The Wall Street Journal.[3] The North American Securities Administrators Association says that "off-exchange forex trading by retail investors is at best extremely risky, and at worst, outright fraud."[4]
"In a typical case, investors may be promised tens of thousands of dollars in profits in just a few weeks or months, with an initial investment of only $5,000. Often, the investor’s money is never actually placed in the market through a legitimate dealer, but simply diverted – stolen – for the personal benefit of the con artists."[5]
In August, 2008 the CFTC set up a special task force to deal with growing foreign exchange fraud.[6] In January 2010, the CFTC proposed new rules limiting leverage to 10 to 1, based on " a number of improper practices" in the retail foreign exchange market, "among them solicitation fraud, a lack of transparency in the pricing and execution of transactions, unresponsiveness to customer complaints, and the targeting of unsophisticated, elderly, low net worth and other vulnerable individuals."[7]
The forex market is a zero-sum game,[8] meaning that whatever one trader gains, another loses, except that brokerage commissions and other transaction costs are subtracted from the results of all traders, technically making forex a "negative-sum" game.
These scams might include churning of customer accounts for the purpose of generating commissions, selling software that is supposed to guide the customer to large profits,[9] improperly managed "managed accounts",[10] false advertising,[11] Ponzi schemes and outright fraud.[4][12] It also refers to any retail forex broker who indicates that trading foreign exchange is a low risk, high profit investment.[13]
The U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC), which loosely regulates the foreign exchange market in the United States, has noted an increase in the amount of unscrupulous activity in the non-bank foreign exchange industry.[14]
An official of the National Futures Association was quoted as saying, "Retail forex trading has increased dramatically over the past few years. Unfortunately, the amount of forex fraud has also increased dramatically."[15] Between 2001 and 2006 the U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission has prosecuted more than 80 cases involving the defrauding of more than 23,000 customers who lost $350 million. From 2001 to 2007, about 26,000 people lost $460 million in forex frauds.[1] CNN quoted Godfried De Vidts, President of the Financial Markets Association, a European body, as saying, "Banks have a duty to protect their customers and they should make sure customers understand what they are doing. Now if people go online, on non-bank portals, how is this control being done?"
Contents [hide]
1 Not beating the market
2 The use of high leverage
3 Alleged scamming by Country
3.1 Israel
4 Convicted scammers
5 Under criminal investigations
6 See also
7 References
[edit]Not beating the market

The foreign exchange market is a zero sum game[8] in which there are many experienced well-capitalized professional traders (e.g. working for banks) who can devote their attention full time to trading. An inexperienced retail trader will have a significant information disadvantage compared to these traders.
Retail traders are - almost by definition - undercapitalized. Thus they are subject to the problem of gambler's ruin. In a "Fair Game" (one with no information advantages) between two players that continues until one trader goes bankrupt, the player with the lower amount of capital has a higher probability of going bankrupt first. Since the retail speculator is effectively playing against the market as a whole - which has nearly infinite capital - he will almost certainly go bankrupt. The retail trader always pays the bid/ask spread which makes his odds of winning less than those of a fair game. Additional costs may include margin interest, or if a spot position is kept open for more than one day the trade may be "resettled" each day, each time costing the full bid/ask spread.
Although it is possible for a few experts to successfully arbitrage the market for an unusually large return, this does not mean that a larger number could earn the same returns even given the same tools, techniques and data sources. This is because the arbitrages are essentially drawn from a pool of finite size; although information about how to capture arbitrages is a nonrival good, the arbitrages themselves are a rival good. (To draw an analogy, the total amount of buried treasure on an island is the same, regardless of how many treasure hunters have bought copies of the treasure map.)
According to the Wall Street Journal (Currency Markets Draw Speculation, Fraud July 26, 2005) "Even people running the trading shops warn clients against trying to time the market. 'If 15% of day traders are profitable,' says Drew Niv, chief executive of FXCM, 'I'd be surprised.' "[16]
Paul Belogour, the Managing Director of a Boston based retail forex trader, was quoted by the Financial Times as saying, "Trading foreign exchange is an excellent way for investors to find out how tough the markets really are. But I say to customers: if this is money you have worked hard for – that you cannot afford to lose – never, never invest in foreign exchange." [17]
[edit]The use of high leverage

By offering high leverage, the market maker encourages traders to trade extremely large positions. This increases the trading volume cleared by the market maker and increases his profits, but increases the risk that the trader will receive a margin call. While professional currency dealers (banks, hedge funds) seldom use more than 10:1 leverage, retail clients may be offered leverage between 50:1 and 200:1.[2]
A self-regulating body for the foreign exchange market, the National Futures Association, warns traders in a forex training presentation of the risk in trading currency. “As stated at the beginning of this program, off-exchange foreign currency trading carries a high level of risk and may not be suitable for all customers. The only funds that should ever be used to speculate in foreign currency trading, or any type of highly speculative investment, are funds that represent risk capital; in other words, funds you can afford to lose without affecting your financial situation.“ [18]
[edit]Alleged scamming by Country

[edit]Israel
In Israel there are more than 20 active forex companies, a high number for the size of the population as a number of them operate from Israel but focus on attracting foreign customer ( HFX Forex is an example). In one incident, a client sued the firm Easy Forex, alleging that it paid brokers bonuses when clients lost money and fined brokers when clients made a profit. A television report quoted an Easy Forex broker saying, "I had this evil grin on my face one day, when a client lost $35,000 in a quarter of an hour. A guy gets wiped out - I get my commission. A guy comes up a winner and turns a profit - I pay."[19][20]
[edit]Convicted scammers

Russell Cline
Russell Erxleben
Richard Matthews, Jr.
Joel N. Ward
[edit]Under criminal investigationsa

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