Friday, 26 July 2013

Lady Gaga to perform at MTV Video Music Awards

FILE - This Dec. 15, 2012 file photo shows singer Lady Gaga performing at the Prudential Center in Newark, N.J. MTV announced Thursday, July 25, 2013, that the pop star will perform her new single at the MTV Video Music Awards on Aug. 25. Gaga will release a new album, "ARTPOP," on Nov. 11. (Photo by Evan Agostini/Invision/AP, File)

FILE - This Dec. 15, 2012 file photo shows singer Lady Gaga performing at the Prudential Center in Newark, N.J. MTV announced Thursday, July 25, 2013, that the pop star will perform her new single at the MTV Video Music Awards on Aug. 25. Gaga will release a new album, "ARTPOP," on Nov. 11. (Photo by Evan Agostini/Invision/AP, File)

(AP) ? Lady Gaga will perform at the MTV Video Music Awards next month. It will be one of her first appearances since having hip surgery in February.

The 27-year-old pop star will perform her new single at the Aug. 25 awards show, which will air live from the Barclays Center in Brooklyn, N.Y., MTV announced Thursday.

Gaga sang the national anthem at New York's Gay Pride last month.

She will release a new album, "ARTPOP," on Nov. 11.

Justin Timberlake and Macklemore & Ryan Lewis lead the VMA Awards with six nominations each. Bruno Mars is up for four awards. Robin Thicke, Miley Cyrus, Pink and Thirty Seconds to Mars have three nominations each.

____

Online:

http://www.mtv.com/ontv/vma/

___

MTV is a unit of Viacom Inc.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/4e67281c3f754d0696fbfdee0f3f1469/Article_2013-07-25-Music-Lady%20Gaga/id-77614f9b64a045109513d7425a6130f6

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Engadget Podcast 353 - 07.26.13

Engadget Podcast 343 - 05.10.13

Despite a plethora of major news from the mobile space this week, we somehow recorded one of our shortest podcasts in recent memory. We kick off with a recap of Google's "breakfast with Sundar Pichai" event, then Brian ponders what life would be like with a Chromecast -- he hasn't owned a TV in about a dozen years. Finally, we chat about Verizon's new Droids, and round out the show with observations from our Nokia Lumia 1020 and Samsung GS4 Mini reviews. Episode 353 of the Engadget podcast is ready to stream below.

Hosts: Dana Wollman, Brian Heater, Terrence O'Brien

Producer: Joe Pollicino

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Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/07/26/engadget-podcast-353-07-26-13/?utm_medium=feed&utm_source=Feed_Classic&utm_campaign=Engadget

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Thursday, 25 July 2013

Snowden stays put in Moscow; gets a copy of 'Crime and Punishment'

MOSCOW (AP) ? National Security Agency leaker Edward Snowden, who fled to Moscow's airport a month ago, aims to stay in Russia for the near future and learn the country's culture and language, his lawyer said Wednesday.

To get him started, Anatoly Kucherena said he gave Snowden a copy of "Crime and Punishment," Dostoyevsky's lengthy novel about the torment and redemption of a man who thought himself outside the law.

"I am not talking about the similarity of inner contradictions," Kucherena said after meeting Snowden in the transit zone of Sheremetyevo international airport, where Snowden has apparently been marooned since arriving from Hong Kong on June 23.

The day's developments left the White House ? and nearly everyone else ? "seeking clarity" about the status of the man who revealed details of an NSA program to monitor Internet and telephone communications.

When Snowden first arrived at Sheremetyevo, he was believed to be planning just to transfer to a flight to Cuba and then to Venezuela to seek asylum. But the United States, which wants him returned for prosecution, canceled his passport, stranding him. He hasn't been seen in public since, although he met with human rights activists and lawyers July 12.

Snowden then applied for temporary asylum in Russia, saying he eventually wanted to visit countries that had offered him asylum: Venezuela, Bolivia and Nicaragua.

It's unclear how long Russia will take to decide on the asylum request. Kucherena's meeting Wednesday with Snowden was preceded by a flurry of reports that said the lawyer would give him documentation that would allow him to leave the airport while the asylum process is underway.

But Kucherena said he had no such paperwork to pass along. The Federal Migration Service, which would issue such a document, said it had no information.

Asked about Snowden's long-term intentions, Kucherena told state television that "Russia is his final destination for now. He doesn't look further into the future than that."

The case has provoked considerable tension between Moscow and Washington, at a particularly sensitive time ? less than two months before President Barack Obama had planned to meet Russian President Vladimir Putin in Moscow and again at the G-20 summit in St. Petersburg.

White House spokesman Jay Carney said the U.S. was "seeking clarity" as the reports swirled of Snowden's possible imminent departure from the airport. The head of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, Robert Menendez, said "providing any refuge to Edward Snowden will be harmful to U.S.-Russia relations."

The lawyer said that Snowden is studying "Russian culture" and has already learned a little Russian, but the copy of Dostoyevsky's thick and dense novel ? about the mental anguish of a poor ex-student who kills a pawnbroker for her cash ? was in English. He said he also brought Snowden other books, including an unspecified work by Anton Chekhov.

Kucherena told journalists that he had brought fresh clothes for Snowden, whom he said had been wearing the same clothes he had when he arrived from Hong Kong.

If Snowden gets the documentation to leave the airport, that would only allow him to travel outside Russia, for which he'd need other identification papers, Kucherena said.

How long that might take is unclear.

"Edward is understanding about this and he hasn't been refused anything ? the process is simply being drawn out somewhat," Kucherena said.

U.S.-Russian relations are already strained by Washington's criticism of Russia's pressure on opposition groups, its suspicion of U.S. missile-defense plans in Europe, and its support for the regime of Syrian President Bashar Assad.

___

Nataliya Vasilyeva and Laura Mills in Moscow contributed to this report.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/snowden-lawyer-leaker-staying-russia-now-192853601.html

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Patriots coach 'shocked' by Hernandez arrest

As prosecutors outlined more evidence in their murder case against fallen NFL star Aaron Hernandez -- and asked the court for more time -- his former coach said Wednesday he felt "personally hurt and disappointed" by the case.

"I and other members of the organization were shocked and disappointed in what he had learned," New England Patriots coach Bill Belichick told reporters in his first public comments since Odin Lloyd's killing early on June 17 and Hernandez's arrest nine days later.

"Having someone in your organization that's involved in a murder investigation is a terrible thing."

Authorities have said Hernandez, 23, and two other men picked Lloyd up from his Boston apartment shortly after midnight last month. Surveillance cameras showed the car at an industrial park near Hernandez's North Attleborough, Massachusetts, home.

Lloyd's body was found in the North Attleborough industrial park later that day.

Authorities have accused Hernandez of orchestrating the shooting death of Lloyd, the 27-year-old boyfriend of Hernandez's fianc?e's sister. The former standout NFL tight end has pleaded not guilty to murder.

As has long been his custom on football and other matters, Belichick was guarded in his comments Wednesday to the press, saying repeatedly that he could not comment on "people involved in the judicial process."

The three-time Super Bowl-winning head coach did say that -- even though he was outside the United States when the story broke -- he, team owner Robert Kraft and other Patriot officials "acted swiftly and decisively." The NFL team released Hernandez, who had been one of its top offensive players, shortly after his arrest but before he was charged in court with murder.

Belichick took pains to say that Hernandez's alleged actions, as outlined by prosecutors, do "not in any way represent the way that the New England Patriots want to do things." The team continually evaluates its players -- from their on-field performance to their maturity and personal history off the field -- the coach said, before adding, "We'll work to do a better job of it as we go forward."

"Personally, I'm challenged by decisions that affect the team on a daily basis, and I'm not perfect on that, either," Belichick said. "But I always try to do what I think is best for the football team."

Source: http://www.wyff4.com/news/national/Patriots-coach-shocked-by-Hernandez-arrest/-/9324256/21143342/-/pmb9smz/-/index.html?absolute=true

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DOJ expects to charge SAC Capital on Thursday: source

By Matthew Goldstein and Emily Flitter

NEW YORK (Reuters) - Federal prosecutors are continuing to look for ways to build a criminal case against billionaire trader Steven A. Cohen at the same time as they prepare to announce criminal charges against his hedge fund, said people familiar with the investigation.

Charges of securities fraud and wire fraud expected to be filed against the company on Thursday, according to a source familiar with the investigation.

The charges against Cohen's $15 billion SAC Capital Advisors come after nearly seven years of investigations of his firm on allegations of insider trading.

Authorities do not plan to charge Cohen with any criminal wrongdoing, said the source.

A spokeswoman for Manhattan U.S. Attorney Preet Bharara declined to comment as did a spokesman for the Federal Bureau of Investigation.

A spokesman for SAC Capital also declined to comment.

The filing of a criminal charge against SAC Capital could be a death-knell for the Stamford, Conn.-based firm that employs nearly 1,000 people and made billions for the 57-year-old Cohen.

It is likely that Wall Street firms that lend money and trade with SAC Capital would stop doing so after a criminal charge is filed. However, since more than $15 billion of the firm's assets represents money for Cohen and his employees, SAC Capital has substantial resources to continue functioning.

But even as federal authorities plan to move against Cohen's business, they are continuing to investigate the activities of some of his former employees, including former technology stock trader Dipak Patel, said the source familiar with the matter.

Patel, who once managed up to $1 billion for Cohen and left SAC Capital in 2011, was implicated in potentially improper trading by former SAC Capital analyst Wesley Wang, who pleaded guilty last July and became a cooperating witness for federal authorities.

Federal authorities have wiretapped communications involving Patel and have been considering criminal charges against the Merrick, N.Y. resident, said another person who has been briefed on the investigation. Neither Patel nor his attorney, Tai Park, returned phone calls seeking comment.

Federal prosecutors have debated filing a criminal charge against Cohen's 21-year-old hedge fund, one of the industry's most successful, for many months. The fund is one of the largest payers of commissions on Wall Street, generating more than $300 million a year in trading fees alone for Wall Street brokerages.

Several legal experts, including former federal prosecutors, said the decision to charge the hedge fund, but not Cohen, with wrongdoing would be a tacit admission that the nearly seven-year investigation failed to find sufficient evidence of trading on illicit inside information by Cohen.

A criminal charge against SAC Capital would be one of the most high-profile corporate cases since U.S. prosecutors indicted accounting firm Arthur Andersen for its role in the Enron scandal, a move that effectively forced the audit firm to go out of business.

Some legal experts have questioned whether it is appropriate for prosecutors to charge SAC Capital with criminal wrongdoing but not charge the firm's founder and leader.

"It's part of an overall level of frustration about this whole enterprise, and so they're trying to come at it from every possible angle to destroy this guy's business," said C. Evan Stewart, a defense lawyer and a partner Zuckerman Spaeder. "When the government gets an individual or company in its sights and decides that person's not worth doing business, it's going to use every tool."

If prosecutors do criminally charge SAC Capital, it will come after the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission similarly decided it had insufficient evidence to file civil fraud charges against Cohen.

Instead, the SEC on July 19 filed an administrative order against Cohen charging him with failing to supervise his employees and spotting potential "red flags" involving allegations of insider trading by two of his employees.

An SAC spokesman said on Friday Cohen will vigorously defend the failure to supervise charge. A 46-page "white paper" prepared by SAC Capital's lawyer says Cohen is often too busy to read emails and never saw an email that regulators contend included a reference to inside information about computer company Dell Inc.'s earnings in summer 2008.

Federal authorities began looking into the possibility of filing a criminal charge against SAC Capital after former portfolio manager Jon Horvath pleaded guilty to passing on inside information about Dell during the summer of 2008 to his supervisor Michael Steinberg and traders at other hedge funds.

Earlier this year, prosecutors charged Steinberg with insider trading involving shares of Dell. Steinberg has pleaded not guilty.

To date, nine former and current SAC Capital employees have been implicated or charged with wrongful trading while at the firm.

For now, Wall Street appears to be shrugging at news reports that federal prosecutors are getting closer to filing criminal charges against SAC Capital.

Wall Street firms are continuing to trade with the fund as usual, according to several market sources.

A headhunter said in the past several weeks she had gotten more resumes from employees of SAC Capital, but "not a flood" of resumes.

Several investment firms that have money with SAC Capital, but submitted redemption notices in June to pull their dollars by year's end declined to comment. SAC Capital has said it plans to return more than $4 billion in outside investor money by year's end.

One outside investor voiced support for Cohen and SAC Capital, despite the firm's growing regulatory woes.

Ed Butowsky, managing director at Chapwood Capital Investment Management, which has several million dollars invested with SAC Capital, said: "I don't believe that criminal charges against the firm would impact Steve Cohen's traders and their ability to make money."

(Reporting by Matthew Goldstein and Emily Flitter, additional reporting by Katya Wachtel, Jennifer Ablan and Svea Herbst-Bayliss; Editing by Leslie Gevirtz)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/dojs-decision-criminal-charges-against-sac-capital-nears-180005084.html

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Wednesday, 24 July 2013

Eolas' 'Interactive Web' patents invalid, appeals court affirms ...

One of the tech community's longest patent nightmares appears to be officially over.

The Eolas patents, which were reportedly used to extract hundreds of millions of dollars in licensing fees from companies such as Microsoft, appear to be dead after a U.S. Appeals Court upheld a lower court decision that major portions of the "Interactive Web" patents were invalid. Monday's decision by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit in Washington, D.C., which came without comment, represents finality in the matter for Web companies such as Google and Amazon and host of other companies.

Google said in a statement it is "pleased with the court's decision." CNET has also contacted Eolas Technology, the plaintiff in the case, and will update this report when we learn more.

Eolas, commonly referred to as a patent troll, and the University of California sued a host of tech companies in 2009, contending they were due $600 million in royalties for infringement of the patents by way of online video streaming, search suggestions, and other "interactive" elements on pages. The patents were awarded to Eolas founder Michael Doyle and two co-inventors in 1998 for work they originated while Doyle was employed by the University of California, making the school a co-owner of the patents.

Before a federal jury in Tyler, Texas, concluded in February 2012 that the patents were invalid, Tim Berners-Lee, widely considered one of the fathers of the Internet, testified that allowing the patents to be upheld could pose a major threat to the Internet as its known today.

The 2009 case was just one of many the patent-holding company filed over the years. Perhaps the company's best-known suit was against Microsoft, which Eolas accused in 1999 of infringing on patents through plug-ins and applets used by the software giant's Internet Explorer. Microsoft appealed a 2003 ruling that required the company to pay Eolas $565 million but eventually settled the case out of court for an undisclosed -- but reportedly massive -- sum.

More than a dozen companies were named in the original 2009 lawsuit, including Adobe Systems, Amazon, Apple, Blockbuster, Citigroup, eBay, Frito-Lay, Go Daddy, Google, J.C. Penney, JPMorgan Chase, Office Depot, Perot Systems, Playboy Enterprises, Staples, Sun Microsystems, Texas Instruments, Yahoo, and YouTube.

Office Depot, Rent-A-Center, Playboy, Oracle, and others opted to settle with Eolas.

(Via ArsTechnica)

Source: http://news.cnet.com/8301-1023_3-57594994-93/eolas-interactive-web-patents-invalid-appeals-court-affirms/

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Get Rid Of Gmail Ads In Inbox - Business Insider

Yesterday word got out that Google is putting ads directly in its new Gmail Inbox.

These ads are tricky because they are mixed in with your inbox and look like a regular email.

Google announced back in May that it was adding new features that would help users better organize email. Specifically, the feature organizes emails into different inboxes based on categories like: Primary, Social, Promotions, and Updates.?

Gmail ads

The Promotions tab is supposed to house emails from places like LivingSocial, department stores, and other marketers that you've signed up for. But according to Google, there are two new kinds of ads: ones that link out taking you away from your inbox and ads that will expand in your inbox when you click.

We're used seeing Internet ads everywhere we go, but having them inside of our inbox can be quite annoying.?

gmail priority inbox

If you're seeing these ads in your inbox here's how you can get rid of them:

  • If you see an ad in the promotions tab, click or tap the X on an ad to make it go away. Keep in mind that this will only dismiss the ad until you open a new session.

The only way to really get rid of the ads is to turn off the feature entirely.

You can do this by:

  • Heading to the gear shaped icon in the top right corner under your Gmail photo.
  • ?Select "configure inbox" and disable the "Promotions" option.?

There isn't word on weather Google will transition the ads to other inboxes at some point. For now, turning the off will spare you from the ads.?

Source: http://www.businessinsider.com/get-rid-of-gmail-ads-in-inbox-2013-7

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