Twitter diplomacy

US state department sends a delegation of tech luminaries, including world’s most popular tweeter Ashton Kutcher, to Moscow in an attempt to use technology to improve relations.

Call it geek diplomacy. This week, in lieu of the congressmen and capitalists who typically make up delegations to Russia, Washington sent a detachment of Silicon Valley dreamboats: the 33-year-old creator of Twitter; the “chief lizard wrangler” of Mozilla ; the chief executive of eBay; and — for good measure — the actor Ashton Kutcher, who has edged out Britney Spears to become the world’s most popular Tweeter.

The approach is an unorthodox one, punctuated by such strange moments as Kutcher’s tweeted discovery of a Siberian man whose arm bore a large tattoo of his face. But it indicates how seriously Washington takes online networking as a social force. Among the delegation’s goals was to persuade Russia’s thriving online social networks to take up social causes like fighting corruption or human trafficking, said Jared Cohen, who serves on secretary of state Hillary Rodham Clinton’s policy planning staff.

“These platforms are more than just ways to make money — they’re affecting the lives of people for better or for worse,” Cohen said. “As that realisation takes hold, it’s just a natural human thing. People want to steer it toward the good rather than the negative.”

Russia has already developed the world’s most active social networking audience, with the average adult spending 6.6 hours a month on networking sites, according to the market research company comScore, which is based in Virginia. The government makes little effort to censor the web, which has become a key platform for dissenters like Major Alexei Dymovsky, who last November posted videos saying that the police were under pressure to fabricate charges.

The projects proposed by the delegation were neutral by comparison: a cellphonebased program to assist new mothers; a “safe jobs index” to protect women from human trafficking; and jobs tailored to deter young programmers from becoming hackers. The delegation also encouraged high-tech entrepreneurs to join with social activists, though in Russia, the two groups inhabit different worlds, said Esther Dyson of EDventure Holdings, a member of the delegation.

To many in business, social activists “have lost touch with what is going on,” said Dyson, who has been investing in Russian companies for 20 years. “Their attitude is kind of like: ‘We don’t think that stuff was effective. We’re entrepreneurs. It’s not relevant to us.’ They don’t identify with these heroes of the past.”

In a Wall Street Journal op-ed article last week, Evgeny Morozov chided the State Department for indulging in “techno-utopianism,” the notion that social networking has a natural democratising effect. On the contrary, he argued, crowds mobilised online tend to be chaotic and riven by internal debates , while repressive governments use the same platforms, often anonymously, to distribute propaganda.

He also warned delegations like the one in Moscow tie the platforms too closely to Washington. “The kind of message that it sends to the rest of the world — ie that Google, Facebook and Twitter are now just extensions of the US state department — may endanger the lives of those who use such services in authoritarian countries,” wrote Morozov, a Belarussian and the author of an coming book about the internet and democracy. “It’s hardly surprising that the Iranian government has begun to view all Twitter users with the utmost suspicion.”

‘Osama’s handshake was limp, like shaking a wet fish’

London, Sep 12 (ANI): The handshake by world’s most dreaded terrorist Osama bin Laden has been described as limp, and like shaking a wet fish by a producer of CNN who met the terror mastermind.

CNN producer Peter Bergen, who wrote The Osama bin Laden I Know: An Oral History of al-Qaeda’s Leader, met the most dreaded terrorist in March 1997 when he went to film his first television interview.

Bergen narrates about the extra security around bin Laden and how they were taken to his hideout at night changing vehicles blindfolded.

The interview took place near the Tora Bora region of eastern Afghanistan where Bergen and his crew were electronically swept for tracking devices, and had to pass through three groups of guards armed with sub-machineguns.

“Bin Laden made no effort at small talk, wanting to get the interview done as soon as possible. Peter Jouvenal, our British cameraman, remembers that bin Laden’s handshake was limp, like shaking a wet fish,” The Times quoted him, as saying.

“I don’t recall shaking his hand but I do remember that he took frequent sips from a cup of tea, giving him an air that was more feline than fierce, and his blistering diatribe against the US for its policies in the Middle East was delivered in a barely audible whisper. After an hour he was gone, as suddenly as he had arrived,” he adds.

He also narrates Abdel Bari Atwan, a London-based Palestinian journalist who interviewed him in Afghanistan in 1996, as saying that Bin Laden, it seems, had prepared for life as a fugitive for years, adopting a monk-like detachment from material comforts.

Zaynab Khadr, whose family lived with the al-Qaeda leader in Afghanistan during the late 1990s, was quoted by the author as saying that he did not even allow his children to drink cold water because he wanted them to be prepared for the day when there’s no cold water.

He quotes Bin Laden as once instructing his followers: “You should learn to sacrifice everything from modern life like electricity, air-conditioning, refrigerators, gasoline. If you are living the luxury life, it’s very hard to go to the mountains to fight.”

In a tape posted to Islamist websites in February 2006, he says bin Laden confirmed his willingness to be martyred: “I have sworn to only live free. Even if I find bitter the taste of death, I don’t want to die humiliated or deceived.” (ANI)

White supremacist who planned to bomb Asians and blacks in Britain jailed indefinitely

London, Sep. 9 (ANI): A white supremacist was given an indefinite jail term by a British court after being found guilty of planning a bomb attack on Asians and blacks.

Pro-Nazi Neil Lewington, 43, was branded as “a dangerous man who exhibits emotional coldness and detachment”, The Sun reports.

Racist fanatic Lewington will have to serve a minimum of six years before even being considered for release.

Judge Peter Thornton said: “I accept that in ordinary language, you are an oddball – eccentric, dysfunctional and sometimes immature. But I do not accept you are no more than a pest. My assessment is that you are a dangerous man.”

Lewington was on the verge of launching a bomb blitz on those he considered “non-Britons” when he was arrested by chance for being drunk on a railway station.

Cops found two homemade firebombs in the jobless electrician’s bag.

And when they searched the home he shared with his parents in Reading, Berks, they discovered a bomb factory in his bedroom and plans to make shrapnel grenades from tennis balls and nuts.

They also found a notebook entitled “Waffen SS UK members’ handbook”.

Lewington wrote a chapter in it headed “Targeting or attacking Pakis.”

Lewington’s bedroom contained fascist propaganda including videos of Right-wing terrorists such as London nail bomber David Copeland and Oklahoma fiend Timothy McVeigh.

He was found guilty of five terrorism and two explosives charges at an earlier Old Bailey trial.

His parents, who were present in court, revealed that he had not spoken to his father for a decade. (ANI)

China urges world not to overreact to N.Korea launch

China urged the international community on Sunday not to overreact to North Korea’s launch of a long-range rocket, which prompted condemnation from many powers and triggered an emergency meeting of the U.N. Security Council.

Chinese Foreign Minister Yang Jiechi called his counterparts in the United States, Russia, Japan and South Korea to discuss the launch, the Foreign Ministry said in a statement.

“All sides ought to look at the big picture … (and) avoid taking actions which may exacerbate the situation further,” Yang was paraphrased as saying.

China “upholds using talks to resolve this issue”, he added.

“We hope related parties stay calm and exercise restraint, appropriately deal with it and together maintain peace and stability in this region,” Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Jiang Yu added in a separate statement that referred to the rocket as an “experimental communications satellite”.

“The Chinese side is willing to continue to play a constructive role,” Jiang said in the brief statement carried on the ministry’s website (www.fmprc.gov.cn).

China, the closest North Korea has to a major ally and economic partner, kept above the diplomatic fray in the weeks leading to the launch of the rocket.

U.S. President Barack Obama said that North Korea, which tested a nuclear device in 2006, had violated U.N. resolutions and increased its own isolation, and he urged Pyongyang to refrain from further “provocative actions”.

China is worried about the stability of North Korea given the risk of refugees flooding across its border if the impoverished state were to collapse, and analysts say Beijing is unlikely to back strong action at the United Nations against Pyongyang.

China also calculates that its display of detachment will minimise damage to stalled negotiations seeking to persuade North Korea to abandon nuclear weapons, and help preserve China’s stake in North Korea’s survival, Chinese analysts said last week.

Beijing is a permanent member of the U.N. Security Council, and has the power to veto proposed resolutions. It backed a 2006 resolution that other governments say bans such launches by the North. Beijing has refused to say openly whether it agrees.

That mild stance contrasts with October 2006, when it denounced as “brazen” North Korea’s first and only test explosion of a nuclear device — an act that defied public warnings from Beijing’s image-sensitive leaders.

Lab-on-a-Chip may help study how cancer cells detach from neighbouring tissue to spread disease

London, March 19 (ANI): Johns Hopkins engineers say that they have developed a new lab-on-a-chip that can lead to better cancer therapies.

The researchers say that their invention may help figure out how cancer cells break free from neighbouring tissue, an “escape” that can spread the disease to other parts of the body.

“Studying cell detachment at the subcellular level is critical to understanding the way cancer cells metastasize. Development of scientific methods to study cell detachment may guide us to prevent, limit or slow down the deadly spreading of cancer cells,” Nature magazine quoted principal investigator Peter Searson, Reynolds Professor of Materials Science and Engineering, as saying.

He points out that cancer that starts in the breast, for example, sometimes spreads to the lungs because tumour cells detach and travel through the bloodstream to settle in other tissues.

He further says that scientists have learnt much about how cancer cells attach to these surfaces, but very little is known as to how such insidious cells detach because no one had created a simple way to study the process.

Searson hopes that the new lab-on-a-chip may solve this problem by helping scientists discover exactly how cancer cells spread.

Describing the new device, he has revealed that it boasts an array of gold lines on a glass slide.

He says that molecules promoting the formation of cell attachments are tethered to the gold lines like balloons tied to string. A cell is placed on the chip, atop the molecules.

According to him, the cell spreads across several of the gold lines, forming attachments to the surface of the chip with help from the molecules.

Searson says that the tethered molecules are released from one of the lines by a chemical reaction, specifically by “electrochemical reduction”.

Where the molecules are detached, according to the researcher, that portion of the cell loses its grip on the surface of the chip.

The researchers have filmed a “tail snap” under a microscope showing this segment of the cell pausing for a moment, and then contracting forcefully toward its other end, still attached to the chip.

“It’s very dramatic. The cell stretches way, way out across the chip and then, on command, the tail snaps toward the body of the cell,” says Denis Wirtz, a Johns Hopkins professor of chemical and biomolecular engineering and co-author of the paper.

The researchers say that cells survive this programmed-release process, and can be tested again and again.

The team say that if they have their way, their experiments will one day give them a tool to differentiate between cancerous and non-cancerous cells.

A research article describing the invention has been published in the journal Nature Methods. (ANI)

20,000 policemen for a beefed up security on Republic Day in New Delhi

New Delhi, Jan.16 (ANI): About 20,000 security personnel will guard the national capital ahead of the Republic Day celebrations as part of beefed up security measures following Mumbai terror attacks and intelligence inputs about possible strikes.

Delhi Police Commissioner Y S Dadwal on Friday said that the security establishment does not want to take any chance ahead of the prestigious event, especially after the Mumbai terror attacks that claimed 170 lives.

“After Mumbai attacks, we are not taking any chances. There are inputs (about possible strikes). We are making tight arrangements for the event,” Dadwal told mediapersons in a new conference here.

Around 20,000 police personnel, including 5,500 from paramilitary forces, and mobile hit teams will be deployed across the city ahead of Republic Day.

As part of the security measures, electronic surveillance will also be increased. It has also been decided to intensify checking at borders and night patrolling. There will be intensive checking not only in New Delhi district but also across the capital, Dadwal said.

“Please, bear with us…the situation is like that. We are vigilant and a lot of steps are being taken. We would like to have the maximum security,” the Commissioner said.

A meet among the heads of police forces in Delhi and adjoining areas have already reviewed the security preparations in the National Capital Region (NCR) and decided to increase sharing of intelligence and information regarding criminals and gangs operating in the region.

Police sources said a massive ground-to-air security apparatus would be organised in the city for the event that is attended by the country’s top political and military leadership.

A multi-layer security ring will also be thrown around Rajpath, where President Pratibha Devisingh Patil will unfurl the tricolour and take the salute of marching contingents.

Mobile hit teams, anti-aircraft guns and sharpshooters of the elite National Security Guards (NSG) will be deployed at various locations while paramilitary and Delhi Police commandos will keep a tight vigil along the route of the parade, sources said.

All police heads in the National Capital Region have been directed to ensure that calls made to any of the Police Control Rooms in the region regarding a crime falling in the jurisdiction of another force should “immediately be shared” with the concerned PCR.

Sub Inspectors from Jammu and Kashmir, Assam, Kerala, Tamil Nadu, Gujarat, Andhra Pradesh and Madhya Pradesh are already in New Delhi and surveying the city to gather information about potential trouble-makers, a police official said.

“Deployment of local level officers in the city ahead of the Republic Day celebrations will help in identifying trouble-makers from particular states,” the official said.

The security establishment has already placed a detachment of fighter planes at the Indian Air Force base in Hindon near the Delhi border to provide air-defence.

Police while tightening the security apparatus will install around 100 CCTVs on the route of the parade by this weekend to keep a watch on the movement of people a week ahead of the event.

According to city police’s plans, 22 CCTVs will be placed till 26th January on the 1.5 km Rajpath, where country’s top political and military brass will be present when India showcases its military might. (ANI)