September 6, 2009

'Telepathic' microchip could help paraplegics control computers

LONDON: A 'telepathic' microchip that enables paraplegics to control computers has been developed by Dr Jon Spratley, a British scientist.
Dr Jon Spratley says his device could motor neuron sufferers such as Stephen Hawking, operate PCs and television by thought alone.
The chip is implanted onto the surface of the brain, where it monitors electronic 'thought' pulses. While paraplegics may be unable to move their limbs, their brains still produce an electronic signal when they try.
It means paraplegics, amputees or those with motor neurone disease, such as Stephen Hawking, could be able to operate light switches, PCs and even cars by the power of thought alone.
The device picks up neural signals from the brain's motor cortex, and captures the moment a paralysed patient tries to move their limbs.
This impulse is then transmitted to a relay station implanted in the skull, which in turn sends the signal to a receiver housed in simple computers.
Tests have shown the technology to work in the laboratory, but trials are yet to begin on humans.

Turkey bans "sexy" American pop video: report

Justin Timberlake and Ciara's "Love Sex Magic" too explicit
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ISTANBUL: Turkey's state broadcasting watchdog has banned the music video for "Love Sex Magic," a duet between pop star Justin Timberlake and Ciara, due to its sexually explicit content, Milliyet newspaper said.
The Radio and Television Supreme Council has barred TV channels from showing the video because "it contains sexual outfits, dancing and scenes that are contrary to the development of children and youth and morality in general," according to the daily.
The video features a skimpily clad Ciara licking Timberlake's ear and bent over in questionable positions as the two singers dance closely together.
Ali Karacan, the owner of Numberone TV which has aired the video, called the ban "anachronistic" and "humiliating" for Turkey, a secular Muslim country, which is trying to join the European Union.
In 2001, Turkey's TV watchdog for music mulled reprimanding the country's best-selling artist for passionately kissing a woman in a video.
Viewers complained that Tarkan Tevetoglu, 29, who is the only Turkish singer to enter the charts in Europe, video verged on "pornography."

US hindered probe into General Zia plane crash: Ejaz

ISLAMABAD: Former Federal Minister and PML leader Ejaz-ul-Haq has said US forcefully hindered investigation into General Zia-ul-Haq plane crash.

Talking to media, he said Saturday I cannot point finger towards a person or a country over murder of General Zia-ul-Haq but US did not send FBI team to Pakistan for probe into plane crash.

Postmortem officials were sent to far and flung areas, he added.

September 5, 2009

It is easy for militants to go mobile in Kashmir

JAMMU, INDIA: The startling discovery of guerrillas getting mobile phone SIM cards on fake documents has set off alarm bells for security and intelligence agencies in Jammu and Kashmir who say that private telecom service providers are "overlooking security parameters to push their sales".
Police have arrested at least eight people after it was found that many pre-paid phone connections were being used by militants to stay in touch with each other and also use cell phones to trigger off blasts.
Senior Superintendent of Police (SSP) J.P. Singh, who is heading the probe, said the private telecom operators are giving out additional SIM cards using names and documents of subscribers who were already using the service.
"All this is being done to push sales. Private cellular companies are forgetting something called corporate responsibility and are overlooking security parameters which can be very dangerous," the police officer told IANS.
"And many such connections have easily landed in the hands of militants," the police officer said. The subscribers were unaware that their names and documents were being misused.
Singh said there was "no organised nexus between militants and mobile phone dealers".
"No such evidence as of now is available to prove this (the nexus)," he said. Some 25,000 to 30,000 SIM cards have been cancelled following the disclosure.
Singh said the probe into the racket has been completed and charges against the eight accused will be filed soon.
Refusing to name the accused, he said those arrested included retailers of private phone companies.
The terror-ravaged state got its cellular phone service by the state-run BSNL in 2003. Private operators came a year later.
An estimated four million mobile phone subscribers, mostly having pre-paid services, are in the state where the security agencies, including the army, had initially expressed reservations against mobile phones amid fears that militants may misuse them.
Security forces are worried that they don't know the actual figures of how many such SIM cards have landed into the hands of terrorists even as the telecommunications department has restarted physical verification of customers' documents submitted to it by private operators.
But Telecom Enforcement Resource and Monitoring (TERM) Director T.K. Gupta refused to comment on the "confidential matter".
The racket was unearthed after a dozen people were arrested in connection with an IED explosion in Poonch district. Five people were killed in the explosion.
Eight SIM cards were seized. Police said two were issued by Pakistani phone operator Ufone, and six by an Indian operator in the names of army personnel and civilians.
Police said none of the six subscribers in whose name the SIM cards were allotted were aware that there existed another card in their name.
Earlier, police in the Kashmir Valley had unearthed a similar racket and found that militants had forged the documents of a senior army officer in north Kashmir's Baramulla district to get a SIM card which was used to explode an IED in which an officer was injured.
The use of mobile phones to explode IEDs is one of the easiest and widespread means of attacking security forces as the militant, who plants the IED at one place, can explode it from miles away.

September 4, 2009

Pop legend Jackson laid to rest

America: Michael Jackson, the iconic singer who died from a drug overdose more than two months ago, has been laid to rest at a ceremony in Los Angeles attended by family and celebrities.
Tight security kept fans, reporters and even aircraft away from Friday's private burial service held at Glendale's Forest Lawn cemetery.
Jackson joins a long list of famous stars including Hollywood icons Walt Disney, Humphrey Bogart, Errol Flynn and Clark Gablewho have also been buried there.
The service had been due to begin at 02:00GMT but was delayed by an hour as his family, travelling in a procession of 31 limousines and cars, arrived late.
Among about 200 guests present at the funeral were actress Elizabeth Taylor, child star Macaulay Culkin and Jackson's ex-wife Lisa Marie Presley, the daughter of Elvis Presley.
Final farewell
Jackson's final resting place is a crypt in Forest Lawn's Great Mausoleum, a vast, mock-Renaissance building on the stately property.
The late pop star's coffin was driven to the ceremony shortly after his family arrived for the private event.
The singer - who sold millions of albums worldwide with hits such as "Thriller" and "Billie Jean" - died of a drug overdose on June 25 in what the Los Angeles county coroner later said was a homicide.
Officials said a cocktail of prescription medication, including the powerful anaesthetic propofol and sedative lorazepam, were the primary causes of his death.
Police have investigated several doctors who treated Jackson, focusing on Conrad Murray, his personal physician, who was at his bedside when he suffered a heart attack in a rented Los Angeles mansion.
Murray was hired by concert promoter AEG Live in the weeks before Jackson's death to watch over him as he rehearsed for a series of comeback concerts in London, scheduled to start in July.
Police have said they will seek criminal charges in the case but so far officials have not filed any.
The Jackson estate has said it will reimburse the Glendale Police Department for its expenses, estimated at up to $150,000.
The cost of the memorial service, estimated $1.4m, was absorbed by the city of Los Angeles.