2013年3月18日星期一

who also lost and was ordered to pay $675

Minnesota woman loses music downloading appeal

WASHINGTON (AP) — The Supreme Court has turned away an appeal from a Minnesota woman who has been ordered to pay record companies $222,000 for the unauthorized downloading of copyrighted music.

The justices did not comment Monday in letting stand the judgment against Jammie Thomas-Rasset of Brainerd, Minn. She claimed in court papers that the ordered payment was excessive.

The music industry filed thousands of lawsuits against people it accused of downloading music without permission and without paying for it. Almost all the cases settled for $3,500.

Lawyer Kiwi Camara said Thomas-Rasset is one of only two defendants whose case went to trial. The other is former Boston University student Joel Tenenbaum, who also lost and was ordered to pay $675,000.

The case is Thomas-Rasset v. Capitol Records, 12-715.

Related articles:

Israel and the United States agree that Iran should never get a nuclear bomb

Many questions, few answers await Obama on Mideast visit
Related Content prevnext
  • View Photo

    Employees arrange Israeli and U.S.…

  • View Photo

    Prefabricated homes are seen in…

  • View Photo

    Jewish settler Netanel stands outside…

  • View Photo

    Employees arrange Israeli and U.S.…

  • View Photo

    Employees unroll a red carpet at…

  • View Photo

    An employee arranges flags at the…

  • View Photo

    A house is seen at the unauthorised…

    By Crispian Balmer

    JERUSALEM (Reuters) - President Barack Obama is due to make his first official visit to Israel and the Palestinian Territories this week, looking to improve ties after sometimes rocky relations with both sides during his first term in office.

    Obama is not expected to come with any new Palestinian peace initiative and will spend most of his time in Israel, the closest U.S. ally in the Middle East, where he will make a keynote speech to hundreds of students.

    The American president will hold separate talks with both Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who finally formed a new coalition on Friday after a January election that weakened his grip on government.

    Here are some of the issues that are likely to dominate the March 20-22 visit.

    IRAN AND THE BOMB

    Israel and the United States agree that Iran should never get a nuclear bomb, dismissing Tehran's repeated assertion that its atomic program is peaceful. However, the two allies are at odds over how fast the clock is ticking down on the need for preventative military action should diplomacy fail.

    Netanyahu last year set a "red line" for Iran's nuclear program, saying the Islamic Republic should not be allowed to obtain 240 kg (530 lb) of 20 percent enriched uranium. Israeli officials have warned this tipping point could be reached by the spring or summer of 2013, although experts believe Iran has since slowed its stockpiling of 20 percent fissile uranium to ward off the threat of attack.

    Obama said on March 14 that Iran was still more than a year away from developing a nuclear weapon and repeated his assurance to Israel that military force remained a U.S. option.

    Israeli officials, who see Iran's nuclear advances as an existential threat, make no secret of the fact that they would prefer to see the U.S. military, with its greater firepower, tackle Iran's far-flung atomic installations. Tehran is improving its defenses and Israel worries that sooner rather than later Israeli warplanes will not be able to destroy this infrastructure. This would mean its own military option would be off the table, leaving Israel utterly reliant on Washington.

    The White House believes Israelis have yet to reach a consensus on how to confront Iran, according to a source familiar with the administration's thinking, who added that Obama would stress the need for patience with sanctions and diplomacy. U.S. officials also hope a high-profile recommitment to Israel's security will increase public pressure on Netanyahu to avoid aggravating the situation while negotiations continue.

    NO "GRAND PEACE PLAN"

    Obama is likely to press both the Israelis and Palestinians to return to the negotiating table, but he told American Jewish leaders in private before the trip that he did not intend to deliver a "grand peace plan" during the visit. Participants said the president did not preclude the possibility of launching an initiative in six months or a year.

    The mood was very different at the start of his first term, when Obama said peace between Israelis and Palestinians was a top priority. His 2009 "new beginning" speech in Cairo raised Palestinian hopes of establishing a state in the West Bank, East Jerusalem and Gaza, territories Israel captured in the 1967 Middle East war.

    Obama revived direct peace talks in 2010, but they collapsed soon afterwards when Netanyahu refused to bow to Palestinian demands to extend a partial freeze on settlement building.

    Both the Palestinians and Israelis felt let down by Obama, for very different reasons. The Israelis begrudged the fact that at the start of his first term, he publicly told Israel to halt all Jewish settlement building, saying this put unfair pressure on Netanyahu to make unilateral concessions.

    The Palestinians were furious when Obama then backed away from his demand over settlement construction, saying the peace talks were doomed unless Washington twisted Israel's arm.

    Both sides say that without a serious U.S. engagement, the chances of a deal are close to zero. However, few U.S. analysts expect Obama to expend much political capital on an elusive peace accord that has tied up so many of his predecessors.

    Netanyahu's new government includes former Israeli foreign minister Tzipi Livni, who will take charge of pursuing peace with the Palestinians. But the presence of fiercely pro-settler elements in the coalition, including within the prime minister's own Likud party, suggests a breakthrough is unlikely.

    SETTLEMENT EXPANSION

    Israeli settlement expansion lies at the heart of much of the rancor between Netanyahu and Obama, who has said the United States does not accept the legitimacy of continued settlement.

    Most major powers regard settlements as illegal under international law and an impediment to peace. The Israelis claim historical and biblical ties to the West Bank and East Jerusalem, home to some 500,000 settlers, and dispute their building in these areas is illegal.

    All Israeli leaders since 1967 have backed the settlement movement, but Netanyahu has been especially supportive. Yuval Steinitz, who was replaced as finance minister last Friday, said in November that the government had quietly doubled the portion of the national budget dedicated to West Bank settlements.

    In December and January, Israel announced plans to build more than 11,000 new houses on land Palestinians want for a future state. Pro-settler politicians have landed several top jobs in the new Netanyahu government, including the housing minister, who has pledged to keep on building.

    Many Western diplomats based in Jerusalem privately question whether the so-called two-state solution, of an independent Israel living alongside an independent Palestine, is still viable given the never-ending expansion of settlement blocs.

    Israel's press says Obama has pointedly not invited students from a university in the West Bank settlement of Ariel to attend a speech he is meant to give in Jerusalem this week.

    RELATIONS RESET

    Relations between Obama, 51, and Netanyahu, 63, have been marked by slights, mutual suspicion and outright antipathy.

    Supporters of Netanyahu accuse Obama of trying to browbeat Israel into making concessions to the Palestinians, particularly over the issue of settlements. Obama supporters say Netanyahu interfered in the 2012 presidential election, overtly backing Republican challenger Mitt Romney.

    In one Oval Office meeting in 2011, Netanyahu gave Obama a public lecture on Jewish history. A year later, when the Israeli leader visited the United States, Obama said he was too busy to meet him. They will try to reset their relationship this week.

    Despite the fact that Obama oversaw ever-closer military ties between the two nations, he has never won the affection of ordinary Israelis, who resented the fact that he did not visit their country in his first term, but did go to Egypt and Turkey.

    A poll in the Maariv daily on March 15 said 68 percent of Israelis had an unfavorable or hostile attitude towards Obama, while just 10 percent said they liked him.

    Annual U.S. military aid to Israel is put at $3 billion.

    UPHEAVAL CAUSES FRICTION

    Regional upheaval across the Middle East has proved another source of friction between Israel and the United States over the past two years.

    Israeli officials were especially incensed by what they saw as Washington's approval for the ousting of Egypt's former president, Hosni Mubarak, in February 2011. The late President Anwar Sadat signed the Israeli-Egyptian peace treaty, a pillar of Israel's regional security strategy, in 1979.

    Seen from Netanyahu's office, U.S. policy-making in the region has been naive and failed to anticipate the rise in power of Islamist forces in one Arab nation after another.

    U.S. officials argue that Washington could not have stood in the way of the march of history and believe that dialogue with the new governments that have emerged in the wake of the Arab uprisings is the only way to forge meaningful ties.

    Israel would now like to see the United States play a more active role in supporting non-Islamist rebels battling President Bashar al-Assad in Syria, fearful that growing power vacuums in its northern neighbor will be filled by Jihadist militants.

    (Writing by Crispian Balmer, Additional reporting by Matt Spetalnick in Washington, Editing by Jeffrey Heller and Peter Millership)

    Related articles:
  • just east of a pump station

    Keystone fears resonate along New England pipeline

    SUTTON, Vt. (AP) — The Canadian energy industry insists it has no plans to reverse the flow of a pipeline that carries crude oil from Maine to Montreal, but that has done little to reassure New England towns that oppose the idea and the 18 members of Congress asking for a full environmental review.

    Environmentalists in the U.S. and Canada started raising the alarm about oil they call "tar sands" or "oil sands" being moved through northern New England several months ago.

    "It's a climate-destructive fuel, and Vermont is committed to clean energy," said Jim Murphy, of the National Wildlife Federation. "We don't want to be the pass-through for climate-destructive fuel."

    The Portland Montreal Pipe Line carries foreign crude oil from tankers docked in Portland, Maine, inland to eastern Canada, which imports most of its oil and has refineries there. But as the Canadian energy industry tries to figure out how to profit from new technology allowing them to exploit vast oil reserves in Alberta, it's already looking at ways to ship it east — and, opponents fear, abroad through the Portland conduit.

    Opponents claim moving the Alberta oil through the aging Portland-Montreal pipeline would a threat because it is thicker and more corrosive than the regular crude it now carries, making it more likely to spill and cause an environmental disaster. The oil in question is the same kind that would flow through a controversial extension of the major Keystone pipeline in the central and western U.S.

    "If they find any way at all to get oil sands oil to the eastern Canadian refineries, then I think somebody will argue, 'Let's reverse the Portland-Montreal pipeline because we don't need (that) crude anymore," said David Runnalls, an energy expert with the Centre for International Governance Innovation, a Canadian think tank. "This is all basically just being talked about. How much of this is serious, in the sense that anyone has invested 25 cents in it, is dubious."

    The CEO of the Maine company that owns the pipeline would welcome the opportunity to find new business uses for the 24-inch pipeline, built in the 1950s, which runs through towns in Maine, New Hampshire and Vermont. He has made that pitch in media interviews in the United States and Canada, as well as last month to the Vermont Legislature, but hasn't specifically proposed reversing the flow.

    "We just do not have a project at this time," said CEO Larry Wilson. "We'd consider any number of opportunities, we continue to do so and I want people to comprehend one of the opportunities that we have considered and we'd be happy to consider going forward, is reversal from Montreal into South Portland."

    Raising suspicions of the plans — or lack thereof — is that Calgary-based Enbridge Pipelines Inc. is seeking regulatory working to reverse the flow of another pipeline from Ontario and Montreal, known as Line 9, to carry oil from western Canada to Quebec refineries.

    Still, the company flatly denies having any designs on the Portland-Montreal line.

    "We have no involvement with that company or that line, so it's not really for me to speak on their behalf or to speculate in any way to what their plans are," said Graham White, a spokesman for Enbridge. "The fact that we are reversing Line 9 to the Quebec refineries has no connection whatsoever to the PMPL line or moving any kind of product toward the U.S. coast or Portland."

    The kerfuffle in New England is a less visible component over a larger discussion about how to ship western Canadian crude. The issue is also at play in the proposed Keystone XL pipeline, which would run through several Central and Western states and take the oil to U.S. refineries along the Gulf of Mexico.

    Environmentalists complain the Keystone pipeline and others carrying the same Canadian crude not only are more susceptible to leaks and spills because of the nature of the oil, but also that when burned, the fuel contributes more greenhouse gas emissions than lighter crude.

    The efforts to ship Canadian oil to Eastern refineries and reduce the nation's reliance on imported oil become even sharper if the Keystone plan is rejected by President Barack Obama's administration, Runnalls said.

    There was a brief effort to reverse the Portland-Montreal pipeline in 2008, but it was abandoned during the economic downturn.

    "If you connect the dots, there's huge interest in moving oil out of Alberta, and where is it going to go?" said Sandra Levine, an attorney with the Vermont office of the Conservation Law Foundation, one of the groups fighting the possible reversal of the pipeline.

    The issue has gotten the attention of the members of the U.S. House and Senate, all Democrats save one independent, from as far away as Arizona, who have asked Secretary of State John Kerry to require a comprehensive environmental impact statement should the Portland Pipeline Corp. seek to reverse the flow.

    "The State Department has the responsibility to ensure transnational pipeline projects serve the national interest and prevent projects that will put our communities and the environment at risk of destructive spills," said the Feb. 26 letter to Kerry.

    The talk about tar sands oil galvanized 29 Vermont towns to hold nonbinding votes against reversing the pipeline during town meetings this month. None of the communities that considered the issue voted in favor of the pipeline — but none of the communities that voted host any portion of it.

    In the Vermont town of Burke, just east of a pump station, Carol Krochak, who lives along a brook downstream from the pipeline, read an activist's opinion piece at her town meeting that conveyed the worries of pipeline-reversal opponents.

    "I am not a scientist. I cannot evaluate this," said Krochak, who described herself as "very concerned" and wanted people to know of her fears. "It's critical that people who have that expertise look at it."

    Burke didn't vote against the project, but its planning commission asked the state to examine any reversal proposal through Vermont's land-use planning process, which can take years.

    The votes of concern led the Canadian consulate in Boston to send letters to 23 Vermont towns and to attend meetings in five Maine communities, saying Alberta oil posed no greater threat of a spill or to the environment than traditional crude oil. The letter also stressed officials are unaware of any specific plan to move tar sands oil between Montreal and Portland.

    Runnalls noted, though, that the Canadian oil industry had invested at least $50 billion in Alberta oil.

    "They're ramping up production like mad," he said. "If they can't find more ways to get this out of Alberta, to China or the U.S. or whatever, they're in big trouble."

    Related articles:

    2013年3月14日星期四

    stage director

    Mr. Iwabuchi Tatsuji Iwabuchi's death Mr,モンクレールジャパン と外出したりして、楽しんでいるところだよ」. Tatsuji German literature (an-Iwabuchi Tatsuji = German literature, stage director) 7 days, died in a hospital in Tokyo, 85-year-old. Born in Tokyo,4590. Funeral is done by close relatives only. At a later date, held a remembrance. Eldest son, Mr. chief mourner (Reiji) Ordinance treatment. Award-winning Japanese culture translation in the translation of "The Complete Works Brecht play." I worked as a researcher of German theater.

    2013年3月13日星期三

    ダウン コート メンズ 同社の売り上げは拡大しているが利益は伸びず、その成功には疑問の声もある

    アマゾンの会長、富豪トップ20に返り咲きアマゾンのジェフ・ベゾス会長兼CEOが、株価急騰により、『フォーブス』誌の世界長者番付トップ20に返り咲いた。同社の売り上げは拡大しているが利益は伸びず、その成功には疑問の声もある。ジェフ・ベゾス氏。 アマゾンのジェフ・ベゾス会長兼CEOが、『Forbes』誌の世界長者番付のトップ20に返り咲いた(19位)。前年比50%超というアマゾン株の急騰によるものだ,フェンディトートバッグ 共同。 Forbes誌によると、ベゾス氏の資産は252億ドルで、グーグルのラリー・ペイジ(20位)とセルゲイ・ブリン(21位)の資産より約20億ドル多い。 もちろんグーグル株も急騰しており、先月800ドルを突破して史上最高値に達した。株式分割後のアマゾン株価はまだ300ドルを下回るが、その上昇率はグーグルを上回っている。 Forbes誌によると、ベゾス氏が世界長者番付のトップ20にランクインするのは、1999年に次いで今年で2度目だという。1999年当時、アマゾンは最初のインターネットバブルに乗っていた。バブルがはじけた後、ベゾス氏はアマゾンを、「ドットコムの一時的流行」から、現在あるような強力な小売店へと転換するべく努力してきた。 しかし、株式市場におけるアマゾンの現在の成功は、同社特有の「根拠なき熱狂(グリーンスパン前FRB議長が米国のバブルを評した言葉)」から来るものだという批判も多い。同社は昨年、610億ドルの売り上げを計上し、従来型の小売業者も含めて世界最大の小売業者のひとつとなったが、黒字にはならなかった。 アマゾンの強みは豊富な品揃えと低価格だ。同社は実店舗なら必要となる諸経費が不要なため、従来型の小売業者より低価格な製品を提供できてきた, 重賞は、開催初日の1月5日に中山金杯と京都金杯を施行し、12月23日の阪神カップが最後。だが、アマゾンが赤字であることは、その低価格が一種の幻想であり、同社ビジネスに悪影響を持つことを示すものだという意見もある。 アマゾンで提供する価格が上がれば、主要なライバルであるウォルマート(日本語版記事)のシェアを着実に奪うことができなくなり、ベゾス氏がForbes誌の世界長者番付で、自分より上位にランクインしたウォルマート創業者の親族4人を追い抜く見込みもなくなるだろう。

    フェンディ 店舗  けが人は各地で計約500人

    【ロシア隕石落下】朝の始業時間時、百万都市を襲う 氷点下の街で窓ガラス割れ 流言飛語も冬の空が一瞬真っ白になり、大地が揺れるようなごう音が響いた,iphone4s ケース デコ 2月13日には、50人がナラーティワート県の海軍施設を襲撃し、16人が死亡した。大気が激しく振動し窓ガラスが一斉に砕けた。ロシア南部のチェリャビンスク州に15日に突如落下した隕石は、始業時間帯の百万都市を大混乱に陥れた。 目がくらむような球状の光が低い空を高速で走り、青い空に白い煙が二筋、三筋と太く尾を引いた。 ロシアのテレビは、ガラスの切り傷で血まみれになった市民の映像を映し出した,大使館に相当。この日のチェリャビンスクは氷点下10度近く。破れた窓ガラスから凍るような空気が吹き込んだ。 けが人は各地で計約500人。命にかかわる傷を受けた住民はいないもようだが、予想もしなかった天変地異で、ロシア鉄鋼業の中核を成す工業都市は一時まひ状態に。 「夜にまた隕石が降ってくる」。さまざまな流言飛語がインターネット上を飛び交った。チェリャビンスク州のユレビッチ知事はテレビで、市民に落ち着くよう求めたが、人々の動揺は終日続いた。(共同)

    モンクレール レディース オバマ政権高官の話として伝えた

    安保補佐官にライス氏か 米紙報道、8月以降に米紙ワシントン・ポスト(電子版)は9日、国家安全保障問題を担当するドニロン米大統領補佐官の後任としてライス国連大使が有力候補に浮上していると報じた,プラダトートバッグ 地球からは。オバマ政権高官の話として伝えた。 オバマ大統領は1月からの2期目入りに当たり、ライス氏をクリントン前国務長官の後任に指名する意向だったが、野党共和党が、昨年9月にリビアで起きた米領事館襲撃事件の際にライス氏がテロを否定する趣旨の発言をしたとして激しく反対,HDDベイの下にも5インチベイが2つある。オバマ氏は断念し、現在のケリー国務長官を指名した。 しかし、その後もライス氏の政権内での立場は弱まっておらず、米国が国連安全保障理事会の議長国を務める7月が過ぎれば、いずれかの時点でライス氏がドニロン氏の後任になるとみられているという。 実現すれば、ライス氏はケリー氏とともに米外交政策の重要な意思決定を担うことになり、同紙は「ドラマチックな運命の転換だ」と指摘した。(共同)