Saturday, 19 April 2014

Salsa legend Cheo Feliciano dies in car wreck

Cheo Feliciano performs on June 20, 2008, at The Theater at Madison Square Garden in New York.
Cheo Feliciano performs on June 20, 2008, at The Theater at Madison Square Garden in New York.
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
  • Cheo Feliciano was killed in a single-car wreck early Thursday morning
  • He lost control of his Jaguar and crashed into a light pole
  • He was a salsa legend and Puerto Rican icon
San Juan, Puerto Rico (CNN) -- Puerto Rican salsa legend Jose Luis "Cheo" Feliciano, a giant of the genre, died in a car crash early Thursday morning in San Juan, police said. He was 78.
A crooner with one of the most recognizable and imitated voices in Latin music, Feliciano sang with the long-running Fania All Stars in the heyday of New York's thriving salsa scene in the 1970s.
"Cheo was one of the most important stalwarts and forces of our music," said Juan Moreno Velazquez, a New York-based journalist who has written biographies of salsa's biggest stars. "He will be mourned in Puerto Rico and throughout Latin America. He connected to the people, a true stalwart of our culture for all Latinos. The passing of this icon leaves immense pain throughout Latin America."
Indeed, the governor of Puerto Rico has declared three days of mourning and, throughout the island on Thursday, many motorists drove with their headlights on in tribute.
Puerto Rico Gov. Alejandro Garcia Padilla said in a statement: "Today, Puerto Rico lost one of its greatest voices."
Feliciano was born in Ponce, Puerto Rico, and made a name for himself in New York as a musician and singer for a number of groups.
Considered salsa royalty, Feliciano was awarded a Latin Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award in 2008.
Photos: People we lost in 2014Photos: People we lost in 2014
The fatal car wreck happened about 4:13 a.m. Thursday, Puerto Rico police said.
Feliciano lost control of the Jaguar he was driving and crashed into a light pole, police said. He died at the scene.
Police told CNN en Español the singer was the only person in the car. The speed he was traveling at was under investigation, police said.
His wife, Coco, told reporters that Feliciano did not like to wear a seat belt.
The singer's son, José Enrique Feliciano, praised his father at the scene of the accident.
"Papi is for all times, leaving his music and his heart to the people," he said. "Thank God that we have his music to remember him."
The singer was diagnosed with a treatable type of cancer last year, and he had undergone cancer treatments.
In a statement, U.S. Rep. Nydia Velazquez called Feliciano a Puerto Rican treasure.
"His music embodied the rhythm of Puerto Ricans living in New York City and his lyrics helped tell our collective story," she said.
The death of Feliciano, beloved for his hits such as "Anacaona" and "Amada Mia," was noted on the Twitter and Facebook accounts of some of Latin music's biggest stars, from Ricky Martin to Ruben Blades, who tweeted "BROTHER CHEO. I've just learned of the accident and it is difficult for me to accept."

Singer Ricardo Montaner tweeted: "I cannot believe that Cheo is no longer with us ... Cheo Feliciano one in a million

Why the U.S. government is 'trolling' jihadists on social media

Nasir al-Wuhayshi, head of al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula, in a still from an al Qaeda propaganda video released this week.
Nasir al-Wuhayshi, head of al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula, in a still from an al Qaeda propaganda video released this week.
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
  • The U.S. State Department has begun engaging with Muslim extremists on social media
  • It hopes to dissuade potential Islamic militants by presenting an alternative viewpoint
  • Some have derided the initiative as 'trolling,' while others say it is rattling jihadist leaders
  • Social media has become a vital recruiting ground for Islamic extremists
(CNN) -- "We don't negotiate with terrorists," has long been the standard refrain of governments when it comes to violent extremists.
But these days, in the realm of social media, at least, they are talking to them.
In recent years, the U.S. State Department has launched social media efforts to engage jihadists and their sympathizers online, contesting their claims with the intention of dissuading potential converts to Islamic extremism.
"We are actually giving al Qaeda the benefit of the doubt because we are answering their arguments," says Alberto Fernandez, coordinator of the State Department's Center for Strategic Counterterrorism Communications (CSCC), which runs the program. "The way I see it is we are participating in the marketplace of ideas."
The way I see it is we are participating in the marketplace of ideas
Alberto Fernandez, coordinator, Center for Strategic Counterterrorism Communications
That marketplace is now online, and the corners of it dedicated to Islamic extremist talk can be surreal, noisy, sometimes horrifying places.
Jihadist social media: Decapitations, appeals for wives
Like no conflict before, the Syrian war, the prime focus of the world's jihadists, is being discussed, disputed -- and waged, in its propaganda aspects -- on social media.
The content ranges from the shockingly grisly to the bizarre. Combatants post photos of decapitated heads as trophies of battlefield victories, or images of victims from their own side, captioned with vows to avenge them.
Links to grainy phone-camera footage abound, documenting everything from group executions, to a video appeal summoning Muslim women to come to Syria to find a husband among the Islamist rebels. On Twitter, jihadists post their theological quandaries: how to watch football when it means being exposed to men's bare legs?
Often informed by the memes and language of the broader Internet, the content is disseminated swiftly around the world through a diverse network of jihadists and their supporters, journalists, analysts and onlookers.
A recent tweet by the State Department directed at an Islamist in Somalia.
A recent tweet by the State Department directed at an Islamist in Somalia.
In this way, social media has become a prime conduit for motivating budding extremists to take up arms.
study just published by researchers at King's College London traces how Western-based radical preachers with strong social media influence have inspired a wave of Western Muslims to fight in Syria, where they are now estimated to account for about a quarter of the 11,000 foreign jihadists in the country.
In response to this threat, the U.S. government has been "messaging" in social media in Arabic, Urdu and Somali for three years now, attempting to penetrate the virtual echo chambers of jihadist thought with contrary points of view.
But it is only since their English-language Twitter feed was launched in December, becoming a pugnacious new voice in the conversation, that their efforts have increasingly drawn attention -- and raised eyebrows -- in the West.
This development has led to the spectacle of the U.S. government publicly bickering with jihadists and their ideological fellow travelers on social media, debating Syria, the War on Terror, "the clash of civilizations" in 140-character bursts.
As a psy-op tool, it's pretty laughable
Jonathan Krohn, journalist
A typical exchange occurred recently when a pro-jihadist Twitter user admiringly posted an image of a desecrated Buddha of Bamiyan, one of the monumental statues in Afghanistan destroyed by the Taliban in 2001. The CSCC account tweeted in response: "Destroying ancient culture out of hatred and backwardness are a feature of al Qaeda's ideology."
"Crying about so-called ancient culture when there was no food and children were dying out of hunger," scoffed the Islamist. "The shortage of food in Afghanistan was due to Taliban's disastrous policies," replied the State Department account.
Another user chimed in with a tweet at the State Department: "Al Qaeda just bombed a kindergarten and school with your funding and guns."
Trolling the terrorists?
Some observers have been dismissive of the State Department's efforts, conducted under the banner: "Think Again, Turn Away." Jonathan Krohn, a journalist who, with a colleague, has launched a Twitter account and podcast dedicated to jihadist social media, and sometimes tussles with the State Department account online, describes their activities as "trolling."
"As a psy-op tool, it's pretty laughable," he said. "They target journalists and analysts with as much verve as attacking jihadis."
But others say the efforts appear to having some success at "getting in the heads" of senior Islamic militants.
The two things that motivate people the most when it comes to social media are comedy and anger
Alberto Fernandez
"For years, al Qaeda had gotten in the heads of the U.S. government, and the U.S. government had become very sensitive to various al Qaeda talking points," says Will McCants, a scholar of militant Islam at the Brookings Institution, who was involved in setting up the CSCC.
"I felt there's no reason why we can't return that favor... The more you can make them think on these points, the more you can damage their credibility and shape their behavior."
For his part, Fernandez, a former U.S. ambassador to Equatorial Guinea, rejects the "State Department troll" label.
"Some people use that because I think it's convenient shorthand for an adversarial relationship," he said. "To me, (a troll) ... is a person who is annoying and obnoxious and stupid. Well, we're none of those things, because we're answering their charges with facts."
But he admits to drawing on the same emotional arsenal as an Internet troll in the center's work.
"People who study the Internet more than I do... mention that the two things that motivate people the most when it comes to social media are comedy and anger," he said. "If you're talking about al Qaeda -- let's face it, it's going to be negative. So it might as well be pointed."
'An ungoverned space'
For the U.S. government, entering the social media fray to argue with terrorists has required a substantial paradigm shift. The default posture had been not to dignify the extremists with a response. But gradually, said Fernandez, the government realized that doing so was simply surrendering ground to their opponents.
The Internet is also an ungoverned space, so it's an area of opportunity for them
Alberto Fernandez
"We seek to contest space that previously had been ceded to our adversary," he said. Al Qaeda tends to thrive in "the ungoverned spaces of the world," such as "the Sahara desert, or places in Somalia or Yemen or Syria. The Internet is also an ungoverned space, so it's an area of opportunity for them."
Al Qaeda has long publicly acknowledged the crucial importance of propaganda to their cause, he said, with its leader Ayman al-Zawahiri quoted as saying that "more than half" their battle to win the hearts and minds of Muslims was being waged through media.
"We in the West think kinetic strikes or arresting people or fighting... that's important," said Fernandez. "Media stuff... it's secondary or tertiary. Al Qaeda doesn't see it that way."
The aim was also, broadly, to make "life more difficult for the extremists." "It's very easy if you're out there and able to say whatever you want and nobody contradicts you," said Fernandez.
Another recent image tweeted by the U.S. State Department.
Another recent image tweeted by the U.S. State Department.
McCants said the online space taken up by jihadist chatter has expanded and become much more diffuse in recent years, as it had migrated from discussion boards to social media platforms like Twitter, and been increasingly conducted in English.
"There are many more people talking," he said, adding that while that meant they could be harder to find, "once you find them you really can insert yourself and engage directly. They have to listen to it, at least until they block you."
Fernandez said the CSCC's efforts were aimed not at converting extremists -- although "it would be nice" -- but reaching the wider audience of onlookers that jihadists were trying to influence. "In a way, we're picking a fight with the extremists, because the extremists are there to radicalize other people," he said.
Their "bread and butter" was using jihadists' own content to make the case against them, he said, such as when they recently hijacked a hashtag in Arabic -- "accomplishments of the Islamic state" -- that had been started by supporters of the bloodthirsty Islamist militant group ISIS.
We're picking a fight with the extremists, because the extremists are there to radicalize other people
Alberto Fernandez
The CSCC account used the hashtag on 176 tweets that Fernandez said listed the true achievements of ISIS: "Things like poverty, murder, detracting from the decency of the Syrian revolution, helping the Assad regime by trading oil with them."
Is it working?
Studies have pointed to the potential shortcomings of this kind of work: that the counter-messaging is simply ignored, as Krohn suggests it often is, or stirs up antagonism by providing an opponent for extremists to rally against.
So is the project working well enough to justify its 50 staff and a $5 million a year budget?
Fernandez says feedback had been positive and the work would continue, although it was difficult to quantify results objectively. "We are never going to know ... unless they put up their hand and say 'I saw your stuff and decided not to become a terrorist'," he said. "You're almost never going to get that."
The initiative, already active across Twitter, Facebook and YouTube, would look to branch out to other social media where jihadists were active. "What about Ask.fm? What about Instagram? What about Pinterest?" said Fernandez. "In a way, we're mirroring or shadowing what they do."
McCants said he considered the program "a qualified success," and that criticisms of the work tended not to be data-driven.
We got quite good at this during the Cold War, and then we forgot
Will McCants, scholar of militant Islam
"I don't think anyone believes this has been a dramatic blow against terrorism recruitment... But I think on this particular measure of getting inside the heads of terrorist recruiters and leaders -- at least in the al Qaeda orbit -- it has been successful."
He believed jihadist groups had been rattled by certain of the CSCC's claims -- in particular, that the victims of Islamic extremists were predominantly other Muslims. It was possible to tell when messaging had struck a nerve, he said, as jihadist leaders would typically respond "by putting messages out on the discussion boards saying, 'Listen, they're putting these lies out, don't engage them'."

"We got quite good at this during the Cold War, and then we forgot, because as the only superpower, we didn't really have to do it," he said. "(But) the U.S. government is rediscovering its skills in this sort of thing

Nadal suffers shock Monte Carlo defeat to countryman David Ferrer

Rafael Nadal looks forlorn as he loses to David Ferrer in the 2014 Monte Carlo Masters.
Rafael Nadal looks forlorn as he loses to David Ferrer in the 2014 Monte Carlo Masters.
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
  • David Ferrer defeats Rafael Nadal in quarterfinals of Monte Carlo Masters
  • Win marks Ferrer's first clay court victory over Nadal in a decade
  • Ferrer will now face Australian Open champion Stanislas Wawrinka in semifinals
(CNN) -- Rafael Nadal suffered only his third defeat in 11 years at the Monte Carlo Masters Friday losing in straight sets to fellow Spaniard David Ferrer.
The 32-year-old Ferrer produced a typically energetic performance to take the quarterfinal match 7-6 (7/1) 6-4 marking the first time he has beaten Nadal on clay in over a decade.
"I am happy because I am in the semifinal and because I am playing very good this week," a delighted Ferrer told the ATP Tour's official website.
"Rafa is not a machine. Sometimes he can play not so good always. Well, maybe today he didn't play his best tennis, and I played very good."
The pair swapped four service breaks in an enthralling 85-minute first set that Ferrer eventually took on a tie break.
Davis Cup showdown
Teen sensation with the X factor
In the footsteps of 'Grand Slam Stan'
Ferrer then stretched into a commanding 5-2 lead at the start of the second before being pegged back to 5-4.
The diminutive Spaniard kept his cool under pressure, however, calmly serving out to take the set 6-4 and with it the match.
Nadal was gracious in defeat, although he admitted concern at what was an uncharacteristically tepid performance at one of his favored events.
The world No. 1 won eight titles in a row at Monte Carlo between 2005 and 2012 before his triumphant run was halted by Novak Djokovic in last year's final.
"When you play tennis, you can lose, you can win," Nadal said. "When the opponent is doing things better than you, the normal thing is you lose. That's what happened today."
"I didn't play the right way. I didn't play with the right intensity with my forehand. I played too short. I gave him the chance to have control of the point almost all the time. He did much better than me, so I just congratulate him."
World No. 6, Ferrer, will now face Australian Open champion Stanislas Wawrinka in the semifinal Saturday.
The Swiss overcame Canada's Milos Raonic 7-6 (7-5) 6-2 to reach his first semifinal since his Melbourne triumph earlier this year.
Elsewhere Roger Federer defeated home favorite Jo Wilfred Tsonga 2-6 7-6 (8-6) 6-1 to set up an enticing semifinal match against Novak Djokovic.

The Serb eventually overcame Guillermo Garcia-Lopez of Spain in Friday's final quarter final match winning 4-6 6-3 6-1.

Researchers claim to hack fingerprint sensor on Samsung Galaxy S5

samsung galaxy s5

Well, that didn't take long.

Four days after Samsung released its long-awaited Galaxy S5, security researchers say they've already found a way to hack the smartphone's fingerprint sensor.
In a video posted Tuesday on YouTube, experts from Security Research Labs demonstrated an apparent breach of the S5 using similar tactics employed late last year to bypass the fingerprint lock on Apple's(AAPLFortune 500) iPhone 5s.
The group says it used a camera-phone photo of a fingerprint on a smartphone screen to create a "fake finger" sheet out of a wood-glue mold. That allowed them to access the S5's home screen and even send money via the PayPal app, which uses fingerprint authentication.
The cost to build a Samsung Galaxy S5
"Samsung does not seem to have learned from what others have done less poorly," Security Research Labs said.
"Incorporation of fingerprint authentication into highly sensitive apps such as PayPal gives a would-be attacker an even greater incentive to learn the simple skill of fingerprint spoofing."
Samsung (SSNLF) did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
In a statement Tuesday PayPal said it took the SRL findings "very seriously," but was "still confident that fingerprint authentication offers an easier and more secure way to pay on mobile devices than passwords or credit cards."
The company says it can quickly deactivate fingerprint keys on lost or stolen devices, and that users are covered in case of fraud by its purchase protection policy

Watch Elon Musk's Reusable Rocket Launch And Land Itself In This Amazing Video Shot By A Drone

Elon Musk's private space company, SpaceX, has been experimenting with reusable rockets since last year.
Because the cost of fuel is much less compared to the cost of building a rocket from scratch every time, Musk and his team are trying to master reusable rockets so they can get closer to their goal of making commercial space travel more affordable. 
The company just posted an amazing video on YouTube of its Falcon 9 Reusable rocket lifting off, rising 250 meters, hovering, and landing on the ground right next to the launch pad.
Even cooler, the video was shot by a drone. 
Later today, SpaceX will make its second attempt to send its Dragon spacecraft, carrying 4,000 pounds of supplies, on a Falcon 9 rocket (like the one in the video) to the International Space Station on its third resupply mission.
That launch is scheduled for 3:25 p.m. Eastern and will be broadcast live from the SpaceX website starting at 2:45 p.m.


Read more: http://www.businessinsider.com/elon-musks-f9r-first-flight-test-2014-4#ixzz2zL1wu970

Facebook Has Become The New Yahoo, And It's Obvious Mark Zuckerberg Knows It

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One thing Silicon Valley industry insiders like to knowingly whisper to each other is that Facebook is the new Yahoo.
This winter, Facebook halted the rollout of a beautiful redesign.
The reason: The company realized that while the redesign looked great on new computers with big, sharp screens, it was hard to use on older computers with small, crappy screens. Most of Facebook's users still have small, crappy screens.
So, Facebook scrapped the photo-rich redesign and came out with a design that, while it may look like it's from 2009, works really well for most of its users. 
If Facebook can’t innovate on design because of its huge install base, then it really is becoming the next Yahoo.
Almost since its beginning, Yahoo has dealt with a classic innovator's dilemma.
It couldn't try really radical things with Yahoo.com because Yahoo.com was already such a huge business due to its popularity with hundreds of millions of mainstream users.
This left Yahoo vulnerable to smaller companies that can do radical things, because they have not yet become dependent on an existing business. Eventually those smaller companies, Google and Facebook among them, became much bigger companies that ate into Yahoo's revenues.
Now, Facebook is dealing with the same problem.
It can't redesign its site in a really cool, modern way that will appeal to users of 2017 because it would annoy the billion users it picked up starting in 2004.
This leaves it vulnerable to startups that can build social sharing tools optimized for tablets, phones, and computers built with today's technologies. Those startups don't need a billion users today to keep growing until they can start taking ad dollars away from Facebook.
The good news for Facebook shareholders is Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg seems to realize how much his company looks like Yahoo from circa 2005 and he's doing something about it.
Zuckerberg is using Facebook's massive market cap to make stock-rich acquisitions of startups doing the risky, innovative things Facebook can no longer do with Facebook.com. In the past 24 months, Zuckerberg has spent $22 billion purchasing InstagramWhatsapp, and Oculus.
You may wonder why the people running Yahoo didn't do the same thing a decade ago.
The truth is, they tried to.
But they made one big mistake that Zuckerberg isn’t making.
Specifically, they worried too much about paying the exact right price for big-ticket acquisitions. 
There's one really good example of this from Yahoo's history.
Back in 2006, Yahoo could have purchased a small, fast-growing startup that has, in the years since, become a $150 billion+ company.
Yahoo's board and this startup's board had both approved a deal that would have sold the startup to Yahoo for $1 billion.
But then, at the last minute, Yahoo's CEO, Terry Semel, decided $1 billion was too much. He went to the startup's CEO and told him the price he was willing to pay was now $850 million.
What Semel didn't know was that the startup CEO hadn't really wanted to sell his company. But he'd told his board that if anyone ever offered $1 billion, he would take it.
So, when Yahoo had offered $1 billion, it had effectively called the startup CEO's bluff with his board. The deal was going to get done.  
But as soon as Semel offered $850 million, the startup CEO took the opportunity to back out of the deal entirely.
And that's how, in an effort to save $150 million, Yahoo lost out on a company now worth $150 billion.
That company? 
Facebook.
The CEO who turned down $850 million, but would have taken $1 billion?
Mark Zuckerberg.
The lesson here is not that Facebook will avoid Yahoo's fate because it is willing to make huge acquisitions.
Yahoo made plenty of huge acquisitions including Geocities and Broadcast.com.
The lesson Zuckerberg seems to have learned from Semel is that when he has already decided to make a huge acquisition, he isn't going to lose the deal over some amount of money that is a tiny fraction of that startup's future value.
He knows that in the technology business, acquisitions have a binary outcome: They either save you from your innovator's dilemma or they don't.


Read more: http://www.businessinsider.com/facebook-has-become-the-new-yahoo-2014-3#ixzz2zL16zLDR

How Is Yahoo So Worthless?

yahoo marissa meyer
Julie Jacobson/AP
Yahoo president and CEO Marissa Mayer
Yahoo is huge.
It is the fourth-biggest Internet domain in the United States. It is the fourth-biggest seller of online ads in the country.
It is the most popular destination for fantasy sports, controls one the most-trafficked home pages in news, and owns the eighth-most popular email client. In the last three months, it collected more than $1 billion in revenue. It's very rich.
It's also totally worthless.
Technically, it's worse than worthless. Worthless means without worth. Worthless means $0.00. But Yahoo's core business—mostly search and display advertising—is worth more like negative-$10 billion, according to Bloomberg View's Matthew C. Klein.
The math: Yahoo's total market cap is $37 billion. Its 24 percent stake in Alibaba, the eBay of China, is worth an estimated $37 billion (Alibaba hasn't IPO'd yet, so this figure will vary), and its 35 percent stake in Yahoo Japan is worth about $10 billion. That means its core business is valued around negative-$10 billion.
graph
Yahoo! Market value.

It also suggests, as Klein points out, that Yahoo’s core ad-sale business has lost $12 billion in value since Marissa Mayer took over as CEO.
How is this possible? Yahoo is a profitable company. How could those profits be worth less-than-zero to shareholders?
One possibility is that investors are discounting Yahoo's stake in Alibaba and Yahoo Japan by a lot, because the government would heavily tax whatever value the company would try to pass along to shareholders after selling its shares. But even if Yahoo sold its shares in Alibaba and Yahoo Japan and took the tax hit, the remaining profitable company—call it Core Yahoo—would have to trade above $0.00. You can't have a public company trade at a negative-$10 billion valuation. And Yahoo isn't "worthless" by at least one very important measure: Its ad division is profitable!
Matthew Levine calls this paradox the "conglomerate discount." Core Yahoo might be valued at less-than-zilch now that it's a part of the conglomerate bundle called Yahoo Inc.
But as an independent company, Core Yahoo's value would trade at a higher price. "Core Yahoo is worth less than zero because it's an arithmetic residue of taking a bunch of businesses with very public price tags on them and applying a conglomerate discount," Levine writes.
Yahoo's shareholders, upon gaining a full appreciation that they own a profitable ad business that the market is valuing at a deliriously low price, will perhaps start screaming even louder for the company to sell its holdings. Even a Yahoo Inc worth $0.01 would mean unlocking more than $10 billion in value.
Beyond the finances, Yahoo's big picture is that digital advertising remains a pretty horrible business, where massive audience translates into pennies-worth of value (at best!).
The future of our eyes and ears is digital, but the online world looks to be dominated by two non-Yahoo companies: Facebook and Google. Yahoo doesn't have social scale and it doesn't control search. Instead, it merely has massive digital attention, something so cheap that even its profits are easily ignored.


Read more: http://www.theatlantic.com/business/archive/2014/04/the-peculiar-worthlessness-of-yahoo/360851/#ixzz2zL0o3bs5