Friday, August 2, 2013

How to customize and manage Twitter for iOS push notifications: Via iMore Blog

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Source: http://forums.imore.com/apps-games/259901-how-customize-manage-twitter-ios-push-notifications-via-imore-blog.html

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Spain's Rajoy says he was wrong to trust treasurer in party funding scandal

By Andr?s Gonz?lez

MADRID (Reuters) - Spanish Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy apologized on Thursday for mishandling a major corruption scandal, but denied he or his center-right People's Party accepted illegal payments and rejected opposition calls to step down.

It was the first time Rajoy had admitted any error since it emerged in January that the ruling party's former treasurer Luis Barcenas - in jail pending trial on charges of bribery and tax evasion - hid up to 48 million euros in Swiss bank accounts.

"I was wrong. I'm sorry but that is how it was. I was wrong in trusting someone we now know didn't deserve it," Rajoy told parliament at the start of a 5-1/2-hour special debate on the funding scandal that was carried live on television.

In a defiant one-hour speech and two shorter rounds of debate, he made no other admission of wrongdoing.

But he acknowledged the scandal has damaged Spain's image abroad at a time when his government is wrestling with a shrinking economy, 26 percent unemployment and a big budget gap.

Investors have shrugged off the scandal as it has not destabilized the government and on Thursday Spain sold debt more cheaply than two weeks ago. A European Central Bank back-stop for ailing euro zone countries has held Spain's borrowing costs at a reasonable level after they jumped last year and ignited fears of an international bailout.

Barcenas, who left his post in 2009 but continued receiving financial support from the party, told a judge he collected millions in cash donations from construction magnates and distributed them to senior PP figures, including Rajoy.

The Spanish leader has been criticized for maintaining contact with Barcenas up until recently. In January the prime minister sent the former treasurer an SMS text message that read: "Luis. I understand. Be strong. I'll call you tomorrow."

During the debate, opposition leaders from the Socialist and other parties repeated demands that Rajoy quit.

"Any other leader of a serious democracy in Europe would have stepped down over the SMS messages that you found perfectly acceptable. Can you imagine (German Chancellor Angela) Merkel texting a tax evader to tell him to 'be strong,?" asked Socialist leader Alfredo Perez Rubalcaba.

However, Rajoy said he would stay in office and continue with economic measures which have included spending cuts, tax hikes and rules to make hiring and firing less costly, policies welcomed by investors and Spain's European partners.

For months Rajoy had avoided any detailed statement on the Barcenas scandal. But as public pressure for accountability has grown and opposition parties threatened to call a vote of no confidence, Rajoy agreed to testify before lawmakers.

TAXES PAID

Rajoy said he had always declared all his income to tax authorities and said a judicial investigation would prove that there was no illegal financing in the party.

Barcenas, who worked 30 years for the PP, has testified that he maintained for almost two decades a set of shadow accounts tracking a slush fund of cash donations and payments that were hidden from tax authorities and auditors.

Rajoy dismissed the allegations as "a surprising and imaginative collection of lies" and said his party would be vindicated by the official investigation.

He said party members received payments beyond their salaries, for expenses and for seniority premiums, but said all those items were officially registered and that it was up to each individual to declare them in tax statements.

"The judge will determine how to proceed with each insinuation but I can tell you now that there was no shadow accounting and no crime was covered up," he said.

The scandal has damaged Rajoy's credibility and eroded voter support for the PP. But with the prime minister expected to hold on to power due to his party's strong majority in parliament, investors have barely reacted.

"There was some market concern about a month ago that Rajoy would be forced to resign but since then he's said he would carry out the full term, so no one's really paying attention to it," said Bhavisha Patel, strategist at consultancy 4Cast.

Opinion polls show politicians and political parties are widely mistrusted and the Socialists and the PP have lost significant ground to smaller parties which are perceived to be more honest.

(Writing by Fiona Ortiz; Editing by Gareth Jones)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/spains-rajoy-faces-lawmakers-over-corruption-scandal-071225328.html

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Thursday, August 1, 2013

Police: Explosion on FedEx in San Francisco, California, caused by package containing fireworks - @KTVU

San Francisco police and firefighters responded to a report of an explosion involving a FedEx truck in the city's South of Market neighborhood Wednesday afternoon but didn't find any damage.

There was also no one injured in the incident, which was reported at 2:01 p.m. near Sixth and Tehama streets, fire department spokeswoman Mindy Talmadge said.

Police spokeswoman Officer Tracy Turner said the FedEx driver called 911 to report an explosion.

When officers arrived, however, they could not find any sign that an explosion had occurred, Turner said.

A bomb squad responded and Tehama and Sixth streets were shut down, but the streets reopened about an hour later.

The FedEx truck appeared to be intact, and the driver declined to speak with reporters at the scene.

Turner said it is possible that someone threw a firecracker in the area of the truck.

Michael McKinney, a security guard who works on that block of Tehama Street, said there was a similar incident on Monday involving a report of an explosion with no damage.

He said he heard a loud bang that day, and wondered if someone had thrown some sort of explosive object from a window.?

Talmadge said initial reports indicated that the explosion might have been caused by a package in the truck containing fireworks, but Turner said police determined that was not the case.

Source: http://www.ktvu.com/news/news/disasters/explosion-fedex-truck-results-traffic-shut-down-so/nY9Py/

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Cleveland kidnapper's abuse aired at sentencing

CLEVELAND (AP) ? Three months after an Ohio woman kicked out part of a door to end nearly a decade of captivity, a former school bus driver who kidnapped three women and subjected them to years of sexual and physical abuse was being sentenced Thursday.

Prosecutors began detailing Ariel Castro's daily assaults on the women, recounted in diaries that compared the women's experience to that of prisoners of war. With the possibility of the death penalty for a forced miscarriage taken off the table, Castro stands to get life in prison plus 1,000 years.

Early in the hearing, Castro tried to apologize to the victims, but after speaking with the judge said he would do that later in the proceeding.

A police officer who helped rescue the women said one was reluctant to come out of her room even when she saw the officers. They were scared even after they were taken out of the house and quickly began sharing details about the horrors they went through, saying that they had been starved and beaten.

"They were just shouting out a lot of things," said Cleveland police officer Barb Johnson. She described the women as thin, pale and scared.

Responding to questions from prosecutors, Cleveland police detective Andrew Harasimchuk said that the women all described a pattern of being physically, sexually and emotionally assaulted for years. He said all three women were abducted after Castro offered them a ride and that each was chained in his basement and sexually assaulted within a few hours of being kidnapped.

Cuyahoga County prosecutor Tim McGinty said in a sentencing memorandum filed Wednesday that Castro, who chained his captives and fed them only one meal a day, "admits his disgusting and inhuman conduct" but "remains remorseless for his actions."

The memorandum says many of the specific charges in Castro's indictment reflect conduct documented by one of the women in her diary.

"The entries speak of forced sexual conduct, of being locked in a dark room, of anticipating the next session of abuse, of the dreams of someday escaping and being reunited with family, of being chained to a wall, of being held like a prisoner of war ... of being treated like an animal," it says.

The sentencing could take up to four hours, court officials said, with Castro, his attorneys, his victims and prosecutors getting a chance to speak. The legal team representing the women's interests declined to comment on whether they would testify or send statements to the court.

Prosecutors brought a model of the house where Castro, 53, imprisoned the women into the courtroom Thursday ahead of the sentencing.

In the court filing, McGinty said Castro chained his captives by their ankles, fed them only one meal a day and provided plastic toilets in their bedrooms that were infrequently emptied, the filing said. At one point, he locked all of them in a vehicle in his garage for three days while he had a visitor, according to McGinty's filing.

The women quickly escaped after Amanda Berry kicked out the door panel on May 6 and Castro was arrested within hours. The women disappeared separately between 2002 and 2004, when they were 14, 16 and 20 years old.

Other horrific details of the women's ordeal had already emerged, including tales of being chained to poles in the basement or a bedroom heater or inside a van, with one woman forced to wear a motorcycle helmet while chained in the basement and, after she tried to escape, having a vacuum cord wrapped around her neck.

Castro repeatedly starved and beat one of the victims each time she was pregnant, forcing her to miscarry five times.

He forced the same woman on threat of death to safely deliver the child he fathered with another victim on Christmas Day 2006. The same day, prosecutors say, Castro raped the woman who helped deliver his daughter.

Prosecutors will ask the judge to prohibit Castro from ever seeing his daughter, now 6.

As part of his plea deal, Castro received a sentence of life with no chance of parole for aggravated murder in the forced miscarriage. He then received 1,000 years for the kidnapping, rape, assault and other charges.

Berry, 27, made a surprise onstage appearance at a rap concert last weekend, and a second victim, Gina DeJesus, 23, has made a few televised comments. Knight, 32, appeared with Berry and DeJesus in a video in early July thanking the community for its support.

Knight, the first of three to disappear, also sent police a handwritten letter thanking them for their help collecting cards and gifts for the women. In the note, Knight told Second District Cmdr. Keith Sulzer, "Life is tough, but I'm tougher!"

___

Welsh-Huggins reported from Columbus, Ohio.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/cleveland-kidnappers-abuse-aired-sentencing-143923373.html

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Samantha Wyatt: Right-Wing Media Characterize Government Effort To Reduce Fraud, Error, And Debt As "Mind Control"

Right-wing media have baselessly smeared the White House's new Behavioral Insights Team, labeling it "propaganda," "mind control," and "Orwellian." In reality, the Behavioral Insights Team is modeled off a similar unit in Britain that has proven effective in?encouraging timely tax payment?and reducing energy bills and consumption.

Conservative media seized on White House plans to create a Behavioral Insights Team on July 30, when FoxNews.com?obtained a document?describing the program and its search for behavioral scientists.

Breitbart.com quickly jumped on the story,?suggesting?that the Obama administration will use the program to push?a?social agenda:? "The Obama administration has not been shy about attempting to use its influence - or taxpayer money - to push enthusiasm for its agenda, including Obamacare, nutrition, and gay rights."

Fox stoked fears by hyping the program on multiple shows with little mention of its benefits. On?the July 30 edition of?Lou Dobbs Tonight,?Fox Business host Lou Dobbs?commented?on FoxNews.com's report on?the program, saying, "To many, that sounds purely like propaganda and mind control."

On July 31,?Fox & Friends?co-hosts Steve Doocy and Brian Kilmeade?implied?that the Behavioral Insights?Team, described onscreen as?the?"Nudge Squad," would lead to government coercion of citizens:

DOOCY: The problem?as well?is sometimes a nudge can lead to a shove, so you just don't want to overdo it.

KILMEADE:?Right.?Nudge, push, shove, poke, we don't know. Here's the thing?--

DOOCY: I don't want anybody poking me.

America Live?host Shannon Bream later?described?the program as "raising serious concerns about Big Brother," and?Fox?News contributor Monica Crowley?fear mongered?that the program "has an Orwellian ring to it."

Contrary to right-wing media claims, the goals of the Behavioral Insights Team are far from?"mind control."?Rather, the?program?is modeled off its British counterpart, which has?utilized behavioral psychology?to target?fraud, error, and debt, and to reduce energy costs and consumption.

The document cited by Fox News?states?that using behavioral insights to inform policy can "help design?public?policies that work better, cost less, and help people to achieve their goals," and cites?the British Behavioural Insights Team commissioned under David Cameron as a money-saving model:

A growing body of evidence suggests that insights from the social and behavioral sciences can be used to help design public policies that work better, cost less, and help people to achieve their goals. The practice of using behavioral insights to inform policy has seen success overseas. In 2010, UK Prime Minister David Cameron commissioned the Behavioural Insights Team, which through a process of rapid, iterative experimentation ("Test, Learn, Adapt"), has successfully identified and tested interventions that will further advance priorities of the British government, while saving the government at least ?1 billion within the next five years (see previous Annual Reports 2010-11 and 2011-12).

The British Behavioural Insights Team found through experimentation that utilizing behavioral insights to shape policy is highly effective.?The Guardian?wrote?of the approach: "It is politics done like science, effectively?...?and, in many cases, it appears to work."

Subtle psychological "nudges" are particularly effective in encouraging people to pay their taxes on time.?Writing in?The New York Times, economist Richard Thaler?described?the program's income tax experiment, which found that changing the wording of late tax reminder letters?increased repayment rates by fifteen percent:

Letters using various messages were sent to 140,000 taxpayers in a randomized trial. As the theory predicted, referring to the social norm of a particular area (perhaps, "9 out of 10 people in Exeter pay their taxes on time") gave the best results: a 15-percentage-point increase in the number of people who paid before the six-week deadline, compared with results from the old-style letter, which was used as a control condition.

The?British?tax authorities estimate that this initiative, if rolled out across the country, could generate ?30 million of extra revenue annually, according to Thaler. Another trial that sought to reduce energy waste was?similarly effective, offering individuals subsidized loft clearance to encourage them to insulate their homes and reduce their energy bills and consumption.

Source: http://mediamatters.org/blog/195165

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Rowling accepts donation for identity revelation

LONDON (AP) ? Author JK Rowling has accepted a charitable donation from a law firm which revealed she wrote a crime novel under a pseudonym.

The Harry Potter author says her crime-writing alter ego, Robert Galbraith, had respectable sales before being exposed in the Sunday Times as a pseudonym. Though there had been speculation she had leaked the news to bolster sales, the law firm Russells acknowledged one if its partners had let the information slip to his wife's best friend, who tweeted it to a Sunday Times columnist.

Rowling sued the law firm partner. Her attorney, Jenny Afia, told Britain's High Court on Wednesday that Rowling was "distressed by such a fundamental betrayal of trust."

The firm agreed to reimburse Rowling's legal costs and to make a payment to the Soldiers' Charity.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/4e67281c3f754d0696fbfdee0f3f1469/Article_2013-07-31-Britain-Rowling/id-693b4933ad1847b1921fcd4e12327388

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In addition to making NBA history, Ossie Schectman, center, earned All-America honors at Long Island University

Man who scored first points in NBA history dies at 94

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Arizona Cardinals cheerleader is an Iraq veteran

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Roberto Hernandez came within one out of a complete-game shutout, and Yunel ...

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/wtsp/video/~3/Oe5ks0FxEPs/default.aspx

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CBS Sports: MLB prepared to ban A-Rod for life

Report: MLB prepared to ban A-Rod for life - CBSSports.com

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Source: http://www.cbssports.com/mlb/blog/eye-on-baseball/22954908/report-mlb-prepared-to-ban-arod-for-life

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Barclays seeks $9 billion from shareholders to appease regulator

By Steve Slater and Matt Scuffham

LONDON (Reuters) - Barclays plans to raise 5.8 billion pounds ($8.9 billion) from its shareholders to address calls from Britain's financial regulator for the 320-year-old bank to strengthen its capital reserves against potential market shocks.

The Bank of England's Prudential Regulation Authority (PRA) said on Tuesday Barclays needed an extra 12.8 billion pounds ($19.7 billion) of capital, more than it estimated last month, and that it should fill the shortfall in the next year.

Barclays announced the fundraising alongside news that it would take another 2 billion pounds charge for mis-selling products and said it was also pushing back its target to deliver a key profitability goal.

Banks across Europe are battling to meet tougher regulations aimed at preventing a repeat of the financial crisis, and many are also struggling to move on from past misdeeds. Deutsche Bank , for example, missed second-quarter profit forecasts on Tuesday, hit by higher legal costs.

Barclays chief executive Antony Jenkins said he was reacting "quickly and decisively" to the PRA and that it was happy with his plan, which also includes selling 2 billion pounds of bonds that convert into equity or are wiped out if the bank hits trouble, and shrinking loans a further 65-80 billion pounds.

"I think they've done the right thing. Anything else would have been a fudge, they needed to get on and raise equity," said Mike Trippitt, analyst at Numis Securities. He said earlier this month Barclays could need 6-12 billion pounds of capital, which did not include the extra mis-selling provision.

However, investors said Barclays' move could dent the British government's plans to start selling its shares in Lloyds Banking Group later this year, by sucking up market demand for bank stock.

The rights issue will offer shareholders one new share for every four owned at 185 pence, in an offer that allows existing shareholders to buy discounted shares first to give them a chance to maintain their stake.

At 0830 GMT, Barclays shares were down 4.6 percent at 294.8 pence, the weakest performance in the European bank index <.sx7p>.

Regulators in Britain, Switzerland, the United States and elsewhere have been increasing scrutiny on leverage ratios, which do not rely on banks' own risk assessments but express a bank's capital as a proportion of its overall assets.

Barclays said the PRA had estimated its leverage ratio at 2.2 percent at the end of June, lower than the 2.5 percent it had estimated last month.

"As a consequence of the PRA's review we have had to modify our capital plans, in order to meet the 3 percent leverage ratio target by June 2014," Jenkins said, referring to a key PRA goal.

MIS-SELLING PAIN

Barclays said it was pushing back its target to deliver a return on equity above its cost of equity - previously 11.5 percent - to 2016, a year later than Jenkins set out in a far-reaching restructuring unveiled in February.

But it bumped up its dividend payout expectations, saying it expected to distribute 40-50 percent of earnings in 2014 compared with the 30 percent previously predicted.

Barclays set aside another 1.35 billion pounds in its first-half results to compensate customers for mis-sold payment protection insurance (PPI), taking its total provision for that to 4 billion pounds.

British banks have now set aside more than 15 billion pounds to cover PPI compensation, and Barclays' latest move signals rivals may also have to bump up their provisions.

Barclays also set aside a further 650 million pounds for the mis-selling of complex interest rate hedging products to small firms.

The bank reported a pretax profit of 1.7 billion pounds for the six months ended June, almost double its 871 million pound profit a year ago. Its adjusted pretax profit was 3.6 billion pounds, just below the average forecast of 3.7 billion pounds from 22 analysts polled by the company.

It said it was "cautious" on the outlook and operating environment and that it would accelerate its plan to cut costs. Jenkins' restructuring plan absorbed 640 million pounds of costs in the first half.

Barclays will pay about 130 million pounds in fees and commission on the rights issue. It will be launched in September, and new shares are expected to be issued on October 3, or possibly November 7. The shares have been priced at a 40 percent discount to Monday's closing price.

(Editing by Mark Potter)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/barclays-plans-5-8-billion-pound-rights-issue-061701241.html

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