Monday, June 17, 2013

Workshops on effective writing ? technical writers adding value ...

Our team at Atlassian has just started presenting a series of workshops for other Atlassians, on how to write effectively. People are very appreciative of the knowledge they gain in the workshops. In turn, we technical writers learn a lot from the participants. We see how much other people value our own skills. And we get a fresh look at writing and documentation, from another viewpoint. What?s more, the workshops are fun and invigorating. Added value all round!

I?m sharing the idea and content of the workshops in this post, because we?re finding them so valuable. It?s very rewarding as a technical writer, to see how much people value our knowledge and skill. It?s also interesting to see how much they appreciate a guiding hand in what we consider the very basics of writing a technical document.

Sometimes we forget just how much we know. :)

Before the session, the technical writer liaises with the manager of the team about to attend the workshop. We discuss the primary focus, and find out whether the team has any current plans to write documents or blog posts. Just recently in our organisation, a number of teams have put strategic initiatives in place to write and blog more. So our workshops come at a good time.

We also ask the participants and team leads to think of documents that need writing, so that their post-workshop assignments can be real documents.

After the session, the participants complete their assignments and choose one of the available technical writers to do a review. The review is a half-hour one-on-one chat, focusing on the document and any further questions the participant may have.

Kicking off the workshop

[The next few sections in this post contain the content of the workshops. The content is on a page on our internal wiki, which the technical writers use as a basis for the workshop. Participants can also use the page as a reference after the session.]

In this session you?ll learn how to write documents that people will find, read, and get what they need from. The aim is to provide a practical guide to help you get started quickly, and to put you in touch with the technical writers who can assist with reviewing your work.

We cover two types of document:

  • A ?how to? guide on the corporate intranet.
  • A blog post on the corporate external blog.

Getting started on a document

How do you write a document?
One word at a time? not!

The big picture is the important thing.

  • Sit back, think, and plan the document before you start.
  • While writing, if the words don?t come, make a note and continue writing. Preserve the big picture. Come back later to fill in the gaps.

Talking to your audience

User icon: rrobinsUser icon: keganUser icon: jmlemieuxUser icon: brollins

Who do you want to read the document? Who are the people you?re writing for, and what do they already know?

  • Think about those people carefully. Make a mental picture of a person who has the characteristics of your target audience.
  • Use that imagined person to make all decisions about your document.
  • When in doubt about wording, speak to the imagined person out loud. Write down what you said. Write it down immediately, while it?s fresh. [I usually tell an anecdote here, about how some writers stick a picture of a person on their computer monitor, and talk to that picture.]
  • If there?s more than one audience, consider writing a separate document for each audience. For example, consider separate documents for administrators and ordinary users.

The structure of a page

[The aim of this diagram is to illustrate that a page should have a number of headings, with short bits of text between them. After a quick look at the diagram, we discuss the sections in more detail below.]

Structure of a page

Structure of a page

State the purpose and audience at the top

Tell people who the document is for, and what it will help them do. This will let them know if it?s the right document for them.

Separate the concepts (?what? and ?why?) from the task (?how?)

Some people already know the concepts. They?ll skip past that bit and go straight to the ?how?. Other people know how to do something ? they?ve found the right spot in the user interface, or found the right form on the intranet. But they want to know why they should do it, or what it means.

Use ?chunking?

Split the content into easily-digestible chunks. Keep them short.

Use plenty of headings, so people can find the chunk they need. Research shows people?s eyes jump from heading to heading as they skim a page.

Lead your reader by the hand

Give clear, numbered steps. Don?t skip any steps.

People have come here because they?re stuck. Don?t worry, they?ll go away again as soon as they?ve got the idea.

Add related topics and/or next steps

Send the readers away immediately if they?re in the wrong place. After that, don?t send them away until you?re sure they?ve got what they need. So, keep links to a minimum in the main portion of the page.

  • At the top: In the section about purpose, add links to documents the reader may need instead of this one. For example, if you have separate documents for administrators and users, link from the one to the other.
  • At the end: Put related topics and next steps at the end, when you?ve finished with your reader.

Examples from our product documentation

[At this point, the workshop participants have already absorbed a lot of theory. It's a good time to show them some examples of good and bad design. Use these examples as a discussion point. Ask the participants what is good or bad about each page.]

Good structure

https://confluence.atlassian.com/display/DOC/Deleting+or+Deactivating+Users

Good structure and design

Good structure and design

Comments:

  • Our current style is to put the related topics at the top on the right, instead of at the bottom. We?re discussing a change, because the design doesn?t work too well on mobile devices.
  • Instead of a warning macro, we?ve used a panel (uncoloured) with an exclamation icon. There?s some discussion about coloured panels, and whether people skip over them when reading a page. See the references to ?banner blindness? in the resources section below.
  • [This is a good place to break for a quick chat about banner blindness. Find out what the workshop participants think about it, and how they themselves read a document.]

Not-so-good structure

[This is a page that has grown organically, with contributions from many people over a long period of time. It's had a revamp in the latest version of our documentation. The link points to an earlier version.]

https://confluence.atlassian.com/display/CONF50/Database+Setup+for+Oracle

Unplanned structure and design

Unplanned structure and design

Comments:

  • No clear step-by-step flow.
  • No indication of what each section is for, and whether you need to do them all.
  • Other comments? [This is a good place for discussion amongst the workshop participants.]

Language and style

[This section contains a few key tips on language and style - the bread and butter of technical writers, but not necessarily well known by other people.]

Keep it short and simple

Use simple words and short sentences.

Use active voice rather than passive

[Explain the difference between active and passive. Hold a bit of a discussion here. This is a difficult concept for many people.]

Examples:

  • Passive: The chocolate was eaten by the technical writer.
  • Active: The technical writer ate the chocolate.

Why use active voice? It?s shorter. And passive voice can be confusing, because sometimes it doesn?t say who must do what. Imperative (command) is even better, when appropriate.

Bad:

?Your browser must be configured to xxx.?
Reader thinks: OK, so I?ll assume someone has already done that for me when setting up my machine.

Good:

?Configure your browser to xxx.?
Reader thinks: OK, I?ll do that now.

Clarify technical terms and abbreviations

Explain important concepts at the top of the page.

Spell out each abbreviation the first time you use it on a page. For example:

If you?re using IE (Internet Explorer), ?.

?with regard to Workplace, Health and Safety (WHS).

Titles

The title is your most important tool for helping people find your document. This is especially true on a Confluence wiki, where people use the quick search a lot. The quick search is based entirely on the page title.

  • Put the key information at the beginning of the title.
  • Make the title describe the purpose of the document.

How to go about writing a page

[After quite a bit of conceptual and theoretical information, the workshop participants welcome a practical guide at this point.]

Step by step:

  1. Decide on your audience.
  2. Write the purpose.
    First write it for yourself, then refine it for the audience. This helps to form the content of the page.
  3. Write the title.
  4. Outline the document by creating the headings.
  5. Fill in the details.
    Keep each section short.
  6. If unsure, or struggling to find the right words, make a ?TO DO? note and continue. Come back later.
    Hint: I use ?xxxxxxxxxxxxxx? instead of ?TO DO?. It?s quick to type, strangely satisfying, easy to search for, and stands out when I?m reviewing the page. [This bit often leads to some animated discussion amongst workshop participants. Some of them already do something similar. Others love the idea, and smile with delight.]
  7. Review the content yourself:
    • Have you included everything you intended to include?
    • Can you cut anything out?
    • Should you split the document?
    • Is your language and tone right for the audience?
  8. Ask someone else to review the page.
    As any writer will tell you, it?s impossible to review your own work. Your brain knows what you wanted to say, and that?s what your brain will see even if that?s not what?s written.
  9. If possible, do some user testing.
    Grab a colleague from a different department. Get a different perspective!
  10. Watch the page, and update it based on comments.

More about structure, at space level (specifically for Confluence wiki)

[It's time for more theory.]

We?ve already talked about the structure of page. The structure of your space also important. People often need to browse to see what?s available. Perhaps they don?t know what to search for, but they do know the general area they?re in.

Scenario: Jack searches for ?proxy? and finds a page. But it?s not the one he wants. So he looks at the nearby pages.

How:

  • Group related topics under a common parent.
  • Use the Documentation theme to show the space structure.

Making sure people find your page

Already discussed:

  • Structure of a wiki space
  • Page titles
  • Links to related topics

In addition to the above, let?s look at SEO (search engine optimisation) both internal (on the intranet, for the Confluence search engine) and external (on the corporate blog, for Google etc).

These are the key points for making sure people find your page or post:

  • Make the title meaningful, with important words near the beginning.
  • Make sure the URL contains real words.
    If you are blogging on Confluence, don?t use special characters like ??? in a page title, because the resulting URL will not contain words.
  • Decide the key words for your post. These are the key concepts, and the ones the people are likely to look for when searching.
  • Put your key words at the top of the post, in the introductory paragraph.
    This ties in well with our structure, where the first section contains a introduction and a summary of the story.
  • Put your key words in the headings in your post.

Tools

  • Templates and blueprints ? make some of your own.
  • Use the spell checker in the browser.
  • Gliffy is great for simple diagrams.

Other hints

  • Writing is a creative process, and it keeps happening even when you think you?ve stopped!
    You?ll find yourself thinking of stuff to add to your document at odd times. While walking in the bush. Or in the middle of the night. Make a note. Email yourself. Put it on Remember The Milk. Whatever works. Such ideas are gems. Don?t lose them.
  • Optimise your page for people using mobile.
    No section and column macros (on Confluence wiki).
    Short sections with lots of headings.
  • Limit the number of note- and warning-boxes to a maximum of two per page. Using more than this can indicate an organisational problem in the text.

Writing blog posts

[This is just a summary. We have another workshop that focuses on blog posts.]

Your blog post is likely to be technical, so the process of writing it has much in common with writing a technical document.

Here are some quick pointers:

  • Maintain a character in your blog, so that people can start seeing it as a friend. Blogging is a social activity. Be yourself! Otherwise it?s difficult to maintain a consistent persona and people will soon pick it up if you don?t sound real.
  • If you?re writing on the corporate blog, ask for guidelines about the tone and style to use.
  • Write each post around a story or a ?hook?. This will give the post a theme, making it easier for you to write and easier for people to read.
  • Make sure the title reflects the main story. This will attract readers and give you a good position in search results such as Google or Bing.
  • Add structure to the content. Yes, even in a blog post. Put headings in the post itself. Split the information into easily-readable chunks.
  • Give plenty of factual information, preferably hard-won. That?s what people value. Code samples and screenshots are great.
  • Link to other people?s blogs. If your idea is an expansion of something someone else has written, include a mention of where you got the idea. If you?ve seen someone?s post about a related topic, link to it. The other bloggers appreciate this and will start linking back to you in return.
  • Be nice, positive and sincere. If you disagree with something, say so but be constructive. Some bloggers are successful by being horrid, but to make that work you have to be really good and have a curl on your forehead. I don?t like nastiness, manipulation or one-upmanship, so I wouldn?t recommend it.

Resources

  • Kurt Vonnegut:

    Here?s my all-time favourite: Kurt Vonnegut?s How to Write With Style.

    The best thing about Kurt?s guide is that it illustrates his principles so perfectly. This excerpt is from the section called ?Sound like yourself?:

    ?lucky indeed is the writer who has grown up in Ireland, for the English spoken there is so amusing and musical. I myself grew up in Indianapolis, where common speech sounds like a band saw cutting galvanized tin, and employs a vocabulary as unornamental as a monkey wrench.

    This bit is pretty cool too:

    Pity the readers

  • Avoiding framed and decorated text boxes:
  • [Link to your corporate style guide here.]

That?s the end

In designing the content of the workshop, my aim was to give the participants as much practical guidance as possible in a short space of time. I picked the top things we technical writers know, about how to make a document work.

To add variety to the one-hour session, I chose a mix of theory and discussion sections. The sessions to date have been lively and interactive. We ask participants to complete a feedback form a week or so after each session.

The actual writing happens after the session, in the participants? own time. They can then request a one-on-one review with a technical writer, before publishing their document either internally or for the whole wide world. Participants have expressed their thanks and said the content is useful, and have indicated a wish to attend a follow-up session.

What do you think of this type of workshop, and its potential as a way technical writers can add even more value to our organisations that we already do? I?d love to hear if you have run something similar within your own organisation too.

Source: http://ffeathers.wordpress.com/2013/06/16/workshops-on-effective-writing-technical-writers-adding-value/

Richie Havens Allan Arbus Jaguars new uniforms jenelle evans jenelle evans glenn beck AJ Clemente

Saturday, June 15, 2013

Fitness kit I've tested this week: ImuPro food allergy blood test | The ...

imupro food allergy test

Have you ever wondered if you?ve got any food allergies or intolerances? Ever wished you could know whether or not you ought to be eating certain foods in order to optimise your health, physique or performance in sport?

A few weeks ago, I was offered the opportunity to have a full food allergy lab test done using a sample of my blood. The test ? ImuPro ? is incredibly in depth and so I quickly and gratefully took them up on their offer. It?s not often you get the chance to get data like this about your body!

The ImuPro food tests (there are several options or levels) give you a personal immune system profile. Lots of coaches and athletes are already using the test, but it?s just as interesting for anybody interested in health and wellness, particularly nutrition.

They base their tests, and resulting recommendations, on three principles:
1. Avoidance of foods with a positive reaction.
2. Rotate the foods that make up your new diet.
3. Reintroduce the avoided foods.

The ImuPro 300 ? the one I took ? does involve getting your blood taken by a nurse, but it?s made as simple as possible.

photo 3

I was sent the kit in the post (absolutely everything the nurse needed to take the blood, and all the packaging I needed to send it back). I had to make an appointment at my GP surgery, but the procedure was very quick and painless. I then made arrangements with the courier, using the paperwork provided, and they picked it up within hours. My blood whizzed off to a lab in Germany (IgG antibodies are stable in transit unlike other blood components). All I had to do was wait for my results!

(Not all of the tests need a GP?s appointment and ImuPro Lite is a home test)

The blood analysis identifies high levels of specific IgG antibodies. The personalised immune profile is delivered to you ? a huge amount of information, presented in a pack, so you can read and refer back as you make the dietary changes recommended to improve your health and wellbeing.

IMG_4875

Here?s what I received
IMG_4873

- individual short report giving me recommendations
- the list of 270 foods tested, ranked by strength of reaction (detection of IgG antibodies)
- list of what I should definitely be eating
- list of what I ought to avoid
- a little cut-out-and-keep list of my ?trigger foods?
- a blank rotation plan template to use
- a much longer ?patient findings? report, extending the info in the short report to explain what level of allergy I have to each food, potential reasons behind this and how to use this info
- recipe suggestions ? 54 pages of recipes suited to the recommendations given in the report (everything from breakfasts to meat dishes, one-pot dishes, sides, cakes and desserts)
- a 67 page booklet about food allergies, digestion, food labelling, hormones and a food encyclopaedia

Phew! What an immense amount of info!

I found it very interesting that most of the foods on my ?avoid?/?trigger foods? lists are things I eat a great deal on a bodybuilding diet. Hm? In future, I?ll pay more attention to food rotation! I do consider that I eat a varied diet ? within the realms of bodybuilding prep/contest prep diet ? but perhaps I need to work harder on variety, food rotation and even excluding some foods and then reintroducing them after a period.

All very useful and interesting stuff!

ImuPro?s Joanna Wilki explained that the procedure analysed my reaction to nearly 300 different elements and created the personal food immune profile I now have here. ?Now you?ve got that information, you can can self-adjust your nutrient intake. I know you?re already very conscious of the importance of diet. With the results of your ImuPro 300 test, you have the advantages of knowing which foods you should avoid and, just as importantly, which foods you should enjoy.?

I love learning about nutrition, digestion, and how/why different foods affect the body in certain ways from inflammation to healing. What I particulalry like about these test results is that they?re so in depth. It?s fascinating, and it helps me know more about my body and be self-sufficient when it comes to knowing what works for me.

ImuPro would love you all to take a look at the ImuPro website and learn more about the various tests. ?We are happy for you to give an honest critique of the process and the test,? they said. ?We are happy to help anyone who buys one of our tests because we do recognise that they are expensive and support is paramount to the whole process. We like to make sure that everyone is happy with the end result.?

I must say that every member of the ImuPro team I had contact with was very helpful, very knowledgeable and very passionate about this product. Thank you, ImuPro people!

Find them online ImuPro website or ImuPro on Facebook or follow ImuPro on Twitter.

Fitness kit I?ve tested this week: ImuPro food allergy blood test is a post from The Fit Writer blog.

Nicola Joyce ? the Fit Writer ? is a freelance copywriter and journalist who writes for the sport and fitness industry. Her main website is here.

Like this:

Like Loading...

Source: http://thefitwriter.wordpress.com/2013/06/14/tested-reviewed-imupro-food-allergy-blood-test/

OJ Brigance What Time Does The Superbowl Start 2013 Psalm 91 Super Bowl 2013 Commercials Evasi0n Superdome Iron Man 3 Trailer

Friday, June 14, 2013

Four teens arrested for Islamic school fire in apparent Woolwich murder fallout

The fire, which caused only minor damage and injuries, is just the latest in a spate of anti-Muslim incidents in Britain that have followed the May 22 killing of soldier Lee Rigby.

By Jeremy Ravinsky,?Contributor / June 10, 2013

Four teens were arrested yesterday evening in relation to a fire that broke out at an Islamic boarding school late Saturday evening in the southeast London suburb of Chislehurst. The fire was the latest in a series of attacks targeting Britain?s Muslim community following the murder of soldier Lee Rigby.

Skip to next paragraph Jeremy Ravinsky

Contributor

Jeremy Ravinsky is an intern at the Christian Science Monitor's international desk. Born and raised in Montreal, Canada, Jeremy has lived in Boston for a number of years, attending Tufts University where he is a political science major. Before coming to the Monitor, Jeremy interned at GlobalPost in Boston and Bturn in Belgrade, Serbia.

Recent posts

' + google_ads[0].line2 + '
' + google_ads[0].line3 + '

'; } else if (google_ads.length > 1) { ad_unit += ''; } } document.getElementById("ad_unit").innerHTML += ad_unit; google_adnum += google_ads.length; return; } var google_adnum = 0; google_ad_client = "pub-6743622525202572"; google_ad_output = 'js'; google_max_num_ads = '1'; google_feedback = "on"; google_ad_type = "text"; // google_adtest = "on"; google_image_size = '230x105'; google_skip = '0'; // -->

Though no major damage was done to the Darul Uloom School, 128 students and staff members were evacuated due to the fire, while two students were treated for smoke inhalation, reports CNN. Students were allowed to return to school Sunday.

The suspects, a group of 17- and 18-year-olds, are being held at a police station in south London.

The incident comes on the heels of another fire at an Islamic center in the north London municipality of Muswell Hill. According to the Guardian, graffiti was found at the scene that linked the incident to the English Defense League (EDL), an ultra-right anti-Muslim group. The EDL, however, has denied any connections to the fire.

The two fires appear to be part of a Britainwide flare-up in anti-Muslim sentiments following Mr. Rigby's murder on May 22 in Woolwich, another London suburb.

"These are difficult times for London's communities. The Met is now investigating suspicious fires at two locations within the Islamic community which have happened in the past few days,? said Bernard Hogan-Howe, London?s police commissioner, in a statement to the press.

"We should not allow the murder of Lee Rigby to come between Londoners. The unified response we have seen to his death across all communities will triumph over those who seek to divide us."

Rigby, a military drummer, was killed by two men wielding a cleaver and a machete. The men claimed that they attacked Rigby because he had served in Afghanistan.

According to Bloomberg, the frequency of anti-Muslim incidents in Britain has multiplied at an alarming rate since Rigby?s death, jumping from an average of four to six to as high as 26 per day. In that time, 12 mosques have been attacked.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/csmonitor/globalnews/~3/4g_4pVrTV1U/Four-teens-arrested-for-Islamic-school-fire-in-apparent-Woolwich-murder-fallout

jr smith chris anderson rondo suspended bay bridge band of brothers presidents george washington

Saturday, June 8, 2013

IRS names new official as investigations continue

(AP) ? The Internal Revenue Service has named a new official to help oversee the workers who process applications from groups seeking tax-exempt status.

Until now that post has been held by Holly Paz. Her name has surfaced in the investigations into IRS mistreatment of conservative groups seeking a tax-exempt designation.

An internal IRS announcement said Friday that Karen Schiller will have that job.

According to House Oversight and Government Reform Committee Chairman Darrell Issa, a California Republican, Paz was involved in an internal IRS investigation that in May 2012 essentially concluded that the agency had been targeting conservative groups.

That was a year before the IRS revealed the targeting publicly.

The announcement did not address Paz's status. Some other IRS workers involved have been put on administrative leave.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/89ae8247abe8493fae24405546e9a1aa/Article_2013-06-07-IRS-Political%20Groups/id-2671205e208444bc81ef5d16785685d7

Frank Ocean Gay bill clinton andy roddick Costa Rica Earthquake sandra fluke costa rica Earthquake Costa Rica

Friday, June 7, 2013

Why Jordan orders ban on 263 news sites

The Jordanian government ordered that a controversial media law go into effect on Sunday, in a sudden erosion of online press freedom just days after King Abdullah promised human rights reforms.

By Elizabeth Barber,?Contributor / June 6, 2013

Jordan's King Abdullah speaks during the closing ceremony of the World Economic Forum on the Middle East and North Africa at the King Hussein Convention Centre, at the Dead Sea in May 2013.

Muhammad Hamed/Reuters

Enlarge

Jordan ordered access blocked to nearly 300 local news sites on Sunday, days after King Abdullah touted significant human rights reform at the World Economic Forum in Amman.

Skip to next paragraph Elizabeth Barber

Intern

Elizabeth Barber is an intern on the Christian Science Monitor?s Web desk. She holds a master?s degree from Columbia Journalism School and a bachelor?s degree in International Relations and English from SUNY Geneseo. Before coming to the Monitor, she was a freelance reporter at DNAinfo, a New York City breaking news site. She has also been an intern at The Cambodia Daily, in Phnom Penh, Cambodia, and at D.C.?s The Middle East Journal.

Recent posts

' + google_ads[0].line2 + '
' + google_ads[0].line3 + '

'; } else if (google_ads.length > 1) { ad_unit += ''; } } document.getElementById("ad_unit").innerHTML += ad_unit; google_adnum += google_ads.length; return; } var google_adnum = 0; google_ad_client = "pub-6743622525202572"; google_ad_output = 'js'; google_max_num_ads = '1'; google_feedback = "on"; google_ad_type = "text"; // google_adtest = "on"; google_image_size = '230x105'; google_skip = '0'; // -->

Jordan?s Press and Publications Law, a September 2012 measure that requires online media to register with the Jordanian government, went into effect this week in a move that brings Jordan in tune with repressive media laws passed across the region after the Arab Spring. Some 263 news sites not in compliance with the law were ordered censored, including popular outlets JO24.net and Amman Net, according to a Human Rights Watch press release.

Jordan's media law is consistent with measures in place elsewhere in the Middle East that target online news outlets, which have throughout the region become hotbeds of dissent and spaces for choreographing challenges to government policies. In a much criticized move in December, Egypt passed a new constitution that granted the state the authority to shut down news outlets in violation of the vague guidelines listed in the document, including compromising national security. Most recently, Qatar ??long heralded as a bright spot for media freedom, as home to international news source Al-Jazeera ??passed a cybercrime bill in May that threatened shut down news outlets publishing "false news" or stories infringing?on "social principles or values."

Many of the affected Jordanian news organizations had refused to register with the government in protest of what they see as a state overstep into media affairs. Other news sites said that registration had been impossible: the law includes a steep registration fee of $1,400, as well as a requirement that the editor-in-chief of the online news site have been a member of the official Jordanian Journalists? Syndicate for at least four years, according to The New York Times.

The site closures come about a week after King Abdullah opened the World Economic Forum on the Middle East and North Africa in the capital, during which he praised the Arab Spring and voiced his support for greater democratization.

"The Arab Spring and its call for human dignity has become the voice of our century,? said Abudllah, in a speech quoted on Al-Arabiya. ?This is a reason to stand proud, but we cannot stand still. Reform, democracy and peace are always work in progress.?

Jordan?s media law, which applies to some 400 news sites in the country?s robust online media market, also holds the owner and editor-in-chief of an online media liable for comments or posts that users post to the website. Websites can be fined up to $14,000 for a user comment found to insult the royal family, contradict Arab-Islamic values, incite sectarian strife, or slander public officials, according to the Associated Press.?

The law also gives the government unfettered power to shut down both foreign and domestic websites without notice or explanation.

?King Abdullah talked a good game about rights reform at the World Economic Forum just a few days ago, but didn?t wait for the dust to settle before moving to muzzle Jordanian news sites,? said Sarah Leah Whitson,?Middle East director at Human Rights Watch, in a statement.

?The blocking is not intended to restrict freedoms ? but the goal of this action is to organize the work of these websites, protect them, and keep from allowing those from outside the profession to inhabit the label of journalists?,? said the Jordanian government, in a statement quoted by Jordan?s official news agency and translated by Human Rights Watch.

"We will not allow personal attacks against individuals, or attacks against any groups or minorities," Information Minister Mohammed Momani told the Associated Press, referring to some recent incidents in which online media were blamed for inciting religious or social prejudice and inaccurate reporting involving public figures.

Jordan, which had not seen the Arab uprisings that have toppled many heads of state elsewhere in the Middle East in 2011, has received regular criticism from human rights groups for its forceful response to public protests urging political reforms. Its media,?while generally freer than press outlets elsewhere in the Middle East, has also been hit with serious setbacks over the last couple years. Last February, blogger Enass Musallam was stabbed in an incident believed to be related to her critical writings on the Jordanian royal family. Later that month, Jordanian journalist Jamal al-Muhtaseb was detained for an article alleging misconduct by the Royal Court. He was released on bail in May.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/Oogka1tNem0/Why-Jordan-orders-ban-on-263-news-sites

aziz ansari aziz ansari katherine jenkins peyton manning broncos mexico city earthquake stand your ground law dancing with the stars season 14

Obama administration defends Verizon phone record collection

By Mark Hosenball and Susan Heavey

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The Obama administration on Thursday acknowledged that it is collecting a massive amount of telephone records from at least one carrier, reopening the debate over privacy even as it defended the practice as necessary to protect Americans against attack.

The admission comes after the Guardian newspaper published a secret court order related to the records of millions of Verizon Communications customers on its website on Wednesday.

A senior administration official said the court order pertains only to data such as a telephone number or the length of a call, and not the subscribers' identities or the content of the telephone calls.

Such information is "a critical tool in protecting the nation from terrorist threats to the United States," the official said, speaking on the condition of not being named.

"It allows counter terrorism personnel to discover whether known or suspected terrorists have been in contact with other persons who may be engaged in terrorist activities, particularly people located inside the United States," the official added.

The revelation raises fresh concerns about President Barack Obama's handling of privacy and free speech issues. His administration is already under fire for searching Associated Press journalists' calling records and the emails of a Fox television reporter as part of its inquiries into leaked government information.

It was not immediately clear whether the practice extends to other carriers.

The order released on Wednesday is from the U.S. Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court and directs Verizon's Business Network Services Inc and Verizon Business Services units to hand over daily electronic data until July 19. The order can be seen at: http://r.reuters.com/kap68t

(This headline of this story has been corrected to say administration, not White House)

(Reporting by Mark Hosenball and Susan Heavey; Editing by Vicki Allen)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/nsa-collecting-phone-records-verizon-customers-report-010806341.html

Adairsville Ga ashley judd Alois Bell Donna Savattere deer antler spray Jason London rick ross

Thursday, June 6, 2013

Kansas wheat farmer sues Monsanto over rogue wheat release

Link Information - Click to View

Kansas wheat farmer sues Monsanto over rogue wheat release
A U.S. wheat farmer has sued Monsanto Co, accusing the biotech seed giant of gross negligence for not containing an experimental genetically modified wheat discovered in an Oregon field that has put U.S. wheat export sales at risk.

Source: Reuters
Posted on: Wednesday, Jun 05, 2013, 8:02am
Views: 29

Source: http://www.labspaces.net/128500/Kansas_wheat_farmer_sues_Monsanto_over_rogue_wheat_release

Miss America 2013 Aaron Swartz Gangster Squad school shooting oscar nominations C7 Corvette tom brady