Drunk Email to Obama Gets British Teen Banned From America for Life

September 14, 2010 – 2:40 pm

Am I bovvered?

Apparently British teenager Luke Angel made a mistake recently: He wrote an email while drunk. Of course, such a little mistake easily turns into a lifetime ban from America when it contains an obscenity and is addressed to President Obama.

Different sources put different numbers of asterisks between the p and the k—some have two and some have three—so it’s unclear exactly what the obscene term used by Angel is, but you can certainly try to fill in the blank yourself:

I don’t remember exactly what I wrote as I was drunk. But I think I called Barack Obama a p***k. It was silly – the sort of thing you do when you’re a teenager and have had a few. [...] The police came and took my picture and told me I was banned from America forever. I don’t really care but my parents aren’t very happy.

According to The Sun, US authorities refused to discuss the particular details of Angel’s case and only explained that “there are about 60 reasons a person can be barred” from America.

Article: RSS via: Gizmodo

Tags: , , ,

Broadband billion dollar plan unveiled by Obama

July 12, 2010 – 1:22 pm

More than a year after Congress passed the economic stimulus package, President Barack Obama announced that $795 million of that money will go toward expanding Internet access across the country to provide jobs and improve communication.

Obama’s plan, announced Friday, will allocate more than $1 billion for installing broadband Internet across the country.

About $800 million of that will come from the tax-sponsored stimulus package, while the rest comes from outside investment.

“We’re competing aggressively to make sure the jobs and industries and the markets of tomorrow take root right here in the United States,” the president said. “We’re moving forward. And to every American who is looking for work, I promise you, we are going to keep on doing everything that we can.”

The plan will create 66 infrastructure projects across the country and more than 5,000 temporary jobs, Obama said. It also will benefit more than 685,000 businesses, 900 health care facilities and 2,400 schools.

The money is part of $7.2 billion in the stimulus that was set aside to expand broadband Internet access.

While the president emphasized job creation Friday in his Internet proposal, he also described new statistics on employment for June as the sixth straight month of job growth despite the phasing out of census jobs.

Economists, however, see the June jobs data as disappointing for their small increase in private-sector jobs and a larger-than-expected increase in discouraged jobless who dropped out of the job market. Total U.S. payrolls were down by 125,000 jobs in June, but the private sector expanded by 83,000 jobs.

“We are headed in the right direction,” the president said. “But, as I was reminded on a trip to Racine, Wisconsin, earlier this week, we’re not headed there fast enough for a lot of Americans.”

The state that’s slated to get the most money under the plan is Iowa, which will receive about $90 million (although it will share about $20 million of that with Missouri), almost double what the second-ranked state, Georgia, is to receive.

Obama highlighted how the broadband allocation will benefit education, the environment and doctor-patient communication.

“Recovery Act broadband projects help bring down the cost of private investment, attract Internet service providers to new areas, improve digital literacy among students and workers, and help create new opportunities in employment, education and entrepreneurship by wiring homes and businesses,” according to an analysis that the National Economic Council released last year.

The stimulus package, enacted in February 2009, allocated $787 billion to create jobs, increase cash flow and revitalize the economy amid the recession. Only three Republicans in Congress voted for the measure.

On Monday, the president announced a separate plan to increase spectrum levels in order to make wireless broadband connection to the Internet more accessible.

“Once we emerge from the immediate crisis, the long-term economic gains to communities that have been left behind in a digital age will be immeasurable,” the president said Friday.

Article: RSS via: Myjoyonline

Tags: , , , ,

President Obama gets power to shut down internet

June 25, 2010 – 8:36 pm

Internet kill bill gets approval

The US Senate committee has approved legislation which effectively gives President Obama the power to shut off parts of the internet when there is a national emergency.

The legislation is called Protecting Cyberspace as a National Asset Act and will allow the President in times of national emergency to implement response plans for protecting the infrastructure of the web, as well as the electrical grid and telcom networks.

Kill switch?

Although there has been a lot of criticism of the bill, those who approved it are adamant that it does not give Obama a ‘kill switch’ for the web, with the senate explaining that “it would make it far less likely for a President to use the broad authority he already has in current law to take over communications networks.”

The senate also explained: “Only specific systems or assets whose disruption would cause a national or regional catastrophe would be subject to the bill’s mandatory security requirements.”

And we thought Obama was going to be given a big on/off web switch to go with his shiny red nuclear button.

The bill is an update of the Communications Act of 1934, modernising the US government’s ability to safeguard its cyber networks from attack.

View Source

Tags: , , , ,

Get Adobe Flash playerPlugin by wpburn.com wordpress themes