Monday, October 21, 2013

Germans May Torture Amazon Into Lifting Lowest-Price Rule

Today in international tech news: A German watchdog group says that Amazon is ruining competition with its third-party merchant rules. Also: The Guardian wins some awards for its NSA reporting; a cybersecurity experts cries foul over Huawei's claim to innocence; News Corp. has some security holes; and a website in China is for whatever reason offering information about people who have used Chinese hotels.


Germany's antitrust watchdog said Amazon is undermining competition with its rules for third-party merchants and threatened to impose reforms if Amazon doesn't change its ways.


The watchdog complains that Amazon's Marketplace obstructs competition, a term that in Germany and Europe refers less to which company wins -- Amazon is obviously winning -- and more to how many companies get to play. In particular, the watchdog is irked that third-party merchants must offer their cheapest price when peddling products over Amazon's Marketplace.


Without a change in those rules, the group said it would use the "instruments of torture" at its disposal.


Germany is Amazon's second-biggest market, but the company has been facing headwinds there this year. Workers there have staged multiple strikes, including one over the summer and then another last month. More recently, workers threatened to stage a pre-Christmas strike.


France, too, has been on a bit of a crusade against Amazon. There, authorities proposed a bill that would prevent Amazon from offering both a 5 percent discount and free shipping. That bill garnered unanimous parliamentary support earlier this month.


[Source: Reuters]


Guardian Wins Journalism Awards for Snowden Leaks


Britain's newspaper The Guardian won a pair of Online Journalism Awards, handed out by the Gannett Foundation, for its groundbreaking reporting on the National Security Agency.


The two honors were the Award for Investigative Journalism and the Watchdog Journalism Award.


The Online Journalism Awards are doled out by the Online News Association, which is the world's largest association of digital journalists.


[Source: The Guardian]


Expert: Huawei's Don't-Look-at-Us Act is Malarkey


Huawei's claim that it has never been asked to divulge information about individuals is hogwash, according to cybersecurity analyst Jeffrey Carr.


Last week, media outlets including this one discussed a report from Huawei in which the company claimed to have never been asked by any government to turn over information about people. The implication, of course, was that it is U.S. companies, not innocent Huawei, that people should be worried about.


Not exactly, says Carr.


China's State Security Law indeed requires companies and individuals to fork over any information that is requested, Carr points out. If Chinese authorities haven't asked Huawei to provide access to information, Carr writes, "it's because Huawei has already built that access in so that China Telecom can do its job of lawful intercept."


[Source: JeffreyCarr.blogspot.com]


News Corp. Hole Offers Glimpse Into Personal Data


An IT security expert unearthed a vulnerability in all of News Corp.'s major metropolitan websites in Australia, giving him access to all newsletter subscribers' personal information.


The exposed data included household income, mobile phone number and a bunch of other things that people might not want a random IT security guy to see. Credit card information, however, was reportedly not available (even if details about the number of children subscribers had were).


The vulnerability exposed anyone who had ever signed up for a News Corp. metropolitan newspaper newsletter.


News Corp. is a notoriously conservative media corporation based in New York and owned by Rupert Murdoch, who himself hails from Australia.


News Corp. said it found no evidence of anyone doing anything malicious with the information.


[Source: The Age]


Hotel Guest Info Lands on Web in China


A website has sprung up claiming to contain personal information about thousands of guests who have stayed at major Chinese hotel chains over the past several years.


Reporters at Chinese media outlets said the site allows people to enter a person's name, and up pops a list of potential matches: full name, phone number, ID number -- you name it.


Someone took to Taobao, China's eminent e-commerce site, and offered to sell what he claimed was a complete list of the offending website's data. The going rate to download the data is about US$330.


[Source: The Beijing News (Chinese) via TechWeb (Chinese) via Tech In Asia]



David Vranicar is a freelance journalist and author of The Lost Graduation: Stepping off campus and into a crisis. You can check out his ECT News archive here, and you can email him at david[dot]vranicar[at]newsroom[dot]ectnews[dot]com.


Source: http://www.technewsworld.com/rsstory/79235.html
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Willow Garage Spin-Off Brings UBR-1 Mobile Robotics Research Platform Out Of Stealth


Unbounded Robotics has come out of stealth — as the latest and last spin off from open source robotics maker and incubator Willow Garage, which created the PR2 robotics research and development platform, and was itself set up with a vision to make autonomous personal robotics. That mission provided a little tougher than founder, Scott Hassan, originally thought when he set it up back in 2006.


“I was a little bit optimistic, and I thought it would be much easier to do than it actually is, and the biggest problem is actually finding a market,” he told IEEE Spectrum back in August, when the news broke that most of Willow Garage’s employees were being absorbed into Suitable Technologies, a maker of a remote presence tech called Beam, and itself originally incubated out of Willow Garage.


Today, the last of Willow Garage’s robotic hatchlings has emerged into the light: Unbounded Robotics is carrying the PR2 torch out of Willow Garage (at least in spirit), with the launch of the one-armed bot UBR-1 — aka “a state-of-the-art ROS-based mobile manipulation platform designed for robot researchers and businesses”. (ROS being the open source robot operating system developed by Willow Garage and the Stanford AI Labs.)


While there’s a clear evolutionary path from PR2 to UBR-1, the latter’s makers stress it’s “not specifically designed as the heir apparent” to PR2. And is far more sophisticated — as you’d expect, with the two bots being separated by more than five years development work.


Here’s how UBR-1 is described in Unbounded’s launch blog:



With decades of robotic hardware and software experience, we have developed a mobile manipulation platform that offers advanced software and a sophisticated hardware exterior.  The one-armed robot is designed for human-scale tasks and comes pre-installed with Ubuntu Linux LTS and ROS, along with applications such as MoveIt! navigation, calibration, and joystick teleoperation.  The robot offers mobility, dexterity, manipulation, and navigation in a human-scale, ADA-compliant model.


The team has done extensive software integration to improve the user experience; MoveIt! being the highlight of that integration.  On the hardware front, the UBR-1 requires no calibration at start-up, has a workspace large enough for the robot to reach the ground as well as countertops, and was designed with extensibility in mind so that users can easily develop custom applications.


As a platform for robotics research, we are looking forward to seeing how the UBR-1 is put to use in both R&D and commercial markets.  Similar to an iPhone without any third-party apps, the greatest contribution of the UBR-1 will be the output from the robotics community that is able to take advantage of this sophisticated mobile manipulation platform.



The price-tag on UBR-1 is a cool $35,000, and Unbounded won’t be shipping the bot til summer 2014. It says it will be taking orders “soon” though. That price-tag may sound hefty but it’s orders of magnitude smaller than the cost of the PR2 — and its makers are anticipating that that scaled down price will catalyse take-up of UBR-1 among research communities.


But it’s not just intended as an academic play thing. Unbounded is also aiming UBR-1 at the commercial space too, noting that it’s mobility and ability to navigate its environment give it an edge over some existing commercial robot rivals.


They also want UBR-1 to tap into the ROS-powered community of robot makers, and also note it can also be deployed in business automation scenarios. So plenty of potential owners could be taking a UBR-1 home.


“Unbounded’s UBR-1 is the natural heir apparent to the PR2 community, but at one-tenth the cost I anticipate strong uptake in the research and academic communities,” the startup told TechCrunch. “At the same time the UBR-1 robot is also capable of commercial deployments similar to Baxter, but with advanced navigation capabilities.  Finally, it’s a great addition to the growing ROS community.”


“Commercially, Baxter comes closest to competition. But Baxter works great when the robot doesn’t need to be mobile.  Unbounded’s robot is able to move and navigate it’s environment,” it added.Specs wise, UBR-1 weighs in at 73kg, has a maximum height of 52 inches and a base footprint of 19.5 inches, and 13 degrees of freedom (Base, Torso Lift, 7-DOF Arm, Gripper, and Pan Tilt Head). Its arm has seven degrees of freedom and can lift a 1.5kg payload.


UBR-1′s brains consist of a 4th Gen Intel i5 processor, with 8GB of RAM and a 120GB hard drive. The bot is good for three to five hours of continuous movement operation on a single charge.


Unbounded Robotics’s founding team consists of Eric Diehr, Lead Mechanical Engineer; Michael Ferguson, CTO; Derek King, Lead Systems Engineer; and Melonee Wise, CEO.


Check out the video below to see UBR-1 in action:




Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/gmnjR-Egmog/
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Economic assessment of mountain pine beetle timber salvage

Economic assessment of mountain pine beetle timber salvage


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PUBLIC RELEASE DATE:

21-Oct-2013



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Contact: Jeff Prestemon
jprestemon@fs.fed.us
910-549-4033
USDA Forest Service ‑ Southern Research Station



Forest Service study finds that increased timber salvage of trees killed by mountain pine beetle would benefit some areas in the West but not others



A recently published study by U.S. Forest Service researchers evaluates potential revenues from harvesting standing timber killed by mountain pine beetle in the western United States. The study shows that while positive net revenues could be produced in West Coast and Northern Rockies states with active timber markets, the central Rocky Mountain states of Colorado, Utah, and Wyomingwhich have the largest volume of standing dead timberwould not generate positive net revenues by salvaging beetle-killed timber.


A mountain pine beetle epidemic in the western United States has left mountainsides covered with dead pines, especially lodgepole pine, with most of the timber and land affected on national forests. Policymakers and forest managers are considering increasing timber salvage rates on these lands as a way to address potential wildfire threat, hazards from falling trees, and visual impact, but first need to assess the broader economic ramifications of putting more timber on the market in areas where mills have closed and markets have waned over the two last decades.


Research Forester Jeff Prestemon and fellow scientists with the Forest Service Southern Research Station Forest Economics and Policy unit and with the Eastern Forest Environmental Threat Assessment Center were asked to evaluate the circumstances under which salvaging pine beetle-killed timber would be cost-effective. The researchers used an economic assessment model to estimate potential salvage volumes, costs and revenues from programs that would encourage salvage of standing dead timber, summarizing findings by state and owner groups.


"We carried out a set of multiyear simulations to produce an assessment of the net revenue impacts of salvage on national forests and other public and private lands in the 12 contiguous western U.S. states," says Prestemon. Net revenues are defined as revenues received at the mill gate less the costs of harvesting, transportation, and administration. The researchers also carried out a scenario that tested doubling the total mill capacity in Montana and Coloradotwo states heavily affected by the mountain pine beetleto evaluate the effects of efforts to encourage or subsidize higher rates of salvage in these states.


Findings from the assessment include:


  • The central and northern Rocky Mountain states have the most salvageable timberland and the largest total salvageable volumes, with the highest in Montana, Colorado, Wyoming, and Idaho.
  • The majority of timber and lands affected in the 12 western states are on national forests88 percent of the total salvageable volume and 84 percent of the total area.
  • Four statesColorado, Idaho, Montana, and Wyominghave actual volume losses greater than 2 billion cubic feet. Two additional statesOregon and Utahhave more than 1 billion cubic feet of salvageable volume.
  • Of the above six states, Idaho, Oregon, and Montana currently have the timber processing capacity to absorb large quantities of salvage.
  • Scenarios show that salvage would generate positive net revenues in Idaho, Montana, Washington, Oregon, California, and South Dakota.
  • States where salvage-generated revenues are on average less than salvage costs include Colorado and Wyomingwhich have large proportions of salvageable volumeand Nevada.
  • For Wyoming and Colorado, scenarios show that relatively high volumes removed per acre of timberland lead to quick saturation of available markets even when the number of total acres harvested is small.

"In short, our results show that places where timber product markets are strong are likely to have profitable salvage, while places where product markets are weak would need sizable public expenditures to achieve appreciable reductions in the amount of dead standing timber," says Prestemon. The study did not examine other factors that might influence land management decisions, such as fire risk reduction, improvement in stand conditions, or jobs.


###


Access the full text of the article at http://www.srs.fs.usda.gov/pubs/ja/2013/ja_2013_prestemon_001.pdf


Headquartered in Asheville, NC, the Southern Research Station comprises more than 120 scientists and several hundred support staff who conduct natural resource research in 20 locations across 13 southern states (Virginia to Texas). The Station's mission is "to create the science and technology needed to sustain and enhance southern forest ecosystems and the benefits they provide." Learn more about the Southern Research Station at: http://www.srs.fs.usda.gov/.




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Economic assessment of mountain pine beetle timber salvage


[ Back to EurekAlert! ]

PUBLIC RELEASE DATE:

21-Oct-2013



[


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]


Share Share

Contact: Jeff Prestemon
jprestemon@fs.fed.us
910-549-4033
USDA Forest Service ‑ Southern Research Station



Forest Service study finds that increased timber salvage of trees killed by mountain pine beetle would benefit some areas in the West but not others



A recently published study by U.S. Forest Service researchers evaluates potential revenues from harvesting standing timber killed by mountain pine beetle in the western United States. The study shows that while positive net revenues could be produced in West Coast and Northern Rockies states with active timber markets, the central Rocky Mountain states of Colorado, Utah, and Wyomingwhich have the largest volume of standing dead timberwould not generate positive net revenues by salvaging beetle-killed timber.


A mountain pine beetle epidemic in the western United States has left mountainsides covered with dead pines, especially lodgepole pine, with most of the timber and land affected on national forests. Policymakers and forest managers are considering increasing timber salvage rates on these lands as a way to address potential wildfire threat, hazards from falling trees, and visual impact, but first need to assess the broader economic ramifications of putting more timber on the market in areas where mills have closed and markets have waned over the two last decades.


Research Forester Jeff Prestemon and fellow scientists with the Forest Service Southern Research Station Forest Economics and Policy unit and with the Eastern Forest Environmental Threat Assessment Center were asked to evaluate the circumstances under which salvaging pine beetle-killed timber would be cost-effective. The researchers used an economic assessment model to estimate potential salvage volumes, costs and revenues from programs that would encourage salvage of standing dead timber, summarizing findings by state and owner groups.


"We carried out a set of multiyear simulations to produce an assessment of the net revenue impacts of salvage on national forests and other public and private lands in the 12 contiguous western U.S. states," says Prestemon. Net revenues are defined as revenues received at the mill gate less the costs of harvesting, transportation, and administration. The researchers also carried out a scenario that tested doubling the total mill capacity in Montana and Coloradotwo states heavily affected by the mountain pine beetleto evaluate the effects of efforts to encourage or subsidize higher rates of salvage in these states.


Findings from the assessment include:


  • The central and northern Rocky Mountain states have the most salvageable timberland and the largest total salvageable volumes, with the highest in Montana, Colorado, Wyoming, and Idaho.
  • The majority of timber and lands affected in the 12 western states are on national forests88 percent of the total salvageable volume and 84 percent of the total area.
  • Four statesColorado, Idaho, Montana, and Wyominghave actual volume losses greater than 2 billion cubic feet. Two additional statesOregon and Utahhave more than 1 billion cubic feet of salvageable volume.
  • Of the above six states, Idaho, Oregon, and Montana currently have the timber processing capacity to absorb large quantities of salvage.
  • Scenarios show that salvage would generate positive net revenues in Idaho, Montana, Washington, Oregon, California, and South Dakota.
  • States where salvage-generated revenues are on average less than salvage costs include Colorado and Wyomingwhich have large proportions of salvageable volumeand Nevada.
  • For Wyoming and Colorado, scenarios show that relatively high volumes removed per acre of timberland lead to quick saturation of available markets even when the number of total acres harvested is small.

"In short, our results show that places where timber product markets are strong are likely to have profitable salvage, while places where product markets are weak would need sizable public expenditures to achieve appreciable reductions in the amount of dead standing timber," says Prestemon. The study did not examine other factors that might influence land management decisions, such as fire risk reduction, improvement in stand conditions, or jobs.


###


Access the full text of the article at http://www.srs.fs.usda.gov/pubs/ja/2013/ja_2013_prestemon_001.pdf


Headquartered in Asheville, NC, the Southern Research Station comprises more than 120 scientists and several hundred support staff who conduct natural resource research in 20 locations across 13 southern states (Virginia to Texas). The Station's mission is "to create the science and technology needed to sustain and enhance southern forest ecosystems and the benefits they provide." Learn more about the Southern Research Station at: http://www.srs.fs.usda.gov/.




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Source: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2013-10/ufs-eao102113.php
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This Week’s Apple Rumors, Ranked From Dumbest to Most Plausible

This Week’s Apple Rumors, Ranked From Dumbest to Most Plausible
With only three days to go until Apple's October event, this week's rumors point to a slightly thicker Retina display iPad mini and new Apple TV hardware.


Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/GearFactor/~3/TSYivJQEPnc/
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'Will & Grace's stars still laughing 15 years later

TV











8 hours ago

Hilarious and subversive, "Will & Grace" was an instant hit. But back in 1998, a sitcom about a gay man and a straight woman sharing an apartment was also revolutionary, a fact stars Debra Messing and Eric McCormack were initially reluctant to acknowledge.

"We used to be asked about (the lasting social impact) while it was on," McCormack, who reunited with Messing on TODAY Thursday, said. "That's when we didn't want to say anything; we were just a comedy, we were just trying to be funny. But now with time ... what I'm most proud of is that we always treated, the show always treated, Will's desire for the perfect man as equal to Grace's desire for the perfect man. ... That was the real message."

Both actors say they still meet to catch up and share a meal from time to time. ("We go out to dinner and freak people out," said Messing.) But their ongoing friendship shouldn't come as a surprise: When the show's pilot first aired they both had an inkling they made a great team.

"I was too superstitious to say it out loud, but he turned to me after we shot the pilot ... and he said, 'I think we're going to be together for a long time,'" recalled Messing. "And I got chills."

The pair, along with co-stars Megan Mullally and Sean Hayes (who has a new show on NBC, "Sean Saves the World") had terrific chemistry. "The two of them used to say that they were sort of ... like the vaudeville version of us," said Messing. "The four of us, when we were together, it just happened. You can't plan that, it was luck."

"Will & Grace" reruns are now airing in mini-marathons on WEtv.








Source: http://www.today.com/entertainment/will-graces-eric-mccormack-debra-messing-still-laughing-15-years-8C11409510
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In Libya, migrants face ordeals at sea and in jail

In this image made from Monday, Oct. 14, 2013 video, African migrants look through bars of a locked door at Sabratha migrant detention center for men in Sabratha, Libya. Libya’s chaos in the two years following the overthrow of dictator Moammar Gadhafi has turned the country into a prime springboard for tens of thousands of migrants, mainly from Africa, trying to reach Europe in dangerous sea voyages. (AP Photo/AP Video)







In this image made from Monday, Oct. 14, 2013 video, African migrants look through bars of a locked door at Sabratha migrant detention center for men in Sabratha, Libya. Libya’s chaos in the two years following the overthrow of dictator Moammar Gadhafi has turned the country into a prime springboard for tens of thousands of migrants, mainly from Africa, trying to reach Europe in dangerous sea voyages. (AP Photo/AP Video)







In this image made from Monday, Oct. 14, 2013 video, migrants look through bars at Sabratha migrant detention center for women in Sabratha, Libya. Libya’s chaos in the two years following the overthrow of dictator Moammar Gadhafi has turned the country into a prime springboard for tens of thousands of migrants, mainly from Africa, trying to reach Europe in dangerous sea voyages. (AP Photo/AP Video)







In this image made from Monday, Oct. 14, 2013 video, African migrants look through bars of a locked door at Sabratha migrant detention center for men in Sabratha, Libya. Libya’s chaos in the two years following the overthrow of dictator Moammar Gadhafi has turned the country into a prime springboard for tens of thousands of migrants, mainly from Africa, trying to reach Europe in dangerous sea voyages. (AP Photo/AP Video)







In this image made from Monday, Oct. 14, 2013 video, migrants rest at Sabratha migrant detention center for men in Sabratha, Libya. Libya’s chaos in the two years following the overthrow of dictator Moammar Gadhafi has turned the country into a prime springboard for tens of thousands of migrants, mainly from Africa, trying to reach Europe in dangerous sea voyages. (AP Photo/AP Video)







(AP) — The first time the young mother tried to flee to Europe on a rickety boat of fellow migrants from Africa, the overcrowded vessel quickly broke down and filled with water, forcing it to return to the Libyan coast. The second time, she was arrested and placed in a mosquito-infested Libyan detention center, where she has languished for months.

She says she lives on bread and water, with only milk for her 8-month-old girl, and is beaten by guards with a hose if she complains.

"They beat us like goats," said Beauty Osaha, 23, who headed north from her native Nigeria in hopes of a better life. She said the guards at the facility in the ancient city of Sabratha search migrants' bodies, including their private parts, looking for money or smuggled phones.

Libya's chaos in the two years following the overthrow of dictator Moammar Gadhafi has turned the country into a prime springboard for tens of thousands of migrants, mainly from Africa, trying to reach Europe in rickety, crowded boats. With police and the military in disarray, human smuggling has reached the level of a mafia-style organized industry in which Libya's militias have gotten involved, according to activists and police.

The danger of the sea journey became particularly clear this month, with three deadly wrecks of migrant boats coming from Libya. At least 365 people, mostly Eritreans fleeing repression in their homeland, died on Oct. 3 when their boat from Libya sank off the Italian island of Lampedusa — one of the worst verified migrant tragedies in the Mediterranean.

Detention by Libyan militias is the migrants' other potential ordeal. Activists say militias hold migrants in stores, schools and abandoned buildings as well as detention centers, abusing them and holding them hostage until they receive money from the migrants' families. Then the migrants are freed, only to try again.

"In these prisons, the principles of the Feb. 17 Revolution are being toppled down. The Libyan authorities must put an end to those pirates," a Libyan rights group called Beladi, or My Nation, said on its website, referring to the "revolution" that led to Gadhafi's ouster and death in 2011.

But Libya's government is weak, virtually hostage to the militias, which originated as rebel brigades fighting Gadhafi but have grown in size and power.

The government has put some militias on the Interior and Defense Ministries' payrolls in an effort to control them, but the militias still do whatever they want. Militiamen this month even briefly kidnapped Prime Minister Ali Zidan, who has frequently spoken of the need to rein in the armed groups.

An official with one militia in Tripoli connected to the Interior Ministry that runs a migrant detention center acknowledged abuses take place but blamed them on lack of training for the young guards. "They only get about two months of training, this is not enough," said Abdel-Hakim al-Balazi, spokesman for the Anti-Crime Department, a militia umbrella group that keeps security in the capital.

He said that migrants detained by his group are sent to larger detention centers in cities in Libya's southern deserts, run by other militias. Soon after, "we just see them free again on the streets," he said. He added that the southern borders are "wide open" with no government control.

After the latest migrant deaths, Zidan said his government was "determined" to stem the migrant flow. He asked the European Union for training and equipment to help patrol Libya's coast and desert borders, including access to satellite imagery.

In the first six months of this year, 8,400 migrants reached Malta and Italy by sea, almost all from Libya, nearly twice the number in the first six months of 2012, according to the U.N. refugee agency. Smaller numbers come from Tunisia, and others from Egypt, often heading to Greece. But even with the ordeals, Libya's weakened enforcement makes it an attractive path for migrants.

Cities along Libya's 1,000-mile, largely unpatrolled Mediterranean coastline have become collection points where Africans mass, scrounging up the cash for boat to take them the 200 miles to Malta or Lampedusa. Sabratha, a coastal city of about 110,000 people, is now home to some 10,000 migrants, officials here say.

The true number of migrant deaths at sea is impossible to tell, given the secrecy of the boat journeys. A half hour drive into the desert by a garbage heap outside Sabratha is a makeshift graveyard, marked only with a few stones painted white — with no names — where migrant bodies found washed ashore have been buried.

"Bodies are not buried separately, just all next to each other with no marks to tell who is where," said activist Essam Karar, who documented the burials, taking pictures of the bodies.

Under Gadhafi, Libya's policies shifted depending on his whims. At times, illegal migration was encouraged as a tool to pressure European countries; at other times, security forces carried out wide-scale arrests of migrants.

Now officials and activists say trafficking became more organized and that militias collaborate in the profitable business.

"It's a multinational mafia," said Gamal al-Gharabili, head of Sabratha-based Association for Peace, Care and Relief. Boat owners are mostly Libyans connected with Sudanese smugglers bringing in migrants from Horn of Africa countries, he said.

Abdel-Salam al-Kerit, another Sabratha activist involved in aiding migrants, said the migrants used to have to pay multiple smugglers across the land route through Libya. "Now you pay once and for all," he said. "The network extends from the southern borders of Libya to the shores."

Bassem al-Gharabili, a police officer at the anti-trafficking body in the city, said smugglers have become more professional, using larger boats, and are expert at eluding security forces.

"Traffickers monitor us as much as we monitor them. They have spies in the sea. They could be fishermen," he said.

Ramadan, a 25-year-old Eritrean detained at the Sabratha facility, said he first tried to flee Africa along the Egyptian-Israeli border but was caught by smugglers who tortured him with electric shocks and chopped off some of his fingers.

He then tried crossing to Europe from Libya twice. The first time, he survived a rickety boat packed with 50 people that partially broke down after four hours at sea. Three people on board died. The second time, he was detained in Sabratha. There, he said, he was beaten by guards.

"Better to die. I have nothing," said Ramadan, who spoke on condition his full name not be used, fearing further trouble from officials.

In a dark cell at a detention center in the town of Sorman, near Sabratha, Israel Koja said he ran away from his hometown in Nigeria after militants from the Islamist extremist group Boko Haram stormed his house, tied him up and stabbed him.

Koja, 33, paid $1,200 for traffickers to cross the desert into Libya, but has spent more than a year in the jail.

"I escaped a hell to fall in another hell," Koja said.

Associated PressSource: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2013-10-18-Libya-Illegal%20Migrants/id-ace24d6157464bf1a6a7476dc7f91a72
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Diahann Carroll: Quick-witted honoree


LOS ANGELES (AP) — At 78-years-old Diahann Carroll keeps a sense of humor.

"I don't think I realize what the passage of time really means until people talk about things that I did in the '50s and I wonder 'Who the hell are they talking about?,'" the actress, singer and Golden Globe-winner said while being honored at a House of Flowers dinner Saturday evening.

Beverly Johnson, Angela Bassett, Regina King and Anika Noni Rose were in attendance to applaud Carroll and fellow honoree Cheryl Boone Isaacs, the first African American president of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences.

The dinner, hosted by television producer Tracey Edmonds and film and television producer Debra Martin Chase, was held at Edmonds' home.

Fellow honoree Isaacs said the evening made her feel "on top of the world" and described her new post as AMPAS president as "going from zero to 60 in four seconds."

Conceptualized by Chase and deemed House of Flowers after Truman Capote's Broadway play, in which Carroll starred in 1954, the affair was meant to "celebrate female empowerment and to help open doors for future accomplishments," said Edmonds.

"Diahann is a legend who's broken so many barriers and has always represented glamour," said Chase.

Occasionally brushing the soft curls from her face with her heavily jeweled hands, Carroll cracked grins as ladies like Johnson, Bassett and dancer and producer Debbie Allen lined up to collect hugs and kisses.

"I certainly don't feel like an icon," said Carroll in an interview before dinner. "I've had long stretches of unemployment. This is not an easy game." Later in her acceptance speech she said, "I really appreciate knowing that you've heard my name and remember it. I don't even know if I would have been allowed to drive down this street back in the '50s. Being here has given me new passion."

After a 30-year hiatus, Carroll will return to Broadway in April to play Denzel Washington's mother in "A Raisin in the Sun." Rose will also star.

A Tony Award-winner, four-time Emmy nominee, Oscar nominee and the first black actress to star in her own prime-time series, "Julia," Carroll says there is still one role she has yet to conquer: "I would love to be a part of a studio that tells our stories and has a means of growing."

"Julia" debuted in 1968. Carroll is still making TV appearances as a recurring character on USA's "White Collar."

___

Follow AP Film Writer Jessica Herndon on Twitter at: https://twitter.com/SomeKind

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/diahann-carroll-quick-witted-honoree-125254381.html
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