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Updates from Organizations - Government agencies - Advertise Various Artists

Monday, March 11, 2019 - 10:45am
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The World Wide Web will celebrate its 30th anniversary on Tuesday, March 12

Fact Sheet: Web vs. Internet

  • While the "Web" is probably the largest service on the Internet that most people use, it's not all of the "Internet".
  • Everything that makes up the Web runs over the Internet, but there is a lot more to the Internet than the Web.
  • The Internet provides the foundation for all kinds of applications, like email, chat, and video conferencing—and also the Web.
  • Every time you message someone on WhatsApp, iMessage or Facebook Messenger, you are using the Internet, but NOT the Web.
    • The same is true of Telegram, Signal, Viber, and most other messaging systems.
    • NOTE: the messaging systems may have a web interface where you can read and compose messages, but they also have non-Web clients (ex. apps) and when they are sending/receiving messages, they are doing so using non-Web protocols.
  • Every time you make a video call over Skype, Facetime, Zoom, WhatsApp, you are using the Internet, but NOT the Web.
  • Every time you send or receive an email message, you are using the Internet, but NOT the Web.
    • (Note that you might be using a Web interface to read or write the email, but the actual sending and receiving takes place using non-Web protocols.)
  • When you are playing online games using apps you install on your computer, you are using the Internet, and probably not the Web.
  • When you use apps on your mobile phone, those are using the Internet - and may or may not be using the Web.
    • (Some apps on your mobile phone are written natively for Android or iOS and use protocols that are NOT for the Web - but in many other cases, what you see as "apps" are basically small, separate web browsers that then pull up a website inside of the "app"... so it is a Web site, traveling over the Internet, that is then viewed inside of an "app" on your mobile phone.)
  • When you store files on DropBox, Box.com, Microsoft OneDrive, etc., you are using the Internet - and you *might* be using the Web if you are using the Web interface to upload files - but if you are using the native integration into Windows or Mac OS X, those are not using the Web.
  • When you use group calendaring tools, many of those use non-Web protocols - again, you are using the Internet, but not necessarily the Web.
  • The Web would not exist without the Internet ... but similarly the Internet would not have grown into the amazing and powerful tool it is without the Web.
  • The Web needs the Internet to work... but the Internet needs the Web to be useful.
  • The Web relies on the Internet to get content to people ... and the Internet relies on the Web for the content people want.
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  • Joint Resolution Regarding Daylight Saving Time

     

    SALT LAKE CITY, UT (3/9/19) – On Monday, March 11 at 2:00 p.m., Representative Marsha Judkins will present 1st Sub HJR 15 to the House Economic Development and Workforce Services Committee.

     

    Efforts to address the daylight saving issue has stalled for years, in part because the Federal Government does not allow Utah to stay on daylight saving time year round – it being one of the more popular options. Currently, the Federal Government allows states only two options: to stick with the status quo or to stay on standard time. The resolution is in support of Congressman Rob Bishop's proposal to Congress to allow states to decide whether they stay on standard time OR daylight saving time year round. With this new flexibility, Utah would finally be able to have a real policy discussion about what time zone scheme is best for our state and our citizens.

     

    The bill will be heard just one day after Utah and 48 other states observe the annual “spring forward” tradition that sets the clocks forward by one hour. This ritual, coupled with the “fall back” portion in the fall, is based off of misguided efforts decades ago to save on energy. However, research has shown that the clock-switching scheme does not actually save energy –though there is a growing body of evidence that indicates the tradition has a negative impact on health and productivity.

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    Judging U.S. War Crimes

    by Kathy Kelly

    878 words

    Chelsea Manning, who bravely exposed atrocities committed by the U.S. military, is again imprisoned in a U.S. jail. On International Women’s Day, March 8, 2019, she was incarcerated in the Alexandria, VA federal detention center for refusing to testify in front of a secretive Grand Jury. Her imprisonment can extend through the term of the Grand Jury, possibly 18 months, and the U.S. courts could allow formation of future Grand Juries, potentially jailing her again. 

    Chelsea Manning has already paid an extraordinarily high price for educating the U.S. public about atrocities committed in the wars of choice the U.S. waged in Iraq and Afghanistan. Chelsea Manning was a U.S. Army soldier and former U.S. intelligence analyst. She already testified, in court, how she downloaded and disseminated government documents revealing classified information she believed represented possible war crimes. In 2013, she was convicted by court martial and sentenced to 35 years in prison for leaking government documents to Wikileaks. On January 17, 2017, President Obama commuted her sentence. In May of 2017, she was released from military prison having served seven years.  

    “Where you stand determines what you see.”

    Chelsea Manning, by virtue of her past work as an analyst with the U.S. military, carefully studied footage of what could only be described as atrocities against human beings. She saw civilians killed, on her screen, and conscience didn’t allow her to ignore what she witnessed, to more or less change the channel. One scene of carnage occurred on July 12, 2007, in Iraq. Chelsea Manning made available to the world the black and white grainy footage and audio content which depicted a U.S. helicopter gunship indiscriminately firing on Iraqi civilians. Twelve people were killed, including two Reuters journalists. 

    What follows is part of the dialogue from the classified US military video footage from July 12th: 

    US SOLDIER 1: Alright, firing.

    US SOLDIER 4: Let me know when you’ve got them.

    US SOLDIER 2: Let’s shoot. Light 'em all up.

    US SOLDIER 1: Come on, fire!

    US SOLDIER 2: Keep shootin’. Keep shootin’. Keep shootin’. Keep shootin’.

    US SOLDIER 2: Alright, we just engaged all eight individuals.
                      

    Amy Goodman describedthe next portion of the video: 

    AMY GOODMAN: Minutes later, the video shows US forces watching as a van pulls up to evacuate the wounded. They again open fire, killing several more people, wounding two children inside the van. 

    US SOLDIER 2: Bushmaster, Crazy Horse. We have individuals going to the scene, looks like possibly picking up bodies and weapons.

    US SOLDIER 1: Let me engage. Can I shoot?

    US SOLDIER 2: Roger. Break. Crazy Horse one-eight, request permission to engage.

    US SOLDIER 3: Picking up the wounded?

    US SOLDIER 1: Yeah, we’re trying to get permission to engage. Come on, let us shoot!

    US SOLDIER 2: Bushmaster, Crazy Horse one-eight.

    US SOLDIER 1: They’re taking him.

    US SOLDIER 2: Bushmaster, Crazy Horse one-eight.

    US SOLDIER 4: This is Bushmaster seven, go ahead.

    US SOLDIER 2: Roger. We have a black SUV —- or Bongo truck picking up the bodies. Request permission to engage.

    US SOLDIER 4: Bushmaster seven, roger. This is Bushmaster seven, roger. Engage.

    US SOLDIER 2: One-eight, engage. Clear.

    US SOLDIER 1: Come on!

    US SOLDIER 2: Clear. Clear.

    US SOLDIER 1: We’re engaging.

    US SOLDIER 3: I got ’em.

    US SOLDIER 2: Should have a van in the middle of the road with about twelve to fifteen bodies.

    US SOLDIER 1: Oh yeah, look at that. Right through the windshield! Ha!
     

    Democracy Now, in the same segment, asked former U.S. whistleblower Dan Ellsberg for comments about releasing the video. “What were the criteria,” Ellsberg asked, “that led to denying this to the public? And how do they stand up when we actually see the results? Is anybody going to be held accountable for wrongly withholding evidence of war crimes in this case…?”

    Chelsea Manning’s disclosures also led to public awareness of the Granai massacrein Afghanistan. On May 4, 2009, Taliban forces attacked U.S. and Afghan forces in Afghanistan’s Farah province. The U.S. military called for U.S. airstrikes on buildings in the village of Granai. A U.S. Air Force B-1 bomber was used to drop 2,000 lb. and 500 lb. bombs, killing an estimated 86 to 147 women and children. The U.S. Air Force has videotape of the Granai massacre. Ellsberg called for President Obama to post the videotape rather than wait to see if Wikileaks would release it. To this day, the video hasn’t been released. Apparently, a disgruntled Wikileaks employee destroyed the footage.

    Were it not for Chelsea Manning’s courageous disclosures, certain U.S. military atrocities might have been kept secret. Her revelations were also key to exposing U.S. approval of the 2008 coup against the elected government in Honduras and U.S. dealings with dictators and oligarchs across the Middle East, which helped spark the Arab Spring rebellions.

    Prior to her arrest in 2010, Chelsea Manning wrote: “I want people to see the truth, regardless of who they are. Because without information, you cannot make informed decisions as a public.”

    Chelsea Manning’s principled and courageous actions provide guidance for us to control our fears. We must seek an end to war crimes in Afghanistan, Iraq and other areas where the U.S. terrifies and kills civilians.

    -end-
    Kathy Kelly, syndicated by PeaceVoice, co-coordinates Voices for Creative Nonviolence.