Australia a Model for Successful Gun Control?












If there is one country that best represents the possibility of cutting gun crime by increasing gun control, it is Australia.


In 1996, 28-year-old Martin Bryant finished his lunch in a café in the seaside resort of Port Arthur and pulled out a semi-automatic rifle. In the first 15 seconds of his attack, he killed 12 and wounded 10. In all, he shot more than 50 people in six locations, killing 35. The worst mass shooting in Australia's history capped a violent decade of mass shootings that killed nearly 100 – and Australians had had enough.


Only 12 days later, Prime Minister John Howard – a conservative who had just been elected with the help of gun owners – pushed through not only new gun control laws, but also the most ambitious gun buyback program seen in recent memory.


The laws banned assault rifles, tightened gun owner licensing, and created national uniform registration standards. Howard knew they might be unpopular among some of the same voters who helped put him into office -- during one particularly hostile public town hall, he wore a bulletproof vest.


But something extraordinary happened: the laws tapped into public revulsion at the shooting and became extremely popular. And they became extremely effective.






Tom Williams/CQ Roll Call/Getty Images







In the last 16 years, the risk of dying by gunshot in Australia has fallen by more than 50 percent. The national rate of gun homicide is one-thirtieth that of the United States. And there hasn't been a single mass shooting since Port Arthur.


"It's not that we are a less violent people and that you are a more violent people," says Philip Alpers, an adjunct associate professor at the University of Sydney who runs GunPolicy.org, which tracks gun violence and gun laws across the world. "It's that you have more lethal means at your disposal."


But it wasn't just the new laws that made Australia safer. The gun buyback program collected nearly 650,000 assault weapons and 50,000 additional weapons – about one sixth of the national stock. Fewer guns on the street helped severely reduce the likelihood that guns could be used for a mass shooting.


"Tens, if not hundreds of thousands of gun owners simply, voluntarily gave up guns that they did not need to give up," Alpers told ABC News. "You could not be a gun owner during that period and not feel terribly persecuted, terribly under threat from public opinion. The commentaries were vicious."


Gun advocates hold up Australia's example as a reason to try similar laws in the United States, following the massacre at Sandy Hook Elementary School. But Australians' willingness to give up their guns suggests a fundamental difference between Australia and the United States' gun cultures – and why Australia could be looked at for inspiration, rather than a model.


In the U.S., the founding fathers wrote gun ownership into the country's bedrock documents. Gun owners have long seen their weapons as a sign of freedom.


"But Australians are predisposed toward not having guns," Alpers argues. "We take it for granted that you license the gun owner and you register the firearm. Just as you do with a car. In the United States, everything went in the different direction."


So gun control advocates urge the Obama administration to look at certain steps Australia took – but not necessarily reproduce them.






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How an ancient Egyptian code unmasked a cannibal star


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SMRT Alpha appointed to operate retail space at S'pore Sports Hub






SINGAPORE: The Singapore Sports Hub has appointed SMRT Alpha to lease and operate 41,000 square metres of commercial retail space at the Singapore Sports Hub.

This new joint venture is a partnership between subsidiaries of SMRT and NTUC FairPrice.

The retail mall and waterfront area will feature a variety of indoor and alfresco food and beverage outlets.

For shoppers, the mall will offer a wide range of stores and amenities.

Tenants will also include a FairPrice Xtra hypermarket at the mall, providing affordable daily essentials and groceries, as well as sportswear and sporting equipment, catering to the needs of the residents and shoppers in the area.

The Singapore Sports Hub will be opened and fully operational in April 2014.

- CNA/lp



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Microsoft, Motorola over $100 million apart on patent fees



Microsoft and Motorola can't come close to an agreement on how much the software giant should pay for the right to use the Google-owned company's patents.


In court filings released yesterday and obtained by Reuters, Microsoft indicated that it would be willing to pay as much as $502,000 per year to license Motorola's H.264 patents. The company would also pay as much as $736,000 for Motorola's 802.11 wireless technology.


Motorola, meanwhile, had a much different take. That company has stuck to its guns, saying that a simple fee wasn't enough, and Microsoft should be required to pay a percentage of the selling price of the allegedly infringing products to Motorola. The royalty on H.264 technology should be 2.25 percent, amounting to between $100 million and $125 million per year in fees, Motorola argued, according to Reuters. The mobile company wants a royalty payment of 1.15 percent to 1.73 percent for its Wi-Fi patents, potentially earning it tens of millions of dollars more each year.



Microsoft and Motorola have been deadlocked on what they believe are fair royalty payments over the software giant's use of the mobile company's patents. Microsoft argues that the H.264 patents, which relate to video technology, as well as the Wi-Fi patents, should be offered at a fair rate because they are standard-essential intellectual property. In order for companies to license standard-essential patents, they must request fees that are considered fair, reasonable, and nondiscriminatory (FRAND).


Microsoft has been outspoken about its belief that Motorola is acting unfairly with its 2.25 percent royalty request. In a blog post in February, Microsoft vice president and deputy general counsel Dave Heiner said that Motorola wants $22.50 in royalties for each Windows-based laptop sold on the open market. Those laptops, he said, rely on 50 H.264 patents from Motorola. However, in order to get H.264 onto laptops, Microsoft needs to license over 2,300 patents from 29 other companies that also own some intellectual property related to the technology. Altogether, those companies charge "2 cents for use of more than 2,300 patents."


Motorola has also charged that the
Xbox violates its patents.


Motorola and Microsoft last month held a trial over patent royalties. The court is expected to deliver a final verdict on how much Microsoft will have to pay next year. The same court attempted to have Microsoft and Motorola solve the royalty issue out of court, but the companies couldn't come to an agreement.


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GRAIL Mission Goes Out With a Bang

Jane J. Lee


On Friday, December 14, NASA sent their latest moon mission into a death spiral. Rocket burns nudged GRAIL probes Ebb and Flow into a new orbit designed to crash them into the side of a mountain near the moon's north pole today at around 2:28 p.m. Pacific standard time. NASA named the crash site after late astronaut Sally Ride, America's first woman in space.

Although the mountain is located on the nearside of the moon, there won't be any pictures because the area will be shadowed, according to a statement from NASA' Jet Propulsion Laboratory in California.

Originally sent to map the moon's gravity field, Ebb and Flow join a long list of man-made objects that have succumbed to a deadly lunar attraction. Decades of exploration have left a trail of debris intentionally crashed, accidentally hurtled, or deliberately left on the moon's surface. Some notable examples include:

Ranger 4 - Part of NASA's first attempt to snap close-up pictures of the moon, the Ranger program did not start off well. Rangers 1 through 6 all failed, although Ranger 4, launched April 23, 1962, did make it as far as the moon. Sadly, onboard computer failures kept number 4 from sending back any pictures before it crashed. (See a map of all artifacts on the moon.)

Fallen astronaut statue - This 3.5-inch-tall aluminum figure commemorates the 14 astronauts and cosmonauts who had died prior to the Apollo 15 mission. That crew left it behind in 1971, and NASA wasn't aware of what the astronauts had done until a post-flight press conference.

Lunar yard sale - Objects jettisoned by Apollo crews over the years include a television camera, earplugs, two "urine collection assemblies," and tools that include tongs and a hammer. Astronauts left them because they needed to shed weight in order to make it back to Earth on their remaining fuel supply, said archivist Colin Fries of the NASA History Program Office.

Luna 10 - A Soviet satellite that crashed after successfully orbiting the moon, Luna 10 was the first man-made object to orbit a celestial body other than Earth. Its Russian controllers had programmed it to broadcast the Communist anthem "Internationale" live to the Communist Party Congress on April 4, 1966. Worried that the live broadcast could fail, they decided to broadcast a recording of the satellite's test run the night before—a fact they revealed 30 years later.

Radio Astronomy Explorer B - The U.S. launched this enormous instrument, also known as Explorer 49, into a lunar orbit in 1973. At 600 feet (183 meters) across, it's the largest man-made object to enter orbit around the moon. Researchers sent it into its lunar orbit so it could take measurements of the planets, the sun, and the galaxy free from terrestrial radio interference. NASA lost contact with the satellite in 1977, and it's presumed to have crashed into the moon.

(Learn about lunar exploration.)


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Siblings of Sandy Hook Victims Face Survivor's Guilt













Six-year-old Arielle Pozner was in a classroom at Sandy Hook school when Adam Lanza burst into the school with his rifle and handguns. Her twin brother, Noah, was in a classroom down the hall.


Noah Pozner was killed by Lanza, along with 19 other children at the school, and six adults. Arielle and other students' siblings survived.


"That's going to be incredibly difficult to cope with," said Dr. Jamie Howard, a clinical psychologist at the Child Mind Institute in New York. "It is not something we expect her to cope with today and be OK with tomorrow."


READ: Two Adult Survivors of Connecticut School Shooting Will be Key Witnesses


As the community of Newtown, Conn., begins to bury the young victims of the Sandy Hook elementary school shooting today, the equally young siblings of those killed will only be starting to comprehend what happened to their brothers and sisters.


"Children this young do experience depression in a diagnosable way, they do experience post-traumatic stress disorder. Just because they're young, they don't escape the potential for real suffering," said Rahil Briggs, a child psychologist and professor at Montefiore Medical Center in New York City.






Spencer Platt/Getty Images













President Obama on Newtown Shooting: 'We Must Change' Watch Video









Newtown Shooter's Former Babysitter 'Sick to My Stomach' Watch Video





Arielle and other survivor siblings could develop anxiety or other emotional reactions to their siblings' death, including "associative logic," where they associate their own actions with their sibling's death, Howard said.


"This is when two things happen, and (children) infer that one thing caused the other. (Arielle) may be at risk for that type of magical thinking, and that could be where survivor's guilt comes in. She may think she did something, but of course she didn't," Howard said.


CLICK HERE for photos from the shooting scene.


Children in families where one sibling has died sometimes struggle as their parents are overwhelmed by grief, Howard noted. When that death is traumatic, adults and children sometimes choose not to think about the person or the event to avoid pain.


Interested in How to Help Newtown Families?


"With traumatic grief, it's really important to talk about and think about the children that died, not to avoid talking and thinking about them because that interferes with grieving process, want their lives to be celebrated," Howard said.


Children may also have difficulty understanding why their deceased brother or sister is receiving so much, or so little, attention, according Briggs.


"I think one of the most challenging questions we can be faced with as parents is how to 'appropriately' remember a child that is gone. So much that can go wrong with that," Briggs said. "You have the child who is fortunate enough to escape, who thinks 'Why me? Why did my brother go?' But if you don't remember the sibling enough the child says 'it seems like we've forgotten my brother.'"


"They may even find themselves feeling jealous of all the attention the sibling seems to be receiving," Briggs said.


Parents and other adults in the family's support system need to be on alert, watching the child's behavior, she said. Children could show signs of withdrawing, or seeming spacy or in a daze. They could also seem jumpy or have difficulty concentrating in the wake of a traumatic event.


"For kids experiencing symptoms, and interfering with ability to go to school, they may be suffering from acute stress disorder, and there are good treatments," Howard said.






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Gut instincts: The secrets of your second brain


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Delhi rape highlights chronic women's safety issues in India






NEW DELHI: A weekend trip to the movies for a medical student in her twenties and her male friend ended in horrifying brutality on Sunday night.

She was harassed and then gang raped on a moving bus. Her friend tried to intervene but was beaten up with an iron rod. The two were later thrown from the vehicle, semi naked.

The woman is now in critical condition in a New Delhi hospital suffering from head injuries, cuts, as well as sexual assault wounds.

"Five to seven people started harassing her. The boy protested and made every effort to come to her aid, but some people caught hold of him. Then three to four people took her and gang raped her in the cabin of the bus," said D.K. Mishra, a relative of girl's male friend.

Whilst tragic and very disturbing, incidents such as this are becoming far too common in the Indian capital.

Reactions from politicians are also becoming increasingly similar.

Opposition politicians blamed the party in power for not doing enough to protect women, while the chief minister of Delhi said her government would do whatever it took to make sure such incidents do not happen again.

"The stringent actions required will be taken, not just in this incident but precautionary measures will also be taken to prevent such incidents from happening in the future," said Chief Minister of Delhi Sheila Dikshit.

However that often-heard promise begins to sound hollow when the records of rape cases are analysed.

According to National Crime Records Bureau, 568 cases of rape were registered in New Delhi in 2011.

"If women are not safe here, then where ever in the country you can imagine a woman be safe? No parent can sleep in peace if this is the kind of situation which is developing in our capital," said Ranjana Kumari, Director of the Centre for Social Research.

India's other major cities are not far behind. Entertainment and financial hub Mumbai is second on the list with 218 cases.

One also has to bear in mind that these numbers are just cases which are registered. Many more cases in the cities and throughout the country are never registered.

There are laws to protect the rights of women but rape case statistics point to a very disappointing lack of enforcement borne out of deep-rooted social attitudes.

- CNA/jc



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U.N. summit's meltdown ignites new Internet Cold War



Delegates to the Dubai summit at last Friday's closing ceremonies, after the U.S. and other nations had refused to sign the treaty.

Delegates to the Dubai summit at last Friday's closing ceremonies, after the U.S. and other nations had refused to sign the treaty.



(Credit:
ITU)



news analysis When the history of early 21st century Internet politicking is written, the meltdown of a United Nations summit last week will mark the date a virtual Cold War began.



In retrospect, the implosion of the Dubai summit was all but foreordained: it pitted nations with little tolerance for human rights against Western democracies which, at least in theory, uphold those principles. And it capped nearly a decade of behind-the-scenes jockeying by a U.N. agency called the International Telecommunication Union, created in 1865 to coordinate telegraph connectivity, to gain more authority over how the Internet is managed.



It didn't work. Backed by nearly a million people and some of the engineers responsible for creating the Internet and World Wide Web, the U.S. and dozens of other western democracies rejected the Dubai treaty. That dealt a serious blow to an alliance of repressive regimes -- led by Russia, China, Algeria, and Iran -- that tend to lack appreciation of the virtues of a traditionally free-wheeling Internet.



That rejection formalized a new geopolitical rift. "This conference was never meant to focus on Internet issues," said ambassador Terry Kramer, head of the U.S. delegation to the Dubai summit. "The Internet has given the world unimaginable economic and social benefit during these past 24 years -- all without U.N. regulation."



Washington quickly applauded its negotiators' decision. The Federal Communications Commission's Robert McDowell, a Republican, called it an ITU "power grab" and said the U.S. delegation "stood strong for Internet freedom." FCC chairman Julius Genachowski, a Democrat, said the U.S. "simply could not sign such a treaty," and Rep. Zoe Lofgren, a California Democrat, warned it was time to stand against nations that want "greater control over the Internet in order to restrict or censor it for political or cultural reasons."



The new Internet political divide isn't east-west or north-south. Instead, it roughly tracks national governments' commitment to free expression and other human rights: the U.S., Canada, Europe, Australia, New Zealand, India, the Philippines, and Japan did not sign the Dubai treaty (PDF). They're joined by some Latin America and African nations including Chile, Peru, Malawi, Gambia, and Costa Rica.



Of the ITU's 193 member states, 89 have signed the treaty so far, putting the total at a little under half. Signatories include Russia, China, Libya, Nigeria, Iran, Cuba, Cambodia, and Egypt.



There's a chance that the Dubai summit could have been salvaged if the discussions remained focused on items unambiguously within the ITU's mandate, such as maritime telecommunications and balance of payments for telephone calls.



Delegates from Burundi, which signed the treaty.

Delegates from Burundi, which signed the treaty.



(Credit:
ITU)



But ITU chief Hamadoun Touré and Mohamed Nasser al Ghanim, the summit's chairman, pushed to insert language dealing with regulation of "unsolicited" Internet communications and cybersecurity. In addition, a resolution appended to the treaty says "all governments should have an equal role and responsibility for international Internet governance" and formally expands "the activities of ITU in this regard."



That amounts to a direct challenge to the traditional way the Internet is governed, which is primarily by ICANN, the organization that manages Internet domain names and addresses, and by protocols created by groups such as the Internet Engineering Task Force and the World Wide Web Consortium. It also suggests that topics related to Internet speech and surveillance could be put to a majority vote of ITU's 192 member countries, many of which have less-than-favorable views toward human rights. Two-thirds of the world's nations, according to Reporters Without Borders' ratings, suffer from significant "problems" with press freedom.



To list some examples: China, which boasts the world's most extensive Internet censorship regime, proposed Internet eavesdropping recommendations using deep packet inspection that the ITU adopted last month. In 2008, CNET disclosed that the ITU was drafting technical standards, also proposed by the Chinese government, to define methods of tracing the original source of Internet communications.



It's also telling that when a proposal surfaced in Dubai last week to include a brief mention of "human rights obligations" in the treaty, dozens of nations balked. China criticized the language, saying "we also have a very serious question about the necessity of the existence of this text." The "security of the state" is another concern that's equally valid, China's delegate said. Malaysia was worried that capitalizing Human Rights Obligations would make them seem too important.



"We will not vote on any issues"

Touré, the ITU chief, had promised in advance that the Dubai summit would not be Internet-focused, and would work by consensus.



"In the true tradition of the ITU, we will not vote on any issues," Touré told reporters over the summer. "Voting means winners and losers, and this is not simply acceptable. And we believe that we'll come to an agreement on all of the issues." Touré had said this month that the summit "is not about Internet governance."



But when the treaty expanded to include cybersecurity and the content of Internet communications, the U.S. and its allies felt they had walked into an ambush.




"We all agreed that content was not intended to be part of the ITR, but content issues keep coming up," the U.K.'s delegate said last week. "Unfortunately, the language that we proposed and the various alternatives we proposed were constantly rejected."



Another sticking point was procedural: instead of working by consensus, a vote to give the ITU a more "active" role in shaping the Internet's future took place at 1 a.m. local time last Thursday. (After the adoption of the proposal, Spain's delegate raised an objection, saying "had we known that it was a vote, we might very well have acted differently.")



The world's five Internet address registries, which assign blocks of IPv4 and IPv6 addresses, published a statement over the weekend that criticized the ITU for secrecy and for violating its own promises to summit attendees: "Neither the content of this conference, nor its conduct during this critical final period, have met community expectations or satisfied public assurances given prior to the event."



For his part, Touré said in a statement after the summit that the event "succeeded in bringing unprecedented public attention to the different and important perspectives that govern global communications." He added, in what could be viewed as a swipe at the U.S. and other countries that refused to sign the treaty, "there is not one single world view but several, and these views need to be accommodated and engaged."



Large bureaucracies tend to discover justifications for expansion, of course, and the U.N. constellation of agencies is no exception.



At a 2004 summit at the U.N.'s headquarters in New York, U.N. Secretary General Kofi Annan criticized the current system through which Internet standards are set and domain names are handled -- namely ICANN, IETF, W3C, and so on -- and delegates from Cuba, Ghana, Bolivia and Venezula objected to what they said was too much control of the process by the U.S. government and its allies.



Two years later, at another U.N. summit in Athens, then-ITU Secretary General Yoshio Utsumi criticized the current ICANN-dominated process, stressing that poorer nations are dissatisfied and are hoping to erode U.S. influence. "No matter what technical experts argue is the best system, no matter what self-serving justifications are made that this is the only possible way to do things, there are no systems or technologies that can eternally claim they are the best," Utsumi said.



In an interview with CNET at the time, Houlin Zhao, director of the ITU's Telecommunication Standardization Bureau, was blunt about his agency's interest in expanding its mandate: "The ITU is trying to ensure its value. Any public network of communications is naturally of interest to ITU."



The ITU's problem is, as law professor David Post put it, that the Internet "arose and spread across the entire globe without any ITU oversight or involvement whatsoever." Worse yet, from the perspective of the ITU, its own set of technical standards, called the OSI protocols, developed in the 1980s, were largely rejected in favor of the Internet's lingua franca of TCP/IP.



Last week's summit is likely to spark calls for ITU reform -- or even its abolition. Andrew McLaughlin, former deputy chief technology officer in the Obama administration, recently said the ITU "should be killed off in its current form" because its "nature, structure, culture, values and processes...are all inimical to a free and open Internet, and they are all inconsistent with the nature of the technical infrastructure that now characterizes our communications networks." Anthony Rutkowski, a consultant who was previously a counselor to two different ITU secretary-generals, told CNET last week that the ITU is "the most failed body in the history of international telecommunications."



Significant reform is unlikely. So is the prospect of the ITU abandoning its bid to expand its authority over Internet governance. The next summit in the new Internet Cold War will take place in Busan, Korea, in November 2014. McDowell, the FCC commissioner, is already warning: "The United States should immediately prepare for an even more treacherous ITU treaty negotiation that will take place [then]. Those talks could expand the ITU's reach even further."


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Space Pictures This Week: Frosty Mars, Mini Nile, More

Photograph by Mike Theiss, National Geographic

The aurora borealis, also known as the northern lights, illuminates the Arctic sky in a recent picture by National Geographic photographer Mike Theiss.

A storm chaser by trade, Theiss is in the Arctic Circle on an expedition to photograph auroras, which result from collisions between charged particles released from the sun's atmosphere and gaseous particles in Earth's atmosphere.

After one particularly amazing show, he wrote on YouTube, "The lights were dancing, rolling, and twisting, and at times looked like they were close enough to touch!" (Watch his time-lapse video of the northern lights.)

Published December 14, 2012

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