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Monday, 20 October 2014

Bandits Attack and Burns Down KCSE Papers in Turkana

Eight police officers who were ferrying Kenya Certificate of Secondary Education (KCSE) examination to a school in Turkana East constituency are still missing after heavily armed raiders attacked their car. The officers are said to have come under heavy attack from the over 100 raiders who also burnt the car. Former Kapedo Councillor Joseph Eragai said the attackers sprayed the police car with bullets Monday afternoon before setting it ablaze. “The raiders numbering over 100 ambushed and sprayed the car with bullets at Kasarani. The officers scampered for safety. One was already injured by the time they fled. However, we are not sure about the safety of the rest who had been surrounded by the raiders,” he said. Turkana Director of Education Nichodemus Anyang said they received the examination papers on Sunday at Lodwar airport and were expected to be transported Monday to Lokori police armoury awaiting distribution on Tuesday. The former area councillor said the incident happened only two days after a county vehicle carrying hospital staff from Lodwar to Kapedo health centre was attacked and three people, including a teacher injured. Anyang added that the exam was meant for Kapedo mixed secondary school where 25 candidates are set to sit for the examination which commences Tuesday. He said that the Kenya National Examination Council (KNEC) had been notified and an arrangement has been made to airlift Tuesday's paper to the school using military chopper. The director said due to the high levels of insecurity, the students will have to be relocated next week to Lokori where they will continue with their examinations. Last week, the head teacher of Kapedo primary school was shot and seriously injured as he left school for his home. Turkana East MP Nicholas Ngikor expressed worry over increased spate of attacks in the region. He blamed the government over what he termed as passive action and unwillingness to restore order in the region where more people have been killed a number injured. Turkana Women Representative Joyce Emanikor called for immediate air response to rescue the officers. Cases of Turkana/Pokot conflicts have escalated, only last week a vehicle was attacked between Lokichar and Kainuk where one person was killed and nine others injured.

Reggae vocalist John Holt Pronounced Dead

Reggae vocalist John Holt, who sang the original version of Blondie's hit The Tide is High, has died aged 69. His manager Copeland Forbes told the Jamaica Observer he died in a London hospital on Sunday. The cause of death has yet to be confirmed. Holt rose to fame in the 1960s as the lead singer of The Paragons, writing and releasing The Tide is High in 1967. He went solo in 1970 and went on to become one of the biggest stars of reggae music in Jamaica. Musicians paying tribute to the singer have included Jamaican rapper Shaggy, who tweeted: "We have lost a legend. Very instrumental part of our reggae history! You'll be missed." Fellow Jamaican artist Sean Paul said: "RIP Sir John Holt. You have served your culture well. I salute you." UB40 added that Holt was a "massive inspiration and will be sorely missed". 'Huge talent' Born in 1947 in Kingston, Jamaica, Holt penned a number of The Paragons' hits including Tonight, I See Your Face and Ali Baba as well as The Tide is High. Although the track was popular in Jamaica, it only went mainstream when US band Blondie topped the charts on both side of the Atlantic with their version in 1980. It went on to be covered by a number of other artists including Atomic Kitten, Maxi Priest and Canadian rapper Kardinal Offishall. As a solo artist, Holt's 1972 track Stick By Me was the biggest-selling Jamaican record of the year. His only success in the UK came with his 1974 cover version of Kris Kristofferson's Help Me Make It Through the Night, which spent 11 weeks in the top 40 and peaked at number six. Holt went on to release almost 40 albums over his career, mostly through Trojan Records. The record company paid tribute to the singer, calling him "a huge talent and a true gentleman". His last solo album, Peacemaker, was released in 1993.

The Origin of Copulation (SEX)

Scientists believe they have discovered the origin of copulation. An international team of researchers says a fish called Microbrachius dicki is the first-known animal to stop reproducing by spawning and instead mate by having sex. The primitive bony fish, which was about 8cm long, lived in ancient lakes about 385 million years ago in what is now Scotland. Microbrachius dicki fossils are common - but nobody noticed the sexual organs until now The female fish, on the other hand, had a small bony structure at their rear that locked the male organ into place. Constrained by their anatomy, the fish probably had to mate side by side. "They couldn't have done it in a 'missionary position'," said Prof Long. "The very first act of copulation was done sideways, square-dance style." He added that the fish were able to stay in position with the help of their small arm-like fins. "The little arms are very useful to link the male and female together, so the male can get this large L-shaped sexual organ into position to dock with the female's genital plates, which are very rough like cheese graters. "They act like Velcro, locking the male organ into position to transfer sperm." Artist impression of Microbrachius dicki Copulation using this method did not stay around for long - fish reverted to spawning Surprisingly, the researchers think this first attempt to reproduce internally was not around for long. As fish evolved, they reverted back to spawning, in which eggs and sperm to fertilise them are released into the water by female and male creatures respectively. It took another few million years for copulation to make a come-back, reappearing in ancestors of sharks and rays. Commenting on the research, Dr Matt Friedman, from the University of Oxford, UK, said: "The placoderm group (which includes Microbrachius dicki) is a well known group - the fossils are pretty common, and it's not as if this one was found in some far-off, exotic part of the world. It was found in Scotland. "It is very remarkable that we haven't noticed this before."

Dial and Redial: Phone Hackers Stealing Billions

SAN FRANCISCO — Bob Foreman’s architecture firm ran up a $166,000 phone bill in a single weekend last March. But neither Mr. Foreman nor anyone else at his seven-person company was in the office at the time. “I thought: ‘This is crazy. It must be a mistake,’ ” Mr. Foreman said. It wasn’t. Hackers had broken into the phone network of the company, Foreman Seeley Fountain Architecture, and routed $166,000 worth of calls from the firm to premium-rate telephone numbers in Gambia, Somalia and the Maldives. It would have taken 34 years for the firm to run up those charges legitimately, based on its typical phone bill, according to a complaint it filed with the Federal Communications Commission. The firm, in Norcross, Ga., was the victim of an age-old fraud that has found new life now that most corporate phone lines run over the Internet. The swindle, which on the web is easier to pull off and more profitable, affects mostly small businesses and cost victims $4.73 billion globally last year. That is up nearly $1 billion from 2011, according to the Communications Fraud Control Association, an industry group financed by carriers and law-enforcement agencies to tackle communications fraud. Photo Jim Dalton, a telecom expert, calls attacks on Internet-based phone systems “relentless.” Credit Tami Chappell for The New York Times Major carriers have sophisticated fraud systems in place to catch hackers before they run up false six-figure charges, and they can afford to credit customers for millions of fraudulent charges every year. But small businesses often use local carriers, which lack such antifraud systems. And some of those carriers are leaving customers to foot the bill. The law is not much help, because no regulations require carriers to reimburse customers for fraud the way credit card companies must. Lawmakers have taken the issue up from time to time, but little progress has been made. Last year, Senator Charles E. Schumer, Democrat of New York, pushed the Federal Communications Commission to adopt new regulations after dozens of small businesses around Albany were hit with the swindle. But the agency has not taken any action, and the cause appears to have petered out. Representatives for the agency and the senator’s office did not return requests for comment. The scheme works this way, telecommunications fraud experts say: Hackers sign up to lease premium-rate phone numbers, often used for sexual-chat or psychic lines, from one of dozens of web-based services that charge dialers over $1 a minute and give the lessee a cut. In the United States, premium-rate numbers are easily identified by 1-900 prefixes, and callers are informed they will be charged higher rates. But elsewhere, like in Latvia and Estonia, they can be trickier to spot. The payout to the lessees can be as high as 24 cents for every minute spent on the phone. Hackers then break into a business’s phone system and make calls through it to their premium number, typically over a weekend, when nobody is there to notice. With high-speed computers, they can make hundreds of calls simultaneously, forwarding as many as 220 minutes’ worth of phone calls a minute to the pay line. The hacker gets a cut of the charges, typically delivered through a Western Union, MoneyGram or wire transfer. Continue reading the main story In part because the plan is so profitable, premium rate number resellers are multiplying rapidly. There were 17 in 2009; last year there were 85, according to Yates Fraud Consulting, which is based in Britain. In 2012, hackers hijacked the phone lines at 26 small businesses around Albany and ran up phone bills as high as $200,000 per business over the course of a few days. Those businesses that contracted with major carriers received credit that covered much of the fraud, though some ended up paying a few thousand dollars. Those who had signed up with a local carrier, Tech Valley Communications, were not so lucky. Tech Valley sued three of its clients to pay huge bills, according to court filings. Best Cleaners, a dry cleaning chain that operates in three states, was one victim. At that business, hackers placed more than 75,000 minutes of premium calls, totaling $147,000. At American Energy Care, a small consulting firm in Albany, the bill reached $200,353. A billboard advertising business in Cohoes, N.Y., was charged $18,000. All settled their cases with Tech Valley. None would discuss the case because of the terms of the settlement, but Best Cleaners said the cost was enough to force it to cancel a planned expansion. Industry groups are trying to tackle the problem but say it is hard to keep up with. Roberta Aronoff, the executive director of the Communications Fraud Control Association, said she routinely loads fake “hot numbers” into a fraud management system, sharing them with carriers so they can be blocked. Catching the criminals is difficult because the crime can cross as many as three jurisdictions. In 2011, the Federal Bureau of Investigation and police in the Philippines arrested four men who used the scheme to make $2 million in fraudulent calls; revenue was directed to a Saudi Arabian militant group that United States officials believe financed the 2008 Mumbai terrorist bombings. Foreman Seeley Fountain, the architecture firm, is disputing its $166,000 bill with its carrier, TW Telecom. The bill now includes $17,000 in late charges and termination fees. In addition to asking the F.C.C., the firm has asked the local police, officials at the Georgia Public Service Commission, the F.B.I. and the Department of Justice for help. The F.C.C. and Justice Department declined to comment for this article, and the Georgia agency did not return requests for comment. The local police said there had been no progress in finding the hackers. Joshua Campbell, a spokesman for the F.B.I., said the bureau was working with the industry to solve the problems but declined to discuss the specific case. Bob Meldrum, vice president for corporate communications at TW Telecom, said Foreman Seeley Fountain should have better protected its equipment from hackers. “We had to pay for those calls,” he said. “Someone had to pay for those calls.” Mr. Foreman said his firm didn’t even realize this was a potential risk. Not many do. “It’s relentless,” said Jim Dalton, founder of TransNexus, which sells Internet calling management software. “If you put a computer on the Internet, it immediately starts getting probed for a weak point.” To avoid the same fate, Mr. Dalton and other telecom experts advise people to turn off call forwarding and set up strong passwords for their voice mail systems and for placing international calls. He also said businesses needed to treat their phones as Internet-connected machines, since criminals already were doing that. “People don’t realize their phone is a six-figure liability waiting to happen,” Mr. Dalton added.

Tuesday, 14 October 2014

Jesus Knows and Understands You

Does anyone know everything about you? That can be a scary thought. Even married couples sometimes hide the truth because they don’t want to hurt the other person’s feelings. Who wants to honestly answer questions like: Do you think I’ve put on too much weight? Do you think I’m too critical and overbearing? Yet there is an upside to intimate relationships and friendships. What does it mean to be able to confide in someone about your dreams and fears, and know they won’t laugh? Do you have a pal who knows all about you and likes you anyway? It’s much easier to let your hair down when you know someone appreciates you without expecting you to be perfect. Let’s face it. It’s much easier to make a joking remark or a casual comment when you don’t expect it to be repeated on Facebook an hour later. When someone “has your back,” you are less fearful of admitting your weaknesses. And one of the best ways to deal with your struggles is to be able to talk about them and get some feedback. Now, if you expect your spouse or a good friend to extend this kind of caring, why would you expect less from an all-knowing, all-seeing, all-loving God? Hebrews 4:13 comes immediately after a verse that talks about God’s word (the Bible) being sharper than a double-edged sword.