Wednesday, September 3, 2014

Garth Brooks Next World Tour


Garth Brooks Next World Tour Stop......FLORIDA! Garth Brooks Next World Tour

Get excited! Garth Brooks is coming to Florida on his third stop of his world tour, and he'll be doing 3 shows in Jacksonville next month (October). See below for the official announcement and onsale dates:

Official Release: Now!! The Electrifying Return of America’s Most Powerful Concert Force, Garth Brooks Makes His First Florida Appearance on The World Tour and Returns to Jacksonville for The First Time in Over 17 Years.

Official Release: Now!! The Electrifying Return of America’s Most Powerful Concert Force, Garth Brooks Makes His First Florida Appearance on The World Tour and Returns to Jacksonville for The First Time in Over 17 Years.
GARTH BROOKS

WORLD TOUR

With

Trisha Yearwood

Friday, October 10th 7:30PM

Saturday, October 11th 7:30PM

Sunday, October 12th 7:30PM

 Jacksonville Veterans Memorial Arena
Jacksonville, FL



TICKETS ON SALE

Friday, September 12th *

10:00AM Sharp!    
8 ticket limit!!

Buy ONLY at the following:
www.ticketmaster.com or ticketmaster.com/garthbrooks
Or



1-800-745-3000 or Ticketmaster Express 1-866-448-7849



*No sales at the venue box office or Ticketmaster outlets Sept 12th.

 

TICKET PRICES:

 $57.01 plus $3.99 tax plus $1.00 facility fee plus $6.00 service charge = $68.00

#RIPMiriam Selena Gomez Fan, ID’d as Miriam, Reportedly Commits Suicide!

A fan of Selena Goma, named Miriam, reportedly committed suicide after she was bullyed. Users on Twitter indicated that she ran a Twitter page dedicated to Gomez. It’s unclear what her last name was or the circumstances surrounding her death. A few unofficial Gomez Facebook pages and Twitter accounts were tweeting about the girl’s death.



Other users said the girl was from Spain.
On Monday night, a number of people were tweeting “#RIPMiriam.”
“I hope those people who are responsable for her death are feeling like trash rn bc that’s what they really are #RIPMiriam,” one person tweeted.
Added another: “This is why if I ever see anyone bullying someone wether it’s online or in reality, I will stand up for the person being bullied! #RIPMiriam.”

“#RIPMiriam I may not be in the same fandom she was…. But it breaks my heart to hear something like this to been bullied and comit suicide,” another said.
For her part, Gomez has not addressed the death on her Twitter or Instagram page.


Ladies’ Code singer EunB killed after pop group involved in car crash

Ladies’ Code singer EunB killed after pop group involved in car crash..EunB, singer in South Korean pop group Ladies’ Code, has been killed after the group were involved in a car accident.

The 22-year-old was killed after the band’s van crashed into a protective wall in Suwon at around 1.30am local time.

Fellow group members Rise and So Jung are in hospital, with Rise in a critical condition.
The group’s label, Polaris Entertainment, said in a statement: ‘After a schedule in Daegu on September 2, Ladies’ Code was headed back to Seoul. Around 1:30 AM in Suwon, an issue occured with the car′s back wheel coming off. With the rainy road and wheel coming off, the vehicle spun several times, hitting a guardrail.
‘Due to this, Eun Bi unfortunately passed away. The other members, Rise is in critical condition while So Jung is injured and hospitalided, currently receiving treatment. The other members, manager, and stylists, who were in the car, did not receive serious injuries.
‘We want to apologise to all the fans and everyone who have received much shock, and we ask for everyone to pray for the quick recovery of the members.’

Tuesday, September 2, 2014

David Cawthorne Haines beheading ISIS in New Video

 David Cawthorne Haines beheading ISIS in New Video..David Haines, British Man, Threatened by ISIS in New Video; SITE Says [Breaking News]

David Haines, a UK man, was threatened by ISIS in a new video, according to reports on Tuesday.

In the same video, it apparently depicts an ISIS fighter beheading journalist Steven Sotloff, according to reports. The move comes just weeks after journalist James Foley was killed in a similar manner.

The ISIS fighter who carried out the beheading of Sotloff threatened Haines next, reported CNN.

“Just as your missiles continue to strike our people, our knife will continue to strike the necks of your people,” a figure in the video said, speaking to President Obama. When Sotloff was being beheaded, the ISIS fighter also reportedly said, “”I’m back, Obama, and I’m back because of your arrogant foreign policy towards the Islamic State.”

Steven Sotloff 'beheading' Video

Steven Sotloff 'beheading' Video..ISIS beheading of American journalist Steven Sotloff..RIP Steven Sotloff ISIS video shows beheading of American journalist Steven Sotloff.The ISIS terror group has published a video titled "A second message to America," showing the beheading of American journalist Steven Sotloff.

The video also threatens the life of British captive David Haines.

Sotloff speaks to the camera before he is killed, saying he is "paying the price" for U.S. intervention. Considering he was a captive, it's possible that his words were scripted for him.

The masked ISIS figure in the video speaks to U.S. President Barack Obama, telling him, "Just as your missiles continue to strike our people, our knife will continue to strike the necks of your people."

Who is ISIS?

The Islamic State in Iraq and Syria has thrived and mutated during the civil war in Syria and in the security vacuum that followed the departure of the last American forces from Iraq. The aim of ISIS is to create an Islamic state across Sunni areas of Iraq and in Syria. The group has taken up large swaths of land in Iraq and has said it wants to go into Baghdad.

Wednesday, July 2, 2014

Facebook Manipulated 689,003 Users' Emotions For Science

Facebook is the best human research lab ever. There’s no need to get experiment participants to sign pesky consent forms as they’ve already agreed to the site’s data use policy.


A team of Facebook data scientists are constantly coming up with new ways to study human behavior through the social network. When the team releases papers about what it’s learned from us, we often learn surprising things about Facebook instead — such as the fact that it can keep track of the status updates we never actually post. Facebook has played around with manipulating people before — getting 60,000 to rock the vote in 2010 that theoretically wouldn’t have otherwise — but a recent study shows Facebook playing a whole new level of mind gamery with its guinea pigs users. As first noted by The New Scientist and Animal New York, Facebook’s data scientists manipulated the News Feeds of 689,003 users, removing either all of the positive posts or all of the negative posts to see how it affected their moods. If there was a week in January 2012 where you were only seeing photos of dead dogs or incredibly cute babies, you may have been part of the study. Now that the experiment is public, people’s mood about the study itself would best be described as “disturbed.”
The researchers, led by data scientist Adam Kramer, found that emotions were contagious. “When positive expressions were reduced, people produced fewer positive posts and more negative posts; when negative expressions were reduced, the opposite pattern occurred,” according to the paper published by the Facebook research team in the PNAS. “These results indicate that emotions expressed by others on Facebook influence our own emotions, constituting experimental evidence for massive-scale contagion via social networks.”




The experiment ran for a week — January 11–18, 2012 — during which the hundreds of thousands of Facebook users unknowingly participating may have felt either happier or more depressed than usual, as they saw either more of their friends posting ’15 Photos That Restore Our Faith In Humanity’ articles or despondent status updates about losing jobs, getting screwed over by X airline, and already failing to live up to New Year’s resolutions. “*Probably* nobody was driven to suicide,” tweeted one professor linking to the study, adding a “#jokingnotjoking” hashtag.


The researchers — who may not have been thinking about the optics of a “Facebook emotionally manipulates users” study — jauntily note that the study undermines people who claim that looking at our friends’ good lives on Facebook makes us feel depressed. “The fact that people were more emotionally positive in response to positive emotion updates from their friends stands in contrast to theories that suggest viewing positive posts by friends on Facebook may somehow affect us negatively,” they write.

They also note that when they took all of the emotional posts out of a person’s News Feed, that person became “less expressive,” i.e. wrote fewer status updates. So prepare to have Facebook curate your feed with the most emotional of your friends’ posts if they feel you’re not posting often enough.
So is it okay for Facebook to play mind games with us for science? It’s a cool finding but manipulating unknowing users’ emotional states to get there puts Facebook’s big toe on that creepy line. Facebook’s data use policy — that I’m sure you’ve all read — says  Facebookers’ information will be used “for internal operations, including troubleshooting, data analysis, testing, research and service improvement,” making all users potential experiment subjects. And users know that Facebook’s mysterious algorithms control what they see in their News Feed. But it may come as a surprise to users to see those two things combined like this. When universities conduct studies on people, they have to run them by an ethics board first to get approval — ethics boards that were created because scientists were getting too creepy in their experiments, getting subjects to think they were shocking someone to death in order to study obedience and letting men live with syphilis for study purposes. A 2012 profile of the Facebook data team noted, “Unlike academic social scientists, Facebook’s employees have a short path from an idea to an experiment on hundreds of millions of people.” (Update 6/30/14): Cornell University released a statement Monday morning saying its ethics board — which is supposed to approve any research on human subjects — passed on reviewing the study because the part involving actual humans was done by Facebook not by the Cornell researcher involved in the study. Though the academic researchers did help design the study — as noted when it was published — so this seems a bit disingenuous.

In its initial response to the controversy around the study — a statement sent to me late Saturday night — Facebook doesn’t seem to really get what people are upset about, focusing on privacy and data use rather than the ethics of emotional manipulation and whether Facebook’s TOS lives up to the definition of “informed consent” usually required for academic studies like this. “This research was conducted for a single week in 2012 and none of the data used was associated with a specific person’s Facebook account,” says a Facebook spokesperson. “We do research to improve our services and to make the content people see on Facebook as relevant and engaging as possible. A big part of this is understanding how people respond to different types of content, whether it’s positive or negative in tone, news from friends, or information from pages they follow. We carefully consider what research we do and have a strong internal review process. There is no unnecessary collection of people’s data in connection with these research initiatives and all data is stored securely.”

Ideally, Facebook would have a consent process for willing study participants: a box to check somewhere saying you’re okay with being subjected to the occasional random psychological experiment that Facebook’s data team cooks up in the name of science. As opposed to the commonplace psychological manipulation cooked up by advertisers trying to sell you stuff.

Tuesday, June 3, 2014

Durham - Stanley school bus crash: 20 children taken to hospital

Durham - Stanley school bus crash: 20 children taken to hospital Twenty children have been taken to hospital, one with serious injuries, after two school buses crashed head-on in County Durham.

Police said about 50 children and two adults were involved in the crash in Stanley at about 08:22 BST.

The BBC understands there were 28 casualties in total. Police said most were "not serious".


The pupils - from St Bede's, Lanchester; and Tanfield School; both comprehensives - are aged 11 to 18. Scene of Stanley bus crash

Thirteen ambulances were sent to the scene of the accident at the junction of Shield Row Lane and the A693.

Among the casualties was a 12-year-old boy from Tanfield School flown to hospital by air ambulance with severe facial injuries.

His condition was stable on arrival at the Royal Victoria Infirmary (RVI) in Newcastle, the Great North Air Ambulance said.

A 54-year-old bus driver from Stanley was trapped, but later freed and airlifted to the RVI with serious injuries. Scene of Stanley bus crash

The driver of the other bus, a 27-year-old man from Newton Aycliffe, was taken to hospital with minor injuries. Police said a single-decker bus and a double-decker bus had collided. Some children were taken to the nearby Oxhill public house where they were met by teachers from their respective schools. Scene of Stanley bus crash

A 15-year-old pupil from St Bede's, identified as Jennifer, said: "At first I just thought the bus was stopping really fast and then obviously we collided with the other bus.

"There was a girl at the back and she'd bust her nose and smacked her head off the post. We had to try and get off as quickly as we could."

Police said the roads in the area remained closed.

Supt Colin Williamson, of Durham Police, said: "We can now confirm that all drivers and passengers of both buses have been safely removed from the vehicles and taken to hospital if necessary. Scene of Stanley bus crash About 50 children were involved in the crash

"Those not requiring medical treatment are now with family members."

Caroline O'Neill, head of education at Durham County Council, said: "We are working very closely with both school communities to ensure all support needed is offered to the young people involved and to their families. "We are also liaising with our partners in the police and will assist in their investigation in any way we can."