Thursday, February 25, 2016

Watch: BLM Activist Confronts Hillary Clinton During Fundraiser in SC


A Black Lives Matter activist identified as Ashley Williams wanted the Democratic presidential candidate to explain some comments she made in 1996 that Williams believes encouraged mass incarceration.

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A Black Lives Matter activist identified as Ashley Williams holds a sign referencing a statement Hillary Clinton made during a 1996 speech. 
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A Black Lives Matter activist confronted Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton during a fundraiser in Charleston, S.C., on Wednesday.
The protester, identified as Ashley Williams by the Huffington Post, paid $500 to attend the function while holding a sign that read, "We have to bring them to heel," a reference to a speech Clinton made in 1996 in which she claimed that kids in gangs were "superpredators."
During the January 1996 speech, which took place in Keene, N.H., Clinton, while discussing the 1994 Violent Crime Control and Law Enforcement Act, noted that the government needed an "organized effort against gangs, just as in a previous generation we had an organized effort against the mob. We need to take these people on. They are often connected to big drug cartels. They are not just gangs of kids anymore," she said. "They are often the kinds of kids that are called superpredators."




She continued: "No conscience, no empathy. We can talk about why they ended up that way, but first we have to bring them to heel, and the president has asked the FBI to launch a very concerted effort against gangs everywhere."
"I'm not a superpredator, Hillary Clinton," Williams says to her in a video of the incident that was posted on YouTube.
"OK, fine, we'll talk about it," a visibly annoyed Clinton says.
"Can you apologize to black people for mass incarceration?" Williams asks.
"Can I talk, and then maybe you can listen to what I say?" Clinton then asks.
Clinton tries to tell the 100 or so donors gathered at the event about the speech she gave in 1996 when Williams shouts, "You called black people superpredators."
"You want to hear the facts or do you just want to talk?" Clinton asks.
The back-and-forth between the protester and the Democratic presidential hopeful continues until Williams is escorted out of the event.
"Umm, OK, back to the issues that I think are important," Clinton says while donors applaud.
Watch the interaction below:




Wednesday, February 24, 2016

We Just Found out the Real Reason the FBI Wants a Backdoor into the iPhone

Jake Anderson
February 24, 2016
(ANTIMEDIA) The FBI versus Apple Inc. An unstoppable force meets an immovable object — the feverish momentum of American technocracy accelerating into the cavernous Orwellian entrenchment of the surveillance state. You thought the patent wars were intense? The ‘Battle of the Backdoor’ pits one of America’s most monolithic tech conglomerates against the Department of Justice and, ultimately, the interests of the national security state. And this case is likely only the opening salvo in what will be a decades-long ideological war between tech privacy advocates and the federal government.
On its face, the case boils down to a single locked and encrypted iPhone 5S, used by radical jihadist Syed Rizwan Farook before he and his wide Tashfeen Malik killed 14 people in San Bernardino on December 2nd. The DOJ wants Apple to build a backdoor into the device so that it can bypass the company’s state of the art encryption apparatus and access information and evidence related to the case.
At least, that’s the premise presented to the public. As we are learning, the FBI and the federal government have a far more comprehensive end-game in mind than merely bolstering the prosecution of this one case.
Whistleblower Edward Snowden tweeted last week that “crucial details [of the case] are being obscured by officials.” Specifically, he made the following trenchant points:
Now, the Wall Street Journal has confirmed that there are actually 12 other iPhones the FBI wants to access in cases that have nothing to do with terrorism. According to an Apple lawyer, these cases are spread all across the country: “Four in Illinois, three in New York, two in California, two in Ohio, and one in Massachusetts.”
With each of these cases, the FBI’s lawyers cite an 18th-century law calledAll Writs Act, which they say is the jurisprudence needed to force Apple to comply and bypass their built-in proprietary encryption methods. Is it any wonder the only case the public hears about is the one that involves terrorism?



While law enforcement authorities claim these 12 additional cases are evidence that encryption has become a major hindrance to investigations across the country, privacy advocates say it is, conversely, evidence that national security is not the only factor at play in the government’s desire to circumvent encryption. This is further evidenced by the fact that the government has been pressuring Apple to create iPhone backdoors since long before the San Bernardino attack.
Rather, information privacy advocates like the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) say the push for bypassing encryption  specifically, compelling Apple to build a backdoor operating system  involves a large-scale campaign to use the threat of terror to overreach their legal authority, breaching civil liberties in the process. We saw this in the wake of 9/11, when NSA’s PRISM program conscripted Google, Microsoft, and Facebook in a covert data mining campaign to collect metadata from American citizens.
The EFF says the Apple case is part of an ongoing pattern of the state using the threat of terrorism as a Trojan horse to get backdoor access to citizens’ smartphones:
“The power to force a company to undermine security protections for its customers may seem compelling in a particular case, but this week’s order has very significant implications both for technology and the law. Not only would it require a company to create a new vulnerability potentially affecting millions of device users, the order would also create a dangerous legal precedent. The next time an intelligence agency tries to undermine consumer device security by forcing a company to develop new flaws in its own security protocols, the government will find a supportive case to cite where before there were none.”
The DOJ deployed talking heads to all the media outlets to make the specious argument that what they’re asking for doesn’t really constitute a backdoor. The fact of the matter is, they are asking for a court to mandate that Apple work for the government (which, some have argued, creates a 13th amendment violation as well as privacy concerns) in weakening their own security and creating access to a locked, encrypted device. This is a backdoor, and virtually all tech experts agree that they are dangerous.
“Authoritarian regimes around the world are salivating at the prospect of the FBI winning this order. If Apple creates the master key that the FBI has demanded that they create, governments around the world are going to be demanding the same access.”
Computer programming expert and Libertarian Party presidential candidate John McAfee tried to call the FBI’s bluff last week by offering to take apart the San Bernardino iPhone and help the government extract the data they want without building a backdoor. He made the rounds on major media outlets as well, warning of the dangers of complying with the Justice Department.
McAfee says the FBI is “asking every owner of an iPhone to make their phone susceptible to bad hackers and more importantly foreign enemies of the United States like China.”
Meanwhile, this week, Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg offered intellectual solidarity with Apple’s CEO Tim Cook, while Bill Gates took a more moderate stance on the issue, suggesting privacy advocates were overreacting. Gates later backslid from this position and lent his support to Apple.
It’s also worth pointing out that the FBI’s own mistakes during the investigation of the San Bernardino shooting may the reason they now need Apple’s help. According to Truthdig,
“The FBI reportedly asked San Bernardino County officials to tamper with the iCloud account of one of the suspected shooters in last December’s attack, in an effort that ultimately failed — making it impossible to know if there were other ways of recovering encrypted information without taking Apple to court.”
Apple’s brand is on the line, too. Previously hailed as a data security juggernaut among smartphone manufacturers, a judicial order to build a backdoor would compromise their status in a market in which uncompromised encryption is becoming rarer by the day.
The stakes couldn’t be higher. As noted by The Pontiac Tribune, if the FBI prevails in this case, the ramifications won’t be limited to smartphones. It will set a precedent for the government legally conscripting any and every entity they desire for the purposes of citizen surveillance and metadata collection.




Cam Newton Hater Sends Sports Writer a Racist Letter and She Publishes It





Newsday writer Kimberley Martin says she wanted to prove how deep racism is when it comes to black people.

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Carolina Panthers quarterback Cam Newton 
EZRA SHAW/GETTY IMAGES
Editor’s note: This article contains social media posts that some may find offensive.
Cam Newton has his fair share of fans, but he also has his fair share of haters. Especially those who hate him specifically because he’s black. Newsday sports writer Kimberley Martin proved just how deeply ingrained racism is when she posted a letter she received.
The letter, not too different from tweets and troll comments we receive on the site on a daily basis, warned Martin to stay away from the “[n--gers].”
In a series of tweets, Martin explained why she published the letter:
Ironically, it seems as though the author of the letter didn’t realize Martin is a black woman.




Tuesday, February 23, 2016

9 Thoughts on Rihanna’s ‘Work’ Videos





Needless to say, Rih Rih definitely delivered.

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Rihanna in "Work"

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Afew weeks after the clusterf--k that was the Anti release (shoutout to the newly unemployed Tidal team member who tripped and hit the big red button hours before he or she was supposed to), Rih Rih decided to bless us with some choice visuals for her first single, “Work,” and she did not disappoint in delivering the dancehall-inspired bashment scene that I had fantasized about upon my first listen.
(Can we briefly discuss Anti as a project? I was pleasantly surprised by the effort. Totally not the direction I expected Robyn Fenty to take, but her decision to trend away from being just a singles artist in favor of putting together a cohesive project was a risk that I think worked in her favor. Rih got tired of us dragging her for her limited singing range, got herself a vocal coach and gave us someballads! It was altogether a lovely experience. Except for “Higher.” “Higher” is an act of violence that I like to pretend never happened.)
Imagine my glee when I discovered that our Bajan princess of IDGAF blessed us with, not one, but two videos, back-to-back! This was far and away the highlight of my day, and that’s including finding some forgotten chocolate-chip cookie dough in my freezer.
A few takeaways from the approximately 34,293,428,429,384 times I’ve played it:


1. All I need in this life of sin ... is for a man to look at me with the same fervor as Rihanna looks at herself in the mirror. Lord knows, if I looked like Rihanna, I’d be giving sex face to myself all the live-long day.
2. The group dance cutaways interspersed throughout the first video remind me of when my friends and I would create “crews” in high school that would do routines to dancehall jams in the club. We called ourselves the Divas, and you couldn’t tell us that our Nuh Linga” wasn’t unf--kwitable. RIP, Club Exit.
3. Shoutout to ol’ girl working the chicken at 2:14. Post-bashment jerk is a necessity when you spent the bulk of your evening sweating out your “leave out” and mesh top.
4. Drake is showing up to the party in a sweat suit? That’s more out of place than Jaheim’s getup at Whitney Houston’s funeral. As a matter of fact, Drake might as well have shown up to the party in a suit; it’s about as practical for the festivities as a thick-cotton full-body getup is for a packed, sweaty dance floor.
5. Speaking of our Canadian friend ... wow. Aubrey cannot dance worth a lick. If it’s not the same ole two-step, the man couldn’t find the beat if he had Google Maps’ step-by-step directions.
6. Two big thumbs up to the girl at 2:04 doing what I am pretty sure is the fastest recorded puppy tail in life. My puppy tail is currently more of a slow, dramatic wag, but still I rise.
7. Also, props to the lovely lady in leopard print doing splits across the dance floor. Last time I did a singular split was in Negril in lower Manhattan a little over a year ago. My inner thighs ached for a solid three days after. Getting old can be terrible.
8. Rihanna has me reconsidering my five-year-plus ban on middle parts. My sister in forehead real estate pulled off an effortless middle part, not once, but twice. Is the mesh top the key to this? I need answers!
9. What do you think the average straight male would give up to be Drake on the couch in the second video? No Xbox for a month? How about Sports Center? Wings? Crispy chicken wraps? I’d wager that most would be willing to go bacon-free for a full season.
Needless to say, Rihanna delivered better than the Papa John’s worker who refuses to come upstairs.* In the barren winter expanse that is New York City, this glimmer of color and proper dancehall-infused pop (all shade to Bieber’s current sound transformation; “tropical house-flavored” my ass) has me hotly anticipating throwing on my pum-pum shorts and crop top for the Brooklyn summer house party season.
* But seriously, the main reason I order delivery is that I’m too lazy to put on pants to grab food; making me put on pants to come downstairs defeats the whole purpose.
Shamira Ibrahim is a 20-something New Yorker who likes all things Dipset. You can join her as she waxes poetic about chicken, Cam’ron and gentrification (gotta have some balance) under the influence of varying amounts of brown liquor at Very Smart Brothas.

Suge Knight Says His Rights Are Being Violated in Jail



The former music mogul says that since being stripped of jail privileges, he’s been treated like a leper.

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Marion “Suge” Knight appears in a Los Angeles court for a pretrial hearing Jan. 21, 2016. 
FREDERICK M. BROWN/GETTY IMAGES
Suge Knight, the former head of Death Row Records, is sitting behind bars awaiting trial in a hit-and-run murder case. But the life and times of Knight since he's been behind bars have been hard.
Earlier this month, a judge stripped Knight of his communication privileges because the judge said he felt Knight was using them to intimidate potential witnesses in the case. Knight is no longer allowed to have visitation, receive mail or make phone calls unless those are with his legal team. 
Since the changes have occurred, Knight says jail officials have been treating him like a leper.According to documents received by TMZ, Knight says his human rights have been violated and that he spends his time in isolation.
It's kinda hard to feel remorse for Knight, but I'm sure his highly paid legal team will get to the bottom of this.




For more of black Twitter, check out The Chatterati on The Root and follow The Chatterati onTwitter.


Monday, February 22, 2016

New Orleans Rapper Dee-1 Raps About Paying Off Sallie Mae Loans

The graduate of Louisiana State University used his record-deal money to pay off the loans.

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Rapper Dee-1 (right) 
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To some people, the devil isn’t some red dude with pointy horns. The devil is that Sallie Mae bill they receive every month. Sallie Mae is student loan hell but, unfortunately, many students across the U.S. rely on it to further their education.
But one New Orleans rapper is done with his journey through the depths of Sallie Mae hell. And he made a song about it.

“I finished paying Sallie Mae back,” rapped Dee-1, whose real name is David Augustine Jr., a graduate of Louisiana State University. In an interview with Market Watch, Augustine expressed why he felt the need to rap about his student loans.
“The goal was to make an anthem that would allow people to feel the excitement that I felt, but hopefully, it would also begin a bigger conversation about the student loan debt crisis,” Augustine, 27, said. “Student loan debt is out of control, and I do think that college should ultimately be made more affordable.”


Out-of-control is an understatement. Currently, there are 40 million Americans that hold $1.3 trillion in student debt.
With a degree in hand, after graduating in 2009, Augustine got a job as a public school teacher, but he still had problems paying his student loan bills.
And he raps, “Wasn’t making quite enough to pay them back. Went in default, messed my credit up. Check my Equifax.”
Augustine’s song definitely tells the truth about student loan hell. But luckily for him, he used the money from the record deal he signed in 2014 to pay back Sallie Mae.
Now that’s what you call making smart decisions with your money.
For more of black Twitter, check out The Chatterati on The Root and follow The Chatterati onTwitter.
Yesha Callahan is editor of The Grapevine and a staff writer at The Root. Follow her on Twitter.


Friday, February 19, 2016

21 Things You Didn’t Know Your IPhone Can Do!


#1. It can charge much faster if you turn it on ariplane mode while charging.

#2. If you make a mistake while writing an email, editing a photo, or texting, simply shake your phone and this will show up and allow you to edit easily.

#3. When you need to start a new sentence, just double-tap the spacebar and it will add a period and a space for you.

When you need to start a new sentence, just double-tap the spacebar and it will add a period and a space for you.

#4. Find out what airplanes are flying above you. Just say “what flights are overhead.”

#5. Take a screen shot.

This is useful taking photos of websites, texts, or a funny moment you want to keep. Just hold the home button down and the on/off button at the top right corner at the same time. The screen shot will be saved in your camera roll. Works on an Ipad too.

#6. Teach Siri how to pronounce words.

Whenever Siri mispronounces a word, just say, “That’s not how you pronounce “_____” and she’ll offer you alternatives. You can select the proper one.
Teach Siri how to pronounce words.

#7. If you want to listen to music or audiobooks before you go to sleep, set a timer so it turns off.

Launch your Clock app with a tap, and then tap on the Timer button in the lower right. Once there, set the timer for however long you want your media to play. Next, tap “When Timer Ends,” and scroll down to the bottom. Tap on “Stop Playing.” Now, when your music will stop playing when the timer runs out.

#8. You can control the scrubbing rate of video and audio by moving your finger down the screen as your scrub through it.

When you navigate in a video you drag the playhead horizontally to the right or the left to go forward or backward. While doing this you will see a message that will allow you to adjust the scrubbing rate.

#9. Use the volume up or volume down buttons to take a photo, as long as the camera app is open.

#10. Rapid photo shots

By holding down the capture button, the iPhone will automatically go into burst mode and take a series of shots, ensuring that you capture the perfect shot.

#11. Use your iPhone as a level. Just swipe left in the Compass app and voilà!

#12. Use Speak Selection on iPhone and Ipad, so it reads texts out loud.

Begin by opening the Settings app. Scroll down, choose General, tap Accessibility, then turn on Speak Selection. For voice, you can choose from a wide range of voices from the Speak Selection Menu. These include Australian, British, Spanish accents and much more. To speak words out loud, highlight any text (by double-tapping or tapping and holding on it), then tap the Speak button in the pop-up menu. If you can’t see the Speak button, tap the small right arrow on the pop-up menu, then choose Speak.
Use Speak Selection on iPhone and Ipad, so it reads texts out loud.

#13. Create a passcode with letters instead of numbers.

Change the default setting. Go to Settings > General > Passcode Lock and turn off “Simple Passcode.” You will be prompted to change your passcode, and a full keyboard will appear instead of the number pad. And this keyboard will pop up when you need to unlock your phone.

#14. Add web suffixes easily.

Just by holding down the “.” at the bottom of your keyboard, and a menu will pop up with a list of web suffixes to choose from such as.com,.org,.net,.edu.

#15. View a more detailed calendar.

When using the calendar app, just turn you phone sideways and a more detailed schedule will appear.

#16. Access your email drafts easily by holding down the Compose icon in the lower right corner and it will quickly take you to a list of your drafts.

Access your email drafts easily by holding down the Compose icon in the lower right corner and it will quickly take you to a list of your drafts.

#17. See the timestamps of text messages by sliding the texts over.

#18. Lock autofocus and exposure while you are taking photos.

You can lock the focus and exposure by pressing and holding your finger on the screen until the yellow square appears and blinks twice. A yellow icon and “AE/AF Lock” will appear at the bottom of the screen confirming that you’ve locked in the exposure and focus. It will stay that way until you’re done taking the photo.
Lock autofocus and exposure while you are taking photos.



#19. Create shortcuts.

Go to Settings > General > Keyboard > Shortcuts > Add New Shortcut. Enter a word or phrase that you use often and the shortcut you’d like to use for it. Every time you type that shortcut, the whole word or phrase will appear.

#20. Set your phone to emit light for lights instead of noise.

Instead of having your phone vibrate or ring when you get a call or a text, you can have it emit an LED flash. Go to Settings > General > Accessibility, then scroll down and turn on “LED Flash for Alerts.”

#21. Customize your vibrations.

Change the vibration pattern for notifications. Go to Settings > Sounds > Ringtone > Vibration > Create New Vibration.You’ll be able to tell who’s calling or texting you just by the vibration.
If you like this post, you’ll love this one, 7 Awesome Smartphone Photography Tricks.
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