Sep 23, 2012

Food revolution: 8 apps to help you be the biggest loser

Food revolution: 8 apps to help you be the biggest loser: softdrinks1 520x245 Food revolution: 8 apps to help you be the biggest loser
Whatever your reason: a winter vacation in Thailand at the beach, a wedding, or (best of all) general fitness, losing a little (or a lot) of weight is generally a great thing if done in the proper way through exercise and correct eating. Obesity is one of the major health risks of our time, and the Jamie Olivers of the tech world have cooked up thousands of websites and apps that may help you count calories and fight the flab. Let’s take a look at 8 of the most popular (in no particular order):

MyFitnessPal (Free)

  • Android – Rating: 4.7 stars (from 209,892 reviews)
  • iOS – Rating: 4.5 stars (from 279,730 all-time reviews)
One of the best reviewed weight loss apps on Google Play, and an editor’s pick from both PC Mag and Wired, MyFitnessPal has a pretty impressive food database of over 2 million foods that it can count calories for. The app syncs with the service’s website which is a nice feature, includes a barcode scanner to match food to the database, lists over 350 exercises and offers the ability to connect with friends to lose weight together.
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Noom (Free)

  • Android – Rating: 4.3 stars (from 24,899 reviews)
Boasting it’s users have lost “over 5.5 million pounds” Noom provides personalized tasks derived from “a scientifically-backed weight loss plan”. The nice-looking app uses gamification tactics to get you motivated, and includes a logbook for meals, workouts and weight loss progress as well as integration with Facebook and Twitter.

Diet Point (Free & Paid)

  • Android – Rating: 4.2 stars (from 17,732 reviews)
  • iOS – Rating: 3 stars (from 3,037 all-time reviews)
Diet Point claims to have the largest list of diet plans (55 for free, more than 150 for paid) as well as the largest mobile weight loss forum. The app comes with BMI and BMR calculators and meal reminders. The app is relatively basic looking, but the reference and community seem to be its strengths.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=i5fkc7xF-ac&feature=player_embedded

Diet Assistant (Free & Paid)

  • Android – Rating: 4.2 stars (from 7,405 reviews)
Diet Assistant is similar to Diet Point, but seems to have a few more technological features such as customizable alerts, a home screen widget and database backup and restore.

My Diet Coach (Free & Paid)

  • Android – Rating: 4.3 stars (from 3,057 reviews)
My Diet Coach takes a little different approach from the apps above, focusing solely on women and offering a bit more in the way of motivational prompts than hard data.
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Restaurants Weight Loss Diet ($2.99)

  • Android –  Rating: 4.6 stars (from 596 reviews)
This basic app takes another angle, providing users with calorie information on food from 300+ restaurants, fast food chains and, yes, buffets.
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BMI Calculator (Free)

  • Android – Rating: 4.4 stars (from 4,154 reviews)
This is a calculation app for for body mass index (BMI) and waist-to-height ratio (WhtR). Always something to be said about simplicity.
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Fooducate (Free)

  • Android – Rating: 4.4 stars (from 2,653 reviews)
  • iOS – Rating: 4.5 stars (from 6,390 all-time reviews)
Like MyFitnessPal, Fooducate allows you to scan a UPC barcode to learn about that food’s nutrition facts before purchasing. However, while MyFitnessPal has a range of features, Fooducate focuses on giving an easy-to-understand overview of each of the 200,000+ foods you can scan into the app, giving the good – and the bad – of each food.

Image Credit: Mario Tama/Getty Images

Eat, browse and prosper: How the Internet is bringing obscure food communities to life

Eat, browse and prosper: How the Internet is bringing obscure food communities to life: sausages 520x245 Eat, browse and prosper: How the Internet is bringing obscure food communities to life
The Internet is responsible for many things. Ubiquitous access to media and information. Instant communication. A scarily short news cycle. We even participate in virtual worlds with thousands of other people, escaping from the stress of day-to-day life with a click.
One of its most amazing qualities is the way it enables us to find comrades with whom to share obscure topics — those hobbies that make us feel alone and isolated in our pursuit of them in the physical world, and often out of luck when we really need help. Group-oriented activities like tabletop roleplaying the popularity of which has decreased in the real world are really saved by the Internet (in many ways the Internet displaces these communities; we’ve replaced tabletop gaming with MMOs, though veteran fans will tell you rightly that it’s not the same thing).
But one thing that has really been reinvigorated by the Internet is a lot more primal than tabletop gaming, and that’s the world of food. Eating it, cooking it, processing it and even growing food — these are all popular topics for online communities.
Just how many of you know hundreds of sausage-making veterans and interested newbies in the real world? Not too many, I imagine. Finding a community to ease you into such hobbies without resorting to the Internet is possible, but it is tough work. And even if you live in the sausage-making capital of the world, you can’t beat the speed with which you can get assistance and troubleshooting via a forum post.
That’s just one example, and I spoke to Andy Freeman, the founder of CoffeeSnobs, an Australian community for those trying to perfect the art of roasting, brewing and cupping their own coffee. This community has been a big help to me personally over the six years since I became obsessed with making the perfect cup, a pursuit that others will tell you leads to constant improvement and yet constantly higher expectations.
“CoffeeSnobs was born and has evolved out of both necessity and passion. Initially a group of home roasters wanted to source small quanitites of raw green coffee beans and a single 60kg bag of coffee was purchased and divided between them,” Freeman says. As more people discovered home roasting and the great results it provides, “the group expanded and the quantities increased.”
Eventually Freeman gave in to the demand from coffee snobs who loved working with fresh, world-class beans but didn’t want to get into the roasting game. “After many requests to get the same green beans roasted, I set up a commercial coffee roaster to do just that.”
Depending on where you are, it can be difficult to get your hands on decent beans, or it can be prohibitively expensive for the home hobbyist. My home in Queensland’s Gold Coast is one example, and the places I trust to give me freshly-roasted, properly-sourced beans on one hand. The CoffeeSnobs operation has expanded wildly and now Freeman is shipping beans right around the country to both home and commercial roasters and drinkers.
“We roast fresh to order twice a week,” says Freeman. “The secret to our sales success are three simple goals of excellent product, great price and amazing service.”
As useful as the CoffeeSnobs BeanBay is, the crown jewel is the CoffeeSnobs forum. Consistently vibrant and active every time I’ve visited over the years, it’s an easy way to get — or dispense — advice on everything from espresso machines to brewing methods to coffee beans and their origins. The Roasting subforum is naturally quite active and one of the best places to get advice on the matter, Australian or not.
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“Professional barista associations have existed in the physical world for a long time, but like many other volunteer groups they toggle between being vibrant and dormant depending on who steps up to the committee roles each year,” Freeman says. “Amateur baristas don’t have many opportunities to share and learn from their peers in the physical world and the Internet medium really fills that void well.”
Freeman notes that there are a number of ways to get started as an amateur barista, many of which didn’t exist before the Internet. “YouTube and instructional videos are a great place to start, but being a part of a much wider and vibrant coffee community gives the amateur barista a place to share, learn and hone their craft with likeminded people anytime of the day or night.”
There are active interest groups and clubs in some cities, but CoffeeSnobs provides something you just can’t physically get offline. “Picture yourself walking into a room containing hundreds of different coffee machines and thousands of owners — that’s pretty much what you find online at CoffeeSnobs and that scenario just isn’t practical or possible in the physical world.”
Freeman notes that barista courses are reasonably priced and valuable, but there is only so much you can learn in a single day, or even a longer five week course.
“The real benefit of such a large CoffeeSnobs community is the lifelong learning and sharing environment. A tweak to a process, a fresh idea or a new concept can be thrashed out and explored with like-minded people and as your own knowledge base increases you can give back to the community by answering questions posed by newbies.”
CoffeeSnobs attracted growth primarily by word-of-mouth and other organic methods, though it does well in the search engines, and as with any community online or off, there were some teething problems to figure out. “You need some level of regulation and policing, but primarily want it to be a caring and nurturing environment. We have an amazing team of moderators that discuss policy and any questionable content behind the scenes to ensure our community feel remains the same.”
“Often on large forums content can get overly heated or personal. Such is the feel and personal ownership of our community that nearly all the members will do their best to diffuse volatile situations when they arise so it’s becoming a self-policing environment.”
Couple the goals of providing great beans with reasonable prices to every amateur barista in the country and providing a huge community and digital knowledge base for learning, Freeman says that “we all benefit by improving the quality of coffee everywhere one cup at a time.”
“Maybe one day, the world will be rid of bad coffee.” One can only hope.
There are hundreds of similar communities focused on preparing professional-quality foods and beverages. You can quite easily dive into just about any seemingly daunting process with the Internet: brewing beer and wine, smoking and curing meat and other charcuterie skills, making gourmet sausages or your own cheeses, the list goes on. Another emerging community is that of permaculture and urban farming, where participants look to their own backyards to grow produce, cultivate honey, and even in some cases their own small, suburban livestock.
On the other end of the scale, there are huge communities around the cooking of food, the adoption of challenging diets, and recipe-sharing. Aaron Osteraas, Managing Editor at Site5 (a hosting provider) spends his time working on a site called Eat Keto.
The site is about the ketogenic diet, a very effective method of losing weight, and also a favorite diet among bodybuilders looking to bulk up. It is all about consuming a high-fat, low-carb diet with a good chunk of protein, with a small but rabid following whose flag — if they had one — would be a Ron Swanson-sized serving of bacon.
 Eat, browse and prosper: How the Internet is bringing obscure food communities to life
For example, Eat Keto teaches readers how to make an Oopsie Burger (an American-style burger with a low carb bun), a keto-symbolic Bacon Explosion, and a keto-friendly moussaka, a Middle Eastern dish made of primarily eggplant and beef.
For many adherents, the keto diet is a prime example of a community they’d never have participated in, much less known about, if it weren’t for the Internet. When asked if he’d have ever come across it without Reddit’s help, Osteraas had the following to say:
“Absolutely, positively, not at all. There’s just no chance whatsoever. Unless I was a bodybuilder, which of course, I am not. Reddit and the Internet are enablers of this kind of community, allowing open discussion of ideas between people. The fact is the keto community doesn’t really exist outside of Reddit. It’s about to crack 40,000 subscribers. The Facebook group I’m part of has some 30 members.”
Osteraas is referring to r/keto, the Internet capital of all things related to the diet. “The community is very young. When I got on board last year, there was half the current amount of users.”
Because of the need to track macronutrients on the keto diet, smartphones are a big help in addition the Internet. There are a bunch of online tools the community has attached itself to, including MyFitnessPal, which we mentioned in our roundup of weight loss apps.
“The MyFitnessPal iOS app is a very important tool. It’s not geared to keto out of the gate, but there are ways to set it up for ease of use. Overall, it allows you to track your macronutrients (fat, protein and carbs) with relative ease,” says Osteraas.
“I’m on there. So are some real-life friends and even some I’ve made online through the community. It can be challenging to remember to update your food log every time you eat, though.”
Osteraas doesn’t earn a cent from Eat Keto, and it’s not his motivation for starting the site. “I love food, cooking it first and foremost and also eating it. I’ve dabbled in food blogs before — thankfully decommissioned since — and even written some keto recipes on my personal site, before spinning it out. A lot of people who eat keto aren’t great cooks, or perhaps more appropriately, don’t have the confidence to take steps to become one.”
“I want to focus on easy (if occasionally time-consuming) delicious food that I hope anyone can tackle. Everything is easier when someone has done it before you.”
Though r/keto is the hub of ketogenic activity online, the response to Eat Keto — still a young site — has, in Aaron’s words, “been nothing short of amazing.”
“I’ve had many emails from people thanking me, or asking questions about recipes. It’s the best feeling in the world to know you’ve helped someone else. It’s the little things that make it worthwhile. I get big kicks out of seeing people on r/keto try my recipes out, too.”
“I hope Eat Keto stands as a place for people to get great recipes for a long time to come.”
Image Credit: Jay Directo/Getty Images, Joe Raedle/Getty Images

Google News turns 10

Google News turns 10: Posted by Krishna Bharat, Distinguished Scientist and Founder, Google News



Google News launched on September 22, 2002—exactly a decade ago.



Inspired by the widespread interest in news after the September 11 attacks, we invested in technology to help people search and browse news relevant to them. Google News broke new ground in news aggregation by gathering links in real time, grouping articles by story and ranking stories based on the editorial opinions of publishers worldwide. Linking to a diverse set of sources for any given story enabled readers to easily access different perspectives and genres of content. By featuring opposing viewpoints in the same display block, people were encouraged to hear arguments on both sides of an issue and gain a more balanced perspective.



In the last ten years, Google News has grown to 72 editions in 30 languages, and now draws from more than 50,000 news sources. The technology also powers Google’s news search. Together, they connect 1 billion unique users a week to news content.





Google News today


As we have scaled the service internationally, we have added new features (Local News, Personalization, Editors’ Picks, Spotlight, Authorship, Social Discussions), evolved our design, embraced mobile and run ancillary experiments (Fast Flip, Living Stories, Timeline). In parallel, we have monitored our quality and challenged our engineers to improve the technology under the hood—increase freshness, group news better, rank stories more accurately, personalize with more insight and streamline the infrastructure.



Take a look back at the past decade in Google News through the top stories from each year and a few notable features that have launched in the interim:









It’s undeniable that the online news landscape has changed immensely. Smartphones and social networks have transformed how news is accessed and sourced, and shifted the relationship between readers and authors. Open journalism is the norm, and aggregation by humans and machines is an integral part of the ecosystem. New technologies such as Hangouts on Air have the potential to connect users, journalists and opinion makers and transform how stories are discussed.



Opportunities abound, and we are excited for where we can take this product in the next decade. While change is inevitable, one thing remains the same: our mission is to bring you the news you want, when you need it, from a diverse set of sources.



(Cross-posted on the Official Google blog)

Rare Protests in Laos

Rare Protests in Laos:
Hundreds of store owners at the oldest section of Talat Sao mall in Vientiane protested Friday against government plans to demolish their premises and relocate them, in a rare mass demonstration in the one-party, communist state.
The government wants to demolish the U-shaped block of Talat Sao, known as the morning market, in the heart of the Laotian capital and relocate more than 400 stall owners to what are known as the new Talat Sao Mall 1 and 2, the ASEAN Mall and other areas, reports have said.
The protesters dispersed after Vientiane's deputy mayor negotiated with them for almost an hour, appealing to them to end the demonstrations for the "sake of security" ahead of an Asia-Europe Summit to be held in the capital in November.
The store owners said they resorted to holding the protests after local authorities threatened to cut off water and power supply to their stalls, which have been selling industrial products, handicrafts, fruits, vegetables, meat, and fish as well as various other goods.
They said they did not want to move to the new building because the rents are too high, twice as much as current rates.
Some of them took turns to stay up overnight to prevent the authorities from severing electricity and water supply to the old building.
“The building that the authorities want to demolish is not old; it has been built not many years ago. It's still new, it shouldn’t be destroyed unnecessarily,” one of the store owners said, speaking on condition of anonymity.
The store owners said they had appealed to the Lao parliament to help resolve the dispute but there was no response.
Redevelopment
The government gave a Singaporean investor approval to redevelop Talat Sao into a modern shopping center in 2003-2004, local newspaper reports said.
At first, the stall owners refused to back down to calls by the Vientiane vice mayor Anouphap Tounalom to end the protests.
They relented after the authorities proposed holding negotiations at the nearby Lao Front for National Construction, according to some of the shop owners.
Tounalom announced the closure of the oldest section of Talat Sao last month, saying it had to be rebuilt after nearly 60 years and emphasizing the need to modernize Laotian infrastructure.
In 1989, merchants raised funds to repair and build the market into a U-shaped block which was completed in 1991, Anouphap said, according to a Vientiane Times report.
He said the project to set up a new building replacing the oldest section of Talat Sao was the third and final phase of the redevelopment of Talat Sao and would be linked to structures put up under the previous phases.
Under the first phase, a five-storey building with 200 rooms covering 23,000 square meters ( 250,000 square feet) was built while the second phase consisted of an eight-storey building containing 1,200 rooms with a floor space of 65,000 square meters (700,000 square feet).
Reported by RFA's Lao service. Translated by Max Avary. Written in English by Parameswaran Ponnudurai.

Film Captures Refugee Plight

Film Captures Refugee Plight:
The producer of a film that gives a heartbreaking account of North Koreans risking their lives across the Yalu River to China has brought the movie to Washington in a bid to highlight the plight of defectors escaping from human rights abuses and starvation in the hardline communist state.

The film, 48M, which refers to a 48-meter (158-foot) -wide stretch of the Yalu River, the shortest route between North Korea and China, explores the circumstances driving  defectors to escape, how they flee, and what they endure after crossing the border.

The movie is based on the experiences of around 300 defectors who made their way to South Korea after crossing the Yalu into China, where many North Koreans are caught and repatriated home to face severe punishment, torture and even execution.

On Wednesday, the film was shown to American lawmakers and discussed at a U.S. congressional hearing in Washington on human rights abuses in North Korea. It will also be screened at a church for the Korean community in Virginia state on Sept. 22.

“I have brought with me a human rights-based movie that is based on the heart-breaking and sad reality of the escape of North Koreans along the border of North Korea and China, and the forced repatriation carried out by the Chinese government,” producer Ahn Hyuk told lawmakers at the Tom Lantos Human Rights Commission hearing.

“The movie contains the truth and reality of what is going on right now along the shortest distance in the North Korea-China border which is 48 meters,” he said.

“[It] shows why the North Korean people are leaving their hometowns—which they are so attached to and where they were born—[and] risking their lives to escape.”

South Korea’s Database Center for North Korean Human Rights estimates that as many as 200,000 North Koreans refugees are hiding in China after fleeing persecution and starvation in their homeland, and many lack legal status, access to basic social services and are susceptible to human trafficking.

Many others are stuck in third countries awaiting transit to South Korea or have been repatriated to North Korea by Chinese authorities.

Beijing does not recognize North Koreans as refugees, but considers them to be illegal aliens who have entered the country seeking economic opportunities.

Democracy efforts

Ahn Hyuk, who spent three years in the notorious Yoduk prison camp during the late 1980s and who fled to South Korea in 1993, said the film also demonstrates the determination of the North Korean defector community now living in South Korea to expose rights abuses by the Kim Jong Un regime.

“North Korean defectors [in South Korea] who bear the immense pain of escape and forced repatriation who did not have any other recourse to appeal what they went through, came together and planned the film,” said Ahn Hyuk, who himself fled from the North to the South in 1993.

The producer added that only a few years ago, due to a policy of reengagement in South Korea, “it would have been unimaginable” for North Korean defectors to make such a film.

“Another thing that would have been unthinkable and unimaginable in the past is the fact that now North Korean defectors are producing and sending radio broadcasts into North Korea aimed at the North Korean citizens, and also sending leaflets via balloons into North Korea,” he said.

“The reason why we are able to rise up and continue our efforts for the democratization of North Korea despite the terror threats from the North Korean regime … is because of the determination to go back to our homeland, even if we were to die.”

Repatriated to torture

Also present at Wednesday’s hearing was Pack Kwang Il, a former North Korean teacher who in 2001 had fled his country to China after authorities discovered that he had been responsible for the dissemination of a South Korean TV drama.

During his testimony, Pack described how Chinese authorities had detained him and repatriated him to North Korea, where he was subjected to brutal torture.

“Even though I succeeded in fleeing North Korea, within 15 days, I was arrested by the Chinese security police in Yanbian, in the Korean Autonomous region. It was because I did not know my way around China at all,” he said.

Chinese authorities soon sent him back to North Korea, where he underwent 60 days of “unbearable torture and investigation” in an underground interrogation room.

At the end of the 60 days, while being transferred to a new location for further interrogation, Pack threw himself off of the train he had been packaged onto in an attempt to commit suicide.

He survived the attempt and crawled for nearly two weeks to the Chinese border where he collapsed on a road after crossing the Tumen River.

Pack was eventually rescued by a Korean-American missionary who nursed him back to health and helped him to resettle in South Korea after nearly two years where he joined the Youth and Students Forum for North Korean Democratization.

Common experience

Suzanne Scholte, president of the Defense Forum Foundation, told the Tom Lantos Commission that Pack’s experience, and the experiences of many of the defectors featured in 48M, is common for North Koreans attempting to cross into China.

She noted that following the death of former regime leader Kim Jong Il in December last year, the North Korean government ordered that three generations of a family would be executed if one family member fled during the mourning period.

The regime also issued a “shoot to kill” policy for North Koreans trying to flee to China at that time.

But she also criticized China for its “illegal, cruel and inhumane” practice of forcing refugees back to North Korea, knowing they will face unusually harsh treatment.

“China’s brutal and unlawful repatriation policy has led to the exploitation of North Korean women who in their vulnerability become the victims of traffickers and has created a lawless environment in China,” Scholte said.

Scholte also blasted Beijing for refusing to allow the U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees any access to the region to determine whether North Koreans who cross the border can be claimed as refugees.

In May during the premiere of 48M in Seoul, Scholte commended the film for its portrayal of the suffering North Koreans face at home and what they must endure in China while seeking resettlement in South Korea.

“We hope that many people will watch the movie and learn about human rights in North Korea and the problems faced by refugees,” she said at the time.

“We plan to continue working until the day when there is freedom and respect for human rights in North Korea.”

Reported by Joshua Lipes.

China Mends Fences in Sea Dispute

China Mends Fences in Sea Dispute:
As Beijing flexes its muscle over its territorial dispute with Japan in the East China Sea, it is mending fences with Southeast Asian nations after a spate of tensions in the contested South China Sea.

Following much prodding and diplomacy, China appears to be showing some flexibility in its approach towards drawing up a code of conduct with the Southeast Asian nations aimed at avoiding clashes over competing territorial claims in the vast sea, diplomats in the region told RFA.

Although they are skeptical of any early breakthrough for a legally binding document between China and the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) to guide behavior in the sea, there is optimism that negotiations will occur on a sustained basis.

"We see some flexibility to discuss the COC with ASEAN," one Southeast Asian diplomat said, referring to the elusive Code of Conduct or COC which ASEAN—comprising Brunei, Burma, Cambodia, Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, the Philippines, Singapore, Thailand and Vietnam—has been striving to devise with Beijing for a decade.

In an initial display of seriousness that it is prepared to come to the table, China sent its senior officials to Cambodia last week to informally discuss with their counterparts from ASEAN on prospects for drawing up a code, officials said.

This is the first meeting between the two sides specifically on the maritime dispute since ASEAN plunged into a crisis two months ago when foreign ministers of the 10-member bloc failed to issue their customary joint statement at the conclusion of their annual meeting hosted by Cambodia, China's top ally in Southeast Asia.

Some ASEAN diplomats had charged that Cambodia had been influenced by China not to incorporate in the statement the views of ASEAN member states the Philippines and Vietnam, which had tiffs earlier this year with Beijing over islands and reefs in the South China Sea, causing an impasse at the meeting.

The ASEAN-China Senior Officials’ Informal Consultations on the Code of Conduct (COC) in the South China Sea, as last week's meeting in Phnom Penh was officially called, was among a series of discussions in preparation for the ASEAN summit and the East Asia Summit in November.

"Compared to two months ago, when there was complete reluctance to come to the table, China appears willing to sit down and talk," said one Southeast Asian official, who was briefed on the talks but spoke on condition of anonymity.

"Indirectly, they may be feeling the heat from the mounting criticism over what happened at the meeting in July which was a big blow to ASEAN," the official said.

"But China has also asked the ASEAN states to do their part by reducing tensions and not conducting border incursions and creating a conducive environment for any future talks. They don't want us to bring in third parties [the United States] over the conflict and want us to stick to the 2002 declaration," the diplomat said.

Under a 2002 agreement for managing their overlapping territorial claims, ASEAN and China adopted a Declaration on the Conduct of Parties in the South China Sea, called DOC as a first step towards a binding code of conduct.

But in a reflection of the sensitivity over the issue, it was only last year—after 10 years—that they agreed on a set of guidelines to implement the declaration that was aimed at laying the groundwork for discussions on the regional code of conduct.

Ray of hope

The new ray of hope for achieving a COC comes after extensive diplomacy, including U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton's trip to Southeast Asia and China, with a meeting with Chinese President Hu Jintao.

Chinese leaders told Clinton—who has often emphasized that freedom of navigation in the South China Sea was a U.S. "national interest"—that they want to pursue the COC, U.S. Ambassador to China Gary Locke told a forum in Washington last week, saying the talks between the two sides were "very good."

"I've also heard from many prominent Chinese academics that China would like somehow to return to the status quo, that they would like to lower the temperature," Locke said.

Chinese Foreign Minister Yang Yechi had also visited Indonesia as well as Malaysia and Brunei, giving reassurances that diplomacy was still on track.

Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen, embarrassed by the failure by his country as 2012 ASEAN chairman to forge an agreement on the foreign ministers' joint statement, also made a trip to China this month, meeting Prime Minister Wen Jiabao.

Hun Sen won assurances from Wen that Beijing will "closely work" to make the upcoming East Asia Summit which Cambodia will host a success," Chinese media reported.

Southeast Asian diplomats said a key objective is to get an initial ASEAN-China accord on the COC before the November East Asia Summit, to be attended by leaders of ASEAN as well as China, Japan, South Korea, India, Australia, New Zealand, Russia and the United States.

Key elements of the COC have been agreed upon by ASEAN member states whose foreign ministers will meet to consider a full draft document on the sidelines of the U.N. General Assembly in New York this coming week, the diplomats said.

“We are now in the process of spelling out the draft [of the code] and we hope to be able to share it with my ASEAN foreign minister colleagues when I meet them in New York," Indonesian Foreign Minister Marty Natalegawa said, according to the Jakarta Globe newspaper.

“The development of the South China Sea [issues] reminds us how we desperately need the code of conduct, [so] I’m trying to use the momentum,” Marty said, as Indonesia asserts a leadership role in ASEAN to deal with the South China Sea issue, Asia's biggest potential military flashpoint.

Cambodia or Thailand, which is the ASEAN coordinator for China issues, could host another round of informal talks between senior officials from ASEAN and China on the COC before the East Asia Summit.

"Both sides might also issue a joint statement to commemorate the 10th anniversary of the DOC at Summit," an official involved in the planning of the summit told RFA, referring to the declaration adopted in 2002 in Cambodia to set the stage for the regional code of conduct.

Beijing has maintained all this while that it wants to resolve the South China Sea territorial conflicts on a bilateral basis with ASEAN members Brunei, Malaysia, the Philippines and Vietnam, which have competing claims with China.

China claims sovereignty over nearly all of the resource-rich South China Sea, which is also home to important shipping lanes. It is also locked in a territorial tussle with Japan over disputed islands in the East China Sea.

Bloc

Southeast Asian officials say ASEAN would negotiate the COC with China as a bloc but not in the specific delineation or settlement of the claims between the claimant states.

ASEAN's role "is not to deal with the claims themselves but in the broader setting up of the framework which would allow for a peaceful resolution of these claims," Singapore Foreign Minister K. Shanmugam said, according to the island state's media.

Beijing has stressed that ASEAN should have no role in negotiating on behalf of the four members who were claimant states.

"For China, the COC is only a tool to promote mutual trust over the South China Sea and not to resolve disputes. They stressed this again at the Phnom Penh meeting last week," a Southeast Asian diplomat said.

Still, as the COC is being drafted, China has to grapple with various basic questions—which it has brushed off previously—over its claim to the South China Sea.

While officials have to first pin down the South China Sea area to be governed by the code, there is much uncertainty over the territory China claims—represented by the nine-dashed, U-shaped line encircling most of the sea on Chinese official maps.

The location of those dashes has never been pinpointed as China has not supplied the coordinates for them. The nature of the Chinese claim has also not been clearly defined.

In addition, there is the question of the Paracel islands' inclusion in the code’s area of application. Vietnam still maintains its claim to the islands although China seized them from its fellow communist neighbor in 1974.

Uncertainty

Former ASEAN Secretary-General Rodolfo Severino said the uncertainty over where a “binding code of conduct” would apply was one of the factors cited for downgrading the 2002 ASEAN-China agreement from a legal code to a political declaration.

"Is the uncertainty of its area of application still a factor in and an obstacle to its adoption," he asked.

"If these [outstanding] issues were fudged in the proposed document, as seems most likely to be the case at this time, how would the problem be overcome? What would the formulation be?"

Severino said one fundamental reason why the problems arising from the conflicting claims in the South China Sea are so difficult and intractable is not only the size and strategic location of that body of water but also that all the claimants feel that their footholds in the sea are essential to what they consider as their national interests.

"Therefore, the disputes in the South China Sea cannot be resolved anytime soon, if at all. The most that can be done is to prevent those disputes from developing into armed conflict. This could be the overarching aim of any code of conduct that ASEAN and China might produce."

Freedom of Speech Roundup

Freedom of Speech Roundup:
In the weekly Freedom of Speech Roundup, Sampsonia Way presents some of the week’s top news on freedom of expression, journalists in danger, artists in exile, and banned literature.
Banned_Books
99 of the 100 most banned books for the years 1990-2000. Photo: East Branch of the Dayton Metro Library

Celebrating the Right to Read: 30 years of Banned Books

90.5 WESA. In this interview Bruce Boni, chair of the Pittsburgh banned books event, talks about the legacy of Judith Krug, the founder of National Banned Books week, and highlights Pittsburgh’s past and present banned books performances. Listen Here

Burma: Journalists off Blacklists but Still Can’t get Visas

The Irrawaddy. Despite recently declaring an official state of “press freedom” journalists who are no longer officially banned from entering Burma are still not able to get visas to enter the country. Read Here

Philippines: Anti Cyber-crime Law Threatens Media Freedom

Global Voices. A last-minute addition to the Cybercrime Prevention Act of 2012—signed on September 12 by President Benigno Aquino—makes libel a cybercrime. Some say the addition is a threat to free speech for media and the general public. Read Here

Three Somali Journalists Killed in Suicide Bomb Attack

The Committee to Protect Journalists. According to local journalists, the blast killed Abdirahman Yasin Ali, director of Radio Hamar (“Voice of Democracy”); Abdisatar Daher Sabriye, head of news for Radio Mogadishu; and Liban Ali Nur, head of news for Somali National TV. Read Here

Charlie Hebdo Cartoons Spark Debate over Free Speech and Islamophobia

The Washington Post. Days after an American anti-Islam YouTube video set off deadly riots around the world, a French newspaper has stoked the outrage by releasing a set of cartoons that insult the prophet Muhammad. Internet users weigh in on the appropriateness of the cartoons. Read Here

Held Dear in U.S., Free Speech Perplexing Abroad

NPR, All Things Considered. Noah Feldman, professor of international law at Harvard Law School, talks about what constitutes protected speech in the U.S., and how those views are understood — and misunderstood — around the world. Listen Here

Conservatives, Democrats and the Convenience of Denouncing Free Speech

The Guardian. “The anti-US protests sweeping the Muslim world have presented a perfect challenge to test the free speech convictions of both the American right and the Democratic party version of the left. Neither is faring particularly well.” Read Here

Cambodia: Environmental Journalist Murdered

New York Times Blog. “A Cambodian journalist who exposed rampant illegal logging has been found murdered in the boot of his car, police said Wednesday, in a country where environmental activists often face violent retribution.” Read Here

CPJ Press Freedom Awards: Honoring Tenacity and Courage

The Committee to Protect Journalists. CPJ has presented four journalists–Mauri König (Brazil), Dhondup Wangchen (China), Azimjon Askarov (Kyrgyzstan), and Mae Azango (Liberia)–with the annual Press Freedom award for their courageous reporting on abuses of power and human rights violations in their countries. Read Here

Preview of 'Bwakaw' by Jun Robles Lana, Set to Represent Philippines for Best Foreign Film at Academy Awards (Trailer) - Scene Asia - WSJ

Preview of 'Bwakaw' by Jun Robles Lana, Set to Represent Philippines for Best Foreign Film at Academy Awards (Trailer) - Scene Asia - WSJ

Video and story.

What No One's Saying About Amazon

What No One's Saying About Amazon - AMZN, AAPL, BKS, BBY, SHLD - Foolish Blogging Network

They say everyone has a book in them. That doesn’t mean it’s worth reading. But Amazon.com (NASDAQ: AMZN) makes it possible for everyone to get that book out.

In Thailand, Smuggled iPhones Go for Up to $1,400 - Southeast Asia Real Time - WSJ

In Thailand, Smuggled iPhones Go for Up to $1,400 - Southeast Asia Real Time - WSJ

Customers here are flocking to crowded shopping warrens such as Mahboonkrong in downtown Bangkok to place deposits on phones smuggled in from places such as Hong Kong, Singapore and even the United States. One vendor in MBK – as it is known – said his team will try to bring over 100 phones into Thailand, and so far more than 80 people have handed over deposits of 5,000 baht, or $160, per phone.

Indonesia’s Wealth Growth Bucks Global Decline - Southeast Asia Real Time - WSJ

Indonesia’s Wealth Growth Bucks Global Decline - Southeast Asia Real Time - WSJ

Indonesia has been one of the few economic bright spots amid the broader slowdown in emerging markets – now it also has one of the world’s fastest-growing pools of private wealth.

Another Vote for a Top-10 Indonesia - Southeast Asia Real Time - WSJ

Another Vote for a Top-10 Indonesia - Southeast Asia Real Time - WSJ

JAKARTA—Indonesia has received another rapt review of its economic potential in the coming decades, with a new report suggesting the Southeast Asian powerhouse has what it takes to become the world’s seventh-largest economy by the year 2030.

Growth of early voting transforms electoral strategy

Growth of early voting transforms electoral strategy:
Election Day is more than six weeks away, but by Nov. 6 tens of millions of Americans — perhaps as many as 40 percent of all voters — will have cast their ballots in the presidential race and other contests.
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Government-allied Libyans seize militia bases in Benghazi after protest, deadly clashes

Government-allied Libyans seize militia bases in Benghazi after protest, deadly clashes:
BENGHAZI, Libya — Forces allied with the Libyan government took control of at least two powerful militias’ bases in the eastern city of Benghazi on Saturday after protesters overran the compounds in the early morning hours.
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Syrian rebel force announces shift of its headquarters from Turkey to Syria

Syrian rebel force announces shift of its headquarters from Turkey to Syria:
CAIRO — Commanders of the rebel Free Syrian Army said Saturday that they have moved their headquarters from Turkey to an unidentified location in Syria in an effort to unite and coordinate the armed insurrection against President Bashar al-Assad’s government.
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Behind North Korea’s propaganda star, a darker story

Behind North Korea’s propaganda star, a darker story:
SEOUL — This summer, a 66-year-old woman surfaced at a news conference in North Korea to tell of her jubilant homecoming after six years in the “miserable” South.
As a private citizen and a defector, the woman, Pak Jong Suk, made for an unlikely national symbol. But she also had the pitch-perfect tale for an authoritarian North Korea straining for new ways to make its people love their leader and stay within the country’s borders.

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