Dec 8, 2012

Bing continues its hypocritical ‘Scroogled’ campaign against Google Shopping with new hatchet-clip

Bing continues its hypocritical ‘Scroogled’ campaign against Google Shopping with new hatchet-clip: 2012 12 06 11h07 47 520x245 Bing continues its hypocritical Scroogled campaign against Google Shopping with new hatchet clip
Microsoft doesn’t want you using Google Shopping this holiday season, as in its view the product’s move to accepting paid listings has muddied its waters, making transparent search all but impossible.
To that end, the company has put forth a new campaign entitled ‘Scroogled’ to highlight how Google is being, it would seem, akin to the storied Ebeneezer Scrooge, taking more money than it should for its services. Today, Bing released a new video clip slapping Google for what it views as bad behavior.
The catch to all of this is that Bing isn’t exactly clean on the very same issue. For an in-depth look as to why Bing it being a bit hyperbolic, and unfair, Danny Sullivan at Search Engine Land has the full scoop. Two short excerpts  from his excellent piece, however, set the ground:
[Microsoft] also said that the most listings within Bing Shopping come from merchants who are already in the free listings program and through Bing’s crawling of the web. “We don’t get paid for the majority of products in there,” [it] explained.
All that was news to me. All that would be news to any consumer, because as I’ve covered, Bing doesn’t explain how Bing Shopping works to consumers. To merchants, the implication is that it’s pay-to-play.
And:
What about that claim to consumers that at Bing Shopping, “payment is not a factor used to rank results.” Clearly some merchants only get listed because they paid to be included in Shopping.com, which in turn got them listed in Bing. Payment isn’t the primary factor for ranking well, but it is a factor for these companies. If they didn’t pay, they wouldn’t have a chance to rank at all.
In Microsoft’s view, paid inclusion is quite different from pay-to-rank. Sure, but Microsoft is hitting Google for charging for access to its shopping product. Bing too generates revenues from merchants who participate in its shopping product.
There is a distinction to be made between the two companies approaches, and I’m not advocating that Google’s method is good or preferable, but for Bing to be causing this much ruckus over the issue feels more like propoganda than pro-consumer awareness building.
Here’s the new video:
Top Image Credit: Mike McCune

Gmail graduates 3 Labs features: Send and archive, Default reply to all, and Quote selected text

Gmail graduates 3 Labs features: Send and archive, Default reply to all, and Quote selected text: 843803 84658173 520x245 Gmail graduates 3 Labs features: Send and archive, Default reply to all, and Quote selected text
On Thursday, Google announced three new features that have graduated from Gmail Labs: “Send and archive,” “Quote selected text,” and “Default reply to all.” This is not a gradual rollout; you can use all three of them right now on Gmail.com.
The first feature lets you send an email and immediately archive it from both the compose screen and the reply screen. The second one lets you set up how your Default reply function works, again in both the Compose and Reply sections of Gmail.
Last but not least, the “Quote selected text” lets you highlight text and hit the reply button. This automatically takes the quoted text and inserts it into your reply email. I think this one is the most useful of all three:
gmail quote reply 730x241 Gmail graduates 3 Labs features: Send and archive, Default reply to all, and Quote selected text
As you can see, I’ve quoted the first sentence of Alex’s email so that I can specifically reply to that part of it. This is great for long emails that you don’t want to include in your replies to the sender, but still want to reference.
For those who don’t know, Gmail Labs was introduced back in June 2008, and has been bringing new features to Google’s email service ever since. The project allows users to test new or experimental features of Gmail, allowing them to enable or disable Labs features selectively and provide feedback about each of them.
It’s frankly a great way for Google to figure out which features are worthy, which ones need work, and which ones should be completely abandoned. Gmail engineers can get user input to help them decide how to use resources. On the flipside, if you are using Gmail Labs, you have to remember that all features are experimental and can be killed at any time.
See also – Gmail now lets you insert up to 10GB of Google Drive files directly into an email and Gmail now lets you search for emails by size, with flexible date options, exact match, and more
Image credit: Thier Aquino

Local police post mugshots on Pinterest, leading to a 57% boost in arrests

Local police post mugshots on Pinterest, leading to a 57% boost in arrests: 566713 37985447 520x245 Local police post mugshots on Pinterest, leading to a 57% boost in arrests
Pinterest isn’t just about pinning the stuff you like any more: users are now posting mugshots and helping find the police catch crooks. The new trend began when a crime reporter at The Mercury in Pottstown started a “Wanted by Police” gallery. The results have been astounding.
“We’ve actually seen a 57 percent increase in our warrant services, and we actually got more people based on our tips and our calls,” Richard Drumheller, Captain at the Pottstown Police Department, told NPR. “For us it’s like, ‘Yes,’ because it’s very enjoyable in police work when the public helps you.”
pinterest wanted 730x343 Local police post mugshots on Pinterest, leading to a 57% boost in arrests
The tip line has been ringing off the hook. In fact, Drumheller says some people even called in to say they had seen their own mugshot online and have asked to turn themselves in to authorities.
Yet despite what the gallery’s name implies, this isn’t a most wanted list. These are just pictures of people with outstanding warrants, anything from DUI to theft to assault.
Yet the story doesn’t end with the small police department in Pottstown. NPR reports the tool was noticed by police in Philadelphia, who were already solving crimes with social media and has as a result started using Pinterest in the same way (see Philadelphia Police Department).
Identifying suspects via Pinterest is a new trend, and it looks like it’s one that may spread from police department to police department. Yet it’s really part of a bigger one where social networks are encroaching into all walk of life, from consumers to businesses, as well as from criminals to police officers.
Instagram may be all about photos, but it simply doesn’t fit the use case here. Pinterest does: it is growing very quickly, it’s even more picture-oriented than say Facebook or Twitter, and it has both desktop and mobile users.
Image credit: Michal Zacharzewski

The End of Money: How a Wired writer and Chirpify are turning Twitter into a bookstore

The End of Money: How a Wired writer and Chirpify are turning Twitter into a bookstore: shredded money via thinkstock 520x245 The End of Money: How a Wired writer and Chirpify are turning Twitter into a bookstore
Wired contributor and author David Wolman has taken to Twitter to sell the iPad edition of his latest book, ‘The End of Money.’ As far as we know, the operation is the first of its kind: it’s not only about sharing a link, and users can complete the purchase without leaving the micro-blogging platform.
The transaction is powered by Portland-based startup Chirpify, which focuses on in-stream social commerce via Twitter and Instagram. “We also like to say it’s conversational commerce,” senior account manager Heath W. Black tells us.
From what we’ve seen, the term definitely makes sense, as the whole purchase process resembles a conversation; to acquire Wolman’s book, all you have to do is to reply “buy” to his tweet.
A 4-day experiment in barrier smashing: #ENDOFMONEY for iPad is 1 tweet away. Reply “buy” for $5.99 via @chirpify chrp.in/55q
— David Wolman (@davidwolman) December 5, 2012
If you are already a Chirpify user, for instance if you’ve ever used it to order a beer over Twitter, you can complete the transaction right away. If not, you can create a new account in a few steps and pay via PayPal. You will then receive a download link via email or direct message on Twitter.
chirpify end of money 730x637 The End of Money: How a Wired writer and Chirpify are turning Twitter into a bookstore
As you may have guessed from its full title, which refers to “the coming cashless society,” Wolman’s book is obviously a great fit for such an experiment into the future of money.
“David has been writing about this topic for a little while,” Black recalls. “He is from Portland too, and met [Chirpify's CEO] Chris [Teso] a few months ago. When they discussed what Chirpify was doing, they realized that it made sense for the content of his book.”
As Wolman explains on his blog, the operation wouldn’t have been possible without the support of its publisher, Da Capo Press, and more precisely of its marketing manager, Sean Maher:
“This wouldn’t have been possible without his willingness to experiment, even though if you say “in-stream social commerce” to almost anyone from a traditional publishing house, they would probably ask if you repeat the question in English,” he writes.
While it is too early to tell how many sales the operation will drive, Black says that Wolman sold more copies on the first day than during a typical signing event at a bookstore – all it took were 5 minutes to create the online listing, without having to worry about travel arrangements.
Convenience and lack of friction could be a key factor to drive other authors into giving Chirpify a try. “We had several inquiries from other authors over the past few days,” Black says. While this is good news for the startup and maybe for Twitter, it could also have larger implications for the publishing industry.
After all, established authors often boast a large following on social networks. More importantly, they have a direct and fairly deep relationship with their followers, which could make traditional publishers redundant, and turn Chirpify into a powerful disintermediation tool. However, it remains to be seen whether it would be as efficient for unkwnown book writers without an existing reader base.
Perhaps more interestingly, in-stream transactions could help monetize new types of content, such as long-form journalism, which would benefit from frictionless options to make small payments. Unsurprisingly, some players have already taken notice, such as newly-launched online media outlet Matter:
Interesting: @davidwolman is using Twitter and Chirpify to sell his “End of Money” ebook: chirpify.com/listing/55q Could/should we do similar?
— Matter (@readmatter) December 5, 2012
As you may remember, Matter started as a record-breaking Kickstarter project, and succeeded in building strong community support for its plans. Combined with its $0.99 pricing, this could make it a perfect candidate for a partnership with Chirpify – and a great example of what conversational commerce can achieve.
Image credit: Thinkstock

The Social Commerce and Payments Platform

The Social Commerce and Payments Platform

Google’s Suggested Communities feature for Google+ aims to make it easier to discover new interests

Google’s Suggested Communities feature for Google+ aims to make it easier to discover new interests: 141396437 520x245 Googles Suggested Communities feature for Google+ aims to make it easier to discover new interests
Update: This post has included new information from Google relating to new services that it has implemented throughout the day.
A day after Google launched Google+ Communities, the company has released an update, this time with a new feature called Suggested Communities. Starting today, users are now going to be able to discover new Communities and join them instantly. In addition to that, the company has been rolling out new features all day that will promote Communities both on the network’s sidebar and also in its stream.
Suggested Communities 730x361 Googles Suggested Communities feature for Google+ aims to make it easier to discover new interests
A large number of Communities having been created in the last 24 hours and finding them is obviously really important. After all, it doesn’t make any sense to create your own Community if one has already been created around the same topic. That’s why the company has added this new feature to Google+ so now right above the upcoming events and Trending Topics sections, you’ll be able to see three suggested Communities that you might want to participate in.
Previously, the only ways that users were able to find new Communities on Google+ was either by searching or through a company’s profile who had a badge on their page that tied back to their Community.
Google Plus Pages Communities 730x388 Googles Suggested Communities feature for Google+ aims to make it easier to discover new interests
Chances are that if you’re on Google+, and there are more than 500 million of you on there, then you might have received at least one invitation to a Community. Starting today, all your invites are also being displayed on the site so that you’ll be able to see what Communities people want you to join.
And many more features are already rolling out, including allowing Community posts to be displayed right in your stream — Google says that its algorithm is posting select content from Communities right into your stream, as long as you’re a member of it. The company says that by doing this, it will “drive even more engagement to community posts without having to manually click through to a specific community and manually sifting through the noise.”
If you want to know which Community has updates or new postings, starting today, Google is allowing you to place your mouse over the Communities icon in the main navigation and you’ll see the number of notifications for each. However, the company is quick to point out that this isn’t available to everyone right now, but is being slowly rolled out, something it says will “help to increase how often people check back on communities even if they don’t opt for notifications or emails.”
More to follow.
Photo credit: KIMIHIRO HOSHINO/AFP/Getty Images

Google Now may soon arrive on the desktop by way of Chrome, according to Chromium code

Google Now may soon arrive on the desktop by way of Chrome, according to Chromium code:  Google Now may soon arrive on the desktop by way of Chrome, according to Chromium code
Thanks to a recent code revision to the Chromium project, it appears Google has plans to bring Android’s Google Now to the desktop, arriving by way of Chrome’s own desktop notifications, reports François Beaufort and CNET.
In revision #171868, the following log message reveals that a skeleton has been created for Google Now in Chrome:
Creating a skeleton for Google Now for Chrome implementation.

The CL creates the top-level structure for showing Google Now cards in Chrome via Chrome Notifications.

The implementation lives behind -enable-google-now-integration flag.
As detailed above, Google Now cards will be shown through Chrome Notifications, which already exist in the Chrome Browser. The impact this will have on both Chrome and Android could be massive, and while Google has yet to confirm its plans, the appearance of this code in Chromium signals that Google Now features are more than likely on their way to Chrome.
Following recent updates, Google Now is beginning to look quite tempting to Android users and non-Android users alike. Soon, Google Now could become a selling point for Chrome, and a tool for roping users into the Android experience. Additionally, Chromebooks would benefit from a browser-based notification system, and the inclusion of such would help bridge together all of Google’s devices.
Last month in our review of the Nexus 4, we wrote that Google Now is the future of Android. Only days ago, Google Now was updated with travel destination weather, local events and song ID by voice features.

Google+: Communities and photos

Google+: Communities and photos: For our international readers, this post is also available in ChineseFrench, German, ItalianJapanese, RussianPortuguese and Spanish (Spain, Latin America). - Ed.



During the holidays we reconnect with loved ones and rediscover what makes us tick. And it's times like these that remind me why we started Google+ in the first place: to make online sharing as meaningful as the real thing. Too often our online tools miss the subtlety and substance of real-world interactions, and Google+ aims to fix this. Fortunately we've got a vibrant community to guide us.



Today Google+ is the fastest-growing network thingy ever. More than 500 million people have upgraded, 235 million are active across Google (+1'ing apps in Google Play, hanging out in Gmail, connecting with friends in Search...), and 135 million are active in just the stream.



This enthusiasm, we think, stems from our building tools that build real relationships—in a live hangout, around a breathtaking photo, or with an inner circle of friends. So today we're launching two new improvements that help bring the nuance and richness of real-life sharing to software.



Google+ Communities: for all the people you ought to know

From photography to astronomy (and everything in between), Google+ has always been a place to crowd around common interests and meet new people. What’s been missing, however, are more permanent homes for all the stuff you love: the wonderful, the weird, and yes, even the things that are waaay out there. With Google+ Communities there’s now a gathering place for your passions, including:

  • Public or private membership to support all kinds of groups—from topics and interests to local neighborhoods to regular poker nights
  • Discussion categories to find the conversations you care about most
  • The option to start hangouts and plan events with community members
  • The ability to share with your community from any +1 button across the web






To give it a try just click on the new "Communities" icon (rolling out today), then create or join your favorite community. It’s only a preview, and mobile’s coming soon, so we’re keen to get your feedback.







Snapseed: beautiful photos with your mobile device

Great pictures aren’t taken, they’re made—and Nik Software has been helping people make awesome photos for years. Having welcomed Nik to the Google family, we're excited to bring their Snapseed app (last year's iPad app of the year) to Android. It includes:

  • Basic adjustments like tune, straighten and crop
  • Creative filters like drama, black & white, and vintage that you can apply individually or in combination
  • Control Point technology to selectively enhance your photo—to brighten just a face, for instance, or deepen just the sky
  • The ability to share your creations via Google+ and other services
Snapseed is rolling out now to Google Play and the App Store, and starting today, both versions are free.



Sample image created with Snapseed; gallery available here


This time of year we honor the past, and imagine what’s ahead. So we want to thank you for lending your big hearts to this small project. And we invite you to a future where everyone’s cared for and comfortable in their own skin—in life and online. Let’s keep building Google+ together, and let’s be excellent to each other this holiday season.



Posted by Vic Gundotra, Senior Vice President

YouTube's New Interface

YouTube's New Interface: After so many posts about YouTube's experimental interfaces, it's time for the public release. The new interface is rolled out to everyone and you no longer have to change your YouTube cookie to try it.


"On YouTube video always comes first, and with this new design the site gets out of the way and lets content truly shine. Videos are now at the top of the page, with title and social actions below. Also, playlists have been moved up, so you can easily browse through videos while you watch. Now when you subscribe to your favorite channels, we will add them to your Guide and make them available on every page of the site, and on your mobile device, tablet, and TV," explains YouTube.

The guide is actually a sidebar that's now available on every YouTube page and lets you check your subscriptions, your playlists and the video history. You can also see a list of other videos from the previous page, so you can quickly watch another search result, a different video from the same channel or another video from the homepage.


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.
Egypt December 4
Protesters marching into Korba, Heliopolis, besieging the presidential palace, Dec. 4, 2012 (Creative Commons).

Censorship from on high? Egypt’s lowly media hacks turn the tables

Albwaba News Egyptian media creates “blackout” to protest lack of rights for the press in the proposed constitution. Read here

Chinese Media Retreat After Reports of Unexpected ‘Black Jail’ Verdict

The New York Times.The state-run media announced that citizens had been illegally detained for attempting to lodge complaints against the government and then try to pretend they never published the story. Read here

Iranian Writers, Poets Call For End To Book Censorship

Payvand Iran News. Intellectuals say that Iranian publishing practices are unnecessarily restrictive for the 21st century. Read here

Ecuador’s President Receives Free Speech Award

Foreign Policy. In what international free speech organizations have seen as a controversial move, Argentina’s Universidad Nacional de La Plata has awarded Rafael Correa the Rodolfo Walsh Prize for enabling the “poor and marginalized sectors of society” to express themselves. Read here

Blind activist Chen Guangcheng appeals to CPC to protect human rights; his nephew found guilty of assault

Hindustan Times

“Blind Chinese legal activist Chen Guangcheng, whose dramatic escape from house arrest grabbed world headlines in April, has appealed to China’s new Communist leader Xi Jinping to carry out reforms and defend human rights.” Read here
The Washington Post “Chen Kegui, the nephew of blind legal activist Chen Guangcheng, was sentenced Friday to 39 months in prison for injuring government officials who stormed into his home while searching for his uncle, who had fled house arrest.” Read here

Speak for Justice



Committe to Protect Journalists just launched its campaign against impunity. Take a look here

Vietnamese Director Slams Government Censorship at Hanoi Film Festival

The Hollywood Reporter. In this interview Phan Dang Di talks about his career as a filmmaker in Vietnam, the obstacles he faces in getting a film produced, and how censorship is affecting the country’s burgeoning film industry. Read here

U.S. Colleges Have Free Speech “On the Run”

The Washington Post. George Will analyzes freedom of speech laws at universities—Brandeis, Tufts, University of Wisconsin-Madison—and how they’ve been used to punish students, professors, and newspapers. Read here
The Washington Post. After a joke flyer (albeit, in questionable taste) was distributed on Harvard’s campus, it sparked a “hyper-sensitive” reaction from the university’s administration, causing debate about the meaning of “free speech” at the school. Read here

British Newspapers Agree to Regulator

The New York Times “The editors of Britain’s principal national newspapers met Wednesday under pressure from Prime Minister David Cameron and agreed to the establishment of an independent newspaper regulator with far greater powers than those available to the existing watchdog.” Read here

Chinese Film Studio Boss Yu Dong Calls for Censorship Reform

The Hollywood Reporter. According to Yu, the government’s restrictions are hurting the growing Chinese film industry: Not only are the regulations detrimental economically, but censorship is causing self-imitation in domestic films. Read here

Internet Regulations to be discussed at the ITU: How Will They Affect Free Speech?

“This month the UN’s International Telecommunications Union (ITU) will meet in Dubai to discuss the future of the internet privacy, freedom of expression, and protection for individuals from governments. Will this ensure internet freedom for all, or create laws that curtail users’ rights?”
The Huffington Post. “This ITU conference is potentially dangerous because it has real authority. The Internet exists in its current form under the auspices of an ITU treaty, and many of the conference’s participants want that treaty amended to give themselves greater control…In general, expect continued clashes about online freedom of speech.” Read here
CNN. The ITU conference “is our chance to chart a globally-agreed roadmap to connect the unconnected, while ensuring there is investment to create the infrastructure needed for the exponential growth in voice, video and data traffic.” Read here

Crackdown After Clash Over Ads

Crackdown After Clash Over Ads:
Nearly a dozen Uyghur men remain in jail more than two years after they were detained in a wave of arbitrary arrests tied to a deadly clash with police in northwestern China’s troubled Xinjiang region, according to local sources.
The men were among dozens rounded up during a police crackdown in Keriye (in Chinese, Yutian) county in Hotan prefecture after two Uyghur men and one policeman were killed in an altercation in the town in April 2010, sources in the county told RFA last month.
Sources said the fight that started the crackdown was sparked by photos of half-naked women in local advertisement posters which offended Uyghurs, many of whom chafe under Beijing’s rule in the region.
Details of the incident surfaced two years after it took place amid restricted communications in Xinjiang that followed deadly ethnic clashes in Urumqi in July 2009.
At least two arrested in the aftermath of the 2010 fight were sentenced to death but given a two-year reprieve, two more are serving life sentences in prison, and another is serving eight years in jail in connection with the deaths, according to local sources.
Amid the roundup, authorities also discovered a man had been giving unauthorized religious lessons in Islam from his home, and detained six teenagers studying with him who were later given lengthy prison sentences.
A source said armed police and state security had conducted the wave of arrests, mostly in Hal village, near the town of Keriye.
“Right after the [fight], the Chinese government brought special armed police from Hotan city who joined with the local state security forces and started arbitrarily arresting Uyghur youths,” said a farmer in the county familiar with the case, speaking on condition of anonymity.
“I know around 27 Uyghur youths arrested in that incident … Those are just the ones I know of; there may be more I don’t know about,” the source told RFA’s Uyghur service.
But a resident of an adjacent village said more than 27 people were detained in the aftermath of the deaths.
“Twenty-seven people were arrested from Hal village only, and counting those from around Keriye county, there might have been more than 50 people arrested following the incident,” the villager said, speaking on condition of anonymity.
“Everything was secretly suppressed,” he added.
Hal village authorities contacted by RFA refused to confirm or deny the fight with police or the ensuing wave of arrests.
“If you want to know about this incident, you have to come to my office and talk to me,” the police officer said.
Deadly fight
The fight that killed the two started after two Uyghur men, Dawud and Abdujelil, took down the posters that were on the streets of Keriye town because they felt the partial nudity in the posters had offended local norms of modesty, the first source said.
But the day after they took down the posters, new, “more insulting” posters appeared, according to the source.
On April 26, 2010, when Dawud and Abdujelil, who were respectively 22 and 23 at the time, went to destroy the new posters, they found armed police waiting for them.
In the ensuing fight, Dawud killed one of the police officers with a knife, before he was killed himself, according to the source.
Abdujelil escaped the scene to the home of his friend, Ababekri Memturayim, in nearby Hal village.
Ababekri Memturayim, who was 27, was killed in his doorway when police hit and stabbed him while he refused to allow them into his home to arrest Abdujelil, according to the source.
Abdujelil was later arrested and sentenced to life imprisonment for his role in the fight, the source said.
Authorities also pressured Ababekri Memturayim’s family members to keep quiet about his death, she said.
Ababekri Memturayim’s body was wrapped in a plastic bag and taken away by authorities, and his family members were not allowed to bury him.
“Ababekri Memturayim’s father was arrested, detained for 10 days and forced to not to tell anyone about his son’s death.”
“His father was a poor farmer, very poor … Poor people keep quiet.”
xinjiang-keriye-map-400.jpg
Sentenced to death
Authorities also rounded up other young men in the area with ties to Dawud, Abdujelil, and Ababekri Memturayim and arrested them in connection with the deaths, sources said.
Two of them were given death sentences with a two-year reprieve, although they are believed to still be alive more than two years after their arrest.
Those sentenced to death were Abdul’eziz, 22 at the time, who was arrested after he was found to have a knife at his home, and Abdulhekim, 27 at the time, who had worked with Ababekri Memturayim at a construction company, according to the source.
“They were imprisoned in Urumqi No. 1 Prison, and have been in jail for two years already. But it is not clear if they have been executed yet; their family members have not been informed of anything,” the source said.
Another source, also speaking on condition of anonymity, said that Abdulhakim is still alive in prison.
“He is in Urumqi No. 1 prison right now. His parents very much want to visit him, but are not allowed to see him.”
He said that Abdulhakim had been shot in his right arm and leg when police came to his home to take him into custody and he resisted arrest.
Abdulhakim was taken to a prison hospital, where he did not receive adequate treatment, and after eight months of hospitalization he was given the life sentence in a closed court session, the source said.
“They didn’t want to help him [in the prison hospital]. He suffered there for eight months,” he said, adding that relatives have not been allowed to see him since the sentencing.
Life in prison and 8 years
Aside from Abdujelil, who was involved in the initial fight with police, one more man was sentenced to life in prison, and another given eight years in connection with the incident.
Muhemmet Mettursun, 26, who was a close friend of Dawud’s, was arrested by Hotan armed police and local Chinese state security, and is currently serving his life sentence in Daheyan prison in Turpan.
His mother was detained for several days for protesting against what she felt was his arbitrary arrest.
Metqurban Gangpen, 25, who had loaned money to Muhemmet Mettursun, was arrested and sentenced to eight years in prison, and is currently in serving his time in Aksu prison.
Teenagers studying the Quran
Amid the wave of arrests, police also uncovered that Ababekri Memturayim had been conducting “illegal” teachings on Islam for young students in his home, according to the farmer.
Unsanctioned religious study is forbidden in Xinjiang, where children under 18 are not allowed to attend mosques.
Authorities arrested six teenage boys who had been regularly studying the Quran with Ababekri Memturayim, the source said.
The boys, who were between the ages of 14 and 17 at the time, are now serving sentences of eight to 14 years in prisons in Aksu and Yarkand, far from their hometowns, according the source.
Cultural tensions
Ethnic tensions run high in Xinjiang, where the mostly Muslim Uyghurs complain of policies favoring Han Chinese migration into their homeland and say they have long suffered ethnic discrimination and oppressive religious controls.
Exile Uyghur leaders have warned that Uyghurs are rapidly becoming a minority in their own homeland and that those seeking meaningful autonomy are subjected to political control and persecution.
Abdusalam, a Uyghur scholar and member of an exile group in Canada, said many Uyghurs believe advertisement posters such as the ones that provoked the fight in Keriye are displayed on purpose to provoke Uyghurs who hold on to traditional beliefs and lifestyles.
“This is an old Chinese tactic: muddying the waters to make it easier to catch the fish.  The Chinese government would like to find out which Uyghurs will try to protect their traditions in order to get rid of them,” he said.
Uyghur groups and international rights groups have spoken out on longstanding concerns of widespread human rights violations by the Chinese government against the Uyghur people, including arbitrary arrests.
“China has serious human rights violation against the Uyghurs going back many years, including includes arbitrary arrest, torture, and the use of the death penalty,” the Amnesty International Canada’s secretary general Alex Neve told RFA.
“This certainly includes widespread discrimination with respect to the ability to practice religion and advance their culture, which is affecting the whole of Uyghur society.”
The exile World Uyghur Congress has said thousands of Uyghurs were rounded up and forcibly disappeared in the aftermath of the Urumqi violence of July 2009 in a crackdown that included a 10-month regionwide Internet blackout.
Reported by Rukiye Turdush for RFA’s Uyghur Service. Translated by Rukiye Turdush and Mamatjan Juma. Written in English by Rachel Vandenbrink.