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CNN Political Reporter Peter Hamby |
(CNN) - Karl Rove caused a commotion in recent days by predicting that Sarah Palin will run for president and hinting that she could announce her campaign during a speech to a tea party group in Iowa over Labor Day weekend.
That might be news to Palin. Asked just over a week ago if she would be ready to join the race by the time Labor Day rolls around, Palin responded, "I doubt it." Rove's evidence is this: A new, campaign-style video released by Palin's political action committee highlighting her recent visit to the Iowa State Fair, and in his words, "a schedule next week that looks like that of a candidate, not a celebrity."
Setting aside the fact that pretty much no one outside of Sarah and Todd Palin truly knows her schedule - and that Palin has no actual schedule in Iowa this week - lost in the Rove buzz is the reality that he and the former Alaska governor are not exactly close.
They have traded long distance barbs over Palin's decision to resign from the governorship in 2009, her participation in a television show about her life in Wasilla (Rove said the move undermined her political "gravitas"), and the viability of the Palin-endorsed Senate candidate Christine O'Donnell in 2010.
The two aren't exactly pen pals.
http://www.thelocal.de/sci-tech/20110822-37119.html
Website of music copyright watchdog GEMA hacked
Published: 22 Aug 11 17:17 CET
The website of GEMA, Germany’s music copyright watchdog, has been hacked amid an ongoing dispute over royalties with the video portal YouTube.
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GEMA has been locked in a battle with Google for months over royalties for music videos on YouTube, which the US web giant owns. Instead of being able to watch the videos of many popular artists on the site, YouTube users in Germany often see messages saying the videos are blocked.
The hackers ironically played off that by slapping a message on the GEMA website similar to the one now seen on contentious videos on YouTube. Anonymous said the site was “unfortunately no longer available (not only) in Germany” because GEMA was hindering the "right to freedom."
GEMA said it had not yet determined how the hackers had gained access to its website, but the portal Gulli.com reported internet activists had discovered a key security loophole. It is not the first run-in with hackers for GEMA. The group’s website was hit by a denial-of-service attack in June.
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