Pressroom5 Tech-e: January 2007

Wednesday, January 17, 2007

Hold Your Wee For A Wii

A Sacramento area radio station fired 10 employees today, including three morning disc jockeys, after a mother of three died following an on-air water-drinking contest last week at the station's studios.

The hosts of KDND-FM's ''Morning Rave'' who go by the on-air names Trish, Maney and Lukas were fired a day after the station announced it was suspending the show and investigating the circumstances surrounding the death of Jennifer Lea Strange.

Strange, 28, died after participating in a water-drinking contest on the program, and was one of about 18 contestants who tried to win a Nintendo Wii gaming console early Friday by seeing how much water they could drink without going to the bathroom. The show's DJs called the contest ''Hold your Wee for a Wii.''

The ''Morning Rave'' had been on the air for about five years and was one of the capital's top-ranked morning drive programs.

During the contest, participants were given two minutes to drink an 8-ounce bottle of water and then given another bottle to drink after a 10-minute break.

Strange had showed fellow contestants photographs of her two sons and daughter, for whom she was hoping to win the Nintendo Wii. The game console sells for about $250.

Strange, who placed second, and others kept going even after they were handed even larger containers, but Strange may have drunk nearly two gallons. Afterward, she appeared ill when she went on the air, one contestant noted.

Following the contest, Strange called in sick to work. About five hours later she was found dead at her home.

The Sacramento County coroner said preliminary autopsy findings indicated she died of water intoxication.

Drinking large quantities of water rapidly can throw off the body's balance of electrolytes, causing brain swelling and leading to seizures, coma, or even death.

In February 2005, a Chico State University student died after drinking too much water in a hazing incident at a fraternity. Matthew Carrington was forced to repeatedly drink from a 5-gallon jug and then do calisthenics.

In that case, one fraternity member pleaded guilty to felony involuntary manslaughter and two others pleaded guilty to being accessories to manslaughter, among other charges.

Wednesday, January 10, 2007

Apple - Cingular iPhone Introduced

Apple Computer Inc. Executive Steve Jobs on Tuesday introduced an eagerly-anticipated Apple-branded mobile phone with a touch-screen that combines features from the company's popular iPod music player.

Apple watchers were expecting details on an Apple smartphone able to play music, make calls and perform other functions, the announcement at the annual Macworld conference still helped push the company's shares up more than 5 percent.

Jobs did not give immediate details on the pricing of the phone or its availability and The phone will use the network of AT&T's cellular unit, Cingular Wireless.

The move also could help Apple become a leader in the market for portable digital media devices. The iPod now commands more than a 70 percent share of the U.S. market for MP3 players, as the devices are also known.

The new 11.6 millimeter phone includes a 3.5-inch wide touchscreen display with multi-touch support, 2 megapixel camera and 8 gigabytes of storage. It runs Apple's OS X operating system.

Jobs also said another device that allows users to stream movies, music, photos, podcasts and TV shows to their home entertainment systems would ship in February. Dubbed "AppleTV," the 40 gigabyte machine will cost $299, the same price Jobs forecast back in September.

Jobs also said movies from Paramount films would be sold in on Apple's iTunes online music store in addition to titles from Disney.

Apple has sold more than 70 million iPods since they were introduced and consumers have bought more than 2 billion songs for about 99 cents each on iTunes. More than 220 television shows are also available on iTunes.

Apple shares rose $4.30 to $88.77 following the announcement.

Tuesday, January 9, 2007

Brazilian Judge Lifts Ban On YouTube Over Cicarelli Video

A judge reversed course Tuesday and lifted an order that led to a ban of YouTube in Brazil because a sexy video of supermodel Daniela Cicarelli had uploaded and shown widely on the video-sharing site.

This came after telecommunications companies and Internet providers blocked YouTube from the Amazon to Brazil's populous south in recent days, saying they were unable to limit blocking to the video of Cicarelli making out with her boyfriend.

The case, is the first of its kind in Latin America's largest nation, spotlights the extremely gray area of when and how Internet companies and providers should remove content when privacy rights are violated.

The widely viewed video shows Cicarelli and Brazilian banker Renato Malzoni in intimate scenes along a beach near the Spanish city of Cadiz. The order for its removal was issued after they sued and won a ruling that YouTube violated the couple's right to privacy in hosting the video submitted by the site's users.

But the clip became even more popular over the weekend after the announcement of the Brazil YouTube ban made headlines worldwide, and users in Brazil and beyond posted it to a slew of other Web sites not subject to the judge's order.

Some of the Brazilian companies said it was technically impossible for them to filter out only the video on YouTube, so they pulled the plug on YouTube to make sure they were in legal compliance.

YouTube said it is "working on resolving the current issue in Brazil" and has removed all copies of the Cicarelli video.

"We trust that Brazilian authorities have recognized our efforts to remove all copies of the video, and we will continue to do so as we become aware that it has been reposted."

The ban was also widely criticized by Internet users and press freedom groups, which complained YouTube was being unfairly punished by a near-total block that didn't work anyway because the clip of Cicarelli making out with her boyfriend just went up on other sites.

Sao Paulo state Supreme Court Justice Enio Santarelli Zuliani denied he engaged in censorship, but acknowledged possible concerns Tuesday when he lifted the ban.

"Preventing the dissemination of offensive, false or libelous information is not legal censorship," Zuliani wrote. "However, the blocking of a site could lead to speculation along those lines."

The judge also warned that he could reinstate a YouTube ban in Brazil. He demanded that the service providers explain why they could not block the video alone and that YouTube explain why it could not use software to prevent the Cicarelli clip from popping back on the site.

YouTube said last week the video reappeared on its site after users kept resubmitting it.

The case could spark interest in the development of "fingerprinting" technology that would allow video-sharing sites to identify and block newly uploaded video that is similar or identical to previously removed content, said Jonathan Zittrain, a professor of Internet governance and regulation at Oxford University in Britain. (As reported by the associated press)

Zuliani's order to reverse the ban came just hours after Spanish-owned Telefonica SA issued a statement saying it turned off YouTube, preventing millions of Internet users in Sao Paulo and Rio de Janeiro from viewing the site owned by Google Inc.

Telefonica's announcement affecting Brazil's biggest cities and most populous states came a day after Brasil Telecom SA confirmed that it had blocked the site in a swath of the country stretching from the capital of Brasilia to the Amazon.

The judge last week ordered YouTube to prevent the video from being seen by Brazilians, also ordering fixed-line operators that provide the gateway to Internet providers to take part in the ban until YouTube assured that the clip could not be accessed by Brazilians on its site.

Cicarelli is one of Brazil's best-known models, hosts a show on Brazilian MTV and was previously engaged to soccer great Ronaldo, who plays for Spain's famous Real Madrid team.