POPULARITY
En el programa de hoy conversamos con Ceci Flores –madre buscadora en Sonora y defensora de Derechos Humanos– quien por segundo día consecutivo, volvió al Palacio Nacional para intentar ser recibida por el presidente Andrés Manuel López Obrador. En esta ocasión, fue vestida de beisbolista. Ceci Flores se plantó afuera de uno de los accesos a Palacio Nacional con un cartel en el que se lee la leyenda “Presidente, soy beisbolista. ¿Me deja pasar?”. La intención de la activista es entregar a López Obrador una ‘pala de mando‘, con la que realiza la búsqueda de sus dos hijos Marco Antonio y Alejandro, a fin de que se encargue personalmente de la búsqueda de personas desaparecidas en el país.Omar Niño –director en el portal ON en San Luis Potosí– nos habla de la captura el día de ayer, por parte de la Fiscalía General del Estado de San Luis Potosí, de Christopher “N”, identificado como el presunto feminicida de Dulce Vaca, la joven tiktoker que fue privada de la vida el jueves pasado. Cabe recordar que el cuerpo de Dulce fue encontrado al interior de su domicilio, con heridas producidas por arma blanca. Fueron los mismos vecinos quienes dieron aviso a las autoridades sobre el hecho. La Dirección General de Métodos de Investigación (DGMI) se encargó de cumplimentar el ordenamiento y conducir a Christopher "N", ante el Poder Judicial; el sujeto fue identificado como la pareja sentimental de Dulce.Hablamos con Juan Pablo Spinetto –director de economía y política para América Latina en Bloomberg News– sobre el grito de ayuda sin precedentes del Gobierno cubano donde pidió ayuda a las Naciones Unidas para abordar una creciente escasez de alimentos. Afectada por el endurecimiento de las restricciones estadounidenses; la decadencia de la producción nacional; una débil industria turística posterior al COVID-19, y la indiferencia de sus aliados, la isla está viviendo sus peores días en términos económicos desde el colapso de la Unión Soviética, hace ya más de tres décadas.Edgar Segura –reportero de Chilango– nos habla del avistamiento de un lobo recorriendo calles de la colonia San Juan de Aragón en la alcaldía Gustavo A. Madero, durante la tarde de este lunes 18 de marzo. En un principio se manejó la versión de que el lobo se había escapado del Zoológico de Aragón, sin embargo, la Secretaría del Medio Ambiente (Sedema) aseguró que esto es totalmente falso. Así mismo, la mañana de este martes un toro fue captado deambulando en las instalaciones de la universidad La Salle en el Pedregal. En redes sociales circulan videos donde se observa a un toro en la caseta de seguridad de la institución educativa.Programa transmitido el 19 de marzo de 2024. Escucha Esto no es un noticiero con Nacho Lozano, en vivo de lunes a viernes de 1:00 p.m. a 2:00 p.m. por el 105.3 de FM. Esta es una producción de Radio Chilango.
Vinculan a proceso a Christopher ´N´ por el feminicidio de su pareja y su suegraINAI aprueba dar a conocer las órdenes de aprensión de involucrados en el caso AyotzinapaAnuncia Morena demanda por campaña negra en contra de Claudia SheinbaumPronostican temperaturas de menos 30 grados en Ottawa
Welcome from Chad, Jon, Chris, Mark, Brad, Vardean, Shellin, and Matt! Thank you to: Buz H, Charles L, Christopher N, James G Announcements and News Swag Deadline is fast approaching! Don't miss out. Chris turns 100! Don't miss out on Chad's Starter Deck series on YouTube Brad announces a collaboration with Shellin for our Patreons, Tardy Takes,. You can check it out if you join. Agmar will be the first to awaken in the new release model. Starter Deck showdown. Brad does an amazing job of running this thing! Shellin clarifies the erratas. Jason Walden Interview (this is also available as a standalone episode 194.5) Round-up Farewells
Guests Pete Menefee and Christopher Núñez join Sheri to give more history and give honor to the fabulous woman who we call Miss Bluebell. Check out the Patreon www.patreon.com/bluebellsforeverpod Follow us on Instagram and Facebook to see photos and updates www.instagram.com/bluebells_forever/ www.facebook.com/Bluebells-Forever-100660515010096
The Law School Toolbox Podcast: Tools for Law Students from 1L to the Bar Exam, and Beyond
Welcome back to the Law School Toolbox podcast! Today, in an installment of our "Listen and Learn" series, we're tackling another Constitutional Law topic -- that is justiciability, or the issue of deciding whether a court can make a formal judgment on a legal matter. In this episode we discuss: What three requirements must a plaintiff meet in order to have standing? The special doctrines of taxpayer, organizational, and third-party standing When is it too early or too late to bring a case? The "Case or Controversy" Clause In what circumstances will a court hear a case that would normally be moot? Analyzing two examples involving justiciability Resources: “Listen and Learn” series (https://lawschooltoolbox.com/law-school-toolbox-podcast-substantive-law-topics/#listen-learn) Podcast Episode 285: Listen and Learn – First Amendment (Content-Neutral Restrictions) (https://lawschooltoolbox.com/podcast-episode-285-listen-and-learn-first-amendment-content-neutral-restrictions/) Podcast Episode 290: Listen and Learn – Privilege Against Self-Incrimination and Miranda Rights (https://lawschooltoolbox.com/podcast-episode-290-listen-and-learn-privilege-against-self-incrimination-and-miranda-rights/) Podcast Episode 295: Listen and Learn – Due Process and Equal Protection (Con Law) (https://lawschooltoolbox.com/podcast-episode-295-listen-and-learn-due-process-and-equal-protection-con-law/) Examples & Explanations: Constitutional Law, by Christopher N. May (https://www.amazon.com/Examples-Explanations-Constitutional-Law-Federalism/dp/1543805949) Favorite Con Law Supplement: Chemerinsky's Constitution Law: Principles and Policies (https://lawschooltoolbox.com/favorite-con-law-supplement-chemerinskys-constitutional-law-principles-and-policies/) First-Hand Guide to 1L Courses – Constitutional Law (https://lawschooltoolbox.com/first-hand-guide-to-1l-courses-constitutional-law/) Download the Transcript (https://lawschooltoolbox.com/episode-313-listen-and-learn-the-basics-of-justiciability-con-law/) If you enjoy the podcast, we'd love a nice review and/or rating on Apple Podcasts (https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/law-school-toolbox-podcast/id1027603976) or your favorite listening app. And feel free to reach out to us directly. You can always reach us via the contact form on the Law School Toolbox website (http://lawschooltoolbox.com/contact). If you're concerned about the bar exam, check out our sister site, the Bar Exam Toolbox (http://barexamtoolbox.com/). You can also sign up for our weekly podcast newsletter (https://lawschooltoolbox.com/get-law-school-podcast-updates/) to make sure you never miss an episode! Thanks for listening! Alison & Lee
Fritter, Stella Mae Smith, 101, passed away May 5, 2021, after a long, full life. She had been a resident of the Hermitage at Cedarfield in Henrico County for 23 years. Stella was preceded in death by her husband, the Rev. Albert N. Fritter; her parents Lela Evans and James Jackson Smith of Arley, AL; Three Brothers, Truman, George, and Durell Smith, as well as four sisters, Eva Watkins, Polly Stoffel, Edyth Plunkett and Betty Ledbetter. Stella is survived by her son Albert N. Fritter, Jr. and wife Betty, one grandson, Christopher N. Fritter and wife Yen, and one brother,...Article LinkSupport the show (http://henricocitizen.com/contribute)
Christopher N. Phillips’s The Hymnal is the first study to reconstruct the practices of reading and using hymnals, which were virtually everywhere in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. Isaac Watts invented a small, words-only hymnal at the dawn of the eighteenth century. For the next two hundred years, such hymnals were their owners’ constant companions at home, school, church, and in between. They were children's first books, slaves’ treasured heirlooms, and sources of devotional reading for much of the English-speaking world. Hymnals helped many people learn to memorize poetry and to read; they provided space to record family memories, pass notes in church, and carry everything from railroad tickets to holy cards to business letters. In communities as diverse as African Methodists, Reform Jews, Presbyterians, Methodists, Roman Catholics, and Unitarians, hymnals were integral to religious and literate life. An extended historical treatment of the hymn as a read text and media form, rather than a source used solely for singing, this book traces the lives people lived with hymnals, from obscure schoolchildren to Emily Dickinson. Readers will discover a wealth of connections between reading, education, poetry, and religion in Phillips’s lively accounts of hymnals and their readers. Chris Phillips is Professor of English at Lafayette College and a scholar of historical poetics and the history of reading. He is the author of The Hymnal: A Reading History (Johns Hopkins University Press, 2018) and Epic in American Literature, Settlement to Reconstruction (2012), and the editor of The Cambridge Companion to the Literature of the American Renaissance (2018). He is also the PI for the Easton Library Company Database Project, which reconstructs the usage of the first subscription library in Pennsylvania’s Lehigh Valley. Dr. Phillips was a research fellow at the Library Company of Philadelphia in 2016. This chat originally aired at 7:00 p.m. Thursday, October 1, 2020.
On this 5th episode of the JAAOS Unplugged podcast series, host Andy Jensen, MD, summarizes three research articles from the May 15, 2019 issue of JAAOS: The Role of Athletic Event Coverage in Orthopaedic Residency Training, Total Knee Arthroplasty in the Osteoporotic Tibia, and Understanding and Perception of Overlapping Surgery in an Orthopaedic Trauma Population. Following the article summaries, Dr. Jensen interviews Christopher N. Johnson, DO to discuss his review article Contemporary Management of Appendicular Skeletal Metastasis by Primary Tumor Type. Follow this link to download these and other articles from the May 15th, 2019 issue of JAAOS: https://journals.lww.com/jaaos/toc/2019/05150 The JAAOS Unplugged podcast series is brought to you by the Journal of the American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons and the AAOS Resident Assembly.
On March 15-16, 2019, the Federalist Society's student chapter at the ASU Sandra Day O'Connor College of Law hosted the 2019 National Student Symposium. The roundtable discussion covered "Federalism's Contribution to Economic Liberty: Catalyzing Technological Advancement and Economic Growth".Does the Fourteenth Amendment guarantee economic liberty? If not, what role might states play in advancing economic liberty? Frustrated with the federal government’s inability or unwillingness to solve regulatory or competition-based problems, some states have taken matters into their own hands. This panel will address how states have been, and still can be, laboratories of democracy when it comes to regulation and catalyzing economic growth. It will also address how federal regulators can work with, not against, states to accomplish these goals.Using case studies ranging from emerging technologies to marijuana deregulation, the panel will explore the state’s role in our modern federal system, with special attention paid to modern interpretations of both the Fourteenth Amendment and the Commerce Clause.Discussion will focus on demonstrating the ways in which states can remain flexible in fostering innovation—both technological and regarding social policy—while ensuring that consumers are adequately protected from dangerous product or service testing or other offerings. This flexibility enables states to attract, test, and encourage competition in emerging and innovative technologies, as well as long-existing technologies with lowered barriers to entry.Prof. Jonathan H. Adler, Johan Verheij Memorial Professor of Law and Director of the Center for Business Law & Regulation, Case Western Reserve University School of LawMs. Dana Berliner, Senior Vice President and Litigation Director, Institute for JusticeHon. Clint Bolick, Arizona Supreme CourtHon. Mark Brnovich, Arizona Attorney GeneralProf. Allan Ides, Professor of Law and Christopher N. May Chair, Loyola Law School, Los AngelesModerator: Hon. Chad Readler, U.S. Court of Appeals, Sixth CircuitAs always, the Federalist Society takes no position on particular legal or public policy issues; all expressions of opinion are those of the speakers.
On March 15-16, 2019, the Federalist Society's student chapter at the ASU Sandra Day O'Connor College of Law hosted the 2019 National Student Symposium. The roundtable discussion covered "Federalism's Contribution to Economic Liberty: Catalyzing Technological Advancement and Economic Growth".Does the Fourteenth Amendment guarantee economic liberty? If not, what role might states play in advancing economic liberty? Frustrated with the federal government’s inability or unwillingness to solve regulatory or competition-based problems, some states have taken matters into their own hands. This panel will address how states have been, and still can be, laboratories of democracy when it comes to regulation and catalyzing economic growth. It will also address how federal regulators can work with, not against, states to accomplish these goals.Using case studies ranging from emerging technologies to marijuana deregulation, the panel will explore the state’s role in our modern federal system, with special attention paid to modern interpretations of both the Fourteenth Amendment and the Commerce Clause.Discussion will focus on demonstrating the ways in which states can remain flexible in fostering innovation—both technological and regarding social policy—while ensuring that consumers are adequately protected from dangerous product or service testing or other offerings. This flexibility enables states to attract, test, and encourage competition in emerging and innovative technologies, as well as long-existing technologies with lowered barriers to entry.Prof. Jonathan H. Adler, Johan Verheij Memorial Professor of Law and Director of the Center for Business Law & Regulation, Case Western Reserve University School of LawMs. Dana Berliner, Senior Vice President and Litigation Director, Institute for JusticeHon. Clint Bolick, Arizona Supreme CourtHon. Mark Brnovich, Arizona Attorney GeneralProf. Allan Ides, Professor of Law and Christopher N. May Chair, Loyola Law School, Los AngelesModerator: Hon. Chad Readler, U.S. Court of Appeals, Sixth CircuitAs always, the Federalist Society takes no position on particular legal or public policy issues; all expressions of opinion are those of the speakers.
How is it possible to do good deeds that don’t result in bearing fruit in the Christian life? Listen to this lesson to learn the importance of walking by means of the Holy Spirit rather than being controlled by your sin nature. Find out the meaning of abiding in Christ. See that we can either suffer because we deserve it or because it is not based on something we have done. Come to appreciate that undeserved suffering is designed to train and bless us and to bring glory to God. Dr. Dean's opening comments included a reference to the upcoming Pre-Trib Rapture Study Group Conference, December 3-5, 2018. More information is available at www.pre-trib.org. He also mentioned a book entitled The Hymnal: A Reading History by Christopher N. Phillips.
Eifrige Zuhörer wissen darum, wie oft die Schlendrians von WineOdd über den Regisseur und Kopfmenschen C. Nolan redeten. So ließen sie es sich erneut nicht nehmen, ihr gefährliches Viertelwissen und ihre bescheidene Meinung zum neuen Machwerk des Christopher N. preiszugeben. Man höre, wie es ihnen dabei erging.
In Folge 047 erzählt dir Christopher Nörskau von der Firma slow watches wie sie mit einer Uhr mit nur einem Zeiger mittlerweile rund 3 Mio € Umsatz rein online machen, warum Orlando Bloom für sie "wirbt" und warum sie manchmal DVDs mit Schwulen-Pornos in die Firmenzentrale geschickt bekommen. Show Notes: 00:37 - Vorstellung von Christopher Nörskau und slow watches 01:52 - Warum Christopher so lange in Konzernen gearbeitet hat, bevor er sein Startup gegründet hat 02:52 - Diskussion: Müssen erfolgreiche Gründer jung und Studienabbrecher sein 04:29 - Was für ihn der Ausschlag für die Gründung im Uhrenbereich war 06:16 - Wie sie ihre Uhren produzieren und designen 08:01 - Über ihr Geschäftsmodell - rein online 09:28 - Über ihr Preissegment und Markenkonzept 09:59 - Ihr aktueller Jahresumsatz 10:15 - Ihre Marketingkanäle und den Aufbau am Anfang 17:16 - Facebook ist ihr Kanal Nummer 1 19:38 - Wie sie es geschafft haben, dass die Cosmopolitan, NY Times, Mens Health und viele mehr über sie berichten 24:29 - Warum Orlando Bloom für sie "wirbt" 26:48 - Wo man mehr Information zu slow watches bekommt 27:33 - Eines der beklopptesten Dinge, die Christopher zuletzt passiert ist 31:03 - Was Christopher anders machen würde, wenn er nochmal neu starten könnte 32:08 - Über ihre neue Marke slim made 33:27 - Christophers Startup Curriculum für angehende Gründer 35:29 - Über ihr Tool Setup 38:02 - Habt ihr Tool Empfehlungen für Christopher? 38:25 - Christophers letzter Tipp für die Zuhörer Mehr Infos: Slow watches Webseite Tool Setup: Excel Google Analytics Dropbox
This episode contains offensive language. ---------- In this episode of Reasonably Sound we talk about how it is that through repetition, seemingly innocuous sounds come to be laden with meaning and can even guide the behavior of subjects exposed to them. ---------- Double extra super THANKS to all of Reasonably Sound’s Patrons, who help keep the show afloat. Special shoutout to Allie, Andy McMillan, Autumn, Brandon, Camilla Greer, Chelsea Herrington, Coral Kennelty-Cohen, Dale Jakes, Elliott, Hans Buetow, Ildaris, Jesse Gamble, Joachim, Joe Krushinsky, John Cifuentes, Kyle Adkins, Liz M, Scott, Susan Rugnetta, Talia F E, Tim, Tod Kurt, Xander C ---------- Reasonably Sound's music is by Will Stratton: willstratton.bandcamp.com Its visual design is by Tida Tep: tidatep.com ---------- SOURCES - On Dog Whistle Racism, Generally - "Actually, Many ‘Inner Cities’ Are Doing Great" http://nyti.ms/2hF4Obm | "Thank Ronald Reagan and Bill Clinton for Donald Trump’s Dog-Whistle Ways" http://ti.me/2hF3G7F | "Mike Pence and ‘Conversion Therapy’: A History" http://nyti.ms/2hF3Prz | "Donald Trump used to dog-whistle racism. Now he just yells it" http://bit.ly/2hF3Rjb | "Globalism: A Far-Right Conspiracy Theory Buoyed by Trump" http://nyti.ms/2hEVXGs | "American crossroads: Reagan, Trump and the devil down south" http://bit.ly/2hEVbJA | Quoted - "Exclusive: Lee Atwater’s Infamous 1981 Interview on the Southern Strategy" http://bit.ly/2hF5JbN | "Dog Whistle Politics" by Ian Haney-Lopez http://bit.ly/2hF9KwR | General - Sanctuary Cities and Dog Whistle Politics by Christopher N. Lasch | No Dog Whistle Needed by Gary Younge | Higher Frequency by Sarah L. Webb | How Progressives Should Talk About Racism by Heather McGhee and Ian Haney-López | "What’s the Matter with What’s the Matter with Kansas?" http://bit.ly/2hEXrkn | "Why did the Democrats Lose the South? Bringing New Data to an Old Debate" http://bit.ly/2hF6cL5 | "The truth about the white working class: Why it’s really allergic to voting for Democrats" http://bit.ly/2hF5SMv ---------- I know show notes suck right now, it’ll get fixed soon, hopefully. Sorry.
Im heutigen Podcast spreche ich mit dem Gründer des Vertical Brands Slow Watches - einem Hersteller für Uhren. Wir sprechen über das Unternehmen, Vertriebswege, relevante Onlin-Marketing-Kanäle, Herausforderungen und die Vision, die Marke weltweit weiter zu etablieren. Weitere Infos und Möglichkeit Feedback abzugeben, gibt es unter http://www.ecommerce-vision.de/die-entwicklung-des-vertical-brands-slow-watches-im-gespraech-mit-christopher-noerskau/
In this work we present a simple, yet effective and practical, scheme to improve the security of stored password hashes, rendering their cracking detectable and insuperable at the same time. We utilize a machine-dependent function, such as a physically unclonable function (PUF) or a hardware security module (HSM) at the authentication server to prevent off-site password discovery as well as a deception mechanism to alert administrators of such attempts. Our scheme can be easily integrated with legacy systems without the need for any additional servers, changing the structure of the hashed password file or any client modifications. When using the scheme the structure of the hashed passwords file, etc/shadow or etc/master.passwd, will appear no different than in the traditional scheme. However, when an attacker exfiltrates the hashed passwords file and tries to crack it, the only passwords she will get are the ErsatzPasswords— the “fake passwords”. When an attempt to login using these ErsatzPasswords is detected an alarm is triggered. Even with an adversary who knows about the scheme, cracking cannot be launched without physical access to the authentication server. The scheme also includes a secure backup mechanism in the event of a failure of the hardware dependent function. ErsatzPassword is flexible by design, enabling the proposed scheme to be integrated to existing authentication systems without changes to user experience. The proposed scheme is integrated into the pam_unix module as well as two client/server authentication schemes: LDAP authentication and the Pythia PRF Service [Everspaugh et al. 2015]. The core library to support ErsatzPassword in C and Python required 255 and 103 lines of code, respectively. The integration of ErsatzPassword for each explored authentication systems required less than 100 lines of code. Experimental evaluation of ErsatzPassword shows an increase of authentication latency in the order of 100 ms, which may be acceptable for end user experience. A framework for implementing ErsatzPassword using the Trusted Platform Module (TPM) provides a greater sense of machine-dependent functionality to resist offline attacks.
In this work we present a simple, yet effective and practical, scheme to improve the security of stored password hashes, rendering their cracking detectable and insuperable at the same time. We utilize a machine-dependent function, such as a physically unclonable function (PUF) or a hardware security module (HSM) at the authentication server to prevent off-site password discovery as well as a deception mechanism to alert administrators of such attempts. Our scheme can be easily integrated with legacy systems without the need for any additional servers, changing the structure of the hashed password file or any client modifications. When using the scheme the structure of the hashed passwords file, etc/shadow or etc/master.passwd, will appear no different than in the traditional scheme. However, when an attacker exfiltrates the hashed passwords file and tries to crack it, the only passwords she will get are the ErsatzPasswords— the "fake passwords". When an attempt to login using these ErsatzPasswords is detected an alarm is triggered. Even with an adversary who knows about the scheme, cracking cannot be launched without physical access to the authentication server. The scheme also includes a secure backup mechanism in the event of a failure of the hardware dependent function. ErsatzPassword is flexible by design, enabling the proposed scheme to be integrated to existing authentication systems without changes to user experience. The proposed scheme is integrated into the pam_unix module as well as two client/server authentication schemes: LDAP authentication and the Pythia PRF Service [Everspaugh et al. 2015]. The core library to support ErsatzPassword in C and Python required 255 and 103 lines of code, respectively. The integration of ErsatzPassword for each explored authentication systems required less than 100 lines of code. Experimental evaluation of ErsatzPassword shows an increase of authentication latency in the order of 100 ms, which may be acceptable for end user experience. A framework for implementing ErsatzPassword using the Trusted Platform Module (TPM) provides a greater sense of machine-dependent functionality to resist offline attacks.
Die Sommerpause ist vorbei und wir starten in die Herbstsaison mit zwei Bieren von der Flensburger Brauerei. Kellerbier und Dunkles. Wer sich jetzt fragt wo der Flensburger Klassiker "Flensburger Pilsener" dabei bleibt, der sei auf unseren Youtube-Channel verwiesen. Dort haben wir das Pilsener "mit Bild" getestet ;-) Vielen Dank an Christopher N. für diese Bierspende.
From a suggestion by Christopher N. Corradini on our Facebook page comes our latest unscripted adventure! Two scientists compete for a contract to build the greatest laser ever! But one of them has gained his laser parts through nefarious means! … Continue reading →