Thursday, August 11, 2011

How to nominate Dr. Sanduk Ruit for CNN Heroes 2011


PLEASE READ CAREFULLY!

Go to this link first to nominate Dr. Ruit: http://edition.cnn.com/SPECIALS/cnn.heroes/nom/

Then, follow the following information:
copy and paste :
first name: Sanduk
lastname: Ruit
...city: kathmandu
email: info@sandukruit.org
(yo email id rakhda agaadi space nachhodnu hola.....natra inavalid email id bhanchh)
phone: skip this
age: 50+
category: medical marvel
state: *none

*Is there a specific incident or turning point that motivated your nominee to take action?

Ruit's childhood dream was that of becoming a pilot during his school days. But knowing the death of his elder brother before his birth was due to diarrhea, and being with his younger sister when she died of tuberculosis in 1964, and suffering the loss of another younger sister of pneumonia all worked to changed his heart. "That pinched my heart and I decided to become a doctor,” the Dr. Ruit stated.

(Please change language, which is preferable except the quoted statement)

If you would like to share any websites or online articles about your nominee's activities, you may enter up to 3 links here.

(this one is not compulsory to fill up however, it would be nice and authentic information can be shown)

(Please choose any three links mentioned below, please choose anyone RANDOMLY, do not be serial wise, or else, sabaiko eutai huna aaucha)

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi​/south_asia/3218471.stm
http://news.nationalgeogra​phic.com/news/2003/09/0926​_030926_cataract.html
http://www.texasnepal.com/​blog/2997
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.go​v/pmc/articles/PMC1071661/
http://www.spf.org/the-lea​ders/library/19.html
http://www.osnsupersite.co​m/view.aspx?rid=64972
http://www.hollows.org.au/​Nepal/staff/
http://www.theasiamag.com/​people/doctor-of-the-poor
http://www.princemahidolaw​ard.org/laureate-bio.en.ph​p?type=ind&id=2009-05-18+0​9%3A52%3A04
http://positivenepal.wordp​ress.com/2008/02/01/dr-san​duk-ruitrecipient-of-the-1​6th-prince-mahidol-awards-​2007/
http://www.rmaf.org.ph/Awa​rdees/Citation/CitationRui​tSan.htm
http://www.outofthedarknes​s-film.com/cast/
http://www.bhutanmajestict​ravel.com/news/2009/dr-san​duk-ruit-and-a-team-of-bhu​tanese-eye-specialists-com​pleted-210-eye-operations.​html
http://www.meroguff.com/20​11/03/dr-sanduk-ruit-for-c​nn-heroes-2011.html
http://www.imdb.com/name/n​m2270203/
http://sajha.com/sajha/htm​l/index.cfm?threadid=88441
http://www.ukapologetics.n​et/08/korea.htm
http://news.nationalgeogra​phic.com/news/2003/09/0926​_030926_cataract.html
http://www.youtube.com/wat​ch?v=1eCxzUi8t0I

BBC NEWS | South Asia | Nepal's unique eye care centre
news.bbc.co.uk
The Tilganga Eye Centre is a pioneering facility in Kathmandu which provides much of its treatment for free, reports the BBC's Daniel Lak

BBC NEWS | South Asia | Nepal's unique eye care centre
news.bbc.co.uk
The Tilganga Eye Centre is a pioneering facility in Kathmandu which provides much of its treatment for free, reports the BBC's Daniel Lak.

BBC NEWS | South Asia | Nepal's unique eye care centre
news.bbc.co.uk
The Tilganga Eye Centre is a pioneering facility in Kathmandu which provides much of its treatment for free, reports the BBC's Daniel Lak.

BBC NEWS | South Asia | Nepal's unique eye care centre
news.bbc.co.uk
The Tilganga Eye Centre is a pioneering facility in Kathmandu which provides much of its treatment for free, reports the BBC's Daniel Lak.

Monday, June 27, 2011

Twitter is Hacked Tuesday Morning- September 21 2010

Twitter is Hacked Tuesday Morning- September 21 2010
Twitter was overrun with malicious posts on September 20 morning that used a programming flaw(like XSS) to play pranks, distribute porn and spread worms to unsuspecting users. XSS stands for cross site scripting which refers to web application flaws that enable hackers to inject scripts into web sites. The first worm or pranks was first launched in the Tuesday morning by Magnus Holm, a Norwegian Ruby programmer who uses the Twitter handle @judofyr. It contained only one link which had the embedded command “onmouseover”. It is a Java script command that caused the link to be automatically tweeted when the mouse cursor hovered onto it. The script in some cases also caused a user to forward the offending links virally to their followers and the rest of Twitter. Such worm turned the text into black blocks to hide the dangerous text. He told that he created such worm just to experiment with the flaw. Hence, it is clear that the worm is not voluntarily purposed to destroy anyone’s Twitter account. Rather it is simply an experiment. However, this programmer believed that his worm has already been spread to at least 200,000 users.

Among those pranks, one was on Sarah Brown, wife of the previous British Prime Minister, Gordon Brown. A link on her page redirected visitors to a hard-core Japanese porn site according to a blog by Graham Cluley, an expert at the security software maker Sophos. He further stated that there were tens of thousands of dodgy links circulating on Twitter accounts.

Another attack which entirely took over victims’ computer screen appears to have been started by a Twitter user called @Matsta. Matsta’s website contained the 1980s singer Rick Astley’s music video for “Never Gonna Give You Up” with an added message: “Rick is dancing because he just lost the game.” The Twitter since then disabled his Twitter account.

According to WhiteHat security, a web site security firm, cross-site scripting flaws exist in seven out of ten of all web sites. Hence to avoid such situation, the security experts at Twitter forwarded different remedies. They have recommended that Twitter users avoid such website and instead use a third-party Twitter client like TweetDeck to access the service. Also, using a JavaScript blocker such as NoScript ad-on for Firefox provides protections from such worms.
Later at 10:00 PM on the same day, the Twitter notified they have patched the XSS and fixed the problem.

Thursday, June 23, 2011

Cap and Trade


Cap and Trade
Emissions trading or cap and trade is a market-based approach used to control pollution by providing economic incentives for achieving reductions in the emissions of pollutants. A central authority (usually a governmental body) sets a limit or cap on the amount of a pollutant that can be emitted. The limit or cap is allocated or sold to firms in the form of emissions permits which represent the right to emit or discharge a specific volume of the specified pollutant. Firms that need to increase their emission permits must buy permits from those who require fewer permits. Ex: Acid Rain Program, Emission Reduction Market System by Illinois, Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative by New York etc were some successful carbon emission control system implemented in US in last two decades. Recently in 2007, California State signed into the cap and trade program named California Global Warming Solutions Act which according to our information is successful in offsetting the carbon dioxide and other gases emission in California.
Cap and trade is another alternative approach to reduce the carbon emission in the world. Cap and trade, with baseline approach and carbon tax, are market approaches that put a price on carbon and other greenhouse gases and provide an economic incentive to reduce emissions, beginning with the lowest-cost opportunities. It means the factory that emits the gas above the baseline has to purchase credit from other factory that emits below the baseline. Thus, the carbon emission controlling works automatically as all companies would control gas and try to fall below the baseline instead of buying the credit from the other companies.

US Government Sued Microsoft for establishing Monopoly (1998)

United States v. Microsoft was a set of consolidated civil actions filed against Microsoft Corporation pursuant to the Sherman Antitrust Act on May 18, 1998 by the United States Department of Justice (DOJ) and 20 U.S. states. The plaintiffs alleged that Microsoft abused monopoly power on Intel-based personal computers in its handling of operating system sales and web browserInternet Explorer (IE) web browser software with its Microsoft Windows operating system. Bundling them together is alleged to have been responsible for Microsoft's victory in the browser wars as every Windows user had a copy of Internet Explorer. It was further alleged that this unfairly restricted the market for competing web browsers (such as Netscape NavigatorOpera) that were slow to download over a modem or had to be purchased at a store. Microsoft stated that the merging of Microsoft Windows and Internet Explorer were now the same product and were inextricably linked together and those consumers were now getting all the benefits of IE for free. Those who opposed Microsoft's position countered that the browser was still a distinct and separate product which did not need to be tied to the operating system. sales. The issue central to the case was whether Microsoft was allowed to bundle its or

 In my opinion, the charge against the Microsoft is unreasonable. The way Microsoft merged Windows and Internet Explorer and gave it for free actually benefits the users who otherwise, had to buy from other browsing companies. It has nothing to do against Sherman Antitrust Act. The plaintiffs stated that the Windows and IE are separate product and can’t be monopolized, however, they have no strong reasons on what ground they are separate. Also, there are other companies too who actually merge these products like Mac and Safari, BeOS and NetPositive.

Corruption: its causes, effects and remedies


Corruption: its causes, effects and remedies
Corruption is talked about openly in most countries these days and few countries deny they suffer from it. Which is a good thing since it provides politicians, business and labour leaders, journalists and civil society with a rare opportunity that of agreeing on the urgency of stamping it out. But, agreeing on what exactly is meant by corruption is another matter. In simple sense, corruption is the abuse of public office for private gain. In a wider sense, exploitation of any kind is corruption like shirking work, waste of time, energy and money, deceiving or betraying, mismanaging of public or private funds, undue use of authority, force and power etc. 

Corruption is one of the social evils that involve betrayal of normative value of society and dishonest/preferential use of power or position which has the result of one person or organization being advantaged over another. Corruption respects no borders, knows no economic distinctions and infects all the form of government. The commissioner of taxation channels public monies into his personal bank account, thereby corrupting the public financial system. Also, a political party secures a majority vote by arranging for ballot boxes to be stuffed with false voting papers, thereby corrupting the electoral process. Corruption in developing countries is more devastating than in developed countries. According to Transparency International, nine out of 10 developing countries urgently need practical support to dig out of this mess of corruption. Only 15% of anti-poverty money actually gets to the poor in South Asian nations. Huntington said, “Corruption in a modernizing society is in part not so much the result of deviance of behaviour from the accepted norms as it is the deviance of norms form the established pattern of behaviour”. Thus, Edmund Burke (British Political Writer) said, “Among a people generally corrupt, liberty cannot long exist”.

Transparency International Corruption Perception Index 2004 estimates that the amount lost due to bribery in government procurement is at least US $400 billion per year worldwide. According to this index, a total of 106 out of 146 countries score less than 5 against a clean score of 10. 60 countries score less than 3 out of 10 indicating rampant corruption. Corruption is perceived to be more acute in Bangladesh, Haiti, Nigeria, Chad, Myanmar, Azerbaijan and Paraguay, all of which has a score of less than 2. 

So, there are numerous cases of corruption we can see in the world. For its existence, there are different reasons and conditions. Firstly, “the get-rich quick” motivation inspire the people to become corrupt at both the top and bottom level of the society. For the customs official, accepting the bribe (rent-seeking) may be necessary because his wage is too low to feed his family. Thus, Tanzi (1998) term this as “Corruption due to need”. Secondly, liberal economists argue that the amount of intervention by the state in the form of regulations and restriction compel the businesses/traders to give grants to the public officials for increasing their profits like high tax rate. The conditions favourable for such corruption are lack of accountability and government transparency in decision making, large amount of public capital involved in a project, weak rule of law, weak legal profession, poorly-paid government officials and so on. Thirdly, in some culture, public officials do not perform their duties without some extra payments. Thus, Georges Bernanos said in his book “Why Freedom?”, “The first sign of corruption in a society that is still alive that the end justifies the means” meaning to perform every activities (end), we need to give some bribes (means). Fourthly, corruption is influenced by the discretionary powers granted to officials. Such powers are particularly strong if the government regulations are vague, non-transparent, cumbersome and large in number. Also, the lesser customs officials are held accountable for their actions, the better opportunities for demanding bribes are. The level of corruption will rise with discretion and decrease with accountability. Finally, there are varieties of attractions that motivate corruption apart from economic gain. These are status, power, drug addiction, gambling, sexual gratification etc.
Once the corruption exists in the society, it will have a devastating effect on investment, growth and development. It poses a serious development challenge. In politics, it undermines democracy by subverting formal processes. Corruption in elections and in legislative bodies reduces accountability and representation in policy-making; corruption in the judiciary suspends the rule of law and corruption in public administration results in the unequal provision of services. In general, corruption erodes the institutional capacity of government and public confidence in political institutions as procedures are disregarded, resources are siphoned off and officials are hired or promoted without regarded to performance. 

Secretary General Kofi Annan said, “Corruption is an insidious plague that has a wide range of effects on societies; it undermines democracy and the rule of law, leads to violations of human rights, distorts markets, erodes the quality of life and allows organized crime, terrorism and other threats to human security to flourish”. He further added that “it is in the developing world that its effects are most destructive”. Thus, Ignacio Pichardo Pagaza said, “The phenomenon of corruption is just like the garbage, it has to be removed daily”.

Corruption distorts the allocation of resources and undermines competition in the market place. It also undermines economic development in both public and private sector. In public sector, the officials may increase the technical complexity of public sector projects to conceal such dealings, thus distorting investment. Such corruption reduces the quality of government services and infrastructure and increases budgetary pressures on government. In the private sector, corruption increases the cost of business through the price of illicit payments themselves, the management cost of negotiating with officials and the risk of breached agreements or detection. But, the degree of corruption varies greatly from minor uses of influences to institutionalized bribery. The end-point of corruption is kleptocracy, literally rule by thieves, where even the external pretence of honesty is abandoned. That means, corruption facilitates criminal activities such as drug trafficking, money laundering and prostitution. These are the consequences arose from the corruption which need to be resolved for efficient functioning of the system. 

Corruption can’t be stopped altogether but can be minimized. To solve this problem, at first, there should be transparency and accountability in public institution. The government officials should be held liable and accountable for the job he/she performed. Administrative delays should be reduced to the minimum by prescribing the time limits for dealing with receipts and which should be strictly enforced. Citizens should be educated in respect to their rights, responsibilities and the procedures of the government. Improvement must be made to increase the salary of the employees besides making necessary provisions for housing, medical facilities for the government employees. Companies and businessmen should be obliged to keep detailed accounts of expenditure. Also, officers for the administrative posts should be selected with great care. And then, there should be a complete ban against government servants accepting private commercial or industrial employment for two years after retirement. Also, the corporate funding of corporate company to political parties must be banned because in such a way, the private company may get the political power and make law in favour of them. Cornelius Tacitus said, “The more corrupt the state, the more numerous the laws”. Thus, the taxation laws must be modified; licenses and permit system must be thoroughly reviewed. The law enforcing authorities must see that the laws are rigorously enforced without any fear or favour. Also, the media must encourage honesty and discourage corruption. The salaries of government officials must be raised with the rate of inflation. Finally, the corruption practices performed by the individuals must be given the widest possible publicity. 

Thus, the causes and effects of corruption and how to combat corruption are issues that are increasingly on the national and international agendas of politicians and other policy makers. To meet the economic development, corruption must be reduced.