This Christmas advert has been banned from TV for being too political.— Dan Lewis (CWU NW Chair) (@Think_Become) November 9, 2018
I think what's happening to our rain forests should be banned for being criminal to life on earth.
This needs to be the most viewed Christmas advert ever! Do your best Twitter! pic.twitter.com/c9YEbVyIuw
Showing posts with label censorship. Show all posts
Showing posts with label censorship. Show all posts
Monday, 12 November 2018
This Christmas advert has been banned from TV in the UK for being too political
Labels:
#standup4forests,
advertising,
censorship,
orangutans,
palm oil
Monday, 30 July 2018
July 2018 was not a good month for Zuckerberg and Facebook Inc - Channel 4 undercover investigation, a lawsuit, falling user numbers, sudden 19% drop in company value & US$12 billion hit to personal fortune
As the fall-out from manipulated US presidential campaign and UK Brexit national referendum continues try at it might Facebook Inc just can't give a cursory apology for its part in these events and mover on - users and mainstream media won't cease scutiny of its business practices.
News.com.au, 27 July 2018:
Shares in Facebook plummeted 19 per cent to $US176.26 at the end of trading on Thursday, wiping out some $US120 billion ($A160 billion) — believed to be the worst single-day evaporation of market value for any company....
Founder Mark Zuckerberg, who has a 13 percent stake in Facebook, saw his fortune dropped by more than $US12 billion ($A16 billion) in less than 24 hours, to around $74 billion ($A100 billion).
The fall came after the social media giant revealed three million European users had closed their accounts since the Cambridge Analytica data scandal. The record decline pushed the tech-heavy Nasdaq more than one per cent lower.
CNet, 27 July 2018:
It began Wednesday with Facebook, which announced that daily active user counts had fallen in Europe, to 279 million from 282 million earlier this year. Facebook also indicated it was no longer growing in the US and Canada, two of the most lucrative advertising markets. Just as Facebook was working through its second year of nearly nonstop scandals over unchecked political meddling and data misuse, it was becoming clear that the days of consistent and relatively easy growth were fading.
Reuters, 28 July 2018:
NEW YORK (Reuters) -
Facebook Inc (FB.O)
and its chief executive Mark Zuckerberg were sued on Friday in what could be
the first of many lawsuits over a disappointing earnings announcement by the
social media company that wiped out about $120 billion of shareholder wealth.
The complaint filed by
shareholder James Kacouris in Manhattan federal court accused Facebook,
Zuckerberg and Chief Financial Officer David Wehner of making misleading
statements about or failing to disclose slowing revenue growth, falling
operating margins, and declines in active users.
Chanel4.com, news release, 17 July 2018:
Dispatches
investigation reveals how Facebook moderates content
An undercover investigation by Firecrest Films for Channel 4 Dispatches
has revealed for the first time how Facebook decides what users can and can’t
see on the platform. (Inside Facebook: Secrets of the Social Network, Channel 4 Dispatches, 9pm, 17 July).
Dispatches’ investigation reveals:
*Violent content such as graphic images and videos of assaults on children, remaining on the site, despite being
flagged by users as inappropriate and requests to have it removed.
· *Thousands of reported posts remained
unmoderated and on the site while we were filming, beyond Facebook’s stated aim
of a 24-hour turnaround, including potentially posts relating to suicide
threats and self-harm.
· * Moderators told not to take any
action if content shows a child who is visibly below Facebook’s 13-year-old age
limit, rather than report it as posted by underage users, even if the content
includes self-harming.
· *Allegations from an early Facebook
investor and mentor to Mark Zuckerberg, that Facebook’s business model benefits
from extreme content which engages viewers for longer, generating higher
advertising revenue.
· *Pages belonging to far-right groups,
with large numbers of followers, allowed to exceed deletion threshold, and
subject to different treatment in the same category as pages belonging to
governments and news organisations.
· * Policies allowing hate speech towards
ethnic and religious immigrants, and trainers instructing moderators to ignore
racist content in accordance with Facebook’s policies.
Dispatches sent an
undercover reporter to work as a content moderator in Facebook’s largest centre
for UK content moderation. The work is outsourced to a company called Cpl Resources plc in Dublin which has worked with Facebook since 2010. The
investigation reveals the training given to content moderators to demonstrate
how to decide whether content reported to them by users, such as graphic images and videos of child abuse, self-harming, and violence should be allowed to remain on the site or be deleted. Dispatches also films day-to-day moderation
of content on the site, revealing:
Violent content:
One of the most sensitive areas of Facebook’s content rulebook is about
graphic violence. When dealing with graphic violence content, moderators have
three options – ignore, delete, or mark as disturbing which places restrictions
on who can see the content.
Dispatches’ undercover reporter is seen moderating a video showing two
teenage schoolgirls fighting. Both girls are clearly identifiable and the video
has been shared more than a thousand times. He’s told that Facebook’s rules say
that because the video has been posted with a caption condemning the violence
and warning people to be careful about visiting the location where it was
filmed, it should not be deleted and instead should be left on the site and
marked as disturbing content. Dispatches speaks to the mother of the girl
involved who tells the programme the distress and impact the video had on her
daughter. She struggles to understand the decision to leave the video up on the
site. “To wake up the next day and find out that literally the whole world is
watching must have been horrifying. It was humiliating for her, it was
devastating for her. You see the images and it’s horrible, it’s disgusting.
That’s someone’s child fighting in the park. It’s not Facebook entertainment.”
Facebook told Dispatches that the child or parent of a child featured in
videos like this can ask them to be removed. Richard Allan, VP of Public Policy
at Facebook said, “Where people are highlighting an issue and condemning the
issue, even if the issue is painful, there are a lot of circumstances where
people will say to us, look Facebook, you should not interfere with my ability
to highlight a problem that’s occurred.
Online anti-child abuse campaigner Nicci Astin tells Dispatches about
another violent video which shows a man punching and stamping on a toddler. She
says she reported the video to Facebook in 2012 and received a message back
saying it didn’t violate its terms and conditions. The video is used during the
undercover reporter’s training period as an example of what would be left up on
the site, and marked as disturbing, unless posted with a celebratory caption.
The video is still up on the site, without a graphic warning, nearly six years
later. Facebook told Dispatches they do escalate these issues and contact law
enforcement, and the video should have been removed.
One moderator tells the Dispatches undercover reporter that “if you start censoring too much then people lose interest in the platform….
It’s all about making money at the end of the day.”
Venture Capitalist Roger McNamee was one of Facebook’s earliest
investors, a mentor to CEO Mark Zuckerberg, and the man who brought Sheryl
Sandberg to the company. He tells Dispatches that Facebook’s business model
relies on extreme content:
“From Facebook’s point of view this is, this is just essentially, you
know, the crack cocaine of their product right. It’s the really extreme, really
dangerous form of content that attracts the most highly engaged people on the
platform. Facebook understood that it was desirable to have people spend more
time on site if you’re going to have an advertising based business, you need
them to see the ads so you want them to spend more time on the site. Facebook
has learned that the people on the extremes are the really valuable ones
because one person on either extreme can often provoke 50 or 100 other people
and so they want as much extreme content as they can get.”
Richard Allan told Dispatches: Shocking content does not make us more
money, that’s just a misunderstanding of how the system works …. People come to
Facebook for a safe secure experience to share content with their family and
friends. The vast majority of those 2 billion people would never dream of
sharing content that, like that, to shock and offend people. And the vast
majority of people don’t want to see it. There is a minority who are prepared
to abuse our systems and other internet platforms to share the most offensive
kind of material. But I just don’t agree that that is the experience that most
people want and that’s not the experience we’re trying to deliver.
Underage users:
No child under 13 can have a Facebook account. However, a trainer tells
the undercover reporter not to proactively take any action regarding their age
if the report contains an image of a user who is visibly underage, unless the
user admits to being underage: “We have to have an admission that the person is
underage. If not, we just like pretend that we are blind and we don’t know what
underage looks like.” Even if the content contains images for self-harm for
example, and the image is of someone who looks underage the user is treated
like an adult and sent information about organisations which help with
self-harming issues, rather than being reported for being underage: “If this
person was a kid, like a 10-year-old kid we don’t care, we still action the
ticket as if they were an adult.” Facebook confirmed to Dispatches that its
policy is not to take action about content posted by users who appear to be
underage, unless the user admits to being underage.
Hate speech:
Hate speech:
Dispatches’ undercover reporter is told that, while content which
racially abuses protected ethnic or religious groups violates Facebook’s
guidelines, if the posts racially abuse immigrants from these groups, then the
content is permitted. Facebook’s training for moderators also includes a post
including a cartoon comment which describes drowning a girl if her first
boyfriend is a negro, as content which is permitted. Facebook confirmed to
Dispatches that the picture violates their hate speech standards and they are
reviewing what went wrong to prevent it from happening again.
“Shielded Review” – Popular pages kept up despite violations:
Our undercover reporter is told that if any page is found to have five or more pieces of content that violate Facebook’s rules, then the entire page should be taken down, in accordance with the company’s policies. But we have discovered that posts on Facebook’s most popular pages, with the highest numbers of followers, cannot be deleted by ordinary content moderators at Cpl. Instead, they are referred to the Shielded Review Queue where they can be directly assessed by Facebook rather than Cpl staff. These pages include those belonging to jailed former English Defence League leader Tommy Robinson, who has over 900,000 followers, and who has been given the same protected status as Governments and news organisations. A moderator tells the undercover reporter that the far-right group Britain First’s pages were left up despite repeatedly featuring content that breached Facebook’s guidelines because, “they have a lot of followers so they’re generating a lot of revenue for Facebook. The Britain First Facebook page was finally deleted in March 2018 following the arrest of deputy leader Jayda Fransen.
Our undercover reporter is told that if any page is found to have five or more pieces of content that violate Facebook’s rules, then the entire page should be taken down, in accordance with the company’s policies. But we have discovered that posts on Facebook’s most popular pages, with the highest numbers of followers, cannot be deleted by ordinary content moderators at Cpl. Instead, they are referred to the Shielded Review Queue where they can be directly assessed by Facebook rather than Cpl staff. These pages include those belonging to jailed former English Defence League leader Tommy Robinson, who has over 900,000 followers, and who has been given the same protected status as Governments and news organisations. A moderator tells the undercover reporter that the far-right group Britain First’s pages were left up despite repeatedly featuring content that breached Facebook’s guidelines because, “they have a lot of followers so they’re generating a lot of revenue for Facebook. The Britain First Facebook page was finally deleted in March 2018 following the arrest of deputy leader Jayda Fransen.
Facebook confirmed
to Dispatches that they do have special procedures for popular and high profile
pages, which includes Tommy Robinson and included Britain First.
They say Shielded
Review has been renamed ‘Cross Check’. Lord Allen told Dispatches: “if the
content is indeed violating it will go….I want to be clear this is not a
discussion about money, this is a discussion about political speech. People are
debating very sensitive issues on Facebook, including issues like immigration.
And that political debate can be entirely legitimate. I do think having extra
reviewers on that when the debate is taking place absolutely makes sense and I
think people would expect us to be careful and cautious before we take down
their political speech.”
Delays in moderating content:
Facebook’s publicly stated aim is to assess all reported content within
24 hours. However, during the period of the undercover filming, Dispatches
found a significant backlog. Moderators told the undercover reporter that due
to the volume of reports, or tickets, they are supposed to moderate, they are
unable to check up to 7,000 reported comments on a daily basis. At one point
there is a backlog of 15,000 reports which have not been assessed, with some
tickets are still waiting for moderation up to five days after being reported.
Facebook told Dispatches that the backlog filmed in the programme was cleared
by 6 April.
…/ends
[my yellow highlighting]
Labels:
censorship,
election campaigns,
ethics,
Facebook,
free speech,
hate speech,
violence
Saturday, 16 June 2018
The American Resistance has many faces and this is just one of them .......(22)
This is a political cartoon by Rob Rodgers, who until 15 June 2018 was employed by the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette - ciruculation 317,439 - a subsidiary of Block Communication Inc.
On that day he was apparently sacked for being critical of US President Donald J. Trump.
Labels:
censorship,
fascism,
media,
Trump Regime
Monday, 30 April 2018
What the Australian Government didn’t want the UN to publish
During Nationals MP for New England Barnaby Joyce’s
disastrous sojourn as Australian Deputy Prime Minister and Minister for
Agriculture and Water Resources the federal government began a successfull campaign
to have the United Nations delete
all criticism of Australia’s $13bn effort to restore the ailing Murray-Darling
river system from a published study.
It seems the Turnbull Government did not want the
world to know, or Australian voters to be reminded, that it had placed long
term water sustainability in four of its eight states and territories in jeopardy.
The Food and Agricultural Organisation of the United
Nations draft report in question was the following:
C.J. Perry and Pasquale
Steduto, (25 May 2017), DOES IMPROVED IRRIGATION TECHNOLOGY SAVE
WATER? A review of the evidence: Discussion paper on irrigation
and sustainable water
resources management in the
Near East and North Africa
Abstract
The
Near East and North Africa (NENA) Region has the lowest per-capita fresh water
resource availability among all Regions of the world. Already naturally exposed
to chronic shortage of water, NENA will face severe intensification of water
scarcity in the coming decades due to several drivers related to demography,
food security policies, overall socio-economic development and climate change.
Irrigated agriculture in the Region, which already consumes more than 85
percent of renewable fresh water resources, will face strong challenges in
meeting augmented national food demand and supporting economic development in
rural areas. Countries of the NENA Region promote efficient and productive
irrigation as well as the protection and sustainable management of scarce and
fragile natural resources, particularly water, in their national plans. Through
the Regional Initiative on Water Scarcity, FAO is providing support and focus
to efforts in confronting the fast-widening gap between availability and demand
for fresh water resources. A key question to address is: how can countries
simultaneously reduce this gap, promote sustainable water resources management
and contribute effectively to food security and enhanced nutrition? The
traditional assumption has been that increasing irrigation efficiency through
the adoption of modern technologies, like drip irrigation, leads to substantial
water savings, releasing the saved water to the environment or to other uses.
The evidence from research and field measurements shows that this is not the
case. The benefit at the local “on-farm” scale may appear dramatic, but when
properly accounted at basin scale, total water consumption by irrigation tends
to increase instead of decreasing. The potential to increase water
productivity— more “crop per drop”—is also quite modest for the most important
crops. These findings suggest that reductions in water consumption by irrigated
agriculture will not come from the technology itself. Rather, measures like
limiting water allocation will be needed to ensure a sustainable level of water
use. The present report provides the evidence needed to open up a discussion
with all major stakeholders dealing with water resources management on the
proper and scientifically sound framework required to address jointly water
scarcity, sustainability and food security problems. A discussion that has been
disregarded for too long.
C.J.
Perry stated at Research
Gate on 25 April 2018 that:
Government representatives from the Australian Embassy in Rome disagreed
with the research findings for the Australia section summarised in the original
report. FAO, in response, welcomed the opportunity to improve the report.
Dissemination was put on hold and the report was removed from the FAO website
pending inclusion of additional material relevant to the Australian section. In a series of exchanges, no empirical evidence was presented to support
the Australian authorities’ claim that the investment program in the Murray
Darling Basin has generated substantial water savings and environmental
benefits. This left the global principles
and conclusions set out in the original report unchallenged, while the results
from Australia remained contentious. Therefore, it was decided that the best
solution to the matter was to withdraw the Australian section from the
publication and let the Discussion Paper to be available again on the web. The
original and current versions of the report both invite submissions of additional
case studies, information and analysis to WSI@fao.org. Cases documenting technical or policy interventions
where irrigation water has been released to environmental or other uses will be
particularly valuable.
The
suppressed section in the original draft of this UN report would have been
identical or very similar to this version of the text:
4.1 AUSTRALIA
Document(s)
System of Environmental-Economic Accounting for Water (SEEA-Water)
(United Nations Statistics Division, 2012); Water Account Australia 2004–05,
(Australian Bureau of Statistics, 2006); Droughtand the rebound effect: A
Murray–Darling basin example (Loch and Adamson, 2015); Understanding irrigation
water use efficiency at different scales for better policy reform: A case study
of the Murray-Darling Basin, Australia (Qureshi et al., 2011); Water Reform and
Planning in the Murray–Darling Basin, Australia (Grafton, 2017)
…………………………………...........................................................................................
Context
Australia
has led the world in the introduction of water rights in a context of extreme
resource variability.
This in turn
has provided the basis for managed trading between sectors and locations, and
valuable lessons regarding potential problems as previously under-utilized entitlements
are sold and used, and of “stranded assets” if significant volumes of water are
traded out of an area. More recently, evidence suggests that subsidy programmes
to “save” water seem to have been ineffective, poorly conceived and
un-prioritized.
…………………………………...........................................................................................
Highlights
The Murray
Darling Basin (MDB) is widely recognized for its advanced standards in water
resources management—in particular the system of tradable water rights that
allows transfer of water on short term or permanent leases subject to
evaluation of third party impacts by the regulatory authorities.
Australia
participated in the formulation of the United Nations (UN) System of
Environmental-Economic Accounting for Water. This framework accounts for water
withdrawn from “the environment” (rivers, aquifers), use of that water in
various sectors, including transfer between sectors (for example a water utility
supplying a factory or town), consumption through ET, and direct and indirect
return flows to the environment and to sinks. Trial implementation of the
framework was planned in Australia, and the Australian Bureau of Statistics had
already in 2006 issued guidelines referencing the System of Environmental-Economic
Accounting for Water (UN- System of Environmental-Economic Accounting for
Water
(SEEAW) system), which was to be applied to the reporting of the 2004-5
national water accounts.
However, the
following statement from the introduction to Chapter 4 of the 2004-5 National
Water Accounts for Australia5 is apparently at variance with one critical
element of the SEEAW approach—namely the distinction between consumptive and
non-consumptive uses:
This chapter examines the use of water within the AGRICULTURE industry
in Australia. Water used by this industry includes livestock drinking water and
water applied through irrigation to crops and pastures. Since the AGRICULTURE
industry does not use water in-stream, or supply water to other users, total
water use is equal to water consumption.
Elsewhere in
the Accounting Standards it is stated that:
It is believed that leakage to landscape from surface water resources
such as rivers and storages occurs in the MDB region; however, reliable volumes
are not available, and currently there is no suitable quantification approach
to estimate these volumes.
Does this
assumption of zero return flows matter? Indeed it does: Australia is now
embarked on a massive (AUS$ 10bn) programme to save water for the environment,
including subsidies to farmers for hi-tech on farm investment. Savings are
estimated on the basis of typical application efficiencies (e.g. flood irrigation
50 percent, drip 90 percent), so a farmer with a water entitlement of 100 water
units, switching from flood to drip would be assumed to consume 50 units at
present, which would require a delivery of only 50/0.9 (55.5) units after
conversion. The “saving” of 44.5 units are then divided between the farmer and
the environment. Of the 22.25 units going to the farmer, he consumes (with the
new technology) approximately extra 20 units. So on-farm water consumption is
expected to increase from 50 units to 70
units (and return flows are diminished by approximately the same amount), in
apparent direct contradiction to the programme objectives. In some cases, such
return flows will be non-recoverable outflows to saline groundwater; in other
cases, where irrigation is close to rivers or where groundwater is usable, the
return flows are recoverable and cannot be counted as “savings”. However, the
current evaluation of investments includes no apparent basis for assessing whether
subsidized introduction of hi-tech systems will actually release water to
alternative uses, or simply increase consumption by the extra amount allocated
to the farmer. A more comprehensive implementation of UN-SEEAW—where return
flows to the environment are specifically accounted for—would have addressed
this problem.
Other
authors have identified the issue. Qureshi et al. (2011) point to the problem
of ignoring return flows, and the danger of focussing on local “efficiency”,
while Loch and Adamson (2015) go on to identify the “rebound effect” whereby
when water deliveries to the farm are more valuable, the demand for water
actually increases.
Most
recently, writing in a Special Issue of Water Economics and Policy that
addressed many of the complexities of managing water scarcity in the Murray
Darling basin, Grafton (2017) made the following key observations regarding the
Australian experience with providing subsidies for on-farm improvements in
irrigation technology:
* About USD 2.5 billion of taxpayers’ funds used for improving farm irrigation
has primarily benefitted private individuals;
* These investments have had no discernible impact in terms of reduced
water use on a per-hectare basis, or release of water to alternative users;
* The buyback of water rights from willing sellers was the most effective
use of taxpayer funds to release water to alternative uses;
* Investments in irrigation to raise “crop-per-drop” productivity
had failed to deliver water savings on a basin scale.
NOTE: Full draft report Does
improved irrigation technology save water.pdf
Thursday, 1 March 2018
No need to worry about the possibility that a Liberal-Nationals Federal Government will impose censorship on the free press in Australia
The
time to fret over the possibility of government censorship of the media is over
because in February 2018 it ceased being a distant possibility and became fact.
This
is what the Australian Press Council stated about the News Corp online article….
Australian Press Council (APC):
The
Press Council has considered whether its Standards of Practice were breached by
an article published in news.com.au on 31 May 2017, headed “Islamic State [IS]
terror guide encourages luring victims via Gumtree, eBay”.
The opening paragraph read: “ISLAMIC State has released a step-by-step guide on how to murder nonbelievers, which includes how to lure targets via fake ads on Gumtree and eBay”. The article proceeded to relay in detail how an article in “[t]he latest edition of the terror group’s English-language propaganda magazine … encourages would-be terrorists to advertise products on second-hand selling sites … to lure victims and assassinate them”. The article mostly comprised extracts from the source material describing the steps necessary to perform such acts.
The Council considered that the article did publish much of the source material from IS verbatim, with limited accompanying analysis or context, such as comments from experts and websites such as Gumtree. The Council accepted there was no intention to encourage or support terrorism, but considered that republishing content from terrorist entities in this manner can perpetuate the purpose of such propaganda and give publicity to its ideas and practices.
However, the Council accepted the public interest in alerting readers to potential risks to their safety. It considered that on balance, the public interest in alerting readers to the dangerous content of the terrorist propaganda and its instructional detail was greater than the risk to their safety posed by the effective republication of terrorist propaganda content. Given this, the Council concluded that the public interest justified publication of the article. Accordingly, the publication did not breach General Principle 6.
The Council noted that great care needs to be exercised by publications when reporting on terrorist propaganda to ensure that public safety is not compromised. In particular, effectively republishing source material comprising instructional detail in how to carry out particular terrorist acts could pose a risk to public safety, and reasonable steps should be taken to prevent such an outcome.
This
is what the Turnbull Government did…….
News.com.au, 28 February 2018:
…the
article titled “Islamic State terror guide encourages luring victims via
Gumtree, eBay” no longer exists.
A
week after it was published on May 31, 2017, the Attorney-General’s office
contacted news.com.au to demand it be taken down, saying the Classification
Board had ruled it should be refused classification as it “directly or
indirectly” advocated terrorist acts.
It
appears to be the first time section 9A of the Classification (Publications,
Films and Computer Games) Act 1995 has been used to censor a news report, since
it was first added in 2007.
The
action has alarmed the publisher of news.com.au as Australian media in general
were not informed the Classification Board had the power to ban news stories or
that the eSafety Commissioner had the power to instigate investigations into
news articles.
“The
first news.com.au knew of this matter was when contacted by the
Attorney-General’s Department and advised of the Classification Board
decision,” news.com.au argued as part of a separate Press Council investigation
into the article.
“The
department, board and the eSafety Commissioner did not contact news.com.au
beforehand to advise of the investigation. Consequently, news.com.au was not
given the right to make submissions or a defence in regard to the article.”
News.com.au
removed the article as it was facing legal penalties from the Australian
Communications and Media Authority (ACMA) if it refused, including fines or
even civil or criminal legal action.
In
justifying its decision, the Classification Board noted the article contained
“detailed references and lengthy quotations from Rumiyah (Islamic
State’s propaganda magazine)” with limited author text to provide context.
News.com.au
asked the board why there was no opportunity for news organisations to defend
the article based on public interest grounds but a response provided by a
spokesman for the eSafety Commissioner did not directly address this.
The
spokesman said the board did consider whether the material could “reasonably be
considered to be done merely as part of public discussion or debate, or as
entertainment or satire” before making its decision.
He
also acknowledged this may have been the first time a news article had been
censored using this section.
However, as a government which to a man fails to grasp how the Internet works their well-laid plans seldom go off without a hitch and, the article that Turnbull & Co wish to erase from memory remains on national and international news sites as I write.
Wednesday, 3 May 2017
U.S. Trump Regime's Anti-science Stance Hardens aka Where To Get Basic EPA 2016 Climate Change Data While You Can
Searching with Google for https://www.epa.gov/ on 29 April 2017 and clicking on link to U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) Climate Change Basic Information - Causes of Climate Change - Great Plains, this webpage appeared:
The change appears to have occurred on or about 21 April 2017.
The ‘explanation’ for this change is expanded at https://www.epa.gov/newsreleases/epa-kicks-website-updates:
News Releases from Headquarters› Office of the Administrator (AO)
EPA Kicks Off Website Updates
WASHINGTON – EPA.gov, the website for the United States Environmental Protection Agency, is undergoing changes that reflect the agency’s new direction under President Donald Trump and Administrator Scott Pruitt. The process, which involves updating language to reflect the approach of new leadership, is intended to ensure that the public can use the website to understand the agency's current efforts. The changes will comply with agency ethics and legal guidance, including the use of proper archiving procedures. For instance, a screenshot of the last administration’s website will remain available from the main page.
“As EPA renews its commitment to human health and clean air, land, and water, our website needs to reflect the views of the leadership of the agency,” said J.P. Freire, Associate Administrator for Public Affairs. “We want to eliminate confusion by removing outdated language first and making room to discuss how we’re protecting the environment and human health by partnering with states and working within the law.”
The first page to be updated is a page reflecting President Trump’s Executive Order on Energy Independence, which calls for a review of the so-called Clean Power Plan. Language associated with the Clean Power Plan, written by the last administration, is out of date. Similarly, content related to climate and regulation is also being reviewed.
“As EPA renews its commitment to human health and clean air, land, and water, our website needs to reflect the views of the leadership of the agency,” said J.P. Freire, Associate Administrator for Public Affairs. “We want to eliminate confusion by removing outdated language first and making room to discuss how we’re protecting the environment and human health by partnering with states and working within the law.”
The first page to be updated is a page reflecting President Trump’s Executive Order on Energy Independence, which calls for a review of the so-called Clean Power Plan. Language associated with the Clean Power Plan, written by the last administration, is out of date. Similarly, content related to climate and regulation is also being reviewed.
While Twitter showed a link this in the official EPA timeline on 29 April 2017.
Fox News Insider, 27 April 2017:
Environmental Protection Agency Administrator Scott Pruitt said on "The First 100 Days" tonight the United States should exit the Paris climate agreement because it's a "bad business deal" for America.
Pruitt said the U.S. "front-loaded" our costs under the Paris accord, while countries like China, Russia and India can continue to pollute and not take steps that our country already has.
He noted that U.S. carbon dioxide emissions are at pre-1994 levels, thanks to innovation and technology.
"What we should be talking about is how we export innovation, how we export technology that we've already deployed here," Pruitt said.
He said that the Obama administration's Clean Power Plan and the Paris deal represented a $2.2 trillion reduction in gross domestic product over a ten year period for the U.S., in addition to $292 billion of compliance costs and up to 400,000 lost jobs annually.
"That's a bad business deal for this country," Pruitt said, calling it a prime example of the previous administration's "America last" strategy.
To date there are an est. 14,481 EPA webpage captures on the Wayback Machine between 18 Apr 1997 and 28 Apr 2017.
So before Donald Trump rewrites U.S. climate change history and smothers the EPA website with 'alternative facts' I suggest interested readers download what data they can while they can.
EPA's Climate Change Indicators in the United States was published in 2016 and here is the Wayback archive of that document:
2016 full report (PDF)(96 pp, 20 MB, August 2016)
2016 fact sheet (PDF)(2 pp, 2 MB, October 2016)
EPA has developed comprehensive technical documentation that describes the data sources and analytical methods for every indicator presented in the Climate Change Indicators in the United States report. A PDF version of the technical documentation is provided below for each indicator, along with an overview that describes EPA's process for selecting and evaluating indicators.
Additional files you can download from other pages:
High-resolution figures and the numerical data underlying the figures (on each indicator page)
You may need Adobe Reader to view files on this page. See EPA’s About PDF page to learn more.
Technical documentation overview (PDF)(15 pp, 339 K, August 2016)
Antarctic Sea Ice technical documentation (PDF)(7 pp, 302 K, August 2016)
Arctic Sea Ice technical documentation (PDF)(11 pp, 382 K, November 2016)
Atmospheric Concentrations of Greenhouse Gases technical documentation (PDF)(16 pp, 431 K, August 2016)
Bird Wintering Ranges technical documentation (PDF)(5 pp, 223 K, May 2014)
Climate Forcing technical documentation (PDF)(7 pp, 248 K, August 2016)
Cherry Blossom Bloom Dates in Washington, D.C. technical documentation (PDF)(3 pp, 173 K, April 2016)
Coastal Flooding Documentation (PDF)(6 pp, 202 K)
Drought technical documentation (PDF)(9 pp, 273 K, August 2016)
Glaciers technical documentation (PDF)(8 pp, 260 K, August 2016)
Global Greenhouse Gas Emissions technical documentation (PDF)(8 pp, 226 K, August 2016)
Great Lakes Water Levels and Temperatures technical documentation (PDF)(7 pp, 268 K, August 2016)
Heating and Cooling Degree Days technical documentation (PDF)(6 pp, 222 K, August 2016)
Heat-Related Deaths technical documentation (PDF)(9 pp, 399 K, August 2016)
Heat-Related Illnesses technical documentation (PDF)(7 pp, 209 K, August 2016)
Heavy Precipitation technical documentation (PDF)(7 pp, 195 K, August 2016)
High and Low Temperatures technical documentation (PDF)(10 pp, 244 K, August 2016)
Ice Breakup in Two Alaskan Rivers technical documentation (PDF)(4 pp, 178 K, August 2016)
Lake Ice technical documentation (PDF)(9 pp, 270 K, August 2016)
Land Loss Along the Atlantic Coast technical documentation (PDF)(21 pp, 1 MB, May 2014)
Leaf and Bloom Dates technical documentation (PDF)(7 pp, 216 K, August 2016)
Length of Growing Season technical documentation (PDF)(5 pp, 233 K, August 2016)
Lyme Disease technical documentation (PDF)(9 pp, 309 K, August 2016)
Marine Species Distribution technical documentation (PDF)(6 pp, 255 K, August 2016)
Ocean Acidity technical documentation (PDF)(6 pp, 295 K, August 2016)
Ocean Heat technical documentation (PDF)(5 pp, 195 K, August 2016)
Ragweed Pollen Season technical documentation (PDF)(5 pp, 208 K, August 2016)
River Flooding technical documentation (PDF)(5 pp, 184 K, August 2016)
Sea Level technical documentation (PDF)(11 pp, 301 K, August 2016)
Sea Surface Temperature technical documentation (PDF)(6 pp, 184 K, August 2016)
Snow Cover technical documentation (PDF)(6 pp, 210 K, August 2016)
Snowfall technical documentation (PDF)(7 pp, 212 K, August 2016)
Snowpack technical documentation (PDF)(6 pp, 223 K, August 2016)
Streamflow technical documentation (PDF) (PDF)(7 pp, 201 K, March 2017)
Stream Temperature technical documentation (PDF)(4 pp, 197 K, August 2016)
Temperature and Drought in the Southwest technical documentation (PDF)(10 pp, 248 K, August 2016)
Trends in Stream Temperature in the Snake River technical documentation (PDF)(4 pp, 171 K, August 2016)
Tropical Cyclone Activity technical documentation (PDF)(8 pp, 223 K, August 2016)
U.S. and Global Precipitation technical documentation (PDF)(6 pp, 183 K, August 2016)
U.S. and Global Temperature technical documentation (PDF)(9 pp, 242 K, August 2016)
U.S. Greenhouse Gas Emissions technical documentation (PDF)(6 pp, 249 K, August 2016)
West Nile Virus technical documentation (PDF)(6 pp, 206 K, August 2016)
Wildfires technical documentation (PDF)(13 pp, 548 K, August 2016)
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