Author Archives: Rob Sutter

Philippe Van Den Bossche & 3 Reasons To Buy Organic Strawberries

When talking about the best types of food to purchase organic, one can imagine that all of them would be useful. While this isn’t necessarily wrong, what are some of the more important components that can be looked into by those who may not have as much money to spend? Are there certain foods that Philippe van den Bossche, as well as others, can support more so than others? Strawberries stand as a great option and here are 3 reasons why purchasing them organically is the best move to make.

1. Strawberries have rigged exteriors that should be taken into account. In fact, these are some of the most common traits to look into, apart from the bright red look of the berries in general. If you were to wash conventionally grown strawberries, you may have trouble trying to wash them of their pesticides, which is why going organic is for the best. This is especially true when you take into account that there are 13 known pesticides that could reside on strawberries, which serves as another reason to go natural.

2. Philippe van den Bossche will most likely be able to tell you about the components that help to make strawberries that much more healthful. There are many different vitamins and minerals to take into account but what are some of the specifics on the matter, you may wonder? Vitamin C is a great example, not to mention one of the most commonly known. However, the free radical-fighting anthocyanins are worth looking at as well, seeing as how they can aid in the prevention of cancer, as supported by names such as Philippe.

3. Is it possible that strawberries can come into effect in order to prevent memory loss? It seems as though this is the case, as the Annals of Neurology published that they could potentially delay the impact of cognitive impairments by 2.5 years. Strawberries have been proven useful in other fashions, one of them being the reduction of cancer risk. With the idea of mental health being helped as well, organic strawberries have proven themselves to be that much greater of an investment in the long term.

As one can imagine, there are other benefits to take into account as far as strawberries are concerned. That being said, the reasons listed above were the ones that stood out to me the most and for good reasons as well. Not everyone can purchase all of their food organically, which is understandable when considering the prices that they stand at. However, if you are able to make the change to just one food item out of the bunch, this is a choice worth looking into.

Get in touch with Philippe van den Bossche if you are interested in learning more in regards to the incentives of organic agriculture.. Free reprint available from: Philippe Van Den Bossche & 3 Reasons To Buy Organic Strawberries.

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Philippe Van Den Bossche & Farming In Europe

There are many reasons why organic farming measures are carried through and I do not think that anyone can overlook this particular matter. Philippe van den Bossche knows all too well the importance behind this, which is something that should probably go without saying. However, it seems as though there are certain areas of the world that do not exactly have the idea of organic brought into effect. When it comes to Europe, more awareness in terms of organics should be brought to the forefront.

According to Times of Malta, it seems as though this particular European country has not fully embraced the idea of organic farming, which is one of the focuses of Philippe van den Bossche. Names along the lines of Philippe know that, without these crops, healthy eating is not going to be seen nearly as much as it should be. A European Commission publication said that, in 2011, only 0.2 percent of Maltese land was able to produce organic crops. This point is, at least to me, concerning.

This isn’t to say that matters weren’t taken in order to improve organic cultivation. In fact, the article said that even though matters were taken in order to improve things, the situation remained unchanged since 2007. Only 20 hectares were used for this purpose, with three more being seen since 2011. However, these particular changes have hardly made much of a difference, which is unfortunate considering the plentiful benefits behind this level of growth. If you’d like to know what there is to benefit from, certain points are worth looking into.

Keep in mind that anything that is considered “organic” is not going to be riddled with synthetic pesticides. What about the idea of local interaction that is seen by these farmers and those who live within the general area? If farmers want to be able to create business in the future, it goes without saying that they are going to have to appeal to those who live in a more local area. With this in mind, growers will see more business and consumers will attain the best crops that can be imagined.

I think that there is strong level of understanding by Philippe van den Bossche in terms of organics. However, I think that there should be an even greater level seen on the matter, especially since organic cultivation should be seen in many other areas of the world. There are so many benefits to be had with these types of crops and my only hope is that such awareness is seen in the long term. Everyone should be able to benefit from these various fruits and vegetables, after all.

Kindly get in touch with Philippe van den Bossche if you would like more data about sustainable agriculture.. Free reprint available from: Philippe Van Den Bossche & Farming In Europe.

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Unfortunately, the NSA Surveillance Program Probably Won’t Cause an Overseas Uprising

Mother Jones

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James Fallows recommends a Guardian column from this weekend about the real effect of the Edward Snowden affair. John Naughton says it’s not about Snowden—and I agree. Rather, it’s about what we now know:

Without him, we would not know how the National Security Agency (NSA) had been able to access the emails, Facebook accounts and videos of citizens across the world; or how it had secretly acquired the phone records of millions of Americans; or how, through a secret court, it has been able to bend nine US internet companies to its demands for access to their users’ data.

Actually, this isn’t really true. We’ve known for years that federal agencies have been issuing NSLs and warrants to get data from Facebook and others. We’ve known for years that the NSA was collecting phone records.

Which isn’t to say that Snowden’s disclosures haven’t mattered. They have. The public (and Congress) react far more strongly to documented details than they do to general knowledge that something is going on. Snowden’s revelations have plainly galvanized public opinion and spurred Congress into action. That’s a big deal. But it’s not because we really know all that much more than we did before. This is why I’m a little skeptical of the conclusion Naughton draws from this. I’m going to quote Fallows’ version of it since it’s a little clearer:

In short: because of what the U.S. government assumed it could do with information it had the technological ability to intercept, American companies and American interests are sure to suffer in their efforts to shape and benefit from the Internet’s continued growth.

American companies, because no foreigners will believe these firms can guarantee security from U.S. government surveillance;
American interests, because the United States has gravely compromised its plausibility as world-wide administrator of the Internet’s standards and advocate for its open, above-politics goals.

Why were U.S. authorities in a position to get at so much of the world’s digital data in the first place? Because so many of the world’s customers have trusted U.S.-based firms like Google, Yahoo, Apple, Amazon, Facebook, etc with their data; and because so many of the world’s nations have tolerated an info-infrastructure in which an outsized share of data flows at some point through U.S. systems. Those are the conditions of trust and toleration that likely will change.

This is one of those arguments that I’d really like to believe. After all, it’s perfectly logical, and it helps make the case against a program that I don’t like. And yet, for several reasons, I just don’t think I buy it.

First, I suspect that the vast, vast majority of overseas Facebook/Microsoft/etc. customers already assume that intelligence agencies can read their files if they want to, and they just don’t care. These users aren’t spies or terrorists, and rightly or wrongly, they believe that intelligence agencies aren’t interested in them and won’t find anything interesting even if they are.

Second, would moving to a non-U.S. service protect you? Sure, if it’s one of those super-secure, highly-encrypted data vaults you read about once in a while. But that’s something very few people are interested in. They just want ordinary internet services: email, social networking, chat, etc. And if you’re a foreign national using a non-U.S. service, guess what? The NSA has no restrictions at all about spying on you. It’s true that they actually have to figure out how to get your data, since they can’t just demand it via warrant. But they can use any method they want to intercept or steal it. There are no rules when it comes to overseas data.

Third, I assume that most foreign governments have police and intelligence agencies that work in much the same way as the FBI and the NSA. We don’t hear much about this since they operate on a far smaller scale, but if the French police want access to your email, they can get a warrant issued for it. Likewise, I suspect that French intelligence agencies have some of the same data mining capabilities as the NSA. It’s certainly nowhere near as broad, but I’ll bet it exists.

Put all this together, and it’s really not clear to me that broad public reaction is going to be very strong. Will Danish users stop using Facebook until some Danish company creates an alternate social networking platform? Probably not. The fear of NSA spying is simply nowhere near as compelling as the huge inconvenience of everyone being on a different platform and being unable to chat and share pictures with their friends in other countries.

As for businesses, they’re probably less interested in avoiding NSA spying than they are in staying ahead of hackers and concealing their more dubious dealings from ordinary law enforcement agencies. Using a non-U.S. platform won’t do them any good on either of these scores.

We’ll see, of course. Maybe this is the beginning of a long decline in U.S. information services, as overseas users start to move to other platforms. It’s possible. Unfortunately, I sort of doubt it. At most, I suspect we’ll start to see a bit more nationalistic reliance on domestic network infrastructure, but that’s something that’s always been likely anyway. Beyond that, people will just keep on doing what they’ve been doing.

UPDATE: For a contrary take, read Henry Farrell here. He believes that privacy authorities in Europe will drive major changes in surveillance law, which is a fairly widespread view. I suspect that things will turn out differently than Henry does, but it’s worth reading his argument.

Originally posted here – 

Unfortunately, the NSA Surveillance Program Probably Won’t Cause an Overseas Uprising

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Court: Chevron Can Seize Americans’ Email Data

Mother Jones

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Thanks to disclosures made by Edward Snowden, Americans have learned that their email records are not necessarily safe from the National Security Agency—but a new ruling shows that they’re not safe from big oil companies, either.

Last month, a federal court granted Chevron access to nine years of email metadata—which includes names, time stamps, and detailed location data and login info, but not content—belonging to activists, lawyers, and journalists who criticized the company for drilling in Ecuador and leaving behind a trail of toxic sludge and leaky pipelines. Since 1993, when the litigation began, Chevron has lost multiple appeals and has been ordered to pay plaintiffs from native communities about $19 billion to cover the cost of environmental damage. Chevron alleges that it is the victim of a mass extortion conspiracy, which is why the company is asking Google, Yahoo, and Microsoft, which owns Hotmail, to cough up the email data. When Lewis Kaplan, a federal judge in New York, granted the Microsoft subpoena last month, he ruled it didn’t violate the First Amendment because Americans weren’t among the people targeted.

Now Mother Jones has learned that the targeted accounts do include Americans—a revelation that calls the validity of the subpoena into question. The First Amendment protects the right to speak anonymously, and in cases involving Americans, courts have often quashed subpoenas seeking to discover the identities and locations of anonymous internet users. Earlier this year, a different federal judge quashed Chevron’s attempts to seize documents from Amazon Watch, one of the company’s most vocal critics. That judge said the subpoena was a violation of the group’s First Amendment rights. In this case, though, that same protection has not been extended to activists, journalists, and lawyers’ email metadata.

The Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) represents 40 of the targeted users—some of whom are members of the legal teams who represented the plaintiffs—and Nate Cardozo, an attorney for EFF, says that of the three targeted Hotmail users, at least one is American. Cardozo says that of the Yahoo and Gmail users, “many” are American.

“It’s appalling to me that the First Amendment has no bearing in this case, and that the judge simply assumed that all of the targets aren’t US citizens—when in fact, I am,” says a human rights activist from New York who has been advocating on behalf of the indigenous community, doing both volunteer and paid work, since 2005. He has never been sued by Chevron, nor been deposed. He wishes to remain anonymous—because his legal fight against the subpoena is still pending. The activist received a notice of the subpoena from Google last year (it has not been granted yet.) Chevron is seeking information including, but not limited to, the name associated with the account and where a user was every time he logged in—for the past nine years.

“Chevron is trying to crush, silence, and chill activism on behalf of the people they screwed over,” the activist argues. Michelle Harrison, an attorney for EarthRights International, tells Mother Jones that her clients aren’t comfortable going on record about the subpoenas they’ve received, because “Chevron’s dogged pursuit of anyone that dares speak out against them is regrettably having precisely the chilling effect we warned the court it would.”

Advocates for the plaintiffs in the Chevron case say that subpoenaing the email records is the company’s latest nuclear tactic to win a lawsuit it keeps losing. Chevron was ordered to pay $9 billion in damages in 2011 and to issue a public apology. After the company refused, a judge ordered the damages to double. The Supreme Court has declined to hear Chevron’s appeal. The extortion case is set to go to trial on October 15, after Kaplan—whom the Ecuadorean plaintiffs once asked to be removed from the case—refused to delay it.

Cardozo says there are 101 email addresses listed in the subpoenas to the three tech companies, but EFF has found only two that are owned by actual defendants in the lawsuit. “Subpoenas of nonparties are generally quite routine,” says Eugene Volokh, a professor at the University of California-Los Angeles School of Law. But Karl Manheim, a professor at the Loyola School of Law in Los Angeles, notes, “The parties seeking the info have to establish its relevance to the case; you can’t just go on a ‘fishing expedition’ or on a hunch.”

Julian Sanchez, a research fellow at CATO, says that “even assuming the account holders aren’t citizens, it doesn’t automatically follow that the First Amendment is irrelevant.” But he notes that while anonymous speech made by Americans is protected under the Constitution, “courts have been inconsistent in applying that protection against civil subpoenas aimed at identifying anonymous internet users.” In the case Dendrite International, Inc. v. Doe No. 3, for example, an appellate court held that a company was not allowed to unmask users who had criticized the company on a Yahoo message board.

Manheim says the judge’s invocation of citizenship is “wrong” in this case and the users should appeal. “The US Constitution applies to all persons (even foreign nationals) within US borders and to US persons abroad. While the targets of the subpoenas are outside of US jurisdiction, the subpoena itself is operative within the US. So the Constitution should apply.” (Chevron did not respond to request for comment.)

“I think if the NSA scandal has taught us anything, anyone who says that ‘it’s just metadata’ doesn’t know what metadata is—if I want to spend the night at my friend’s house and use his computer, that’s my business,” Cardozo says. “And if Judge Kaplan thinks seizing metadata is routine, he doesn’t know how powerful it can be.” The activist adds, “It’s a slippery slope. Once one thing is granted, it will only be easier to ask for more.”

Original post – 

Court: Chevron Can Seize Americans’ Email Data

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Philippe Van Den Bossche & Overall Affect By Organic Products

To say that eating organic is most healthful is definitely an understatement. There are those who may indulge every now and then while others have tailored their entire diets around this, which is brilliant, in my view. They understand what is needed in order to make the most of their lives and eating well should be a given. However, there is an audience that may not understand everything that there is to know, though authorities like Philippe van den Bossche may be able to relay some surprising information.

I have to say that there are a number of items which can be considered organic, some of them more popular than others. I remember when “Honest Tea” started to make strides and how many individuals started to invest in it. Once I had the chance to taste some of it for myself, I was happy to say just how satiating it could be. For those who don’t think much of these natural items, you may want to set aside such reservations because they could prove worthy of the investment.

I believe that these items are immensely useful, which is a statement that Philippe van den Bossche can attest to as well. Such authorities know how well these items can come into play and I believe that they should be learned about as a result. These products are excellent and I don’t think that anyone will be able to disagree with such a sentiment. In fact, you may just find that they can help you in terms of a new lifestyle, which is recognized by Philippe as well.

Medical Daily recently reported on the importance of organic items in terms of Parkinson’s disease. They seemed to actually prevent the condition and this was due to the lower instances of pesticides, for ones. Apparently, farmers have put this to use in great amounts, especially considering that they are involved in the cultivation of various crops. With more natural methods of growth put into effect, though, it doesn’t seem like it does anything but good for those who are willing to invest in purer products.

To say that going organic is the best course of action would be something of an understatement. To me, it sounds like the best kind of change that anyone can make in their lives and being able to eat healthier is already an endorsed method. All you have to do is look at the actions that Philippe van den Bossche has taken to make sure that this is brought to the forefront. It’s apparent that it is supported for good reasons and it’d be wrong not to try it even once.

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