Tag Archives: Iceland

Iceland's plan to ban Internet porn sparks uproar

In the age of instant information, globe-spanning viral videos and the World Wide Web, can a thoroughly wired country become a porn-free zone? Authorities in Iceland want to find out.

The government of the tiny North Atlantic nation is drafting plans to ban pornography, in print and online, in an attempt to protect children from a tide of violent sexual imagery.

The proposal by Interior Minister Ogmundur Jonasson has caused an uproar. Opponents say the move will censor the Web, encourage authoritarian regimes and undermine Iceland‘s reputation as a Scandinavian bastion of free speech.

Advocates say it is a sensible measure that will shelter children from serious harm.

“When a 12 year old types ‘porn’ into Google, he or she is not going to find photos of naked women out on a country field, but very hardcore and brutal violence,” said Halla Gunnarsdottir, political adviser to the interior minister.

“There are laws in our society. Why should they not apply to the Internet?”

Gunnarsdottir says the proposals currently being drawn up by a committee of experts will not introduce new restrictions, but simply uphold an existing if vaguely worded law.

Pornography is already banned in Iceland, and has been for decades — but the term is not defined, so the law is not enforced. Magazines such as Playboy and Penthouse are on sale in book stores, and more hard-core material can be bought from a handful of sex shops. “Adult” channels form part of digital TV packages.

Iceland‘s left-of-center government insists it is not setting out to sweep away racy magazines or censor sex. The ban would define pornography as material with violent or degrading content.

Gunnarsdottir said the committee is still exploring the details of how a porn ban could be enforced. One possibility would be to make it illegal to pay for porn with Icelandic credit cards. Another, more controversial, route would be a national Internet filter or a list of website addresses to be blocked.

That idea has Internet-freedom advocates alarmed.

“This kind of thing does not work. It is technically impossible to do in a way that has the intended effect,” said …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Government's plan to ban Internet porn in Iceland sparks uproar

In the age of instant information, globe-spanning viral videos and the World Wide Web, can a thoroughly wired country become a porn-free zone? Authorities in Iceland want to find out.

The government of the tiny North Atlantic nation is drafting plans to ban pornography, in print and online, in an attempt to protect children from a tide of violent sexual imagery.

The proposal by Interior Minister Ogmundur Jonasson has caused an uproar. Opponents say the move will censor the Web, encourage authoritarian regimes and undermine Iceland‘s reputation as a Scandinavian bastion of free speech.

Advocates say it is a sensible measure that will shelter children from serious harm.

“When a 12 year old types `porn’ into Google, he or she is not going to find photos of naked women out on a country field, but very hardcore and brutal violence,” said Halla Gunnarsdottir, political adviser to the interior minister.

“There are laws in our society. Why should they not apply to the Internet?”

Gunnarsdottir says the proposals currently being drawn up by a committee of experts will not introduce new restrictions, but simply uphold an existing if vaguely worded law.

Pornography is already banned in Iceland, and has been for decades — but the term is not defined, so the law is not enforced. Magazines such as Playboy and Penthouse are on sale in book stores, and more hard-core material can be bought from a handful of sex shops. “Adult” channels form part of digital TV packages.

Iceland‘s left-of-center government insists it is not setting out to sweep away racy magazines or censor sex. The ban would define pornography as material with violent or degrading content.

Gunnarsdottir said the committee is still exploring the details of how a porn ban could be enforced. One possibility would be to make it illegal to pay for porn with Icelandic credit cards. Another, more controversial, route would be a national Internet filter or a list of website addresses to be blocked.

That idea has Internet-freedom advocates alarmed.

“This kind of thing does not work. It is technically impossible to do in a way that has the intended effect,” said Smari McCarthy of free-speech group the International Modern Media Institute. “And it has negative side effects — everything from slowing down the Internet to blocking content that is not meant to be blocked to just generally opening up a whole can of worms regarding human rights issues, access to information and freedom of expression.”

Despite its often chaotic appearance, the Internet is not a wholly lawless place. It is regulated, to varying degrees, around the world. Police monitor the net for child pornography and other illegal material, and service providers in many countries block offending sites.

Some governments also censor the Internet at a national level — though the likes of authoritarian Iran, North Korea and China are not countries liberal Iceland wants to emulate.

European countries including Britain, Sweden and Denmark ask Internet service providers to block child pornography websites, measures that have met with only limited opposition.

But broader filtering has mostly been resisted. A few years …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Silfra, Iceland: Snorkeling In Thingvellir Valley On Cold Winter Days (PHOTOS)

By The Huffington Post News Editors

THINGVELLIR, Iceland (AP) — The air above the Silfra rift was freezing and the water in it was only a couple degrees higher, just warm enough to be liquid. Going under was a small shock to the skin — but stunning to the eyes.

The weak light of a grayish Icelandic winter day transformed into an intense glow of blues and greens, offset by brown and golden sand and rocks. From above, Silfra is just a dull ditch between dark chunks of lava; from below, an extravagant, eerie maze.

If the sights don’t take up all available brain cells, a snorkeler or diver can also wonder at how he is, with a bit of poetic license, swimming between two continents.

Read More…
More on AP

…read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Huffington Post

Christian Bale to Ascend Mount Everest?

Oscar winner Christian Bale is reportedly in talks to star in Everest, a true-life feature from Working Title and Universal.

Although several projects are looking to tackle the famed mountain, Baltasar Kormakur‘s film tells the 1996 story of two groups that attempted to reach Everest’s summit and the disastrous events that followed. Kormakur directed last year’s Contraband and the upcoming 2 Guns, based on the graphic novel.

THR reports that Bale will play Rob Hall, “the leader of a New Zealander group who ran Adventure Consultants.”

Principle photography is currently set for this summer in Iceland.

Continue reading…

…read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at IGN Movies

If We Can Put A Man On The Moon Then We Can Ban Internet Porn

By Tim Worstall, Contributor So says parts of the Icelandic government. If we can manage to put a man on the Moon then surely we can stop people looking at pictures of naked ladies. Or not so much ladies who also happen to be naked. But I do have my doubts about the achievability of this, I really do: Ogmundur Jonasson, Iceland‘s interior minister, is drafting legislation to stop the access of online pornographic images and videos by young people through computers, games consoles and smartphones. “We have to be able to discuss a ban on violent pornography, which we all agree has a very harmful effects on young people and can have a clear link to incidences of violent crime,” he said. There’s one major problem there. Over the question of whether pornography is a complement to violent sexual crime or a substitute for it. And yes, this is the way that economists think about such things. Indeed, economists have studied this very thing (as well, presumably, as the normal amount of pornography). And the answer is that while it  well be a complement in certain cases, that some people who watch specific acts then try to act them out, in general, across the population, it acts as a substitute. Which is rather why we’ve had plummeting rape incidence in recent decades as the internet brings freely available pornography to all. …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Forbes Latest

Researchers blame low oxygen levels for mass herring deaths in Iceland

Researchers in Iceland are blaming low oxygen levels in a shallow fjord for the deaths of tens of thousands of tons of herring.

Masses of dead herring have been found in Kolgrafafjordur fjord for the second time this winter, raising concerns about Iceland‘s fishery.

The Morgunbladid newspaper estimated the value of the 10,000 tons of fish found dead this week at 1.25 billion kronur ($9.8 million). An even larger number of fish died in December.

Roughly one season’s worth of herring has been lost, Johann Sigurjonsson, director of Iceland‘s Marine Research Institute, said Wednesday.

He said herring tend to winter in large populations and may have depleted the oxygen in the shallow fjord. The danger should ease in spring when the herring spread out into a wider area, he said, downplaying fears that the entire herring fishery is in danger.

“We regard this as a serious event,” he said. “We are investigating; we would like to find out if it is necessary to try to step in somehow.”

The government‘s economic minister has increased funding for monitoring in the area to determine what can be done to prevent more fish from dying off. Some blame recent construction in the region for the kills.

Schoolchildren, town workers and volunteers have been cleaning up the dead fish, which can be turned into feed for mink and other animals.

Revenue from the sale is expected to go to local children and to area schools.

…read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Iceland investigating mass herring deaths

Researchers in Iceland are blaming low oxygen levels in a shallow fjord for the death of tens of thousands of tons of herring.

Thousands of dead herring have been found in Kolgrafafjordur fjord for the second time this winter, raising concerns about Iceland‘s fishery.

Morgunbladid newspaper estimated the value of the 10,000 tons of fish found dead this week at 1.25 billion kronur ($9.8 million). An even larger number of fish died in December.

Johann Sigurjonsson, director of Iceland‘s Marine Research Institute, said Wednesday that roughly one season’s worth of herring has been lost.

He says herring tend to “overwinter” in large populations and may have depleted the oxygen in the shallow fjord. He says the danger should ease in spring when the herring spread out into a wider area.

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

New Luxury InThe French Alps

By Katie Kelly Bell, Contributor Colorado-based, luxury travel brand, Eleven Experiences is set to open (February 2013) Chalet Pelerin, bringing some high-dollar, ultraluxe competition for neighboring Gstaad. Located in the village of Le Miroir, France, the property is in the Savoie region of the French Alps right on the French/Italian border. Eleven specializes in outlandishly out-of-the-way luxury. They operate properties in places such as a farming valley in remote northern Iceland or a centuries-old Priory in Wiltshire, England. All of these rural, exotic outposts come at a cost. Right now, Chalet Pelerin has a nightly rate that begins at $12,500 per group, based on a 10 person occupancy, but you do enjoy a few perks with that hefty price tag.  And if you like what you see, stay tuned for more properties from Eleven, including destinations in Crested Butte and the Bahamas.
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Forbes Latest

At 15, She's Finally Getting a Name

At 15, She’s Finally Getting a Name

Blaer

WXIX

Her family has always called her Blaer — but since it’s traditionally a male’s name in Iceland, the government didn’t approve.Big change made to birth certificate

Source: FULL ARTICLE at AOL

Minister: Iceland refused FBI aid over WikiLeaks

Iceland‘s interior minister says he ordered the country’s national police not to cooperate with FBI agents sent to investigate secret-busting site WikiLeaks and that it escalated into a diplomatic spat.

Ogmundur Jonasson told The Associated Press that the FBI agents were sent to the country to interview an unidentified WikiLeaks associate in August of 2011.

Jonasson’s comments offered a rare glimpse into the workings of the U.S. investigation into WikiLeaks, a site which has repeatedly embarrassed Washington with spectacular releases of classified documents.

Jonasson said Friday that Icelandic officials protested the FBI trip to their American counterparts. The FBI did not immediately return an email seeking comment.

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

EU top court sides against Ryanair in volcano case

The European Union’s top court said Thursday that Irish low-cost airline Ryanair has to pay out compensation to passengers that were stranded due to the 2010 volcano eruption in Iceland.

The European Court of Justice ruled that airlines have an obligation to provide care, even in such “extraordinary circumstances” as the eruption of the Eyjafjallajokull volcano. The volcano’s ash cloud was considered too dangerous to fly through and millions of passengers were left stranded after airplanes were grounded.

Ryanair said in a statement the ruling would make flying more expensive for consumers. It said the decision “will materially increase the cost of flying across Europe and consumer airfares will increase as airlines will be obliged to recover the cost of these claims from their customers.”

In 2011, Ryanair imposed a new €2 ($2.71) fee on all flight bookings to “cover future compensation costs.”

The company also said that volcano eruptions and subsequent closure of airports were “clearly and unambiguously” events outside an airline’s control.

“The European Court now makes the airlines the insurer of last resort even when in the majority of cases … these delays are entirely beyond an airline’s control,” the company said.

The court gave its opinion after a one Irish passenger was stranded in southern Portugal for a week during the crisis and demanded compensation from Ryanair of almost €1,130 ($1,530.13).

Ryanair has said it paid out €26.1 million ($35.4 million) to stranded passengers but it has refused many claims, citing their “excessive” cost.

Even though EU rules do not set financial limits on compensation, the court said passengers can only claim costs that proved “necessary, appropriate and reasonable to make up for the shortcomings of the air carrier.”

It left it to national courts to assess what that meant in their cases.

The case centers on Denise McDonagh of Ireland who was scheduled to fly back from Faro to Dublin April 17, 2010 only to learn that the flight was canceled. She was stranded in the Algarve for a week before being able to return and charged the costs of meals, refreshments and accommodation.

EU rules say that airlines do not have to pay their passengers if the conditions are beyond extraordinary circumstances, but the court said the volcano eruption and subsequent chaos at European airports “do not release air carriers for their obligation to provide care.”

Chief executive Michael O’Leary has already called on the European Commission and the European Parliament to reform their laws on passengers’ reimbursement rights, saying they discriminate against airlines since payouts for stranded passengers of ferry, rail and bus services are capped at the original ticket cost.

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Shawn Pogatchnik contributed from Dublin

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Icelandic girl wins right to use her given name

A 15-year-old Icelandic girl has been granted the right to legally use the name given to her by her mother, despite the opposition of authorities.

A court ruled Thursday that the name “Blaer” can be used. It means “gentle breeze.”

The decision overturns an earlier rejection by Icelandic authorities who declared it was not a proper feminine name. Until now, Blaer Bjarkardottir had been identified simply as “Girl” in communications with officials.

Like a handful of other countries, including Germany and Denmark, Iceland has official rules about what a baby can be named. Names are supposed to fit Icelandic grammar and pronunciation rules.

Her mother, Bjork Eidsdottir, had fought for the right for the name to be recognized. Blaer told the court she had no problems with her name.

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Iceland wins court case over Icesave deposits

A court has cleared Iceland of wrongdoing over its refusal to repay depositors’ money lost in the country’s banking collapse.

The Luxembourg-based European Free Trade Association Court said Monday that deposit-guarantee laws did not cover “a systemic bank failure of the magnitude experienced in Iceland.”

Some 340,000 British and Dutch savers lost deposits when Icesave, an online subsidiary of Iceland‘s Landsbanki, collapsed along with the island nation’s other banks in 2008.

The savers were repaid by the British and Dutch governments, who have been trying to get their money back.

The court case was brought by the European Free Trade Association Surveillance Authority, which makes sure that Iceland, Liechtenstein and Norway comply with European Union regulations. The countries are not EU members but belong to the European Economic Area.

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Ireland: Horsemeat found in supermarket burgers

The Irish food safety watchdog says that it has found traces of horse DNA in burger products sold by some of the country’s biggest supermarkets, including a burger sold by global retailer Tesco that authorities said was made of roughly 30 percent horse.

The Food Safety Authority of Ireland also said Tuesday that it had found traces of pig DNA in 85 percent of the burger products it tested in Irish supermarkets, including those operated by U.K-based Iceland and German discounter Lidl.

The watchdog says the unusual animal DNA in Ireland‘s burgers isn’t a threat to anyone’s health but does “raise some concerns.”

U.K.-based Tesco apologized for the horsemeat-heavy burger and said it was pulling Tesco-brand burgers from British and Irish supermarkets as a precaution.

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

AP Interview: Dane's life as a spy inside al-Qaida

After converting to Islam, a former member of a Danish motorcycle gang travels to Yemen to study the Quran and soon comes in contact with radical preachers waging holy war against the West.

On the verge of becoming a jihadist, he abruptly abandons his faith and embarks on a dangerous undercover mission to help Western intelligence agencies capture or kill terrorists.

Morten Storm‘s unlikely story, told in a new book and an interview with The Associated Press, has the drama and intrigue of an episode of the “Homeland” TV series. But the burly, red-bearded Dane insists his tale isn’t fiction.

Storm, 37, claims he worked for six years as an informant for the CIA, Britain’s MI5 and MI6 and Denmark‘s security service, PET. All declined to comment for this article.

“Could they just say ‘he never worked for us’? Sometimes silence is also information,” Storm told the AP in Copenhagen. “I know this is true, I know what I have done.”

The book , “Storm, the Danish agent in al-Qaida,”is set for release Monday in Denmark, but Storm gave the AP an advance copy

Storm said he decided to reveal his secret-agent life to the media — he first spoke to a Danish newspaper in October — because he felt betrayed by his agent runners.

In particular, he was upset that he wasn’t given credit for the airstrike that killed Anwar al-Awlaki, a senior al-Qaida figure, in Yemen in 2011.

Storm claims the CIA won’t admit that his work helped them track down the U.S.-born cleric, who has been linked to the Fort Hood, Texas, shootings and the attempted Christmas Day bombing of a jetliner approaching Detroit in 2009.

Storm also claims to have played a role in a series of well-documented anti-terror operations in the past six years by infiltrating extremist mosques in Britain and militant groups in Somalia. He often met his handlers in exotic locations and provided a photograph of one such rendezvous with purported PET agents, at a geothermal spa in Iceland.

Another photograph shows a suitcase packed with cash — $250,000 he claims to have received from the CIA for an undercover operation to track down al-Awlaki though that effort ultimately failed.

Bob Ayers, a former U.S. intelligence officer, cast doubt on Storm’s claims.

“Just because he claims to have worked for these agencies doesn’t mean he was on anyone’s payroll as he almost certainly would not get clearance,” said Ayers, who now lives in London. “It is also doubtful that he would have been one of Awlaki’s trusted insiders. The only thing less trustworthy than an enemy agent is an enemy agent who has turned.”

A European security official not affiliated with any of the four agencies Storm claims to have worked for said he may well have been an informer, but questioned the way Storm described his own significance.

“I have a strong feeling that he’s overestimating his own role,” said the official, who spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to discuss the matter publicly.

Storm says he provided information that led to the 2007 arrest in Britain of Hassan Tabbak, a Syrian-born man sentenced to seven years in prison for trying to make bombs in preparation for terrorist attacks.

In his book, Storm also says he was involved in an operation targeting Saleh Nabhan, a senior al-Qaida operative killed by Navy SEALs in a helicopter attack inside Somalia in 2010..

The most elaborate operation involved al-Awlaki. In 2009, Storm said, he helped the reclusive cleric in his efforts to find a European wife, pairing him up with a Muslim convert from Croatia named Aminah. Storm said he helped carry encrypted video messages between the soon-to-be spouses on a flash drive, before they decided to meet in Yemen. He provided those video clips to AP.

A tracking device was placed in Aminah’s suitcase, but the plan failed when she was told to transfer her belongings to a plastic bag upon arrival in Yemen, Storm said.

However, Storm was sent back to Yemen, supplying various items through a courier to al-Awlaki, who still didn’t suspect he was being double-crossed. The Dane believes his work eventually helped the CIA pinpoint al-Awlaki’s position.

The Americans “had to crawl back to the Danish intelligence to beg them if I would travel back to Yemen and try to recreate or reestablish the contact, the communication with Anwar,” Storm said. “Within four weeks, the contact was up again.”

Storm, who hails from Korsoer, 75 miles (120 kilometers) southwest of Copenhagen, has past convictions for bar fights, violence, cigarette smuggling and petty theft stretching back to his early teens. He was a prospective member of the Bandidos biker gang before a Muslim jailmate convinced him to convert to Islam in 1997.

Storm later spent time with radical Islamists in Britain and Yemen, married a woman from Morocco and named their first son Osama after al-Qaida leader Osama bin-Laden.

He wanted to join Islamist militants fighting in Somalia in 2006 but they rebuffed him. Storm said his anger at that rejection turned to doubts about his religion. Soon he had a complete change of heart, and offered his services to PET agents, who put him in touch with their U.S. and British counterparts.

Storm said his relations with the CIA turned sour after he was told that al-Awlaki was killed in a separate operation. In a meeting at a seaside hotel in Denmark, he secretly recorded a conversation about the issue with a man he claims is a CIA officer.

The man, known to Storm as Michael, thanked him for his efforts but added that “there were a number of other projects” to track down al-Awlaki. Michael said it was like in a soccer game when several players are in a position to a score.

“The other guy could pass it to you, but he didn’t. He took the shot, he scores,” Michael said. “That’s what happened.”

Storm wasn’t satisfied with that explanation.

After spilling his secrets, Storm says he believes he’s now become a potential target not only for al-Qaida, but the CIA.

“I think that when a person potentially could become a liability, it is what easiest for intelligence services to get rid of their agents and especially people like me,” Storm told the AP.

He offered no firm evidence to suggest the CIA, or any other agency, had plans to hurt him.

____

Associated Press writers Karl Ritter in Stockholm, Paisley Dodds in London and Kimberly Dozier in Washington contributed to this report.

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News