Sunday, December 11, 2016

E FUN introduces the Nextbook Flexx 9 2-in-1 tablet which debuts at Walmart [feedly]



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E FUN introduces the Nextbook Flexx 9 2-in-1 tablet which debuts at Walmart
// Coolest Gadgets

E FUN is no stranger when it comes to rolling out tablets, what more 2-in-1 tablets to more or less a saturated tablet market. Well, their Nextbook 10.1 2-in-1 tablet did have students in mind when it was revealed to the masses earlier this September, and here we are with a Walmart debut of the Nextbook Flexx 9 2-in-1 tablet. Basically, the Nextbook Flexx 9 2-in-1 tablet is meant to trumpet the following qualities: being portable, versatile in use, and of course, easy on your budget. Perhaps with the holiday season coming up, this would make for the ideal holiday gift when it comes to someone whom you know loves to play video games, or to watch video on the move, or simply spend plenty of time online on social media and firing out emails to keep in touch.

The Nextbook Flexx 9 2-in-1 tablet will sport a detachable keyboard that obviously makes this a tablet or portable notebook hybrid. It is a Walmart exclusive, where this highly flexible device will retail for a very, very affordable $97.77 a pop — making it 30% cheaper compared to its regular sticker price of $139.99. There is a quad-core Intel Atom processor that runs proceedings from underneath the hood in addition to Windows 10 as the operating system of choice, merging the productivity of a laptop with the mobile ease of a tablet.

Hardware specifications point to an 8.9-inch high-resolution IPS screen at 1280×800 pixels with a 16:10 aspect ratio that ensures vivid picture quality — be it whether you are using it to play, read, watch, stream, or work. It tips the scales at under a pound, which more or less this versatile enough to bring with you anywhere. Integrated connectivity options include Wi-Fi and Bluetooth, and a microSD memory card slot bumps up the 32GB of internal storage by another 64GB. A microHDMI port lets you mirror whatever you want to project onto a TV too, now how about that? Choose from black, purple, or blue shades, and it will even arrive with a free subscription to Office Mobile – that includes Word, Excel, PowerPoint and OneNote apps that are built for Windows tablets and designed for work on the go.

Press Release
[ E FUN introduces the Nextbook Flexx 9 2-in-1 tablet which debuts at Walmart copyright by Coolest Gadgets ]


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Saturday, December 10, 2016

Trump

Social security

Blm

Russia actively tried to help Donald Trump win the election, CIA report says [feedly]



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Russia actively tried to help Donald Trump win the election, CIA report says
// The Verge



A secret assessment conducted by the CIA determined that Russia's interference in the 2016 election was intended to help put Donald Trump in office, The Washington Post reported this evening, using anonymous sources.

The revelations undermine the position of President-elect Trump's campaign, which has sought to downplay reports of foreign interference by citing a lack of evidence. They also mark a stark escalation in hostility between the US and Russia. It appears to be unprecedented that a foreign government used espionage tactics in a US election cycle to try and influence the outcome of a race.

Russia's DNC hack was designed to elevate Trump and hurt Clinton

The U.S. Intelligence Community — which is made up of 16 different government agencies — had already concluded that the Russian government was behind the hacking of the Democratic National Committee, as well as the email hack of Clinton campaign chief John Podesta. The first batch of emails were released by WikiLeaks this past summer and showed DNC staffers conspiring with the Clinton campaign to deny Sen. Bernie Sanders the nomination, among other embarrassing details. The full contents of the emails went on to be a central issue in the run up to Election Day. In a report released in October, the agencies accused Russia of using the email hacks to interfere with the election, but didn't say what the Russian government hoped to achieve.

Today's secret CIA briefing revealed the agency's conclusion that Russia intended to boost Trump's chances, The Washington Post says. "It is the assessment of the intelligence community that Russia's goal here was to favor one candidate over the other, to help Trump get elected," an anonymous senior U.S. official told The Washington Post. The CIA and the Office of the Intelligence Community did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

"Such activity is not new to Moscow," according to the Intelligence Community's October report. Russia has used similar strategies to sway public opinion in Europe and Eurasia. US officials are warning European governments that they too might be targeted by cyber attacks intended to influence elections, according to Buzzfeed News.

"Such activity is not new to Moscow."

In at least two cases, intelligence officials say the warnings came too late, indicating that Russia may have already breached other nations' communications. Yesterday, Al Jazeera reported that German intelligence has detected "increasingly aggressive cyber espionage" leading up to the 2017 election next February.

This comes the same day that the White House announced that it has opened an investigation into what it called a pattern of malicious cyber activity surrounding the most recent — and possibly earlier — election cycles, according to Reuters. President Obama expects to see the results of the review before the end of his term.

- Source: The Washington Post


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Is Amazon Go a sign of the downfall of a retail workforce? [feedly]



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Is Amazon Go a sign of the downfall of a retail workforce?
// ReadWriteWeb



Any time a disruptive technology with industrial or productive applications comes into play, the question arises as to whether or not that technology will result in the loss of jobs. This issue has been tackled extensively in the manufacturing sector, but what about retail? Are robots and IoT technologies putting our retail workforce at risk?

The Bureau of Labor Statistics has predicted a 7% growth in the retail workforce over a period of ten years, ending in 2024. This is a positive sign for the 4.8 million retail workers in the United States. However, what impact will technologies like those that drive the Internet of Things, artificial intelligence, and robotics have on the industry is harder to predict.

For one, these technologies are being developed at a breakneck pace. In the past year, drones and other automated delivery methods have promised to give online retailers an edge in both speed and reach of delivery. This adds pressure on brick-and-mortar retailers to not only make their stores more appealing to a modern customer base but to find ways to increase efficiency to remain competitive.

The impact of these disruptive technologies

To better understand the plight of the retail sector, we should first examine what has been going on in the world of manufacturing.

Manufacturing, especially in the auto industry, experienced a significant shift in employment as automated equipment became commonplace in facilities around the world.

Warehouse-level work for online retailers especially are a different story. Robots are already rolling around Amazon's expansive warehouses, grabbing shelving units full of merchandise and bringing it to their human counterparts which pick items and place them in boxes for shipping. Amazon's robotic armies haven't ceased Amazon's need to hire. Amazon grew its labor force by 47% over a period of a single year, much of this growth occurring in its fulfillment centers.

Back in 2012, PCWorld reported on Amazon's vocational training program enabling employees that were currently working in unskilled warehouse jobs to train for more high-demand jobs. This includes job skills that aren't directly related to Amazon, such as nursing.

While a direct connection between an increase in automation and the decline of U.S. manufacturing jobs is a topic of debate among economists, there is no question that corporations in virtually every sector are actively seeking ways to lower staffing costs while improving efficiency.

There's no doubt that robots change the dynamic of the workplace. For retail workers, robots are being tested as a replacement for some of the many customer-facing retail jobs out there, but they're in no danger of hitting the mainstream anytime soon. Human customers are slow to embrace a robot rolling down the aisles, asking customers if there is anything they can help the customer find.

The perks of a new generation of retail technologies

Amazon, a predominantly online retailer, has offered its own solution to the problem in the form of a brick-and-mortar store that cuts the cashier out of the purchasing process. Customers of the upcoming Seattle-based Amazon Go store will walk in, pick out their item(s), and walk out. The only thing the customer needs to do is load the Amazon Go app on their phone and check in. Their Amazon account gets charged after leaving the store.

This process takes advantage of a number of emerging technologies including computer vision, sensor fusion, and deep learning to track the customer's movements throughout the store and which item(s) they take off the shelves as you shop. Upon leaving, your Amazon account is charged for any item(s) you have with you as you walk out the door.

This has many upsides for customers. Shoppers don't have to interact with a store employee if you don't want to. You can rush in and rush out in seconds rather than waiting in line to check out. For the store, it means less overhead. You won't need as big of a staff, or the staff that you have can spend more time concentrating on providing good customer service prior to checkout.

For nearly a decade, technologists have been predicting that technologies such as RFID would enable shoppers to load their carts with goods and bypass the checkout line. Some stores, including Kroger's, have been testing technologies that would speed up the checkout experience by automating the process utilizing 360-degree barcode scanners.

Smart carts with location awareness and integrated RFID readers are already being tested and show a lot of promise. These carts, which include a tablet-like interface can do things like present shoppers with location-aware ads that direct them to a sale or recommend recipes based on nearby ingredients. These carts can even track shopping habits of particular customers and offer directions to specific items.

This technology doesn't inherently supplant a worker. It enhances the customer experience in a way that complements the customer service that can be provided by the human staff. It also provides the retailer with an additional source of revenue through ad sales and upselling.

But for every upside….

Any time you change a customer's experience, a level of friction presents itself. Change is very difficult. People, in general, don't like change if it means they have to learn how to use a new system. Efficiency has to come with a heavy dose of convenience.

Right now, supermarkets and grocery stores around the world the United States are taking advantage of self-checkout lanes. These lanes enable customers to scan, bag, and work the register for their own purchase. This enables a single cashier to monitor 6, 10, or more checkout lanes at a time. This means fewer cashiers are needed.

Self-checkout lanes are an alternative that these stores are turning to in order to improve efficiency. That creates less demand for cashiers in particular. Employees are often cross-trained to assist with any number of tasks when checkout is slow.

The challenge of these self-checkout lanes comes in the form of increased occurrence of theft. Scales that weigh produce at the self-checkout scanner can be tricked by a crafty customer where a trained cashier ensures an accurate accounting for the merchandise being ringed up.

Will Reynolds Young member of UFCW (United Food and Commercial Workers) said, "Self-checkout lanes are slower and less efficient for customers, despite the misconception that they're faster. They're also easy to trick. A single "watcher" can only really monitor three lanes, and even then that's too much."

Take the challenges of keeping an honest account of a customer's purchase on a self-checkout lane and cut out the checkout part of this experience. We've all seen what a madhouse retail stores can be during sales, such as those held on Black Friday each year. How accurately can cameras and advanced scanning systems track merchandise when it's being fumbled around in a crowded store?

RFID tracking is a possible solution, but RFID-blocking bags and accessories are very easy to acquire.

Just as with most technologies, the more convenient you make them, the less secure they become. People are crafty, and they will find ways around these systems. It could be argued that for every cashier replaced by a robot, there would need to be a human standing at the door checking receipts.

What does the future hold?

Amazon Go's model is intriguing. If successful, it would become a proof of concept for a technology that would undoubtedly be licensed and/or adopted by other retailers. Go's model isn't one for a supercenter or a giant grocery store. It's a test, with a small retail space in a calm corner of Seattle. Despite some claims in the media that as many 2,000 Amazon Go stores are in the works, the company insists that the checkout-free trial will be anything but a massive brick-and-mortar rollout.

So while these technologies are certainly changing the world of retail, the idea that a store would be entirely powered by IoT technologies and staffed by robots is still a bit far-fetched. Beyond the boutique examples of trendy Quinoa restaurants, which still have human attendants present to assist customers with using the technology, the vision of retail stores smattering the landscape devoid of a human workforce remains one of science fiction.

For now.

 

The post Is Amazon Go a sign of the downfall of a retail workforce? appeared first on ReadWrite.


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Friday, December 9, 2016

New clientele

On Campus, Trump Fans Say They Need ‘Safe Spaces’ - NYTimes.com

The real reason Hillary Clinton is scolding Americans over ‘fake news’ [feedly]



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The real reason Hillary Clinton is scolding Americans over 'fake news'
// Personal Liberty Digest™

During a Thursday speech honoring retiring Senate Minority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.) failed presidential candidate Hillary Clinton lamented the "epidemic of malicious fake news" the progressive left is working so hard to make real.

Clinton said the scene that unfolded last week when an armed manned entered the Washington DC pizzeria at the center of the bizarre "pizzagate" allegations and fired a shot is proof that so-called fake news is putting lives at risk.

"The epidemic of malicious fake news and false propaganda that flooded social media over the past year — it's now clear the so-called fake news can have real-world consequences," Clinton said.

The former secretary of state, who blamed her presidential loss on "fake news," continued: "This isn't about politics or partisanship. Lives are at risk — lives of ordinary people just trying to go about their days, to do their jobs, contribute to their communities."

Clinton then insisted that fake news is a national problem "that must be addressed and addressed quickly."

Clinton's beef, however, isn't with fake news—it's with free speech.

After all, Clinton has been a huge promoter of actual fake news over the years. From bimbo eruptions  to the Benghazi video, the former first lady has made a career out of media manipulation.

I wrote about that in a column back in September.

The media that political elites like Clinton are able to manipulate via relationships with wealth owners is an asset to political insiders, media that can't be controlled is a massive liability.

No one knows this better than Clinton.  Alternative media nearly got her husband kicked out of the White House when it blew the top off of his sex scandal. Once the cat was out of the bag, there was only so much Clinton big media friends could do to wag the dog.

Now, alternative media cost Clinton her own shot at sitting in the Oval Office by covering scandals the mainstreamers wouldn't.

Clinton's argument that fake news puts lives at risk because one idiot carried a gun into a pizza shop requires us to accept that free speech should be limited to avoid confusing the least intelligent among us. It also requires us to accept that all news which isn't elitist-approved is untrue.

That's exactly how North Korea's media works.

The post The real reason Hillary Clinton is scolding Americans over 'fake news' appeared first on Personal Liberty®.


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Bear

Trump

Obama has ordered a review on election hacking [feedly]



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Obama has ordered a review on election hacking
// The Verge



President Obama has directed US intelligence agencies to produce a report on attempts to influence the 2016 election through hacking, according to an Obama homeland security adviser.

Report may not be publicly released

Adviser Lisa Monaco told reporters that the country may have "crossed into a new threshold" of hacking threats, and said "it is incumbent upon us to take stock of that," according to Politico, who attended the announcement.

Monaco reportedly said the review is expected to be complete before Obama leaves office in January. The results, however, may not be released to the public. Monaco said only that members of Congress and other "stakeholders" will be shown the report.

Russia has been widely credited with attempts to interfere in last month's election. Evidence linked the country to stolen emails from the Democratic National Committee, the release of which led to the resignation of chairwoman Debbie Wasserman Schultz, and the director of national intelligence later explicitly blamed Russia for the hack. The country was also linked to emails stolen from Hillary Clinton campaign chairman John Podesta.

Despite evidence, Trump has denied Russian involvement

Monaco reportedly alluded to a "growing threat" of such attacks, which the incoming Trump administration will be forced to reckon with. But for his part, the president-elect has denied the possibility of Russian involvement in the DNC hack, despite substantial evidence to the contrary. "It could be Russia. And it could be China," he said just this week. "And it could be some guy in his home in New Jersey."


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Pro-gun group wants Trump to dump Petraeus as possible secretary of state [feedly]



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Pro-gun group wants Trump to dump Petraeus as possible secretary of state
// Personal Liberty Digest™

Former Central Intelligence (CIA) Director David Petraeus is a bad pick for secretary of state because of his "Clinton-like" disregard for Americans' 2nd Amendment rights, according to Gun Owners of America.

Earlier this year, Petraeus joined retired astronaut Mark Kelly in launching a gun control group called The Veterans Coalition for Common Sense. The group's primary objectives are increasing background check scrutiny for gun purchases and working to decrease veteran firearm suicides.

The former CIA chief also has close ties to a number of influential gun control lobbying groups which have promoted increased U.S. gun control as well as the UN Arms Treaty signed by President Obama in 2013 but not yet ratified by the Senate.

Gun Owners of America contends that placing Petraeus in the nation's top diplomatic post would ensure that the arms treaty moves forward.

"There's a fundamental question as to whether we're going to withdraw our signature from it. And the secretary of state is going to play a major role on that. Similarly the Small Arms Treaty the secretary of state will determine whether or not this administration pushes the gun control in that treaty or removes us from it," said GOA Legislative Council Mike Hammond.

Hammond also took issue with the name of Petraeus's gun control organization.

"David Petraeus is co-founder of Veterans for Common Sense to create this impression that veterans and military people think that there should be no Second Amendment rights in America – and that's a particularly insidious notion," he said.

GOA isn't the first 2nd Amendment organization to speak out against the prospect of Petraeus being named secretary of state by the Trump administration.

The Firearms Policy Coalition said in a petition against Petraeus' nomination earlier this month: "Having a Secretary of State who openly advocates for more gun control, and who has the ability to reinterpret regulations without Congressional oversight, would be disastrous for gun owners, hobbyist gunsmiths, and manufacturers."

The post Pro-gun group wants Trump to dump Petraeus as possible secretary of state appeared first on Personal Liberty®.


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Tuesday, December 6, 2016

Serians

Voting recounts

Netflix finally adds video previews — but don’t call them trailers [feedly]



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Netflix finally adds video previews — but don't call them trailers
// The Next Web


Netflix today announced the launch of video previews. In the announcement, the company was quick to point out that these weren't teasers or trailers, but instead a way to help users make better decisions about what to watch. The video preview aids users by "highlighting the story, characters, and tone of a title" — which totally sounds like a trailer. These "not-trailers" will play automatically on the title page when you click to view more information about a show or film. According to the announcement: Today we are launching a new television user interface that uses video more extensively to…

This story continues at The Next Web

Or just read more coverage about: Netflix


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Votes

Friday, December 2, 2016

Blm

Fwd: Feral Hog Population Expands - David Rainer's Weekly Column, Dec. 2, 2016

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Date: Dec 2, 2016 10:31 AM
Subject: Feral Hog Population Expands - David Rainer's Weekly Column, Dec. 2, 2016
To: <needanitro@gmail.com>
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Outdoor Alabama Weekly

Feral Hog Population Expands into All 67 Counties in Alabama

Despite a combined effort to loosen regulations on removal and to increase awareness of the problem, the feral hog population has now reached all 67 counties in Alabama.

Chuck Sykes has been dealing with the scourge of feral hogs for years, now as Director of the Alabama Wildlife and Freshwater Fisheries (WFF) Division, and previously as a private wildlife consultant. Sykes said some landowners are making progress. Others, not so much.

"It just depends," Sykes said. "Some places are; some aren't. Places that are on year-round trapping programs and practicing whole sounder (family group) removal, yeah, they're making good headway. People who are trapping sporadically or thinking they're doing any good night hunting or hunting over bait (both of which are not allowed during deer season), they're fighting a losing battle."

Sykes, who has been WFF Director for four years, said he dealt with feral hogs a great deal before he became director.

"Back in the day when I first started trapping hogs with box traps you'd catch one or two and think you were doing a good job," he said. "With trail cameras you could see you were only catching a portion of what was there with traps they tripped themselves. Now there is a lot of technology out there with corral-type systems that causes the door to fall using your cell phone. That's the only way to do it now. Everything we do is a learning process. Ten years ago, box traps were the best thing going. Then you had a corral trap with a root stick or a push door. Now you have corral traps with electronic doors. There's no telling what's going to be coming in the future.

"I'm not saying people need to quit what they're doing. I'm just saying that whole sounder removal is the only way to make significant headway, with electronic doors that you can activate when you want to."

The small farm of Tes and Ron Jolly near Tuskegee is a perfect example of what Sykes just proposed.

The Jollys' first hog sighting occurred in 2004, and they've been in a battle ever since.

"Rumor was a neighboring hunting club brought them in and turned them loose to hunt," said Ron of a practice of transporting live feral hogs that has now been banned in Alabama.  "Since that time, we've been losing ground ever since. We tried shooting them. We tried box traps."

The possession, transportation and/or release of live feral hogs is banned in Alabama. The WFF Enforcement Section recently arrested 13 Alabama residents for possession of live feral hogs and issued warrants for two residents in Florida and one in Mississippi.

The hog problem became so bad for the Jollys that they were unable to grow crops that would benefit the preferred wildlife, mainly white-tailed deer and wild turkeys.

"We can't grow chufa," Ron said. "We can't grow corn. Even in the green fields, when the wheat makes heads the hogs get it. It really limits what we can do. As a result, we haven't killed a mature buck that weighed more than 200 pounds in a while. Four- to five-year-old bucks used to average between 210 and 215 pounds. The last three years we've killed four- and five-year-old bucks that weighed 175 to 185 pounds. I think that's a direct result of what we had to do, which is not grow corn and stuff they can feed on in the summer time.

"We had to change everything. Quite frankly, the best thing we've done is plant clover in our green plots, which provides forage to the middle of June. After that, they're on their own."

Tes and Ron finally made the decision to invest in one of the trapping systems with an electronically controlled trap door.

"For the first time in six or seven years at least we feel like we've got a fighting chance," Ron said. "Two different neighbors have also bought the systems, and we're trying to build a co-op with other landowners. If a sounder comes on the place now, I feel like I've got a chance to get them all. It may take me a month to do it, but we've caught 47 hogs in the trap since the Fourth of July."

The system the Jollys purchased allows remote monitoring of the corral and remote activation of the trap door.

"That's absolutely the way to go. I'm sitting in Montgomery, and if a hog goes in the trap I can catch him," Ron said. "The main thing it allows me to do is not drop the gate on two of 10. When we drop the gate, we know how many pigs are inside. We can drop the gate when all of them are inside and we can get them all.

"The answer is total sounder removal. And we need to expand our cooperative to get other people helping with the removal. I can do it, but if the guy across the fence is not doing it, all he's doing is growing pigs for me to catch."

The Alabama Cooperative Extension System (ACES) is trying to help with that effort to band landowners together in their battle against the hogs.

ACES has teamed with other agencies such as the Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS), Alabama Wildlife Federation and Alabama Soil and Water Conservation, to name a few, to develop a pilot program to both educate the public on the feral hog problem and provide information on traps from the cheapest option to the latest technology in hog traps.

The project involves purchasing a trailer that publicizes hog control efforts through a graphics message on each side. The trailer can be transported around Alabama to complement the seminars being conducted on hog control.

The second part of the project is to provide the public with the opportunity to rent one of the trap doors that can be monitored and closed remotely via a smartphone app, though the project is in its infancy and details are still being worked out.

WFF Technical Assistance Wildlife Biologist Matt Brock said there's no doubt the insidious creep of the feral hog population continues throughout Alabama.

"We have noticed that hogs are showing up on trail cameras in areas they have not been seen before," Brock said. "I'm getting requests for technical assistance from landowners who have never had hogs on their property before, so it appears they are still expanding their range. They are definitely on the move.

"And I don't know how the drought is going to affect that. The last few complaints I've had were from people with farm ponds they use for livestock. The hogs have shown up because it's about the only source of water unless they're on a major creek or river drainage. The farmers don't know what to think. They're seeing them for the first time and are concerned about the impact of the hogs. The biggest question is what they need to do."

Brock said he's been making site visits to educate the landowners on what to do to prevent the hogs from doing extensive damage. The estimate of agricultural damage done by feral hogs is $1.5 billion annually in the U.S.

"The best answer to hogs is trapping the whole sounder," Brock said. "That's what I've been encouraging people to do. People will go out and shoot hogs. They think that by shooting two or three it might help eliminate the hog problem. In actuality, it doesn't. I tell people to be patient and start pre-baiting. Try to find out how many are in the sounder. Then get them all to come into the trap together, even if it takes several weeks. Our goal is total sounder removal. That way you can remove that entire social unit from that particular area. Then monitor the area, and do it again if the hogs move back in."


sounder caught using trap

The most effective method to deal with a feral hog problem is to trap the entire sounder or social unit in an enclosure with a trap door that can be triggered remotely using a smartphone app.

Photo courtesy of Tes Jolly.


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Petition to make Clinton president largest in Change.org history - CNET [feedly]

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Petition to make Clinton president largest in Change.org history - CNET
// Crave: The gadget blog

More than 4.6 million people sign an online petition calling for the Electoral College to vote for Hillary Clinton instead of Donald Trump.
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