March 3, 2016

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Today in Movie Culture: Donald Trump vs. the X-Men, 'Star Trek' Parody of 'Hamilton' and More

Here are a bunch of little bites to satisfy your hunger for movie culture:

Political Parody of the Day:

Would Donald Trump‘s election be the end of the world? This X-Men: Apocalypse parody implies yes (via Complex):

Trump: Apocalypse

This election year, the X-Men will face their greatest threat… Donald Trump.

Posted by Max Goodrich on Sunday, February 28, 2016

Musical Mashup of the Day:

Fans of the Broadway hit Hamilton and Trekkies alike can appreciate this Star Trek-themed parody of the song “My Shot” (via Film School Rejects):

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Everything Mashup of the Day:

Antonio Maria Da Silva has another Hell’s Club short that brilliantly mashes up tons of movie characters, including multiple James Bonds, Terminators, Jean-Claude Van Dammes, Aliens Xenomorphs, Star Wars droids and much more:

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Poster Parodies of the Day:

This gallery of poster parodies and mashups includes plenty of recent Oscar nominees redone in genius ways (via Nerd Approved):

27 Movie Poster Parodies of Best picture Nominees

Film School Lesson of the Day:

RocketJump offers a basic lesson in editing with this video on cuts and transitions

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Supercut of the Day:

Speaking of cuts, here’s a super one from Burger Fiction of movie characters cursing without using real swear words:

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Vintage Image of the Day:

George Miller, who turns 71 today, smokes a pipe on the set of Mad Max in 1977 while getting a shot of Mel Gibson inside the Interceptor:

Cosplay of the Day:

The DIY Costume Squad shows us how to make a great cheap Leeloo getup for fans of The Fifth Element (via Fashionably Geek):

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Filmmaker in Focus:

The new episode of Joshua Maddock’s The Filmmakers is a showcase of Martin Scorsese‘s films:

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Classic Trailer of the Day:

With the new Ghostbusters getting its first full trailer today, here’s the very funny trailer for the 1984 original:

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and

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Tech Companies, Security Experts Express Support For Apple

Apple’s legal battle with the FBI over iPhone encryption continues: A federal magistrate, at the FBI’s request, has ordered the tech giant to write software to help investigators circumvent iPhone security features to access a phone used by one of the San Bernardino shooters. Apple is fighting the order, calling it dangerous, illegal and unconstitutional.

Today was the deadline for amicus briefs, or “friend of the court” filings in the case.

Some big names are throwing their weight behind Apple — Intel and AT&T have filed briefs, as well as Google, Facebook, Amazon, Microsoft, Snapchat, Box, Slack and Yahoo.

Relatives of some of the victims of the San Bernardino shooting, meanwhile, have filed to support the federal government’s position. Several law enforcement associations also oppose Apple, according to the Department of Justice.

The briefs filed on behalf of Apple (which have been shared by the company) reveal a wide swath of concerns affected by the question of smartphone security.

Here’s a sampling:

The Risk To Dissidents’ Lives

International human rights and technology nonprofit Access Now, along with Wickr Foundation, a nonprofit group affiliated with the messaging app Wickr, looked at the international implications, particularly the risk for dissidents facing oppressive governments:

“Deliberately compromised digital security would undermine human rights around the globe. Pursuant to international law, the United States has a duty to foster basic human rights such as freedom of expression and privacy. The assistance sought by the government not only diminishes the commitment of the United States to uphold those fundamental rights in the digital age, but also keeps Apple from fulfilling its own responsibilities to respect the human rights of users.

“Technology and connectivity have empowered millions around the world to demand social and political change — but criminals and authoritarian regimes exploit the same technology to identify and persecute protesters, democracy activists, bloggers and journalists. In some countries, reliable security tools such as encryption can be the difference between life and death. The relief sought by the government endangers people globally who depend on robust digital security for their physical safety and wellbeing.”

Infringement On Safety, Unraveling Of Trust

A group of individual security experts, represented by lawyers from the Stanford Law School Center for Internet and Society, described what they saw as a threat to public safety. The group — including Stanford cryptography professor Dan Boneh, independent researcher (and former NSA employee) Charlie Miller, and security expert Bruce Schneier, among others — described a practical risk (the technology could be used on other phones), a future risk (a precedent set for risky cybersecurity bypasses) and damage to public trust in software updates.

The last item, they said, represented a concrete threat — not just a change in feelings:

“Regular, silent, automatic updates are crucial for software security. The belief that such an update could be spyware that a company was forced by the government to sign and distribute might lead people to turn off automatic updates. This would render software patches less effective and the general public less secure.”

The Rights And Needs Of Users

The American Civil Liberties Union highlighted the rights of Americans and what it identified as disproportionate impact on the poor:

“While the government can in some circumstances require private parties to support law-enforcement investigations—for example, by requiring them to produce relevant evidence or give truthful testimony—the government does not hold the general power to enlist private third parties as its investigative agents to seek out information they do not possess or control. In other words, law enforcement may not commandeer innocent third parties into becoming its undercover agents, its spies, or its hackers. …

“If the government prevails, then this case will be the first of many requiring companies to degrade the security and to undermine the trust in their products so essential to privacy in the digital age. For the many users who rely on digital devices to secure their information and communications, including members of vulnerable populations who rely on mobile devices to access the Internet, this burden would be severe.”

The Nature Of The Internet — And Our Lives

A coalition of Internet-centric companies — including Airbnb, eBay, reddit and Twitter — got a little philosophical, arguing that the FBI’s request “threatens the core principles of privacy, security, and transparency that underlie the fabric of the Internet.”

Questions of privacy are personal, their filing says:

“An ever growing range of services delivered to devices as diverse as mobile phones, tablets, computers, appliances, and cars have become an increasingly important and integral part of our daily lives, in ways that could never have been envisioned as recently as five or ten years ago. These services provide the ability to communicate with friends, family, colleagues, external advisers and the world at large; to share and read live news from around the world or in-depth works of commentary and expression; and to engage in commerce whether shopping online, starting a business, or planning your next vacation or tonight’s dinner. In sum, today the devices and the software that power them touch every aspect of our lives.”

The Future Of Devices

A group of trade associations from the tech industry objected that the government’s demand would “effectively dictate product design” — not just affecting users’ security immediately but laying the groundwork for altered products well into the future.

That could be bad for users, if privacy is weakened — and bad for law enforcement, the associations suggest, if companies are pushed into an arms race to try to make ever more impossible-to-unlock devices.

The Cost To Businesses

ACT/The App Association, which represents software companies, focused on the burdens the government’s request would place on developers.

It also made an argument that will be familiar to anyone who has groaned in frustration after installing a brand-new software update:

“[T]he Government’s position borders on the absurd in the context of software development. Not only are the burdens imposed extraordinary (i.e., diverting resources from company’s actual business to being a tool of government), but the goals the Government seeks to achieve are far from assured. As any computer user knows, many software patches, which are far more basic than what the Government seeks to compel here, fail to fix problems, make other things worse, or simply necessitate more patches.”

Standing With The Investigators

On the other side of the question, attorney Stephen Larson who represents some family members of some of the victims killed in San Bernardino sided with the FBI, saying the phone could reveal a possible accomplice. The Los Angeles Times reports:

“The 41-page amicus brief includes a letter from Mark Sandfeur, whose son was slain in the conference room where Syed Rizwan Farook and Tashfeen Malik opened fire on Dec. 2, 2015.

” ‘Recovery of information from the iPhone in question may not lead to anything new. But, what if there is evidence pointing to a third shooter? What if it leads to an unknown terrorist cell?” Sanfeur wrote in a letter to Apple Inc. Chief Executive Tim Cook that was included in the brief. ‘What if others are attacked, and you and I did nothing to prevent it?’ “

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A Team Of Refugees Will Compete At The Olympic Games In Rio

A woman takes pictures of the Olympic rings at Madureira Park, the third largest park in Rio de Janeiro.

A woman takes pictures of the Olympic rings at Madureira Park, the third largest park in Rio de Janeiro. Yasuyoshi Chiba /AFP/Getty Images hide caption

toggle caption Yasuyoshi Chiba /AFP/Getty Images

A team of refugees will compete alongside athletes representing their home countries at the Summer Olympics in Rio de Janeiro, the International Olympic Committee has announced.

Previously, athletes who did not represent a country were not allowed to compete.

The team will likely number between five and 10 athletes, the committee said in a statement, and “will be treated at the Olympic Games like all the other teams.”

“By welcoming the team of Refugee Olympic Athletes to the Olympic Games Rio 2016, we want to send a message of hope for all refugees in our world,” IOC President Thomas Bach said in a statement.

Here’s more from Bach:

“Having no national team to belong to, having no flag to march behind, having no national anthem to be played, these refugee athletes will be welcomed to the Olympic Games with the Olympic flag and with the Olympic Anthem. They will have a home together with all the other 11,000 athletes from 206 National Olympic Committees in the Olympic village.”

The IOC said it has identified 43 contenders for the places on the team and the final group will be announced in June. Along with athletic prowess, potential team members will be assessed by “official refugee status verified by the United Nations, and personal situation and background.”

There are some 20.2 million refugees globally, according to U.N. figures. That includes 5.1 million registered refugees in camps in the Middle East, and an additional 15.1 million “refugees of concern.”

According to The Guardian, the IOC identified three possible refugee-team contenders in December:

“They were a Syrian swimmer based in Germany, a judoka from the Democratic Republic of Congo who was living in Brazil and an Iranian taekwondo fighter training in Belgium.”

The chosen athletes will march in the opening ceremony under the Olympic flag, just in front of home team Brazil. Uniforms and coaches will be provided by the IOC.

Prior to Thursday’s announcement, CNN highlighted a group of elite refugee athletes.

“I ask God to bring peace back to my country,” Congolese karate champion Martial Nantoura told the network. “But I am still on the national team. If someone tells me to go to the mat, I will go.”

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Donald Trump Releases Details Of Health Care Plan

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Donald Trump has promised to repeal and replace the Affordable Care Act, and now he has released some more details of how he would do that on his website.

Transcript

AUDIE CORNISH, HOST:

Last night, Donald Trump released details of his health plan. No surprise – he wants to repeal Obamacare. NPR’s Alison Kodjak reports that the other proposals on Trump’s website include many Republican favorites and some that both liberals and conservatives find troubling.

ALISON KODJAK, BYLINE: When Trump was asked about his health care proposal in the debate last week broadcast on CNN, this is mostly what he talked about.

(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)

DONALD TRUMP: We have to get rid of the lines around the states so that there’s serious, serious competition.

UNIDENTIFIED MODERATOR: But Mr…

KODJAK: What he meant was that he wants to allow insurance companies to sell policies across state lines. It’s a popular idea among Republicans, but beyond that, Trump was criticized because he had little more to offer. Now that’s changed. The Trump campaign has posted a seven-point health plan on his website. It includes getting rid of those lines around the states, and it adds a handful of other provisions that are mainstays in conservative health care circles. Joe Antos is a scholar at the right-leaning American Enterprise Institute.

JOE ANTOS: He mentions things that, depending on how you interpret them, could really fit well within traditional Republican views.

KODJAK: Among those items, Trump calls for people to deduct their health insurance premiums from their taxes and use tax-free health savings accounts to pay for out-of-pocket costs. He proposes changes to Medicaid, the government health insurance for the poor and disabled. He’d give a fixed amount of money to each state rather than using today’s cost-sharing formulas. Trump’s plan leaves a lot up to interpretation. Antos likes the tax provision because he’s assuming Trump would ensure they be structured to benefit low-income people, but other conservatives see it differently. Jeffrey Anderson is a senior fellow at the Hudson Institute. He looks at the proposals for deducting premiums and health savings accounts and sees a huge giveaway.

JEFFREY ANDERSON: It creates a new tax loophole by providing an open-ended tax break on the individual side.

KODJAK: Anderson agrees with Trump’s goal to repeal the Affordable Care Act, but her worries about Medicaid. Trump’s plan says, quote, “we must review basic options for Medicaid and work with the states to ensure that those who want health care coverage can have it.” Anderson says that sounds to him like a huge Medicaid expansion. That’s the conservative discussion. Liberals are interpreting Trump in yet another way. Igor Volsky is deputy director of the American Progress Action Fund. He says Trump wants to simply ditch Obamacare.

IGOR VOLSKY: It gets rid of Obamacare but doesn’t talk about coverage expansion, doesn’t talk about cost controls. And so we’re left in the world where a lot of people are losing the coverage they currently have under Obamacare and they don’t actually get anything in return.

KODJAK: We asked the Trump campaign to clarify some of these provisions. A spokeswoman said via email, quote, “the plan speaks for itself.” Alison Kodjak, NPR News.

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