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Putin Jokes About Orgies to Cast Pussy Riot Protesters as Degenerates

By ROBERT MACKEY

In comments broadcast on Thursday, Russian President Vladimir Putin joked about the reputed benefits of group sex for the lazy as he attacked the morals of three women from the punk band Pussy Riot who were jailed by a Moscow court last month.

The women, who performed a profane, anti-Putin song in a Moscow cathedral on the eve of the Russian presidential election in February, were sentenced to two years in prison by a judge who interpreted their actions as an act of “hooliganism” intended to incite religious hatred.

During an interview with an English-language satellite news channel financed by the Russian government, Mr. Putin was asked about the harsh senten ces for the dissident musicians. He responded by seeking to draw attention to what he termed “the moral side” of the Pussy Riot saga.

Russia's president, Vladimir Putin, discussed the jailing of three women from the protest band Pussy Riot during an interview with the state-sponsored satellite channel Russia Today, or RT.

Before replying at all, Mr. Putin asked the British reporter, “Could you please translate the name of the band into Russian?” When the reporter demurred, Mr. Putin continued: “Can you translate the first word into Russian? Or maybe it would sound too obscene? Yes, I think you wouldn't do it because it sounds too obscene, even in English.”

When the journalists tried to pass the matter off as a joke - “I actually thought it was referring to a cat” - Mr. Putin again stressed the obscene nature of the group's name. “I know you understand it per fectly well, you don't need to pretend you don't get it,” he said. “It's just because these people made everyone say their band's name too many times. It's obscene â€" but forget it.”

The Russian president then described a series of political stunts some of the jailed women were involved in before they formed Pussy Riot. Referring to acts of performance art carried out in previous years by another group of dissident artists, the collective known as Voina - “War” in Russian - Mr. Putin said:

First, in case you never heard of it, a couple of years ago one of the band's members put up three effigies in one of Moscow's big supermarkets, with a sign saying that Jews, gays and migrant workers should be driven out of Moscow. I think the authorities should have looked into their activities back then.

After that, they staged an orgy in a public place. Of course, people are allowed to do whatever they want to do, as long as it's legal, but this kind of conduct in a public place should not go unnoticed by the authorities. Then they upload of the time.

Mr. Putin's description of Voina's supermarket performance appeared to invert the meaning of stunt - the artists were trying to draw attention to what they called government policies encouraging anti-Semitism, xenophobia and homophobia, not endorsing those sentiments.

It seems unlikely that Kevin Owen, the journalist who interviewed Mr. Putin for the Kremlin's own network - known as RT or Russia Today - would have been unaware of the stunt, but just in case international viewers, who are the channel's target audience, missed the YouTube clips documenting it in 2008, the broadcaster made video of that performance available to illustrate Mr. Putin's remarks.

Video of a 2008 performance art piece staged in a Russian supermarket by members of the radical art collective Voina.

More ima ges of the supermarket performance, and heavily blurred images of the orgy, were included in a video report from Pravda this week, which similarly suggested that Western supporters of Pussy Riot were unaware of the true, depraved nature of the dissident art produced by the activists.

Although the members of Pussy Riot insisted at their trial that the song they performed in Moscow's Cathedral of Christ the Savior - an obscenity-laced plea for the Virgin Mary to free Russia from Vladimir Putin's grip - was a political stunt, not an attack on believers, the Russian president continued to act as if the entire point of the performance was to ridicule the Russian Orthodox Church.

Accusing the women of “causing unholy mayhem” in the cathedral, which was destroyed during the Soviet era, Mr. Putin said:

You know, Russians still have painful memories of the early years of Soviet rule, when thousands of Orthodox, Muslim, as well as clergy of other reli gions were persecuted. Soviet authorities brutally repressed the clergy. Many churches were destroyed. The attacks had a devastating effect on all our traditional religions. And so in general I think the state has to protect the feelings of believers.

Asked later in the interview about new restrictions on the Internet described as an attempt to suppress dissent by the opposition, Mr. Putin again cast himself as a defender of Russia's moral majority, insisting that his only concern was to “ban child pornography” online. “Any steps we take are in the interests of the Russian people, and our children need this kind of protection,” he said. “No one is going to use this as a tool to restrict the Internet or online freedoms, but we have the right to protect our children.”

Reporting was contributed by Michael Schwirtz.



Judge Approves E-Book Pricing Settlement

By JULIE BOSMAN

2:56 p.m. | Updated A federal judge on Thursday approved a settlement with three major publishers in a civil antitrust case brought by the Department of Justice over collusion in e-book pricing, paving the way for a war over the cost of digital books in the coming months.

Denise L. Cote, the federal judge in Manhattan who is overseeing the case, rejected arguments against the settlement, saying they were “insufficient” to deny its approval.

In April, the government announced that it had filed a lawsuit against five publishers and Apple, accusing them of conspiring to raise the price of e-books.

Three publishers - Hachette Book Group, Simon & Schuste r and HarperCollins â€" agreed to settle with the government, while Penguin Group USA, Macmillan and Apple declined to settle. They face a trial next summer.

The settlement approved on Thursday called for the publishers to end their contracts with Apple within one week. The publishers must also terminate contracts with e-book retailers that contain restrictions on the retailer's ability to set the price of an e-book or contain a so-called “most favored nation” clause, which says that no other retailer is allowed to sell e-books for a lower price.

For the next two years, the settling publishers may not agree to contracts with e-book retailers that restrict the retailer's “discretion over e-book pricing,” the court said. For five years, the publishers are not allowed to make contracts with retailers that includes a most favored nation clause.

“The Government reasonably describes these time-limited provisions as providing a “cooling- off period” for the e-books industry that will allow it to return to a competitive state free from the impact of defendants' collusive behavior,” the court said in a filing on Thursday. “The time limits on these provisions suggest that they will not unduly dictate the ultimate contours of competition within the e-books industry as it develops over time.”

Amazon, which in April called the settlement “a big win for Kindle owners,” has vowed to drop prices on its e-books, probably to the $9.99 point that it once preferred for most bestsellers and newly released e-books.

Other retailers, like Barnes & Noble, could feel pressure to respond. Barnes & Noble has spent heavily in the last several years to build its digital business in an effort to catch up to Amazon. While it has captured at least 25 percent of the e-book market, it does not have Amazon's deep pockets and may have trouble matching discounts that Amazon can offer.

It was e xactly the prospect of lower prices for consumers that the government cited when it filed suit. But publishers and retailers who are critical of the deal say it would have the unintended effect of allowing Amazon to gain a monopoly by offering lower prices than everyone else.

An Amazon spokesperson declined to comment on the ruling.

The approval of the settlement had been widely expected. During a 60-day public comment period that ended June 25, the court received 868 public comments responding to the settlement, including objections from the American Booksellers Association, the Authors Guild and Barnes & Noble.

Bob Kohn, the chairman and chief executive of RoyaltyShare and an outspoken opponent of the settlement, said he was “very disappointed” that the court made a decision without a formal public hearing.

“It appears that the district court completely deferred to the D.O.J., whose analysis of the case was faulty and insufficient,” he said. “I am hopeful that the U.S. Court of Appeals will closely review the important public issues in this case.”

Spokeswomen for HarperCollins and Hachette Book Group declined comment. Simon & Schuster did not immediately return a request for comment.



Bucks: Do We Really Need a Tooth Fairy App?

By ANN CARRNS

Here's one for the list of  tools you can probably live without: An app for iPhones and iPads that helps compute what the tooth fairy should leave for your child.

Now, just in case there any children who are avid Bucks readers, I'm not saying that the tooth fairy doesn't exist - just that he or she may confer with parents to determine the amount of money that is left under your pillow. The amount may vary, based on where you live, and by family (or fairy) tradition.

I am saying, however, that parents who need an app to tell them what value to place on their child's bicuspids may need to get a life.

The app strikes me as appealing to well-meaning but possibly obsessive parents who complicate ch ildhood by overthinking details that should just be fun.

And don't get me started about parents who keep introducing new varieties of fairies. For instance, the “Halloween Fairy,” who takes away excess candy after the holiday - apparently to avoid cavities and/or obesity. I explained to my children that that particular fairy doesn't visit our home, because we know when we should stop eating sweets.

News coverage of the tooth fairy app, which was created by Visa, included quotes from psychologists warning of the possible stigma that may await children who learn that their tooth fairy leaves less than their classmates'. According to an article in USA Today, Nobody wants to be the parent whose child is “the talk at recess,” because of a frugal Tooth Fairy, says Amy Moncarz, a second-grade teacher at Lucy V. Barnsley Elementary School in Rockville, Md.

Actually, I'd be more upset if my child was the “talk of recess” for eating dirt or bullying a classmate, but maybe that's just me.

In a news release, Visa announced that a survey it conducted found that the average gift per tooth was now $3, up from $2.60 last year, and that some lucky children get $5 or more per tooth. (Are they gold teeth, one wonders?) The survey results are based on 2,000 phone interviews in July and has a margin of sampling error of plus or minus 4 percentage points.

I didn't download the app but tried the tool online. It tells you what children of parents similar to you, in terms of education and income, are getting. My children seem to be faring well; their tooth fairy leaves $2 per tooth, while the average where we live is $1, according to the tool. But did I really need to know that?

Maybe tooth fairies should adopt an idea proposed by the author Bruce Feiler, and give a book instead.

Let us know what you think: Are we overdoing it with a tooth fairy app?



Home of the Future Still Years Away

BERLIN - Sabine Starling, a Berlin architect, tapped her and selected a cartoon video for her two daughters. The tablet beamed the choice onto the screen of her white, Internet-ready flat panel television a few feet away.

In the wireless household, using a tablet as a television remote is supposed to be just one conversation in a din of synchronized chatter between electronic devices like TVs, phones, audio equipment and computers - and also involving dishwashers, refrigerators, heaters, motion sensors, lights and windows.

But in Ms. Starling's apartment near Kollwitz Platz in the Prenzlauer Berg district in Berlin, the iPad remote, which works with Apple's own TV service, is an all-too-rare sign of the wave of wireless home automation that was supposed to arrive a decade ago.

Experts say there are several reasons why the uncabled home, which became possible with the advent of Wi-Fi networks, has been slow in coming, with consumer indifference, the cost of consuming wireless data, the global recession and competing technical standards among them. “Theoretically, the technology is already there,” said Peter Cooney, an analyst at ABI Research in London. “But there needs to be something to motivate consumers to get it into the home. And there's no one system to pull it all together. It's early days.”

Wireless connectivity in the home was a major theme of the Internationale Funkaustellung, the largest European consumer electronics trade fair, which was expected to draw a quarter million visitors and nearly 1,500 exhibitors through Wednesday in Berlin.

Wi-Fi networks and residential gateways, which are home networking devices that combine broadband modems, routers, firewalls and network switches, began appearing in 1999.

So far, they have enabled a range of services including home security and lighting, multidevice audio and video streaming and “smart” meter energy management.

But in Pacific Palisades, California, a new 4,539 square-foot, or 422 square-meter, contemporary Mission style home on the market for $3.5 million illustrates the technology's full potential.

Smart thermostats and sensors use electricity and natural gas at maximum efficiency. Air-conditioning, security and irrigation systems are managed by iPads and other smart devices. Video, audio and Internet stream over the Elan G, a multimedia system made by Elan Home Systems of Carlsbad, California. The washer, dryer and bathroom fans are connected wirelessly, letting the local utility reduce power consumption during peak demand. Lighting is controlled by motion sensors. The front, back and garage doors can be activated remotely with an e-mail.

“Improving the efficiency of homes with wireless Internet connectivity is where the industry is headed,” said Robert Kleiman, the co-founder of Structure Home, a custom builder in Los Angeles that built Vision House Los Angeles with Green Builder Media. Mr. Kleiman said home buyers are increasingly demanding wireless technology to save on energy costs and add convenience. “The technology is readily available and will become standard in the near future,” Mr. Kleiman said.

As the number of home networks rises, new automation services are beginning to appear. According to IHS, a research firm in Wellingborough, England, the number of homes worldwide with ethernet connections, which is necessary for Wi-Fi, will double to 800 million by 2016 from 400 million this year. The number of low-power, low-bandwidth networks essential for monitors and always-on sensors is to surge to 28.8 million by 2016 from 3.3 million, IHS expects.

In June, France Télécom introduced MyPlug, a wireless monitor that adjusts household energy consumption and can notify working parents when their children arrive home. MyPlug inserts into an electric socket and uses a remote sensor to detect the arrival of individuals carrying custom electronic IDs, and sends notifications by text message.