Monday, November 19, 2012

photo credit: http://media.tumblr.com/tumblr_mb9j2vFd451r0eczo.jpg
(Image, which I found elsewhere, is not mine. No copyright infringement intended.)


The status of R. A. 10175

By Gary Mariano|De La Salle University
Draft
  • The Cybercrime Prevention Act, signed into law on Sept. 12, 2012, is the subject of a 120-day restraining order issued by the Philippines Supreme Court on Oct. 12 (which should expire on Feb. 9, 2013).
  • The Court has scheduled oral arguments for Jan. 15, 2013.
  • There are nine bills in Congress, filed after the uproar of protest the law created, seeking to repeal or amend parts of the Act.
Sec. 4(c)(4)
This is the provision that makes the new law highly controversial. One, it penalizes electronic libel, whose analogue version is already a crime (Article 353, Revised Penal Code, 1930). Two, it raises the penalty for e-libel one notch. What used to be a minimum prison term of six months and one day has become six years and one day!
All but two of the nine bills in Congress have their crosshairs on Section, paragraph C, subparagraph 4. 

These are House Bills 6613 (Raymond Palatino/Kabataan and Teodoro Casiño/Bayan Muna), 6616 (Antonio Tinio/ACT Teachers), 6630 (Walden Bello/Akbayan); and Senate Bills 3288 (Francis Escudero), 3295 (Loren Legarda), 3297 (Pia Cayetano), and 3301 (Peter Cayetano).

[3302, Peter Cayetano; 3315, Edgardo Angara]

The three House bills and those filed by Angara and the Cayetanos also seek to strike the whole of Sec. 6, which subjects acts already punishable in the Revised Penal Code to a stiffer penalty. This is the measure that makes e-libel punishable by prision mayor in its minimum to medium terms, compared with the erstwhile prision correccional for conventional libel.

(Prision correccional runs from six months and one day to six years; prision mayor from six years and one day to 12 years.)

Other targets
Pia Cayetano's bill likewise calls for the repeal of the cybersex provision in Sec. 4(c)(1).
Also sought for repeal are Sec. 5(a) and Sec. 7.

Sec. 5(a) is the "aiding and abetting" provision which netizens fear would make forwarding, reblogging, reposting, or retweeting material that would be deemed libelous, equally punishable.

Sec. 7 is provides for liability under other laws.

Palatino and Casiño's bill calls for the deletion of the entire Chapter IV, "Enforcement and Implementation"(Sections 10 through 19).

Another contested provision is Sec. 12, which allows law enforcers to record "technical data" in real time. Pia Cayetano wants this section out, while Tinio seeks to require a court warrant.

Sections 18 ("Exclusionary Rule") and 19 ("Restricting or Blocking Access to Computer Data") are also targets for amendment. Angara wants evidence violating the Act inadmissible in court.

Tinio, Legarda and Pia Cayetano want Section 19 stricken from the law. Bello, Angara and Peter Cayetano propose amendments that require a court order prior to restricting or blocking access to computer data.

Questionable
Sec. 5(b) makes a "willfull attempt" to commit a cybercrime equally liable.

Thursday, August 9, 2012

Project NOAH

Here's NOAH (the Nationwide Operational Assessment of Hazards), a very useful weather app from Pagasa. Drag the map if you wish. Or go to the site

Tuesday, August 7, 2012

PDF Newspapers

PDF newspapers Updated July 1, 2017
For that old-fashioned newspaper look, minus the bulk and inkstain/smell

  1. Business Mirror
  2. BusinessWorld - alter the date, ex. BWDigitizedMMDDYYYS1.pdf
  3. Daily Tribune - alter the dates; today, it's crook
  4. Malaya Business Insight - none unless you're okay with a thumbnail
  5. Manila Bulletin - requires registration
  6. Manila Standard
  7. Manila Times - alter the date, ex. todays-front-page-july-01-2017
  8. Philippine Daily Inquirer - page one only
  9. Philippine Star - fee-based

Tuesday, July 24, 2012

Pnoy's 2012 SONA: An outline

Text available at gov.ph/sona-2012


Residue
  1. North Rail contract
  2. PAGCOR/PNP
  3. Obligations to fulfill: classrooms, Philhealth enrollment, AFP modernization
Accomplishments

  1. Economic indicators
    PSE index ~5,000
    GDP 6.4% 1Q 2012
  2. Poverty alleviation: 3 million PPP beneficiaries; additional 3.8M next year
  3. Health care: Philhealth enrollment from 62 to 85%
  4. Education
    No more chairs backlog by the end of the year
    SUCs to get P37B in 2013
  5. Jobs creation
    Tesda trained 434,000
    3.1M new jobs in 2011. 
  6. Infrastructure: Airpors, rail, bus, roads
  7. Tourism
    2010: 3.1 M tourists
    mid-2012: 2.1M (target 4.6M)
    2016: 10M
  8. Agriculture
    rice shortage down from 1.3 mt to 50,000
    coco water exports: from <500,000 liters in 2009 to 16.8M liters in 2011
  9. Agrarian reform
  10. Energy
  11. Criminality
  12. Defense
  13. ARMM
  14. Environment
  15. Civil service
  16. Corruption
  17. China dispute
  18. Justice
Wish list

  1. Universal Health Care
  2. Sin Taxes
  3. Responsible Parenthood
  4. 44% increase in 2013 SUCs budget
  5. Anti-Money Laundering Act

Saturday, March 10, 2012

La Union 2012



~300 km
  • SGP to NLEX 26 km
  • NLEX ~80 km; exit at Mabalacat. Toll P218
  • NE on SCTEX ~30 km. Toll P104
  • Head west on Sta Rosa Rd to Tarlac city ~12 km
  • Resume northward direction on McArthur Hwy ~145km, through
    • Tarlac, Gerona, Paniqui, Moncada, San Manuel,
    • Pangasinan: Villasis, Urdaneta, Binalonan, Pozorrubio, Sison
    • La Union: Rosario, Sto Tomas, Agoo, Aringay, Caba, Bauang
  • Left at Pennsylvania Ave ~2.5 km to destination


Driving directions to Urbiz Garden Plage (134 McArthur Highway) from Sea Park (Poro Point) <11km

1. Head NW on Seapark Road toward Pennsylvania Ave - 900 m
2. Take the 2nd right onto Pennsylvania Ave - 1.6 km
3. Sharp left onto MacArthur Hwy (Manila North Rd) - 8.3 km