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<title>Book Millionaire</title>
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<lastBuildDate>Sun, 16 Sep 2007 02:31:40 -0600</lastBuildDate>
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<item>
<title>What’s Happening With Book Millionaire</title>
<description><![CDATA[<div align="center">
				
				<font style="font-size: 20pt; font-weight: 700" color="#800000" face="Arial">
				“What’s Happening With<br>
				Book Millionaire?”</font>
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						<p style="margin-right: 20px"><font face="Arial">Martin Luther King, Jr said, “Man 
						must evolve — for all human conflict — a method which 
						rejects aggression and retaliation. The foundation of 
						such a method is Love.”</font></td>
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			<p style="margin-right: 20px"><br>
			Book Millionaire continues to move forward, not at the pace we 
			originally intended, but with the same excitement, focus and passion 
			for helping others.</p>
			<p style="margin-right: 20px">Personally, I needed some time to regroup and understand actions 
			of others, of which I felt deep hurt and sadness. This is, in part, 
			what put the show on hold. I appreciate your patience through this 
			process.</p>
			<p style="margin-right: 20px">I have observed some disparaging comments about the Book 
			Millionaire show and me.</p>
			<p style="margin-right: 20px">It has come to our attention — through communications from others 
			— this may be in connection with a group of bloggers who are 
			allegedly blogging false, inaccurate information against about 100+ 
			companies and projects in the publishing industry.</p>
			<p style="margin-right: 20px">At first I was very angry and wanted to punish the people for 
			what I saw as attacks.</p>
			<p style="margin-right: 20px">But something deep inside of me looked around at our world and 
			decided we didn’t need anymore thought forms of anger, hate or 
			violence. Our world is at a critical point, we are either going to 
			make it has a human race…or not.</p>
			<p style="margin-right: 20px">Just look around.</p>
			<p style="margin-right: 20px">You can see it in the news, in leadership, in your neighborhoods 
			and in your schools. We are at a turning point in humanity where we 
			need to evolve to the next level of human potential and 
			sustainability.</p>
			<p style="margin-right: 20px">Situations similar to what happened to me and the show have been 
			experienced by others also, often times women.</p>
			<p style="margin-right: 20px">Here are a few of the recent headlines and summaries:</p>
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						<font color="#800000">
						<span style="font-size: 16pt; font-weight:700">
						“Rudeness, threats make the Web a cruel world”</span></font>
						<br>
						<font color="#000080"><b><i>
						<span style="font-size: 12pt">USA Today </span></i>
						<span style="font-size: 12pt">Technologies Writer <br>
						Janet Kornblum</span></b></font></font></p>
						<p style="margin-right: 20px">
						<a href="http://www.usatoday.com/tech/webguide/internetlife/2007-07-30-cruel-web_N.htm">
						http://www.usatoday.com/tech/webguide/internetlife/2007-07-30-cruel-web_N.htm</a></p>
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									<p style="margin-right: 20px"><b>
									<span style="font-size: 11pt">Excerpt:</span></b><span style="font-size: 11pt"> 
									But a series of incidents, including one 
									involving a female technology blogger who 
									briefly went into hiding after receiving 
									sexually explicit death threats, has made 
									online incivility an increasingly hot topic 
									and fueled a debate over how to balance free 
									speech with social etiquette.</span></p>
									<p style="margin-right: 20px">
									<span style="font-size: 11pt">“The 
									information superhighway has become the mean 
									streets of cyburbia,&quot; says Silicon Valley 
									technology forecaster Paul Saffo. &quot;It's just 
									gotten steadily worse.&quot;</span></td>
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						<p style="margin-right: 20px"><font color="#800000" face="Arial">
						<span style="font-size: 16pt; font-weight: 700">Battling 
						Abusive Blog Comments: The MSM<br>
						Weighs In<br>
						</span></font><font color="#800000">
						<span style="font-size: 11pt">(MSM means mainstream 
						media)</span></font><br>
						<font color="#000080" face="Arial">
						<span style="font-size: 12pt; font-weight: 700">Arianna 
						Huffington<br>
						Co-founder and editor-in-chief of <i>The Huffington Post</i>, 
						author of eleven books and public radio co-host</span></font></p>
						<p style="margin-right: 20px">
						<a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/eat-the-press/2007/03/28/battling-abusive-blog-com_e_44475.html">
						http://www.huffingtonpost.com/eat-the-press/2007/03/28/battling-abusive-blog-com_e_44475.html</a></p>
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									<p style="margin-right: 20px"><b>
									<span style="font-size: 11pt">Excerpt:</span></b><span style="font-size: 11pt"> 
									But (writer Catherine) Holahan takes it a 
									step further, examining the apparent 
									tendency of commenters to spew greater and 
									more energetic bile towards women than men. 
									Not exactly a revelation to those of us in 
									possession of ovaries and URLs, but it's 
									still noteworthy that Holahan explores the 
									question in detail, offering quotes from 
									many female bloggers and noting the increase 
									in sexually aggressive and violent comments 
									on blogs by or about women. The topic of 
									online harassment and abuse is neither new 
									nor immediately fixable, but it's finally 
									picking up mainstream play, and at the very 
									least building some momentum in public 
									discussion.</span></td>
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						<p style="margin-right: 20px"><font face="Arial"><font color="#800000">
						<span style="font-size: 16pt; font-weight: 700">
						BusinessWeek Dispatches from the Blog Battle Zone </span>
						</font><br>
						</font><font color="#000080" face="Arial">
						<span style="font-size: 11pt; font-weight: 700"><i>
						BusinessWeek</i> Technology and Web Writer<br>
						Catherine Holahan</span></font></p>
						<p style="margin-right: 20px">
						<a href="http://www.businessweek.com/technology/content/mar2007/tc20070328_021104.htm">
						http://www.businessweek.com/technology/content/mar2007/</a><br>
						<a href="http://www.businessweek.com/technology/content/mar2007/tc20070328_021104.htm">
						tc20070328_021104.htm</a></p>
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									<p style="margin-right: 20px"><b>
									<span style="font-size: 11pt">Excerpt:</span></b><span style="font-size: 11pt"> 
									Other women bloggers say they, too, have 
									noticed a difference between the way women 
									and men are discussed on the Web. Elisa 
									Camahort, co-founder of BlogHer, a community 
									for women bloggers, says body parts and 
									sexuality are more frequently included in 
									criticisms aimed at women, particularly 
									prominent women, on the Web. &quot;I think a 
									woman is subject to certain kinds of 
									comments that men wouldn't get,&quot; says 
									Camahort.</span></p>
									<p style="margin-right: 20px">
									<span style="font-size: 11pt">When referring 
									to deliberately hostile and insulting 
									comments on blogs and message boards, it is 
									called &quot;flaming.&quot; Among bloggers, people who 
									post comments, seemingly for the sole 
									purpose of upsetting others, are known as 
									&quot;trolls.&quot;</span></p>
									<p style="margin-right: 20px"><span style="font-size: 11pt">&quot;There are 
									a group of people who feel like it is their 
									job to make you feel bad or attack 
									everything that you say,&quot; says Robert Scoble, 
									author of one of the top 25 most-read blogs 
									on the Internet, who rose to prominence by 
									blogging about former employer Microsoft.</span></p>
									<p style="margin-right: 20px"><span style="font-size: 11pt">Kathy 
									Sierra, a well-known blogger who has been 
									target of a cyber-attack, says about going 
									public about her experience, &quot;I never 
									expected this level of conversation. Right 
									now, people are saying we are not going to 
									tolerate this.&quot;</span>&nbsp;</td>
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						<p style="margin-right: 20px"><font face="Arial"><font color="#800000">
						<span style="font-size: 16pt; font-weight: 700">The 
						Bullying Stops Now</span></font><br>
						<font color="#000080">
						<span style="font-size: 11pt; font-weight: 700"><i>USA 
						Today</i> “Tech_Space” Blogger <br>
						Angela Gunn</span></font></font></p>
						<p style="margin-right: 20px">
						<a href="http://blogs.usatoday.com/techspace/2007/03/naked_lunch_in_.html">
						http://blogs.usatoday.com/techspace/2007/03/naked_lunch_in_.html</a></p>
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									<p style="margin-right: 20px">Excerpt: Ms. Sierra's 
									barricaded in her house and coping with the 
									Web's worse aspect. More specifically, Ms. 
									Sierra's dealing with someone who has posted 
									threats to rape, torture, mutilate and 
									murder her.</p>
									<p style="margin-right: 20px">Tim O'Reilly, publisher, ETech 
									organizer, and all-around Guy Who Should 
									Know, said something very smart re all this 
									at SFGate.com: “We need to say this is not 
									acceptable behavior. If you start making 
									offensive comments, they will be deleted 
									from a blog. Don't give people that 
									platform.”&nbsp;</td>
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						<p style="margin-right: 20px"><font face="Arial"><font color="#800000">
						<span style="font-size: 16pt; font-weight: 700">Call for 
						a Blogger’s Code of Conduct</span></font><br>
						<font color="#000080">
						<span style="font-size: 11pt; font-weight: 700">Tim 
						O’Reilly<br>
						Leading tech blogger and computer book publisher</span></font></font></p>
						<p style="margin-right: 20px">
						<a href="http://radar.oreilly.com/archives/2007/03/call_for_a_blog_1.html">
						http://radar.oreilly.com/archives/2007/03/call_for_a_blog_1.html</a></p>
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									<p style="margin-right: 20px"><b>
									<span style="font-size: 11pt">Excerpt:</span></b><span style="font-size: 11pt"> 
									…we now have one more clear object-lesson on 
									what you get when you start a site that not 
									only tolerates but encourages mean comments: 
									there's a quick race to the bottom. It seems 
									to me that there's a big difference between 
									censorship and encouraging and tolerating 
									abuse</span></td>
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						<p style="margin-right: 20px"><font face="Arial"><font color="#800000">
						<span style="font-size: 16pt; font-weight: 700">Taking 
						the Week Off</span></font><br>
						<font color="#000080">
						<span style="font-size: 11pt; font-weight: 700">Robert 
						Scoble<br>
						Leading blogger and author who came to prominence during 
						his tenure as technical evangelist at Microsoft</span></font></font></p>
						<p style="margin-right: 20px">
						<a href="http://scobleizer.com/2007/03/26/taking-the-week-off/">
						http://scobleizer.com/2007/03/26/taking-the-week-off/</a></p>
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									<p style="margin-right: 20px"><b>
									<span style="font-size: 11pt">Excerpt</span></b><span style="font-size: 11pt">: 
									We have to fix this culture…It’s this 
									culture of attacking women that has 
									especially got to stop. I really don’t care 
									if you attack me. I take those attacks in 
									stride. But, whenever I post a video of a 
									female technologist there invariably are 
									snide remarks about body parts and other 
									things that simply wouldn’t happen if the 
									interviewee were a man.</span></td>
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						<p style="margin-right: 20px"><font face="Arial"><font color="#800000">
						<span style="font-size: 16pt; font-weight: 700">Online, 
						Churls Gone Vile</span></font><br>
						<font color="#000080">
						<span style="font-size: 11pt; font-weight: 700">By 
						Howard Kurtz<br>
						Washington Post Staff Writer</span></font></font></p>
						<p style="margin-right: 20px">
						<a href="http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/03/25/AR2007032501218_pf.html">
						http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/03/25/</a><br>
						<a href="http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/03/25/AR2007032501218_pf.html">
						AR2007032501218_pf.html</a></p>
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									<p style="margin-right: 20px"><b>
									<span style="font-size: 11pt">Excerpt:</span></b><span style="font-size: 11pt"> 
									No corner of the Net is safe from this bile. 
									The Washington Post's Web site has been 
									grappling with a surge in offensive and 
									incendiary comments.</span></td>
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			<p style="margin-right: 20px"><br>
			<br>
			<font color="#800000" face="Arial">
			<span style="font-size: 16pt; font-weight: 700">My Choice was Love 
			and Light — Not Easy</span></font></p>
			<p style="margin-right: 20px">It took some time for me to make my choice that instead of 
			attacking or retaliating for what I perceived as false, misguided 
			actions of others, I decided to find a spiritual understanding and 
			develop a spiritual action plan.</p>
			<p style="margin-right: 20px">It’s my desire that this experience helps me spiritually grow as 
			an individual and leader.</p>
			<p style="margin-right: 20px">It took patience and investing time in my process of seeking 
			spiritual answers and healing for this experience. I hope to someday 
			help others heal from the experience of this type of pain. I know it 
			is impossible to give something to another if one doesn’t have it 
			oneself.</p>
			<p style="margin-right: 20px">This experience triggered judgment and anger inside of me. Before 
			acting or moving forward, I had to wait, so I could come from a wise 
			place. It wasn’t easy and took a while for me to complete my inner 
			work.</p>
			<p style="margin-right: 20px"><font color="#800000" face="Arial">
			<span style="font-size: 16pt; font-weight: 700">Focusing on Needs</span></font></p>
			<p style="margin-right: 20px">As a result of this spiritual growth, I have learned that 
			anything perceived as an attack from another is an expression of his 
			or her needs.</p>
			<p style="margin-right: 20px">So I would like to have my attention on that need. What could 
			their needs be?</p>
			<p style="margin-right: 20px">I don’t know, but I could imagine half-a-dozen things.</p>
			<p style="margin-right: 20px">They could have a need to protect society. And if, from their 
			perspective, they think I am doing something harmful, I can 
			understand trying to stop what they perceive as harmful actions. 
			But, they are acting on misinformation.</p>
			<p style="margin-right: 20px">I have gone to their blogs and contacted them to ask for open 
			dialogues to gain an understanding of their perceptions and provide 
			accurate information. They have responded with additional attacks 
			and threats, rather than peaceful, life-enhancing dialogues.</p>
			<p style="margin-right: 20px">Could it be true that someone is paying for this group of 
			bloggers to blog hate messages about more than 100 companies and 
			projects in the publishing industry that compete with this company? 
			Could this be how the bloggers are paying their bills and feeding 
			their families?</p>
			<p style="margin-right: 20px">The group or company that might be paying for this could have 
			needs to feel successful and feed their families. They could be 
			feeling scared of competition believing the only way to fulfill 
			their needs is to try to wipe out the competition in an attempt to 
			increase their market share, stock price or company value.</p>
			<p style="margin-right: 20px">If this were the case, I imagine the people who own the company, 
			who may have hired these bloggers, could be trying to protect their 
			resources, advance their businesses and make money to feed there 
			families.</p>
			<p style="margin-right: 20px">While I do not condone this, I can understand all humans have 
			needs.</p>
			<p style="margin-right: 20px">If this is true, I am very sad for their chosen ways and tactics. 
			I wish they had more trust in Divine Source that there exists other 
			more life-enhancing ways to be successful than trying to hurt 
			others. I choose to not carry enemy images of them.</p>
			<p style="margin-right: 20px">Because their needs are not being met doesn’t have anything to do 
			with me or the show.</p>
			<p style="margin-right: 20px">Even though I do not personally know these people, I can imagine 
			these are beautiful human beings who are misguided in trying to have 
			their needs met, doing so in tragic ways.</p>
			<p style="margin-right: 20px">I can understand that they are making these choices for the same 
			reason all human beings do everything: to meet needs in the best way 
			they know how at the moment.</p>
			<p style="margin-right: 20px"><font color="#800000">
			<span style="font-size: 16pt; font-weight: 700">Love is the Answer</span></font><br>
			<br>
			I believe Love is the answer to this. What I want in my life is 
			compassion and a loving flow between me and others based on mutual 
			giving from the heart.</p>
			<p style="margin-right: 20px">Attack happens when people are taught to analyze and blame rather 
			than clearly expressing what they need.</p>
			<p style="margin-right: 20px">From the moment people start talking about their needs, rather 
			than what is wrong with others, the possibility of finding ways to 
			meet everyone’s needs greatly increases.</p>
			<p style="margin-right: 20px">What do you suppose the beautiful human needs are behind these 
			blogs?</p>
			<p style="margin-right: 20px">It might be some very simple, human basic needs — beautiful, 
			understandable needs wrapped in ugly, tragic strategy.</p>
			<p style="margin-right: 20px">Part of the needs may be to feed their families, if they were 
			hired. If people are paying them, they may see that this is the only 
			way to feed their families.</p>
			<p style="margin-right: 20px">I envision and have joined a team co-creating an online community 
			of cultural leaders helping people and businesses solve problems, 
			make decisions, create and live from Love and Light in the Highest 
			Good for All.</p>
			<p style="margin-right: 20px">Is this culture even possible online? We believe so.</p>
			<p style="margin-right: 20px">Here’s a powerful guiding thought from a Cultural Leader...<br>
			<br>
			At his blog, leading blogger Tim O’Reilly said, “A culture is a set 
			of shared agreements that allows us to live together. Let's make 
			sure that the culture we create with our blogs is one that we are 
			proud of.”</p>
			<p style="margin-right: 20px">Blessings of Love and Light,</p>
			<p style="margin-right: 20px"><a href="http://www.keyboard-culture-lori-prokop.com">Lori Prokop</a><br>
&nbsp;</p>
]]></description>
<link>http://www.bookmillionaire.com/archives/2007/09/whats_happening.html</link>
<guid>http://www.bookmillionaire.com/archives/2007/09/whats_happening.html</guid>
<category>What’s Happening With Book Millionaire</category>
<pubDate>Sun, 16 Sep 2007 02:31:40 -0600</pubDate>
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