LG service Center in Indonesia

September 27, 2011 in fromY

LG Service Center in Indonesia

 

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Ambon
Jl. Tuluka Bessy No. 32
Ambon
(0911) 344630

Banda Aceh
Jl. Sultan Alaydin Johansyah No.15
Neusu, Banda Aceh
(0651) 41783

Bandung
Jl. Lingkar Luar Selatan
Komp. Kopo Plaza, Blok A/24
Bandung 40233, Jawa Barat
(022) 6033673,6009157 – 58

Bandung Electronic City (BEC) L1/G01
Jl Purnawarman No.113-115
(022) 4223032

Banjarmasin
Jl. A. Yani Km. 5,7 No. 6 Banjarmasin
(0511) 3270945, 3267225, 3267421, 3270646

Batam
Jl. Bunga Raya no.1
Komp. Balai Office Park, Batam
(0778) 430220

Bekasi
Jl. A. Yani Komp. Comersial Center Blok A1 No. 11 Kayu Rining, 17144, Bekasi
(021) 8848686, 8856044, 8856045

Bogor
Botani Square Blok 2B, Jl. Raya Pajajaran
Baranangsiang, Bogor
(0251) 8400674

Cirebon
Jl Brigjend Dharsono No 10 Kav 9
Cirebon
(0231) 232424

Denpasar
Pertokoan Gatsu Megah
Jl. Gatot Subroto Barat No. 311, Denpasar
(0361) 425770, 416394, 416395

Jl. Teuku Umar No. 74XX, Denpasar
(0361) 244286, 245441

Jakarta
Jl. Panglima Polim Raya No. 69
(021) 7247738/63

Jl. Biak Raya No. 21B-C. Jakarta Pusat
(021) 63867369 / 70

ITC Cempaka Mas Blok I No.741-742
Jakarta Pusat
(021) 42901978

Mal Ambassador Lt.3 No.8 Jakarta Selatan
(021) 59739654

Mal Taman Anggrek Lt. 3, Blok E8/341
(021) 5639082

Senayan City Lt. 4 No. 6 Jakarta Selatan
(021) 72781540

ITC Roxy Mas Lantai Dasar D31 Jakarta Pusat
(021) 6388287

Komplek Roxy Mas Blok C3 No. 37
Jl. Hasyim Ashari
(021) 6331925

Pacific Place Mall Lt. 3 No. 3-29
(021) 57973055

ITC Fatmawati Ground Floor No. 118, Jakarta Selatan
021-91260046

Mall Grand Indonesia, LT3 Unit3 No. 50
021-23580652

Jambi
Jl. Sultan Agung 2, No : 71
Kelurahan Murni Simpang Pulay Jambi
(0741) 33674

Kediri
Jl. Kapten Tendean 26
Kel.Tosaren Kec. Pesantren, Kediri
(0354) 683162 / 688268

Kendari
Jl. A. Yani No. 183 Wua-wua
Kendari
(0401) 395087

Lampung
Jl. Pangeran Diponegoro No.79
Sumurbatu – Bandar Lampung
(0721) 483910

Lombok
Jl. Sriwijaya No. 72
Lombok
(0370) 6857225

Malang

Jl. Sukarno Hatta No. 30 Kav.8
Malang
(0341) 403900

Manado
Jl. Pierre Tandean Boulevard No. 18
Kel. Wenang Utara, Manado
(0431) 854546

Makasar
Mall MTC Karebosi
Jl. Ahmad Yani, lt. 3, Blok E2
(0411) 5077498

Medan
Jl. Binjai Km. 6.7 No.100
Komp. Pergudangan IKA Dieasel, Medan
(061) 8476929 – 32, (061) 8445822

Plaza Medan Fair Lt 4 No. 86-88
Jl. Gatot Subroto No. 30, Medan
(061) 4140601

Padang

Jl. Pulau Karam No. 179 – 181
Padang
(0751) 36866, 840089, 38979

Palembang

Jl. Perintis Kemerdekaan No. 11-12
Palembang
(0711) 710488, 719670

Pekanbaru
Jl. Riau No.183/185/187
(0761) 44326, 41874, 855424-5, 860697 (mkt), 860696 (svc)

Pontianak
Jl. A Yani II No. 168°
Sei Raya, Pontianak
(0561) 721166

Samarinda
Jl. Ir. Sutami, Komp. Pergudangan Blok V No. 1 ~ 4
Kel. Karang Asam, Kec. Sungai Kunjang
Samarinda
(0541) 275119, 275120, 274587

Semarang
Jl. Majapahit No.297
Semarang
(024) 6719888

Extention tengah No: 6 Lantai dasar
Mall Ciputra Simpang Lima, Semarang
(024) 91085720

Surabaya
Jl. Tegalsari No. 41, Surabaya
(031) 5475577, 5456726-27, 5490777 (svc)

Gedung WTC Lantai II No. 807
Jl. Pemuda No. 27-31, Surabaya
(031) 5456440

Plaza Marina Lt. 3, Blok C3
Surabaya
(031) 8498040

Ujung Pandang
Jl. Petarani No. 18
Ujung Pandang
(0411) 447011, 449370

Yogyakarta

Jl. Magelang KM 6, Sleman
Yogyakarta
(0274) 625948-49

bali villa

Know Your Rights: Photographers

September 12, 2011 in fromY

SOURCE: http://www.aclu.org/free-speech/know-your-rights-photographers

SPECIAL FEATURE

Your rights as a photographer:

  • When in public spaces where you are lawfully present you have the right to photograph anything that is in plain view. That includes pictures of federal buildings, transportation facilities, and police. Such photography is a form of public oversight over the government and is important in a free society.
  • When you are on private property, the property owner may set rules about the taking of photographs. If you disobey the property owner’s rules, they can order you off their property (and have you arrested for trespassing if you do not comply).
  • Police officers may not generally confiscate or demand to view your photographs or video without a warrant. If you are arrested, the contents of your phone may be scrutinized by the police, although their constitutional power to do so remains unsettled. In addition, it is possible that courts may approve the seizure of a camera in some circumstances if police have a reasonable, good-faith belief that it contains evidence of a crime by someone other than the police themselves (it is unsettled whether they still need a warrant to view them).
  • Police may not delete your photographs or video under any circumstances.
  • Police officers may legitimately order citizens to cease activities that are truly interfering with legitimate law enforcement operations. Professional officers, however, realize that such operations are subject to public scrutiny, including by citizens photographing them.
  • Note that the right to photograph does not give you a right to break any other laws. For example, if you are trespassing to take photographs, you may still be charged with trespass.

If you are stopped or detained for taking photographs:

  • Always remain polite and never physically resist a police officer.
  • If stopped for photography, the right question to ask is, “am I free to go?” If the officer says no, then you are being detained, something that under the law an officer cannot do without reasonable suspicion that you have or are about to commit a crime or are in the process of doing so. Until you ask to leave, your being stopped is considered voluntary under the law and is legal.
  • If you are detained, politely ask what crime you are suspected of committing, and remind the officer that taking photographs is your right under the First Amendment and does not constitute reasonable suspicion of criminal activity.

Special considerations when videotaping:

With regards to videotaping, there is an important legal distinction between a visual photographic record (fully protected) and the audio portion of a videotape, which some states have tried to regulate under state wiretapping laws.

  • Such laws are generally intended to accomplish the important privacy-protecting goal of prohibiting audio “bugging” of private conversations. However, in nearly all cases audio recording the police is legal.
  • In states that allow recording with the consent of just one party to the conversation, you can tape your own interactions with officers without violating wiretap statutes (since you are one of the parties).
  • In situations where you are an observer but not a part of the conversation, or in states where all parties to a conversation must consent to taping, the legality of taping will depend on whether the state’s prohibition on taping applies only when there is a reasonable expectation of privacy. But that is the case in nearly all states, and no state court has held that police officers performing their job in public have a reasonable expectation. The state of Illinois makes the recording illegal regardless of whether there is an expectation of privacy, but the ACLU of Illinois is challenging that statute in court as a violation of the First Amendment.
  • The ACLU believes that laws that ban the taping of public officials’ public statements without their consent violate the First Amendment. A summary of state wiretapping laws can be found here.

Photography at the airport

Photography has also served as an important check on government power in the airline security context.

The Transportation Security Agency (TSA) acknowledges that photography is permitted in and around airline security checkpoints as long as you’re not interfering with the screening process. The agency does ask that its security monitors not be photographed, though it is not clear whether they have any legal basis for such a restriction when the monitors are plainly viewable by the traveling public.

The TSA also warns that local or airport regulations may impose restrictions that the TSA does not. It is difficult to determine if any localities or airport authorities actually have such rules. If you are told you cannot take photographs in an airport you should ask what the legal authority for that rule is.

The ACLU does not believe that restrictions on photography in the public areas of publicly operated airports are constitutional.

 

SOURCE: http://www.aclu.org/free-speech/know-your-rights-photographers

From my Flickr

September 7, 2011 in fromY

  by yano sumampow
, a photo by yano sumampow on Flickr.

White Sun on Black Sky