2011年9月30日 星期五

Yahoo! News: Internet News: Alibaba's Ma: "very interested" in buying Yahoo (Reuters)

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Alibaba's Ma: "very interested" in buying Yahoo (Reuters)
Oct 1st 2011, 01:16

PALO ALTO, California (Reuters) – Jack Ma, the founder and CEO of Chinese e-commerce giant Alibaba, is keen on buying Yahoo Inc if the opportunity presents itself and has held discussions with other potential buyers about options.

Asked whether Alibaba might like to pick up the ailing U.S. Internet company, Ma told an audience at Stanford University that he would be "very interested in Yahoo."

The former English schoolteacher later added that, were he to have his way, he would be eager to acquire all of Yahoo, not just the stake it owns in Alibaba.

"The whole piece of Yahoo," Ma said in answer to a question from the audience about what part of Yahoo he was interested in. "China is already ours, right? It's already in my pocket."

Yahoo shares leaped 5 percent to $13.80 in after-hours trading.

Acquiring Yahoo could help Ma expand his online empire into one of the world's most important Internet markets.

Ma also said he planned to spend the next year in the United States learning more about the country and the market. An Alibaba spokeswoman said Ma would be based in the San Francisco Bay area, but would travel across the country and would continue his operational duties as chairman and CEO of the Alibaba Group.

Ma, who was speaking at the China 2.0 conference at Stanford, said he had not visited Yahoo to discuss a deal since he arrived in the United States 15 days ago.

"We are probably one of the very few companies that really understand Yahoo USA very well," he said, referring to his company's long-running relationship with Yahoo, which dates back to 2005.

That relationship has grown strained in recent years. Ma's attempts to buy back some of Yahoo's roughly 40 percent stake in his company were rebuffed by former Yahoo Chief Executive Carol Bartz, who was fired earlier this month.

Yahoo has received inquiries from multiple parties about "potential options," but the struggling company is expected to take months to decide its future. It has retained Allen & Co to help it conduct a long-term "strategic review.

Private equity firm Silver Lake Partners is among the parties that have been in touch with Allen & Co, according to a source familiar with the matter.

Yahoo's board has also started to look for a permanent CEO, but provided no details on its progress, or whether it hired an executive recruiting firm to oversee the search.

At an all-hands meeting the day after Bartz was fired, Yahoo founder Jerry Yang said the company was not for sale, according to another source familiar with the matter. But analysts are staking good odds that Yahoo could eventually be acquired.

Ma said he couldn't predict when a deal to acquire Yahoo might take place.

"It's more complicated than we thought. And there's so many people interested in that. And we are also talking to them and they are talking to us," he said.

"I cross my fingers, just to say we are very, very interested," Ma said.

(Reporting by Alexei Oreskovic; editing by Andre Grenon, Gary Hill)

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Yahoo! News: Internet News: Alibaba's Ma: "very interested" in buying Yahoo (Reuters)

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Alibaba's Ma: "very interested" in buying Yahoo (Reuters)
Sep 30th 2011, 23:45

PALO ALTO, California (Reuters) – Alibaba founder and CEO Jack Ma is keen on buying Yahoo Inc if the opportunity presents itself and has held discussions with other potential buyers about options.

Asked whether Alibaba might be keen on picking up the ailing Internet giant, Ma told the audience during a speech at Stanford University that he would be "very interested in Yahoo."

The former English schoolteacher later added that, were he to have his way, he would be keen on acquiring all of Yahoo, not just buy back the stake the U.S. company owns in Alibaba.

Yahoo shares leaped 5 percent to $13.80 in after-hours trading.

Alibaba has had a strained relationship with the U.S. Web company, which owns roughly 40 percent of the Chinese e-commerce giant. Ma's attempts to buy back some of Yahoo's stake in his company were rebuffed by former Yahoo Chief Executive Carol Bartz, who was fired earlier this month.

Yahoo has received inquiries from multiple parties about "potential options," but the struggling company is expected to take months to decide its future. It has retained Allen & Co to help it conduct a long-term "strategic review."

Private equity firm Silver Lake Partners is among the parties that have been in touch with Allen & Co, according to a source familiar with the matter.

Yahoo's board has also started to look for a permanent CEO, but provided no details on its progress, or whether it hired an executive recruiting firm to oversee the search.

At an all-hands meeting the day after Bartz was fired, Yang said the company was not for sale, according to another source familiar with the matter. But analysts are staking good odds that Yahoo could eventually be acquired.

(Reporting by Alexei Oreskovic; editing by Andre Grenon)

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Yahoo! News: Internet News: Verizon asks court to halt FCC Net neutrality rule (Reuters)

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Verizon asks court to halt FCC Net neutrality rule (Reuters)
Sep 30th 2011, 20:57

(Reuters) – Verizon Communications Inc on Friday asked a federal appeals court to block the Federal Communications Commission from imposing new rules on how Internet service providers manage their networks.

The FCC last Friday said its so-called Net neutrality rules were scheduled to take effect on November 20, prompting threats of challenges from Congress and in the courts.

Its rules forbid broadband providers from blocking legal content, but leave flexibility for providers to manage their networks. Critics have called the rules an unwarranted government intrusion into regulating the Internet, including what kinds of content consumers may access and which companies may provide that content.

Verizon, which is based in New York, filed its challenge with the U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Washington, D.C.

(Reporting by Jonathan Stempel in New York, editing by Matthew Lewis)

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Yahoo! News: Internet News: Top 20 percent of App Store game makers split 97 percent of total revenue (Appolicious)

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Top 20 percent of App Store game makers split 97 percent of total revenue (Appolicious)
Sep 30th 2011, 17:42

Posted September 30, 2011 12:42pm by Phil Hornshaw Tags: Apple, iPhone, Games, App store, developers

It turns out the iTunes App Store might be a little more like the Android Market than previously believed, at least in terms of the fact that many game developers struggle with exposure, while a small group rakes in a lot of revenue.

That's according to a new unscientific survey from Canadian indie iOS game developer Owen Goss, who said he got responses from 252 game developers working in the App Store, according to a story from IndustryGamers. What he found was something to be expected: the best-known game makers receive a disproportionate amount of the total revenue of the App Store. What's striking, however, is just how much. Goss' survey found that the top 20 percent of game developers working in Apple's market receive 97 percent of the total revenue that goes to games.

That's a huge chunk, leaving 80 percent of developers to split a mere 3 percent of the remaining revenue. Goss, who is the founder of Streaming Color Studios, also determined from his survey that the top 1 percent of iOS developers get a third of that 80-percent chunk all to themselves. From the survey, Goss found that the top 25 percent of iOS game developers have pulled down more than $30,000 in lifetime revenue – but the bottom 20 percent have made less than $200. Another quarter said it had made somewhere between $1,000 and $10,000.

It should be noted that all these figures are the lifetime revenue of developers, meaning that the survey wasn't going on a single app or a set period of time. Instead, it focused on what developers were making over the long haul in the App Store. Obviously, better established developers who have been in the app store longer are disproportionately among the top earners; at the same time, though, the survey raises some focus for further study.

As Goss notes in his blog posts about the survey, take this one with a grain of salt. The survey was conducted informally for the most part, and while Goss took steps to do a good job of creating his data set, this isn't a scientific study. The sample size is at issue, as is the distribution of the survey. This one is more of an indicator of where the trends might lie than actual proof of the way money is distributed for game developers in the App Store.

But something that's interesting is that Goss' study paints a picture of Apple's market as being a lot like Google's Android market. The Android Marketplace is notorious for low exposure and difficulty with app discovery, and some developers have complained about making Android games and never seeing much in the way of money for their trouble.

Goss' survey suggests that the same thing might be going on in the iTunes App Store, perhaps for no other reason than the fact that it has shown that developers can be successful. Like the California Gold Rush, the positives of the App Store have lured in a whole lot of developers hoping to strike it rich, and that can make the whole ecosystem overcrowded.

The next question – beyond verifying Goss' findings with a full-on study – would be in determining what affect this distribution of wealth might affect game development in the App Store. The mobile sphere continues to grow (and likely will again when the iPhone 5 is announced on Oct. 4), so it'll be interesting to see if more devs flock to the App Store despite the risk of finding Fool's Gold instead of the real thing.

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Yahoo! News: Internet News: Internet firms co-opted for surveillance: experts (Reuters)

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Internet firms co-opted for surveillance: experts (Reuters)
Sep 30th 2011, 14:02

NAIROBI (Reuters) – Internet companies such as Google, Twitter and Facebook are increasingly co-opted for surveillance work as the information they gather proves irresistible to law enforcement agencies, Web experts said this week.

Although such companies try to keep their users' information private, their business models depend on exploiting it to sell targeted advertising, and when governments demand they hand it over, they have little choice but to comply.

Suggestions that BlackBerry maker RIM might give user data to British police after its messenger service was used to coordinate riots this summer caused outrage -- as has the spying on social media users by more oppressive governments.

But the vast amount of personal information that companies like Google collect to run their businesses run has become simply too valuable for police and governments to ignore, delegates to the Internet Governance Forum in Nairobi said.

"When the possibility exists for information to be obtained that wasn't possible before, it's entirely understandable that law enforcement is interested," Google's Chief Internet Evangelist Vint Cerf told Reuters in an interview.

"Then the issue would be, what's the right policy? And that, or course, engenders a lot of debate," said Cerf, who is recognized as one of the "fathers of the Internet" for his early work in areas including communications protocols and email.

Demands from governments for Internet companies to hand over user information have become routine, according to online privacy researcher and activist Christopher Soghoian, who makes extensive use of freedom-of-information requests in his work.

"Every decent-sized U.S. telecoms and Internet company has a team that does nothing but respond to requests for information," Soghoian told Reuters in an interview.

Soghoian estimates that U.S. Internet and telecoms companies may receive about 300,000 such requests in connection with law enforcement each year -- but public information is scarce.

While U.S. courts are obliged to publish reports on wire-tapping of telephone lines, no similar information is required to be made public with respect to the Internet -- which grew up after the laws on electronic communications were passed.

Google does voluntarily publish a transparency report every six months in which it details the number of requests it receives from governments around the world to remove content from its services or hand over user data.

But the numbers do not reveal how many users are affected by each request -- only trends country by country (www.google.com/transparencyreport).

Some governments are requiring Internet companies to collect more data and keep it for longer, said Katarzyna Szymielewicz, executive director of Poland's Panoptykon Foundation, which campaigns for human rights in light of modern surveillance.

"Government agencies throughout the world are pushing companies to collect even more data than is needed for their business purposes," she told the conference.

"For example, we have a very controversial data retention regime which is currently under review. This requires people to store data for a period up to two years so it can easily be accessed by law enforcement agencies."

The ease and cost of surveillance are at an all-time low, Soghoian said, with Google charging an administrative fee of $25 to hand over data, Yahoo charging $20, and Microsoft and Facebook providing data for free.

"Now, one police officer from the comfort of their desk can track 20, 30, 50 people all through Web interfaces provided by mobile companies and cloud computing companies," he said.

"The marginal cost of surveilling one more person is now essentially approaching zero."

(Reporting by Georgina Prodhan; Editing by Will Waterman)

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Yahoo! News: Internet News: Fresh iPhone Apps for Sep. 30: Quora, Chefs Feed, Pig Curling, Robotriot (Appolicious)

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Fresh iPhone Apps for Sep. 30: Quora, Chefs Feed, Pig Curling, Robotriot (Appolicious)
Sep 30th 2011, 12:22

Fresh iPhone Apps for Sep. 30: Quora, Chefs Feed, Pig Curling, Robotriot

Posted September 30, 2011 7:22am by Phil Hornshaw Tags: Fresh

Question-and-answer community website Quora has finally come to the iTunes App Store with an app that taps you in to experts, community members and anyone else who can dish out information when you need a question answered. Read about it below, and then get some more specific answers from Chefs Feed, an app that gets restaurant recommendations from actual chefs, rather than just other users. Pig Curling is exactly what it sounds like and is a fun casual game to take into the weekend with you, while Robotriot will satisfy any cravings for old-school side-scrolling platformers and fighting robots.

Quora (iPhone, iPad) Free

Questions and answers – that's Quora's bag (Q or A – get it?) and now you can tie into the online community used by many to quickly ask and answer questions on all manner of topics. That's 60,000 topics, to be precise, and many of them location-based. If you want to learn about something, post a question and you'll get answers back as quickly as community members can respond. If you've got an insight to share, you can do that on the fly as well, using your device's Wi-Fi or 3G Internet capabilities.

Quora is populated by experts in a lot of fields, so asking questions will often yield very useful answers. You can also use the topical organization to learn about topics you're interested in by reading the questions of others and the answers they receive. Quora is also a handy traveling tool, with the ability to get information on nearby locations using your iOS device's GPS capabilities.

You've probably seen restaurant guides that give you recommendations from restaurant reviews or from other users and friends, but you've likely never seen one that shows you where chefs like to eat. That's Chefs Feed, a restaurant recommendation app that polls true food experts and finds out what they like in a variety of genres and categories.

Chefs Feed is launching in New York, Chicago, San Francisco and Los Angeles and includes 100 of the best chefs from those cities. You can search for particular chefs and their restaurants by quality and category, and you can even see those chefs' favorite dishes at various establishments. If you're hungry enough, the app carries a feature that finds you a great chef-recommended dish at a restaurant nearby, using your device's GPS capabilities.

The premise here is pretty simple. It's curling, the Winter Olympic sport popular in Canada, in which a team throws a rock down an icy stretch to try to hit a spot on a bullseye to score points. But instead of a rock, you throw picks. It sounds weird because it is, but Pig Curling gains a lot from replacing stones with swine, like various kinds of pigs that can go further or bash through obstacles (and yes, there are lots of obstacles with which to deal). The more points you score in each level and the more pigs you leave on the bullseye, the better your rank for each stage.

You'll use seven different kinds of pigs to score points and deal with four different kinds of surfaces for your curling levels. There are 40 levels available in the game, and you'll also be able to earn achievements and rank up on global leaderboards, thanks to Game Center support.

Robotriot (iPhone, iPad) $0.99

Robots need fighting, I guess, which is why there are so many apps that concern battling renegade machines equipped with scary weapons. In Robotriot, you play a robot tasked with raiding the ships of other robots in a side-scrolling adventure game, not unlike classic titles such as Metroid or Castlevania: Symphony of the Night from the console side, or Robot Wants Kitty from the iTunes App Store. In each level, you'll have to fight off renegade robots while you learn how to move through each stage, find the generator and destroy it.

You'll work through 12 different levels in this sci-fi platformer, and face off against 13 different kinds of robotic enemies along the way. You'll also fight off bosses and gather weapons upgrades to further your warlike robotic ends.

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Yahoo! News: Internet News: Poor nations urged to tap Web fast for growth (Reuters)

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Poor nations urged to tap Web fast for growth (Reuters)
Sep 30th 2011, 11:08

NAIROBI (Reuters) – With online business increasingly driving economic growth, developing nations' top priority should be the infrastructure their citizens need to get connected, delegates at an Internet conference in Nairobi said this week.

The Internet's potential to raise living standards is under-exploited in the developing world, where just 21 percent of the population have access, compared with 69 percent in the developed world.

In a study published earlier this year, consultancy Mckinsey found that the Internet accounted for 21 percent of economic growth in mature economies, and that almost $8 trillion changes hands through e-commerce each year.

But regions such as Africa, lacking the broadband infrastructure mature economies enjoy, have an uphill struggle to encourage telecoms operators to invest in the mobile networks needed to bring the Internet to the masses -- especially when the masses have little disposable income to repay their investment.

"There is no way developing countries should sit back and wait, because online activities are driving offline activities," said Joe Mucheru, head of Google in Sub-Saharan Africa.

Participants at the United Nations-sponsored Internet Governance Forum said there was a need to expand infrastructure such as undersea cables and wireless networks for markets where the primary mode of connection to the Web is by mobile phone.

Increased bandwidth capacity and increased competition will cut prices and allow more people to get connected, government officials and company executives attending the forum said.

SPOTTED OPPORTUNITIES

Some Western telecoms operators facing stagnation at home are prepared to make big bets on connecting developing nations; France Telecom, under the brand name Orange, is seeking to double its revenue in the Middle East and Africa to 7 billion euros ($9.5 billion) in the coming years.

It is already present in Egypt, Tunisia, Senegal and Kenya, among other African countries. One of its present projects is the building of an undersea cable to improve Internet connectivity in west Africa.

"We've prioritized spending on the undersea cables, since that will really be a vast improvement to what is currently available," said Thierry Bonhomme, head of networks at France Telecom.

Today, much of Africa's Internet traffic is delivered via satellites, which have far less capacity and connectivity than the intercontinental cables that are slowly being built.

In Nigeria, it costs $1,100 to buy capacity per megabyte on the Lagos to Abuja link -- nearly double the $600 it costs to buy the same capacity on the much longer Lagos to London link, due to the lack of internal infrastructure once the signal reaches Africa.

Executives of cable operators there have been lobbying the government to formulate forward-looking policies that can help cut the costs of moving capacity within the country.

INTERNET A HUMAN RIGHT?

Bitange Ndemo, the top official at Kenya's ministry of communication, says the answer lies in the construction of a national fiber network to take capacity brought on submarine cables to homes and businesses.

"I ask you to make (access) to this resource (high-speed Internet) a human rights issue," Ndemo told participants at the meeting.

"If access to broadband is declared a human rights issue, then governments will step in and invest so no human being is left behind."

The east African nation, whose approach to provision of communication infrastructure and industry-friendly regulations was promoted by delegates to the conference as a viable model for other developing nations, is in the process of putting up a next-generation LTE network -- more advanced than most developed economies can boast -- to be run by several firms.

The mobile phone is the primary tool of access to the Internet in Africa, driving some handset makers such as Nokia to incorporate Web functions into their latest low-priced models aimed at the continent.

In light of that, Robert Pepper, vice president for global technology policy at Cisco Systems, said African nations could increase access to the Web by switching off analog television in favor of digital TV and using the spectrum used by TV stations for wireless Internet networks.

Nations that impose steep taxes and levies on landing rights for firms that are building submarine cables connecting the continent with the outside world will miss out as the cable operators bypass such nations, delegates to the forum warned.

"Traditionally, international telecom firms were seen as a source of foreign investment and international currencies. Now, if governments have high fees and taxes for cable landings, operators will just by-pass those countries," said Cisco's Pepper.

($1 = 0.733 Euros)

(Additional reporting by Leila Abboud in Paris; Editing by Georgina Prodhan)

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Yahoo! News: Internet News: USA's "Psych" Social TV Campaign Scores With Fans (Mashable)

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USA's "Psych" Social TV Campaign Scores With Fans (Mashable)
Sep 29th 2011, 22:46

USA Network launched a fun new interactive social media mystery game tie-in for its hit TV show Psych. The game is called #HashTagKiller and it takes place on the Web using Facebook's Open Graph API. The game launched on Wednesday and will unfold online over the next seven weeks. The game uses video created with the cast specifically for the game, as well as puzzles, clues and Facebook messages between series leads Shawn and Gus.

[More from Mashable: 5 Ways Facebook's New Features Will Fuel Social Shopping]

Users can visit hashtagkiller.com to get started and sign up using Facebook. We had a chance to talk to Jesse Redniss, VP of digital about the campaign, Psych and the state of social TV.

Psych has a very active social media following with Facebook. In December, USA was also one of the first networks to release a second-screen app for the show. Redniss attended SXSW Interactive this year, along with Psych creator Steve Franks and star Dule Hill. I had a chance to interview all three at the Mashable SXSWi House that we setup with Facebook Live.

[More from Mashable: Facebook Will Never Charge You to Use It. Here's Why]

It turns out, SXSW was the catalyst for the #HashTagKiller online game. After SXSW was over, Hill became active on social media, frequently engaging with fans from Twitter and Facebook. This set in motion the idea of creating a special case, accessible online for the fans of the show.

After the idea was hatched, Psych writers got to work on a script. In addition to the online elements of the game, stars James Roday and Dule Hill also star in video clips that will roll out as part of the game each week. The clips are designed to mimic the look and feel of the show. During the week, players can log into HashTagKiller.com to get more clues and messages and continue to try to track down the killer and solve the case.

The result is a fully integrated social TV experience. What we like about this approach is that the producers, writers and cast were involved from the offset and social media were part of the narrative structure -- not simply an add-on after the fact.


Early Results Are Promising


Redniss shared with Mashable some of the early numbers from the game. In the first 12 hours of being online, more than 13,000 unique visitors visited HashTagKiller.com. Of those visitors, 10,000 signed up for the game. At its peak Wednesday afternoon, the website was fielding over 6,000 requests a minute.

Even more impressive than the early sign-up figures -- which took place entirely from social network-based promotion -- is the average time users spent on the site. Redniss tells us that the average user spent more than 12 and a half minutes on the site. Additionally, 22% of visitors returned at least once within the first 12 hours.

These early figures show just how well this sort of campaign works with its audience. USA understands its audience and is looking to actively include it in various social initiatives.

For instance, next week, the network will be holding a special Fan Appreciation Day for Pysch fans in New York City. Fans will be given the opportunity to watch the season 6 premiere episode before it airs on TV on Oct. 12. USA will be livestreaming the event (sans premiere episode), which will include interviews with the writers, cast and crew and will answer questions posed by fans online and at the event.


Making Other Shows More Social


Psych has a socially engaged audience, which is one reason a campaign like #HashTagKiller is already off to such a solid start. What about USA's other show that might have a less social audience? I asked Redniss about what the network is looking to do to increase the social activity for its other properties.

Redniss told me that using various social networks -- including its popular Chatter real-time chat program, the network hopes to graduate its existing shows and its new skeins to a more social atmosphere.

Chatter is powered by Echo and lets users login and chat in real-time about a TV show as it airs. Chatter has proven to be successful for the network, especially in introducing audiences to the concept of social TV.


Mashable Interviews Cast & Crew from Psych at SXSW 2011 at Facebook Live


This story originally published on Mashable here.

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Yahoo! News: Internet News: 7 Common Questions About Startup Employee Stock Options (Mashable)

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7 Common Questions About Startup Employee Stock Options (Mashable)
Sep 30th 2011, 00:37

Jim Wulforst is president of Google millionaires: 1,000 of the company's early employees (including the company masseuse) who earned their wealth through company stock options. A terrific story, but unfortunately, not all stock options have as happy an ending. Pets.com and Webvan, for example, went bankrupt after high-profile Initial Public Offerings left their stock grants worthless.

[More from Mashable: 14 Epic Tech Fails That Will Live In Infamy [INFOGRAPHIC]]

Stock options can be a nice benefit, but the value behind the offer can vary significantly. There are simply no guarantees. So, whether you're considering a job offer that includes a stock grant, or you hold stock as part of your current compensation, it's crucial to understand the basics.

  • What types of stock plans are out there, and how do they work?
  • How do I know when to exercise, hold or sell?
  • What are the tax implications?
  • How should I think about stock or equity compensation relative to my total compensation and any other savings and investments I might have?

1. What are the most common types of employee stock offerings?


Two of the most common employee stock offerings are stock options and restricted stock.

[More from Mashable: Why Facebook Timeline Will Be Huge for Brands]

Employee stock options are the most common among startup companies. The options give you the opportunity to purchase shares of your company's stock at a specified price, typically referred to as the "strike" price. Your right to purchase – or "exercise" – stock options is subject to a vesting schedule, which defines when you can exercise the options.

Let's take an example. Say you're granted 300 options with a strike price of $10 each that vest equally over a three-year period. At the end of the first year, you would have the right to exercise 100 shares of stock for $10 per share. If, at that time, the company's share price had risen to $15 per share, you have the opportunity to purchase the stock for $5 below the market price, which, if you exercise and sell concurrently, represents a $500 pre-tax profit.

At the end of the second year, 100 more shares will vest. Now, in our example, let's say the company's stock price has declined to $8 per share. In this scenario, you would not exercise your options, as you'd be paying $10 for something you could purchase for $8 in the open market. You may hear this referred to as options being "out of the money" or "under water." The good news is that the loss is on paper, as you have not invested actual cash. You retain the right to exercise the shares and can keep an eye on the company's stock price. Later, you may choose to take action if the market price goes higher than the strike price – or when it is back "in the money."

At the end of the third year, the final 100 shares would vest, and you'd have the right to exercise those shares. Your decision to do so would depend on a number of factors, including, but not limited to, the stock's market price. Once you've exercised vested options, you can either sell the shares right away or hold onto them as part of your stock portfolio.

Restricted stock grants (which may include either Awards or Units) provide employees with a right to receive shares at little or no cost. As with stock options, restricted stock grants are subject to a vesting schedule, typically tied to either passage of time or achievement of a specific goal. This means that you'll either have to wait a certain period of time and/or meet certain goals before you earn the right to receive the shares. Keep in mind that the vesting of restricted stock grants is a taxable event. This means that taxes will have to be paid based on the value of the shares at the time they vest. Your employer decides which tax payment options are available to you – these may include paying cash, selling some of the vested shares, or having your employer withhold some of the shares.


2. What's the difference between "incentive" and "non-qualified" stock options?


This is a fairly complex area related to the current tax code. Therefore, you should consult your tax advisor to better understand your personal situation. The difference primarily lies in how the two are taxed. Incentive stock options qualify for special tax treatment by the IRS, meaning taxes generally don't have to be paid when these options are exercised. And resulting gain or loss may qualify as long-term capital gains or loss if held more than a year.

Non-qualified options, on the other hand, can result in ordinary taxable income when exercised. Tax is based on the difference between the exercise price and fair market value at the time of exercise. Subsequent sales may result in capital gain or loss – short or long term, depending on duration held.


3. What about taxes?


Tax treatment for each transaction will depend on the type of stock option you own and other variables related to your individual situation. Before you exercise your options and/or sell shares, you'll want to carefully consider the consequences of the transaction. For specific advice, you should consult a tax advisor or accountant.


4. How do I know whether to hold or sell after I exercise?


When it comes to employee stock options and shares, the decision to hold or sell boils down to the basics of long term investing. Ask yourself: how much risk am I willing to take? Is my portfolio well-diversified based on my current needs and goals? How does this investment fit in with my overall financial strategy? Your decision to exercise, hold or sell some or all of your shares should consider these questions.

Many people choose what is referred to as a same-day sale or cashless exercise in which you exercise your vested options and simultaneously sell the shares. This provides immediate access to your actual proceeds (profit, less associated commissions, fees and taxes). Many firms make tools available that help plan a participant's model in advance and estimate proceeds from a particular transaction. In all cases, you should consult a tax advisor or financial planner for advice on your personal financial situation.


5. I believe in my company's future. How much of its stock should I own?


It is great to have confidence in your employer, but you should consider your total portfolio and overall diversification strategy when thinking about any investment – including one in company stock. In general, it's best not to have a portfolio that is overly dependent on any one investment.

6. I work for a privately-held startup. If this company never goes public or is purchased by another company before going public, what happens to the stock?


There is no single answer to this. The answer is often defined in the terms of the company's stock plan and/or the transaction terms. If a company remains private, there may be limited opportunities to sell vested or unrestricted shares, but it will vary by the plan and the company.

For instance, a private company may allow employees to sell their vested option rights on secondary or other marketplaces. In the case of an acquisition, some buyers will accelerate the vesting schedule and pay all options holders the difference between the strike price and the acquisition share price, while other buyers might convert unvested stock to a stock plan in the acquiring company. Again, this will vary by plan and transaction.


7. I still have a lot of questions. How can I learn more?


Your manager or someone in your company's HR department can likely provide more details about your company's plan – and the benefits you qualify for under the plan. You should also consult your financial planner or tax advisor to ensure you understand how stock grants, vesting events, exercising and selling affect your personal tax situation.

Images courtesy of iStockphoto, DNY59, Flickr, Vicki's Pics

This story originally published on Mashable here.

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2011年9月29日 星期四

Yahoo! News: Internet News: Ponzi scheme accused Full Tilt Poker's license revoked (Reuters)

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Ponzi scheme accused Full Tilt Poker's license revoked (Reuters)
Sep 30th 2011, 01:37

(Reuters) – Online poker site, Full Tilt Poker, which U.S. federal prosecutors have accused of running a Ponzi scheme, had its gambling license revoked by Alderney Gambling Control Commission (AGCC), the gambling regulator said on Thursday.

In a statement released on Thursday, the AGCC revoked Full Tilt Poker's license accusing it of seriously breaching AGCC regulations which included false reporting, unauthorized provision of credit and failing to report material events.

The commission said the license is revoked with immediate effect and follows the earlier suspension of the licenses in June.

Last week, U.S. federal prosecutors had accused Full Tilt of running a Ponzi scheme and said the company paid its directors more than $440 million while defrauding players, even after charges were filed against it in April.

Internet poker companies, Full Tilt Poker, Absolute Poker and PokerStars and 11 people, including Full Tilt director Raymond Bitar, earlier had been accused of bank fraud, illegal gambling and money laundering offenses.

Full Tilt later rejected the charges.

However, the commission said that the revocation of the licenses does not mean that the business can't be reactivated under new ownership and management.

(Reporting by Arpita Mukherjee in Bangalore, editing by Bernard Orr)

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Yahoo! News: Internet News: Conrad Murry trial stream app hits No. 1 on iTunes (Reuters)

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Conrad Murry trial stream app hits No. 1 on iTunes (Reuters)
Sep 29th 2011, 22:13

LOS ANGELES (TheWrap.com) – The latest high-profile celebrity trial has celeb watchers everywhere tuned in on TV and the Interwebs, and now, of course, there's a cell phone app to make sure people don't miss a minute of coverage of the Conrad Murray trial.

The "Michael Jackson Doctor Trial" app is already No. 1 in iTunes' news app store, with the live video provided by KTTV, the Fox TV station in Los Angeles.

The app, also available for Android phones, has been downloaded all around the world, the New York Post reports. Fox TV exec Jose Rios told the newspaper the idea for the app came after a "Casey Anthony Trial" app proved to be a big seller in June.

"I thought that was a smart thing that they had done," Rios said. "When Michael Jackson died, there was a huge outpouring (in Los Angeles), and we thought that a lot of his fans and other people would want to watch (the trial), so we decided to go ahead."

Rios added he's not worried about any charges that KTTV is trying to profit from the trial and its tragic subject matter.

"If you're saying that, then you probably believe that about all the coverage of (the trial)."

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Yahoo! News: Internet News: Canada tries again to update copyright legislation (Reuters)

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Canada tries again to update copyright legislation (Reuters)
Sep 29th 2011, 20:27

OTTAWA (Reuters) – Canada will reintroduce copyright legislation on Thursday as it grapples with the realities of the Internet age and tries to balance the demands of consumers with concerns from the movie industry.

The legislation, first introduced ahead of the federal election in May, is designed to cope with things like movie piracy, which the Canadian Motion Picture Distributors Association put at more than C$1.8 billion ($1.7 billion) in 2009-10, or the equivalent of 12,600 full-time jobs.

"In the absence of clear and modern copyright rules, digital piracy caused enormous damage to the creative industries, Canadian jobs and the entire economy," the association said in parliamentary testimony earlier this year.

The legislation would let Canadians copy legally acquired music and movies to their iPods and computers but it would bar most attempts to get around digital locks, which limit access to books, movies, music, video games and electronic devices.

In a concession to consumers, the bill would allow them to circumvent a digital lock on their smart phones to let them switch wireless service providers, if their contract allows that.

Introducing the legislation the first time, the Conservative government found it hard to please both the consumers and educators who want lax rules on copying film, books and music, and the movie industry and the U.S. government which both want tighter rules.

In 2009, with the apparent acquiescence of Ottawa, Washington placed Canada on its "priority watch list" of countries with the worst records of preventing copyright theft.

A Wikileaks cable revealed that the office of then industry minister Tony Clement told a U.S. diplomat that being put on the priority watch list might help the government get copyright legislation through.

By introducing the bill in the same form as before the federal election, the government plans to avoid Parliament calling up groups that have already testified about the legislation.

"That suggests things could move very quickly with a few sessions and a march to passing the bill before the end of 2011," said Michael Geist, copyright expert at the University of Ottawa.

The bill would cut the penalties that companies could seek for most private infringement of copyrights. Statutory damages would be reduced to a one-time payment of between C$100 and C$5,000, compared with the maximum current punishment of C$20,000 for a single offense.

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Yahoo! News: Internet News: SHADOWGUN tops iPhone Games of the Week (Appolicious)

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SHADOWGUN tops iPhone Games of the Week (Appolicious)
Sep 29th 2011, 21:00

SHADOWGUN tops iPhone Games of the Week

Posted September 29, 2011 4:00pm by Phil Hornshaw Tags: Games, Games of the Week

The great-looking third-person shooter based on the Unity engine, Shadowgun, has finally hit the iTunes App Store. It's beautiful and quite a bit of fun, and it leads this week's best iPhone games. It's a mite on the expensive side though, so we've populated the rest of this list with some fun, cheaper offerings to give your wallet a break, too.

SHADOWGUN (iPhone, iPad) $7.99

A third-person shooter built on the beautiful Unity engine, SHADOWGUN brings a console gaming feel to the small screen much in the same way as other big name titles, such as Infinity Blade. SHADOWGUN channels the big console hit Gears of War, with much of the same sensibilities – a sci-fi setting and a cover system in which players hide behind objects to keep from getting shot. It also packs some great production values, with some quality voice acting, sharp controls and lots of stuff to shoot. The game does ape Gears of War pretty substantially, so regular gamers might feel like they're playing the same game on a smaller screen. Still, if you're going to copy a game, Gears is a pretty fun one to draw from, and SHADOWGUN distinguishes itself with some cool settings and enemy varieties. Best of all, it's beautiful.

Holster your irons, it's time to go to work in the Old West in Cowboy Guns, a dual-stick shooter with missions and a story. You play the role of a wandering gunslinger named The Kid who joins up with the local sheriff to take on outlaws, blast bosses and generally bring justice to the Frontier. In addition to the story, the game also packs a bounty hunter mode, in which you'll hunt down boss outlaws, and an endless mode where you'll fight bad guys until you can't. The more enemies you take down and areas you explore, the more money you'll be able to use to upgrade your weapons and even buy new ones. There's a whole lot of shooter action to be had here.

Related: Five puzzle apps to reclaim your Sunday

You've probably got a handful of tower defense games on your iOS device at this point, but Jelly Defense is worth a look just for its art style and goofy soundtrack. The game also reworks the standard tower defense rules by adding color-coded enemies – red enemies require red towers to destroy, blue enemies need blue towers, and so on. Some of your towers can take on both, others are specialized, and you'll need to sell some towers you purchase later in each level in order to deal with a new threat. Jelly Defense packs Game Center support and lots of campaign levels to exercise the strategic portion of your brain.

Aliens are attacking the Wild West, and you've got to stop them, Pixel Ranger. This arcade shooter has an interesting twist – for every shot you fire to take down alien scum attacking you in each level, you use pixels. Once you run out of pixels, it's game over, so you'll need to collect as many as you can from the enemies you blow apart with the various weapons you pick up in each stage. And that's in addition to jumping and dodging enemy attackers to keep yourself in one piece. Pixel Ranger includes more than 50 levels to work through, as well as an endless survival mode that lasts as long as you do.

Space Junk (iPhone, iPad) $0.99

There's just something about the movement of objects in outer space. In Space Junk, you're one of those objects, floating around under the power of a jetpack that can send you careening into objects or flying off at high speeds. Your job while you're out there is to blast space junk before it slams into you, clearing it out with your weapons while also fighting off aliens. To maneuver, you've got to carefully fire your thrusters so you don't use too much power and go flying out of control, or too little and find yourself unable to avoid collisions. With a cool-looking retro vector graphic style and some bright neon colors, as well as a few goofy space jokes mixed in, Space Junk is a good time at a low price.

Download the free Appolicious iPhone app

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Yahoo! News: Internet News: With Kindle Fire, Amazon's digital ambitions burn (AP)

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With Kindle Fire, Amazon's digital ambitions burn (AP)
Sep 29th 2011, 19:56

SAN FRANCISCO – Amazon's unveiling of the Kindle Fire tablet computer sends a bright-hot message: The online retailer is ready to rival iPad maker Apple in an effort to be the world's top digital content provider.

It may sound odd coming from a company that pioneered online sales of physical products, selling its first book, Douglas Hofstadter's "Fluid Concepts and Creative Analogies: Computer Models of the Fundamental Mechanisms of Thought," in 1995. But since it first entered the digital market in 2006 with its video download store, Amazon has bet consumers will pay for high-quality digital content.

In addition to the millions of actual items it sells, which range from toys to toothbrushes, Amazon's trove of digital content now includes more than 1 million e-books, 100,000 movies and TV shows and 17 million songs. This is about 1 million fewer songs than iPad maker Apple Inc. sells, but more than twice as many e-books and many thousands more TV shows and movies.

Amazon.com Inc. CEO Jeff Bezos is confident that its content is what will help the Kindle Fire do better than others who have trotted out tablets.

"The reason they haven't been successful is because they made tablets. They didn't make services," CEO Jeff Bezos said in an interview after his company unveiled the tablet at a New York media event Wednesday.

Bezos, the 47-year-old former Wall Street money manager, built Amazon on exactly this sort of confidence. He started the company on the theory that a Web-based book store would resonate with consumers, since it seemed like the easiest way to browse millions of titles at once.

He was right. The company grew rapidly and Amazon began trading publicly in May 1997, despite never having turned a profit. It took five more years — and the addition of product categories like CDs, DVDs and consumer electronics — before the online retailer reported any net income. These days, Amazon consistently reports strong growth: In the most recent quarter, it earned $191 million on $9.91 billion in revenue.

Amazon has long toiled in Apple's shadow. With the arrival of Apple's iPod digital music player, which first came out in 2001, Apple figured consumers would be willing to pay for legal, high-quality digital music they could download to the devices. Apple became a major player early on, making deals with major record labels to sell digital tunes through its iTunes Store in 2003. Soon the iPod became more multimedia-savvy: Apple added TV shows in 2005 and movie downloads a year later.

Amazon soon entered the market itself, rolling out its own digital video downloading service in 2006 and music downloading service a year later.

It was in 2007, though, that things really heated up. That's when Amazon rolled out its first Kindle e-reader, upending the book market once again by turning the focus from costly paper books to electronic ones that could be delivered quickly and cheaply to customers on a reading device.

The Kindle rapidly grew the company's e-book business, and Amazon said in May that it was selling more e-books than physical copies of books. But the Kindle Fire's ability to show e-books, surf the Web, stream movies and TV shows and support apps positions it as an even better catalyst for Amazon's digital goods sales.

The price will probably help, too: When it goes on sale Nov. 15, it will cost $199, which is less than half of the $499 you'll pay for Apple Inc.'s cheapest iPad and $50 less than book seller Barnes & Noble Inc.'s Nook Color e-reader. This leaves buyers with plenty of money left over to spend on content.

"It's important to remember at the end of the day that Amazon's core business is retailing and this is a way to sell more digital media on a sort of 7-inch vending machine," NPD Group analyst Ross Rubin said.

The Kindle Fire, which runs Google Inc.'s Android software, is clearly meant for gobbling up Amazon's digital media in particular. While most Android tablets include access to Google's Android Market for downloading games and apps, the Fire will eschew that in favor of Amazon's own app store. And while the tablet doesn't have much storage space — 8 gigabytes, compared with 16 GB on the cheapest iPad — Amazon is offering users free Web-based storage for any digital content they buy from Amazon.

Another weapon in Amazon's arsenal: In hopes of keeping Kindle Fire users purchasing both digital and actual items, the tablet includes a free month of Amazon's premium shipping service, Amazon Prime. Prime, which costs $79 per year, gives users unlimited two-day shipping on any items they buy from Amazon, as well as free access to a library of 11,000 streaming movies and TV shows. This is about half of what Netflix Inc.'s streaming library has.

Amazon has never said precisely how many Kindle e-readers it has sold, but its higher sales of e-books than print books indicates it's a strong performer. Given this, and the general popularity of tablets, expectations are high for the Fire.

Rubin thinks consumers will become fans of the tablet, saying it offers a more complete media consumption experience than what Barnes & Noble has provided with the Nook Color, which came out last year.

Forrester Research analyst Sarah Rotman Epps thinks Amazon could sell as many as 5 million Fires by the end of the year, but thinks it will probably be closer to 3 million since it's coming out so late. Apple, by comparison, has sold nearly 29 million iPads since it released the first one in April 2010, and over 9 million in the June quarter alone.

Of course, in addition to being the new tablet on the block, the Kindle Fire faces other challenges. On the content side, the Amazon Appstore currently includes more than 16,000 apps, but this is just a small fraction of the 425,000 apps in Apple's App Store, over 100,000 of which are tailored specifically for the iPad. On the tablet side, the device's screen is on the small side, which means less space for watching movies and more panning around when surfing the Web. And it will only be able to access the Internet over Wi-Fi, not over wireless carriers' high-speed data networks.

Still, Epps believes Amazon's decision to lead with content and services, rather than hardware, will help it prosper with the Kindle Fire.

"Apple will still be the clear market leader, but Amazon will still be a clear number two because of that strategy," she said.

___

AP Technology Writer Peter Svensson in New York contributed to this report.

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