2011年10月31日 星期一

Yahoo! News: Internet News: Security firm: Hackers hit chemical companies (AP)

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Security firm: Hackers hit chemical companies (AP)
Nov 1st 2011, 05:34

BEIJING – Cyber attacks traced to China targeted at least 48 chemical and military-related companies in an effort to steal technical secrets, a U.S. computer security company said Tuesday, adding to complaints about pervasive Internet crime linked to this country.

The targets included 29 chemical companies and 19 others that make advanced materials used by the military, California-based Symantec Corp. said in a report. It said the group included multiple Fortune 100 companies but did not identify them or say where they were located.

"The purpose of the attacks appears to be industrial espionage, collecting intellectual property for competitive advantage," said the report.

Security experts say China is a center for Internet crime. Attacks against governments, companies and human rights groups have been traced to this country, though finding the precise source is nearly impossible. China's military is a leader in cyberwarfare research but the government has rejected allegations of cyberspying and says it also is a target.

The latest attacks occurred between late July and September and used e-mails sent to companies to plant software dubbed "PoisonIvy" in their computers, Symantec said. It said the same hackers also were involved in attacks earlier this year on human rights groups and auto companies.

Symantec said it traced the attacks to a computer system owned by a Chinese man in his 20s in the central province of Hebei. It said that when contacted, the man provided a contact who would perform "hacking for hire."

Symantec said it could not determine whether the Chinese man was a lone attacker, whether he had a direct or indirect role or whether he hacked the targets for someone else. It called him Covert Grove based on a translation of his Chinese name.

The U.S. and Chinese governments have accused each other of being involved in industrial espionage.

Security consultants say the high skill level of earlier attacks traced to China suggests its military or other government agencies might be stealing technology and trade secrets to help state companies.

The chairman of the U.S. House of Representatives Intelligence Committee, Rep. Mike Rogers, said last month that Chinese efforts to steal U.S. technology over the Internet had reached an "intolerable level." He called on the U.S. and other governments to pressure Beijing to stop.

Another security firm, McAfee Inc., said in August it had found a five-year-long hacking campaign that it called Operation Shady Rat against more than 70 governments, international institutions, corporations and think tanks.

In February, McAfee said hackers operating from China stole information from oil companies in the United States, Taiwan, Greece and Kazakhstan about operations, financing and bidding for oil fields.

Thousands of Chinese computer enthusiasts belong to hacker clubs and experts say some are supported by the military to develop a pool of possible recruits. Experts say military-trained civilians also might work as contractors for companies that want to steal technology or business secrets from rivals.

China has the world's biggest population of Internet users, with more than 450 million people online, and the government promotes Web use for business and education. But experts say security for many computers in China is so poor that they are vulnerable to being taken over and used to hide the source of attacks from elsewhere.

Last year, Google Inc. closed its China-based search engine after complaining of cyber attacks from China against its e-mail service.

That case highlighted the difficulty of tracking hackers. Experts said that even if the Google attacks were traced to a computer in China, it would have to be examined in person to be sure it wasn't hijacked by an attacker abroad.

___

Symantec Corp.: http://www.symantec.com

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Yahoo! News: Internet News: UK conference seeks cooperation on cyberspace (Reuters)

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UK conference seeks cooperation on cyberspace (Reuters)
Nov 1st 2011, 03:04

LONDON (Reuters) – Ministers, tech executives and Internet activists from around the world gather in London on Tuesday to discuss how to tackle security threats and crime on the Internet without stifling economic opportunities or freedom of speech.

The London Conference on Cyberspace will look at ways to increase international cooperation in addressing issues raised by the rapid expansion of the Internet, as fast-growing economies are increasingly agitating for governments to have a bigger say in its regulation.

"How to ensure we can all reap the benefits of a safe and secure cyberspace for generations to come is one of the greatest challenges we face," British Foreign Secretary William Hague, who is chairing the meeting, said.

"This needs to be a collective endeavor, involving all those who have a stake in cyberspace."

Representatives from China, Russia and India are expected at the conference as well as tech industry figures such as Jimmy Wales, founder of Wikipedia, and Joanna Shields, a senior executive of Facebook. U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton canceled her trip because of her mother's ill health.

No immediate agreement is expected to emerge from the two-day conference, but British officials hope it will set an agenda for future discussions.

A closed session of the conference will deal with the aspect of the Internet's rise that has seized most attention -- threats to international security.

The last year has seen a dramatic rise in reported cyber attacks often linked to governments, from apparent attempts at data theft at the International Monetary Fund and elsewhere, often blamed on China, to the Stuxnet computer worm attack on Iran's nuclear program linked to Israel and the United States.

CYBER ATTACKS

On the eve of the conference, the head of Britain's communications spy agency said British government and industry computer systems were facing a "disturbing" number of cyber attacks, including a serious assault on the Foreign Office's network.

While Western states worry about rampant intellectual property theft and hacking, authoritarian governments such as China and Russia are alarmed at the role the Internet and social media played in the protests that have swept the Arab world this year.

Fast-growing emerging economies have been seeking more say in how the online realm is policed, worrying campaigners for a loosely regulated Internet who see a risk to web freedom.

In September, China, Russia, Tajikistan and Uzbekistan proposed to the United Nations a global code of conduct including the principle that "policy authority for Internet-related public issues is the sovereign right of states."

While international security and freedom of speech are hugely complex issues, an area where there could be more prospect of international agreement soon could be cooperation to tackle conventional crime and child pornography.

Experts said the broad agenda of the London conference carried the risk it would be thin in achievement.

"At best you're going to see some milk and toast statements that are going to satisfy everybody and satisfy nobody. The big question is: Who will govern cyberspace, who will be responsible for making the rules?" said Rafal Rohozinski, chief executive of Canadian security consultancy the SecDev Group.

But John Bassett, a former senior official at Britain's GCHQ signals intelligence agency and now a senior fellow at London's Royal United Services Institute thinktank, said a "meeting of minds" was much more important than diplomatic agreements at this stage.

"If we find enough ground to start a dialogue between governments and other players, that would be an excellent result," he said.

(Additional reporting by Georgina Prodhan, Peter Apps, Michael Holden)

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Yahoo! News: Internet News: Best Buy To Sell HP TouchPad for $149, with Strings (NewsFactor)

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Best Buy To Sell HP TouchPad for $149, with Strings (NewsFactor)
Oct 31st 2011, 20:55

After the fire sale that saw Hewlett-Packard's TouchPad tablet sell out for $99 in August, the device is making its way to Best Buy store shelves once again. Best Buy will begin selling the TouchPad online Tuesday and in stores Friday.

The difference is, the discount isn't as deep this time around and it comes with a string attached. Best Buy is selling a 32 GB TouchPad for $149 -- but consumers have to buy an HP or Compaq notebook or desktop PC in order to get the deal.

Consumers who just want the TouchPad will pay $599.99. Best Buy warned that quantities would be limited. HP is not selling the tablet on its own Web site.

Revitalizing PC Business

"HP is trying to get people to start buying its computers again because everybody stopped," said Michael Disabato, managing vice president of network and telecom at Gartner.

Enterprises in particular were hesitant to purchase HP or Compaq machines because HP was considering spinning off or selling its PC business. Enterprises were concerned about buying into machines for which the company may or may not provide support. But news emerged late last week that HP had decided to hold on to its Personal Systems Group.

"HP objectively evaluated the strategic, financial and operational impact of spinning off PSG. It's clear after our analysis that keeping PSG within HP is right for customers and partners, right for shareholders, and right for employees," said Meg Whitman, the new HP president and CEO. "HP is committed to PSG, and together we are stronger."

A strategic review involved subject-matter experts from across the businesses and functions. Beyond the contributions the PC unit makes to HP's solutions portfolio and overall brand value, the study showed that the cost to recreate these in a standalone company outweighed any benefits of separation. HP is still the leading manufacturer of personal computers globally, with revenues totaling $40.7 billion in 2010.

Where Are the Apps?

The TouchPad, however, is still on the chopping block. The TouchPad seemed doomed from the beginning. Early reviews of the product, which debuted on July 1, were mixed. Some said HP released the TouchPad too early. Others called its performance sluggish. Still others said there weren't enough apps in HP's app store to compete.

"I'll still ask the question, where are the apps?" Disabato asked. "Samsung's Galaxy Tab is the only tablet that has offered any real competition for the iPad, which is why I think Apple tried to kill it off."

On the upside, the multitasking was a hit, the webOS implementation is finding praise, and the hardware is getting a nod. It didn't sell well at $499, but at $99 it seemed like a basement bargain to tens of thousands. It remains to be seen how well the TouchPad will sell with the PC strings attached, especially with Research In Motion's offer of buy two, get one free for the BlackBerry PlayBook.

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Yahoo! News: Internet News: MGM, Boyd, Bwin.party in deals for U.S. online poker (Reuters)

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MGM, Boyd, Bwin.party in deals for U.S. online poker (Reuters)
Oct 31st 2011, 20:09

(Reuters) – Casino operators MGM Resorts International and Boyd Gaming on Monday unveiled a plan to partner with online poker company Bwin.party Digital Entertainment, subject to the legalization of Internet gambling in the United States.

Gibraltar-based Bwin.party, the world's largest publicly traded online gaming company, was formed earlier this year through the merger of Austria's Bwin and PartyGaming.

Bwin.party would own 65 percent of a start-up company that would offer online poker to U.S.-based players, while MGM would own 25 percent and Boyd would have a 10 percent stake.

U.S. prosecutors earlier this year accused the owners of three of the largest Internet poker companies of tricking regulators and banks into processing billions of dollars in illegal gambling proceeds.

That crackdown scuttled a similar deal between online gambling operator PokerStars and Las Vegas-based Wynn Resorts Ltd.

MGM closed its original Internet gambling operations in mid-2003, citing regulatory uncertainties.

"There is now an overarching opinion in Washington that this needs to be addressed," MGM Chief Executive Officer Jim Murren told Reuters in a telephone interview. "U.S. citizens are putting their financial assets at risk on sites that the U.S. government has no comfort over how they are being operated."

Wynn, MGM and other brick-and-mortar casino operators have been lobbying hard in recent years for U.S. legalization of online poker -- which they say is primarily a game of skill, rather than other forms of gambling where the customer is playing against the "house."

Their goal is legislation at the federal level, but legalization efforts are also underway in several states.

"Federal legislation is a vastly better solution ... to avoid any ambiguities in laws," Murren said.

Casino companies argue that millions of Americans are already playing online poker on web sites operated from overseas and legalization would bring that revenue to the United States, where it could be taxed, jobs would be created and integrity could be assured.

Opponents, including groups like the Southern Baptist Convention, say online gambling is an irresponsible way to raise revenue.

Boyd and MGM also said each has agreements to use Bwin.party's technology under its own brands.

MGM owns 10 casinos on the Las Vegas Strip, ranging from Circus Circus to the Bellagio, as well as casino-resorts in Mississippi and Michigan and joint ventures in New Jersey and Macau, the only place in China where gambling is legal.

Boyd, which runs Las Vegas properties that cater mainly to local residents rather than tourists, owns and operates 16 casino properties in six states.

(Reporting by Deena Beasley; editing by Richard Chang)

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Yahoo! News: Internet News: Pete Townshend brands iTunes a 'digital vampire' (AP)

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Pete Townshend brands iTunes a 'digital vampire' (AP)
Oct 31st 2011, 20:47

LONDON – The Who's Pete Townshend on Monday branded Apple Inc.'s iTunes a "digital vampire" that profits from music without supporting the artists who create it.

Townshend said that faced with the Internet's demolition of established copyright protections, iTunes should offer some of the services to artists that record labels and music publishers used to provide. These include employing talents scouts, giving space to allow bands to stream their music and paying smaller artists directly rather than through a third party aggregator.

The guitarist was delivering the first John Peel Lecture, named in honor of the influential British radio broadcaster who died in 2004.

Townshend asked if there was any reason iTunes "can't provide some aspect of these services to the artists whose work it bleeds like a digital vampire" to make money.

ITunes declined to respond to Townshend's comments.

Apple's service is the market leader among legal download services, accounting for about three-quarters of music downloads.

Townshend said consumers, as well as the industry, needed to change their attitude to digital music.

"It would be better if music lovers treated music like food, and paid for every helping, rather than only when it suited them," he said.

"Why can't music lovers just pay for music rather than steal it?" he said.

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Yahoo! News: Internet News: RIM Offers Buy Two, Get One Free BlackBerry PlayBooks (NewsFactor)

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RIM Offers Buy Two, Get One Free BlackBerry PlayBooks (NewsFactor)
Oct 31st 2011, 18:38

Research In Motion hopes to move some PlayBooks before the end of the year with a promotion that aims at business users. The BlackBerry U.S. Web site is making an offer it hopes mobile business users won't be able to refuse.

From now until Dec. 31, BlackBerry business customers can get one free PlayBook tablet with every two purchased from an authorized retailer. To make the pot even sweeter, business customers can also choose a premium accessory for each tablet, either a leather sleeve, a charging pod or a six-foot cable.

Optimizing for Enterprises

The promotion comes just days after RIM announced a delay in PlayBook OS 2.0. David Smith, senior vice president of BlackBerry PlayBook for RIM, specifically mentioned enterprise plans in his Oct. 25 blog post. In a move that plays on RIM's historic strengths,, he said, RIM is addressing barriers to tablet adoption, including device manageability and enterprise application deployment.

"Enterprises will uniquely have the ability to manage tablets from a centralized server, while BlackBerry Balance ensures a seamless user experience for personal and professional needs and gives CIOs the peace of mind that corporate data is secure," Smith wrote.

Smith said BlackBerry PlayBook OS 2.0 will also offer dedicated shelf space inside the BlackBerry App World storefront to make approved enterprise applications available to an organization's end users more quickly. RIM hopes these features will help change the way enterprises view and use tablets.

The PlayBook OS 2.0 update will also include advanced integrated e-mail, calendar and contact apps, a new video story, as well as new functionality that will allow your BlackBerry smartphone and BlackBerry PlayBook to work together even better.

Overcoming Downsides

"RIM is trying to boost sales with this promotion and this is one way to do it. The PlayBook is obviously not selling and it can't compete with the iPad, and it has shortcomings that we've discussed before," said Michael Disabato, managing vice president of Network and Telecom at Gartner.

The PlayBook offers true multitasking capabilities. But a major downside so far is that it has to be paired with a BlackBerry smartphone via a special application to access e-mail, calendar, address book, memo pad, task list, BlackBerry Messenger, and browsing functions. With the OS update put off, it remains to be seen if business users will take the PlayBook plunge before they see the software improvements.

Another downside is the lack of a strong system of developers and applications. As Disabato sees it, if RIM is going to compete with Apple and Android, it needs to attract more developers and roll out a user experience that doesn't require two pieces of equipment. At the end of the day, Apple still has the advantage.

"With this promotion, RIM will get traction with people who are thinking about buying a PlayBook or planning to buy one," Disabato said. "The government might decide employees don't need an iPad, they just need a tablet, and decide to buy the PlayBook. But this promotion is not going to displace any iPad sales before Christmas."

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Yahoo! News: Internet News: Battles by states over online taxes may yield little (Reuters)

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Battles by states over online taxes may yield little (Reuters)
Oct 31st 2011, 18:35

(Reuters) – America's state governments won't see many revenue gains any time soon if they triumph in battles to tax sales by out-of-state Internet retailers, a leading Wall Street credit-ratings group said on Monday.

Standard & Poor's Ratings Services said that state governments were increasingly targeting Internet sales outside their borders but still faced legal hurdles and were unlikely to see much top-line benefit soon.

"At this time, Standard & Poor's Ratings Services does not think that the amount of revenue states are foregoing by not collecting tax on Internet sales is significant enough to influence state or local ratings," S&P analyst David Hitchcock said in a report. "Nevertheless, Internet commerce is growing faster than overall retail sales, and if trends continue the loss of tax revenue could become significant."

California is among the states that have locked horns over sales-tax collections with online retailers such as Amazon.com Inc, but the effects on state revenue were far from clear, either in the near term or longer, according to S&P.

(Reporting by Michael Connor in Miami; Editing by Padraic Cassidy)

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Yahoo! News: Internet News: Court sidesteps Connecticut student speech case (AP)

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Court sidesteps Connecticut student speech case (AP)
Oct 31st 2011, 14:14

WASHINGTON – The Supreme Court is refusing to disturb a court ruling that Connecticut school officials acted reasonably in disciplining a student for an Internet posting she wrote outside of school.

The justices on Monday turned down an appeal from Avery Doninger, who was a high school junior in Burlington, Conn., when she took to the Internet to criticize administrators for canceling a popular school activity.

Doninger sued school officials after they punished her by preventing her from serving as class secretary as a senior.

The 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in New York sided with the school officials.

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Yahoo! News: Internet News: Mexico: Video threatens to disclose Zetas allies (AP)

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Mexico: Video threatens to disclose Zetas allies (AP)
Oct 31st 2011, 12:48

VERACRUZ, Mexico – An Internet video is threatening Mexico's Zetas drug cartel with exposure of its allies in the local police and news media this week unless the gang frees a kidnapped member of the international hacker movement known as "Anonymous."

The YouTube message, which claims to be from Anonymous "Veracruz, Mexico and the world," says it is "tired of the criminal group the Zetas, which is dedicated to kidnapping, stealing and extortion," and threatens to fight back with information instead of weapons.

It said it knows of police officers, journalists, taxi drivers and others working with the Zetas.

The video refers to an unidentified person kidnapped in the coastal city of Veracruz, and says: "You have made a great mistake by taking one of us. Free him."

The hacker group, which has claimed responsibility for attacks on corporate and government websites worldwide, supposedly will act Friday if the kidnapped activist is not freed or is harmed, according to the message.

"We cannot defend ourselves with weapons, but we can with their cars, houses, bars," the message adds, apparently alluding to properties owned by cartel supporters. "It's not difficult. We know who they are and where they are are."

"Information is free," it says. "We do not forgive. We do not forget."

An official with the Veracruz state attorney general's office, who could not be named because he was not authorized to speak on the record, said the office could not confirm video's authenticity or the case of the kidnapping.

Veracruz, an oil state on the Gulf of Mexico with a major port of the same name, has seen a spike in drug violence in recent months in what authorities say is a battle between the Zetas drug cartel, which has controlled the territory for at least a year, and its rivals. Dozens of bodies have been showing up in recent weeks, including the dumping of 35 last month on a main highway in rush-hour traffic in the city of Boca del Rio.

Two other Internet postings since July have announced the arrival of group that calls itself the "Mata Zetas," or Zeta Killers, who authorities say are likely aligned with the powerful Sinaloa Cartel. Others have raised questions about whether the group's members are vigilantes or other rogue bands taking justice into their own hands against the Zetas.

The new message, presented by someone wearing a theater mask that is a trademark of Anonymous, was reportedly uploaded to websites early this month, but was first reported Friday on the website of the global intelligence think tank Stratfor.

Stratfor, in its analysis of the video, said anyone exposed by Anonymous as a Zetas collaborator — accurately or not — would be targeted by rival gangs, and the Zetas could respond by attacking Internet activists even if they are not affiliated with Anonymous.

Three people have been killed recently in the northern states of Nuevo Leon and Tamaulipas by suspected Zetas who apparently believed the victims used the Internet to spread information about the gang.

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Yahoo! News: Internet News: China shuts 50 microblogs for porn, vulgarity (Reuters)

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China shuts 50 microblogs for porn, vulgarity (Reuters)
Oct 31st 2011, 11:27

BEIJING (Reuters) – China has shut 50 microblogs for distributing pornography and carrying "vulgar content", state media said on Monday, as the government steps up monitoring of the internet.

"The microblogs were shut down for violations that include carrying pornographic images and videos, information for prostitution, as well as illegal advertising for sex-related drugs and productions," Xinhua news agency said.

"Members of the public reported the microblogs, which were then investigated and closed by authorities," it added, citing an unidentified official at one of the country's internet regulators, the State Internet Information Office.

The government has called for stricter policing of the nation's wildly-popular Twitter-like microblogs that more than 200 million Chinese use. Homegrown micro-blogging sites have also served as lively arenas for public discussion over government policies and scandals.

The spread of porn and vulgar material has been effectively contained since a crackdown on Internet- and cellphone-based pornography was launched in 2009, Xinhua said.

"Authorities will continue to take measures to cut down on new channels used for spreading pornography and vulgar material."

It provided no other details.

China's microbloggers showed their potency in a string of recent official scandals, particularly an online uproar in the wake of a high-speed bullet train crash in July that killed 40 people. Microbloggers led the charge in challenging rail officials' evasive accounts of the disaster.

Chinese state media have demanded that Internet companies, regulators and police do more to cleanse websites of "toxic rumors".

China heavily filters the Internet, and blocks popular foreign sites such as Facebook, YouTube and Twitter.

(Reporting by Ben Blanchard)

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Yahoo! News: Internet News: Inside the Google NYC LEGO and Tech Fantasy Land [PICS] (Mashable)

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Inside the Google NYC LEGO and Tech Fantasy Land [PICS] (Mashable)
Oct 30th 2011, 12:11

Tour Google's sprawling Mountain View, CA, campus and as you ogle the colors, great employee facilities and sense of whimsy, you'll think, "Why can't more offices be like this?" In reality, at least one of them can. It's Google's second largest office, not in California, but instead nestled among the towering skyscrapers of Manhattan. The company calls this facility "Google NYC," and it is big and surprisingly entertaining for a corporate office where 2,500 employees work on everything from Google Search and Ads to Google Maps, Docs and more. In fact, Google told Mashable that the office is host to the second-largest number of Google engineers in the company (you can guess where the rest of them are).

[More from Mashable: Siri Gives Apple a Two-Year Advantage Over Google, Says VC]

Google inhabits multiple floors of the downtown building and the one Mashable visited covers an entire city block. It's so large that areas have been given special names so people can keep track of where they are and where they're going. To get from one place to another, many employees use one of the hundreds of Razor scooters on the floor. As you would expect, there's ample free food and lots of unusual places to sit, meet and read. On the day we visited, there was what looked like a lunch counter facing a cooking show/music recital set where one seat was reserved for Yo Yo Ma (yes, the Yo Yo Ma) who was visiting that day.

One entire wall is devoted to LEGO art and LEGO creation. It was a struggle not to stop, stay and play. There's even a ladder to climb from one floor to the other.

[More from Mashable: Apple Enlists iPhone 4S Users to Solve Battery Problem]

The company is by no means new to New York. It arrived here way back in 2000, when Google was just two years old, and opened this office in 2006. In 2008, Google bought out an abandoned Oreo factory (yes, the Oreo cookie was invented there) on Chelsea Piers and established a second New York Office, just down the block from the first one.

Mashable got a quick tour of Google NYC, a place full of classic tech and LEGO whimsy. The gallery offers just a glimpse of what we found. See if you can guess the names of the classic computers before looking at each caption.

This story originally published on Mashable here.

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Yahoo! News: Internet News: Sohu.Com Q3 profit rises (Reuters)

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Sohu.Com Q3 profit rises (Reuters)
Oct 31st 2011, 07:31

(Reuters) – Chinese internet portal Sohu.com Inc's third-quarter profit rose 19 percent, helped mainly by higher revenue from its online advertising and online gaming businesses

Net income for the quarter rose 19 percent to $64.3 million, or $1.17 a share, from last year.

Total revenue for Sohu.com, which competes with Sina Corp, NetEase.com and Tencent Holdings, rose 42 percent to $233 million.

The key online gaming segment, which makes up more than half of Sohu's total revenue, rose 35 percent to $115.8 million, while online brand advertising revenue rose to $76.6 million.

Analysts on average were expecting the company to earn $1.18 per share, on revenue of $228.3 million, according to Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S.

The company said it expected fourth-quarter non-GAAP earnings of $1.30-$1.35 per share on revenue of $241-$246 million.

(Reporting by Maneesha Tiwari in Bangalore; Editing by Jon Loades-Carter)

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2011年10月30日 星期日

Yahoo! News: Internet News: Netflix extends streaming deal for ABC content (Reuters)

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Netflix extends streaming deal for ABC content (Reuters)
Oct 31st 2011, 04:33

(Reuters) – Netflix said it has extended its license agreement with ABC Television Group, a division of Walt Disney Co, to continue to stream TV shows over the Internet.

With the extension of the existing license agreement, Netflix will also add new TV show episodes from ABC Studios, Disney Channel and the ABC Family to its existing library, it said in a statement.

Netflix will now also carry episodes of ABC's "Switched at Birth," "Alias" and prior season episodes of Disney Channel's animated series "Kick Buttowski."

Netflix will continue to carry every episode of ABC shows including "Lost," "Ugly Betty,," "Grey's Anatomy," and "Desperate Housewives" and a number of programs from the Disney Channel.

(Reporting by Maneesha Tiwari in Bangalore; Editing by Matt Driskill)

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Yahoo! News: Internet News: Cablecom head eyes "all options" regarding Swiss Orange: report (Reuters)

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Cablecom head eyes "all options" regarding Swiss Orange: report (Reuters)
Oct 30th 2011, 12:25

ZURICH (Reuters) – The head of internet, telephone and TV provider Cablecom said he was looking at all options when asked about whether his firm might buy mobile phone provider Orange Switzerland, a unit of France Telecom SA, a newspaper reported on Sunday.

Cablecom chief Eric Tveter told the newspaper SonntagsZeitung: "We're looking at all options. I'm not in a position to comment on a possible deal."

When asked whether he was interested, he said: "Yes, but my answer is: We're looking at all options."

France Telecom wants to sell its Swiss and Austrian operations, deals which could bring in some 2 billion euro ($2.83 billion) , according to analysts.

(Reporting by Catherine Bosley; Editing by Helen Massy-Beresford)

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2011年10月29日 星期六

Yahoo! News: Internet News: China arrests 12,000 in online drug sale sweep (Reuters)

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China arrests 12,000 in online drug sale sweep (Reuters)
Oct 30th 2011, 02:46

BEIJING (Reuters) – Chinese police have arrested 12,125 people during a crackdown on the sale of narcotics online and have confiscated more than 300 kg of illegal drugs, state news agency Xinhua reported on Sunday.

Police were tipped off to the scale of the problem after uncovering chatrooms in the two western cities of Lanzhou and Xian that were being used to peddle drugs, it said.

"Newcomers were only allowed to enter the chat room after being introduced by 'acquaintances' and taking drugs live via webcam," Xinhua cited a police officer as saying.

Police began detaining suspects in early September, the report added. The youngest was 14, it said.

"Criminal suspects turned to the Internet as it is harder for them to be detected that way," it said.

Websites must "take responsibility in fighting such illegal activities" and new laws be drafted to cope with this new problem, Xinhua added.

(Reporting by Ben Blanchard; Editing by Paul Tait)

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2011年10月28日 星期五

Yahoo! News: Internet News: FCC OKs $4.5 Billion Annually for Rural Broadband (NewsFactor)

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FCC OKs $4.5 Billion Annually for Rural Broadband (NewsFactor)
Oct 28th 2011, 21:30

The Federal Communications Commission has approved the creation of a new Connect America Fund for extending the nation's communications infrastructure to reach millions of Americans currently without access to broadband services. The new program's annual investment of $4.5 billion over the next six years will be drawn from funds already being collected under existing regulations, the FCC said.

For example, the FCC intends to redirect the Universal Service Fund (USF) introduced in 1997 to ensure that Americans had universal access to voice communications. As of early 2011, USF fees were equivalent to 15.5 percent of each U.S. telecom company's interstate and end-user revenues.

Given that USF has long since succeeded in fostering the availability of voice services across the U.S., the FCC is shifting the nation's universal connectivity commitment to broadband, said FCC Chairman Julius Genachowski.

"We are taking a system designed for the Alexander Graham Bell era of rotary telephones and modernizing it for the era of Steve Jobs and the Internet future he imagined," Genachowski said.

Financial Incentives For Carriers

The FCC aims to provide the nation's broadband service providers with the requisite financial incentives for extending their infrastructures to accommodate the needs of 7 million rural Americans without broadband access today. However, participating carriers must demonstrate they are deploying a full range of broadband capabilities to currently unserved customers.

For example, the new Connect America Fund benchmarks require service operators to deliver actual broadband speeds of at least 4 megabits per second downstream and 1 Mbps upstream. Furthermore, the monthly usage capacity available to consumers must be reasonably comparable to the services delivered to residential terrestrial fixed broadband networks in urban areas. In addition, the network's latency performance must be able to support real-time applications and services such as VoIP.

The availability of high-speed broadband within currently unserved parts of the nation is expected to lead to the creation of 500,000 new jobs over the next six years.

"We estimate that the [new initiative] as a whole will unleash billions in private-sector broadband infrastructure spending in rural America over the next decade," Genachowski said.

A New Mobility Fund

Another important aim of the FCC's new plan is to empower small businesses that otherwise couldn't exist in the small towns scattered throughout rural America, and as a result to create additional job opportunities within their communities.

"By empowering millions more Americans to engage in e-commerce --- as buyers and sellers --- the [new initiative] will grow the size of our overall online marketplace and provide a boost for Main Street businesses across the country, Genachowski said.

The FCC's initiative also includes a new mobility fund for expanding the availability of mobile broadband services nationwide.

"Over the next three years, we will provide almost $1 billion in funding per year for universal mobility," Genachowski said. "We are also extending the benefits of mobile broadband coverage to tens of thousands of unserved road-miles, areas where millions of Americans work, live, and travel."

Due to the reforms introduced by the FCC Thursday, however, some consumers may have to pay a monthly access recovery charge (ARC) of 10 to 15 cents, on average. On the other hand, "consumers already paying local phone rates of $30 or more cannot be charged the ARC," said Commissioner Michael Copps.

Still, consumer watchdog groups are worried about the new plan's impact on U.S. consumers.

"We share the concerns of other consumer organizations that the commission's actions will lead to higher prices at a time when the average American is watching every penny," said Public Knowledge President Gigi Sohn.

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Yahoo! News: Internet News: Google takes another shot at the TV market (Reuters)

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Google takes another shot at the TV market (Reuters)
Oct 29th 2011, 01:06

SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) – Google Inc is making another push to bring its Web savvy to television sets, hoping to tap into a vast new market despite consumers' lukewarm reaction to one of its initial offerings.

The Internet search engine unveiled a revamped version of its Google TV service and announced plans to create about one hundred online "channels" of original video programing for its YouTube website, in separate announcements on Friday.

The YouTube channels will feature videos created though partnerships with various media organizations, and involving celebrities including rapper Jay-Z, Madonna and skateboarder Tony Hawk. The partnerships involve more than $100 million in upfront payments by Google to the various partners, according to a person familiar with the matter.

The new 2.0 version of Google TV provides new tools for recommending movies, TV programs and online videos to TV viewers, and makes it easier for software developers to create new apps for the television screen.

Google TV -- which currently comes built-in on certain Sony Corp television models and on Logitech International set-top boxes -- allows consumers to access online videos and websites on their TVs, as well as to play with specialized apps such as video games.

"There's a lot of thirst for using the Web in the living room," said Google Product Management VP Mario Queiroz, who is leading the Google TV initiative.

But in a sign of the many challenges that have frustrated Google's ambitions to conquer the living room, as well as those of other tech companies including Apple Inc, Queiroz described Google TV as a "long-term bet."

"I don't know what exact month this will take off," he told Reuters during a demonstration of the new product at Google's Mountain View, California headquarters last week. "I do think there's been a lot of progress over the past year and this next year there will be a lot more progress."

Google does not disclose how many users it has for Google TV, which was launched with great fanfare last year. But some analysts say that version 1.0 of the product has been a flop.

"The fire they were trying to start never even got a spark," said Forrester Research analyst James McQuivey.

The $299 price for the least-expensive Google TV device was too high, said McQuivey (Logitech has since reduced the price of its device to $100). And the fact that many of the television networks, perhaps sensing a threat from Google, blocked the Web-based versions of their shows from being accessible on Google TV devices created confusion among consumers, he said.

But TV is too attractive a market for Google to ignore, say analysts.

For Google, which generated 96 percent of its revenue from advertising last year, television represents a significant opportunity for expansion. According to industry research firm IDC, television advertising in the U.S. this year is expected to be a nearly $70 billion market.

Having a foothold in the living room could also be important for Google as the lines between traditional media and the Internet blur and as Google moves to bolster the rich trove of amateur videos on its YouTube website with professionally-produced content.

The new YouTube channels will feature videos in nearly 20 different categories, such as sports, comedy and news. The first channels will launch next month with more channels rolling out over the coming year, Google said.

Google will sell ads alongside the original video channels, sharing up to 55 percent of the ad revenue with some of its partners after Google has earned back the cost of its up-front payments, according to the person familiar with the matter, who wished to remain anonymous because of the confidential nature of the arrangements.

Other tech powerhouses also recognize the TV opportunity, including Microsoft Corp, which has taken steps to turn its Xbox video game console into a general-purpose media player.

In the newly-released biography of Steve Jobs, author Walter Isaacson relates a conversation in which the recently-deceased Apple co-founder said he was interested in creating an "integrated television set" that seamlessly connected with the Internet and with all of a consumer's electronic devices. So far analysts say that Apple's foray into the TV market has been a rare failure for the iPhone maker.

"The reason these companies have all been eyeing this market is that there's not that many markets that are 200 million plus units a year and have an installed base of a billion plus screens," said IDC analyst Danielle Levitas, referring to global sales of TV sets. "You can't ignore markets that big, on screens that are that important in terms of hours spent and media delivered."

THE MOTOROLA FACTOR

One advantage that Google could have in the TV market is its planned $12.5 billion acquisition of Motorola Mobility Holdings Inc, which makes cable television set-top boxes as well as mobile phones.

"If I were Google, the first thing I would do is put (the Google TV software) into the next round of Motorola set-top boxes and say (to the cable providers) 'We'll give you half-off for these things, if you put Google TV in,'" said McQuivey of Forrester Research.

Google's Queiroz declined to discuss how Motorola might fit into the Google TV plans other than to note that Google has said it plans to run Motorola as a separate business after the acquisition closes.

Beginning on Sunday, Google will automatically upgrade the software on existing Sony Google TV devices that are already in consumers' homes, with software updates to Logitech coming shortly thereafter. New Google TV devices, from manufacturers including Samsung and Vizio, are expected next year.

Google has built Google TV on the new "Honeycomb" version of its Android operating system. The company has also redesigned the look of Google TV, replacing the cluttered, computer-like screen full of options with a more minimalist strip of graphical icons that sits at the bottom of the TV screen.

Google's Android Market, the central clearinghouse for the smartphone and tablet apps designed to run on the Android operating system, will now be available on Google TV. That means software developers that make smartphone applications, such as Rovio's Angry Birds, will easily be able to offer versions that run on Google TV.

But in contrast to Internet-connected smartphones, which have become incredibly popular in recent years, Web TV products from Google and other companies face a steep road as they strive to prove their worth to consumers, say some analysts.

"It's an incredibly difficult screen to figure out," said IDC's Levitas, noting that unlike with smartphones and PCs, a TV is often viewed by multiple people at the same time and has two disparate experiences -- standard television programing and Web content -- that need to be cleverly tied together.

"The TV is going to be the last frontier we crack in terms of the connected experience," said Levitas.

(Reporting by Alexei Oreskovic, editing by Bernard Orr and Carol Bishopric)

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Yahoo! News: Internet News: Cain's smoking ad divides Republicans: Reuters/Ipsos poll (Reuters)

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Cain's smoking ad divides Republicans: Reuters/Ipsos poll (Reuters)
Oct 28th 2011, 23:12

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – Presidential hopeful Herman Cain's quirky "smoking ad" may have mystified many Americans, but according to a new Reuters/Ipsos online poll, it has drawn a sharp line between Republicans who identify with the Tea Party and those who don't.

The ad, which shows Cain's chief of staff Mark Block puffing on a cigarette for no apparent reason, created enormous Internet buzz this week.

Six in 10 of those who strongly identify with the conservative Tea Party movement said they loved or liked the ad.

An almost equal percentage of people who self-identified as mainstream Republicans either disliked or hated it.

Block is shown on the video giving Cain, a surprise Republican nomination front-runner, a testimonial before taking a draw from a cigarette. The image shifts to the candidate who slowly breaks into a smile as his campaign song blares.

"He's a likable candidate, particularly for those strong Tea Partiers who identify around values of small government and an anti-Washington sentiment. Cain seems to be tapping into that very effectively," said Ipsos pollster Julia Clark.

Tea Party supporters form a central part of the Republican voting base and could help determine who the party's 2012 presidential nominee will be, with voting to start in early January.

"STUPID"

Cain, the former chief executive of Godfather's Pizza, has shot to the top of some Republican polls in recent weeks in the race to decide who will challenge Democratic President Barack Obama in next year's election.

About a third of people surveyed loved or liked Cain's video, a third hated or disliked it, and another third was neutral.

Some commentators have speculated that Cain's campaign put a smoker in the ad as an anti-political correctness message that would appeal to conservatives.

Even if that were the intention, most Tea Party Republicans did not take the bait.

"I do think the Tea Party support for this ad is not because of the smoking but because of their support for Cain," said Clark.

The smoking did stick in viewers' minds, and seemed to obscure the campaign message of Cain as a viable candidate.

The one word that came to people's minds most when asked about the smoking segment was "stupid."

Fifty percent of those polled felt what stood out for them most was the narrator smoking a cigarette, and more than a quarter thought the ad communicated to them that Cain endorses smoking.

"This really distracted from the message in a lot of ways," said Clark.

People who have never been smokers noticed the cigarette more than those who smoke or who have smoked. About one in five of current smokers felt that it communicated that 'Herman Cain endorses smoking,' but this figure rose to a third among people who have never smoked.

"If you've never smoked a cigarette you're more likely to think Cain endorses smoking," said Clark.

The poll surveyed 554 registered Republicans, of whom 374 answered questions about the video.

Because it was an online poll, typical margins of error do not apply. Despite that, various recognized methods were used to select as representative a sample as possible and weigh the results. If this were a traditional random survey, it would have a margin of error of between plus 4.4 percent and plus 5.1 percent. This figure varies because some participants dropped out of the video portion of the survey.

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Yahoo! News: Internet News: Analysis: Shakeout expected among online advertising companies (Reuters)

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Analysis: Shakeout expected among online advertising companies (Reuters)
Oct 28th 2011, 20:57

NEW YORK (Reuters) – The crowded advertising technology sector may be about to shake out some losers.

With north of 150 companies -- according to consultant and investment banker Luma Partners -- in the relatively new online advertising industry, there are simply too many competitors seeking too much of a return on capital.

Add in a drop-off in potential buyers and a declining appetite for public offerings, and the online advertising sector is due to stall, industry players and backers say.

"It's just not a big enough market for all the money invested," said Will Margiloff, chief executive officer of Ignition One, the digital marketing technology unit of Japanese ad agency Dentsu.

"That is a real challenge -- VCs and private equity guys are trying to figure out how to jump on the ad tech bandwagon and are really grasping. There can't be six or seven category leaders."

To Margiloff, the problem is that some of these companies frequently have more money invested in them than revenue potential, and often the revenue opportunity involves a more service-oriented action such as sales rather than a unique technological capability.

"The valuations that you see are more the heyday of the Right Media sale to Yahoo -- 10 times revenue," said Margiloff about Yahoo's $680 million purchase in 2007 of the remaining 80 percent stake in the company that it did not already own. "That is not reality ... Two to three times revenue is more realistic."

On top of that, the likely buyers have been sidelined dealing with their own issues.

For instance, AOL and Yahoo, both of which would be obvious buyers for online advertising start-ups, are in the midst of turnaround efforts that have left them with leadership vacuums and takeover vulnerability.

Then there are companies like Google and eBay that have already placed their bets on a few companies in the sector.

Google agreed to buy display ad company Admeld in June, for $400 million, according to TechCrunch and the New York Times, and eBay acquired GSI Commerce for $2.4 billion. Google's deal is awaiting approval from the Department of Justice.

With the usual suspects on the sidelines, there are still investors who think they can pick winners from a crowded field.

David Pakman, a partner at venture capital firm Venrock who has been investing in the ad tech space for a decade, is still bullish about the sector.

Among his investments was DoubleClick, which Google ended up buying for $3.1 billion in 2007. Venrock has also invested in online advertising companies AppNexus and Media6Degrees.

"As an investor we like markets that attract lots of innovative activity," he said, adding that he considers the sector dynamic. "Is everyone going to exit? No. It doesn't mean it's a bad opportunity."

Indeed, in the first half of 2011, roughly $5.7 billion worth of deals have taken place in the online advertising sector, according to JEGI Transaction Data.

John Lambros, managing partner and head of digital media at investment bank GCA Savvian, believes that the longer consolidation takes, the more buying opportunities open up for private players and unusual suspects like Oracle, IBM or Accenture.

"There are a lot of companies in the sector," Lambros said. "The real question is how do the market leaders gain scale and mind share. I don't think the market has shaken itself out to say who are the winners and who are the losers."

Michael Cassidy, founder and chief executive of privately held, 10-year-old display ad platform Undertone agrees, saying the lower valuations and the absence of bellwether buyers have given him room to become an acquirer. His profitable company is in the market for acquisitions of up to $100 million, he said.

According to Ian Sigalow, a partner at venture capital firm Greycroft Partners, advertising technology companies focused on the demand-side of the equation -- selling directly to agencies and marketers -- have a much better chance of flourishing.

"At the end of the day, only a few platform companies will exist," said Sigalow.

During the first half of 2011, Internet ad revenues increased about 23 percent to $14.9 billion, according to the Interactive Advertising Bureau and PricewaterhouseCoopers. (Reporting by Jennifer Saba; Editing by Peter Lauria; Editing by Gary Hill)

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