среда, 29 февраля 2012 г.
VIC:Baker stable after food mixer accident
AAP General News (Australia)
08-12-2011
VIC:Baker stable after food mixer accident
MELBOURNE, Aug 12 AAP - A woman has been dragged into an industrial mixer when her
arm got caught in the machinery at her own bakery in Melbourne's southeast.
Paramedics found the woman's arm had wrapped tightly around the mixer and was snapped
in several places.
It took rescuers 30 minutes to free her after the accident around 12.50pm (AEST) on Friday.
At last report the 48-year-old woman was in a serious but stable condition in the Alfred
Hospital.
Paramedic Otto Bell said the woman was in agony but remained calm throughout her ordeal.
"She was, however, concerned about the hot dough (inside the machine) that was making
her rather uncomfortable," he said.
"We had to unwrap her by carrying her weight and moving her around in the direction
opposite to how she got tangled."
Mr Bell said blood flow to her hand had stopped and paramedics were unsure whether
the limb could be saved.
She's has several serious fractures and open wounds on her arm.
A Worksafe spokeswoman said it's believed the woman and her husband own and operate
the bakery in Police Rd, Springvale.
The spokeswoman said initial investigations suggested the mixer was not properly guarded.
AAP jcr/pmu/it
KEYWORD: ARM WRAP
� 2011 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.
Qld: Road safety summit hears plea from victim
AAP General News (Australia)
02-21-2006
Qld: Road safety summit hears plea from victim
A summit on Queensland's escalating road toll has heard a plea from a paraplegic accident
victim .. urging young drivers to be more responsible.
The two-day summit at state parliament was called after Queensland recorded its highest
toll for seven years.
20-year-old SETH AITKEN now uses his time to educate young drivers after he suffered
spinal injuries in a speeding accident two years ago .. which confined him to a wheelchair.
Premier PETER BEATTIE says …
East-West Digital News Launches Website Making Russian IT Markets Accessible to World
Wireless News
04-18-2011
East-West Digital News Launches Website Making Russian IT Markets Accessible to World
Type: News
While Russia has set for itself the strategic goal of modernization through technological development, to date the country remains largely terra incognita to many international players in the IT sector because of the general lack market data and business information in English.
East-West Digital News, a new website, is the first English- language resource bridging the information gaps across a spectrum of industries, making them more accessible to Western audiences for the first time.
The site overcomes the language barrier with clear, incisive English and provides comprehensive coverage of Russian Internet, telecom, digital TV, satellite, and software markets as well as relevant financial and legal information.
"In contrast with the abundance of such information available in Russian, no regular or sufficient source of information covering these industries existed in English," said East-West Digital News co- founder Adrien Henni, a former French journalist and analyst with a Western investment fund operating in Russia. "Partners, colleagues and I myself personally witnessed how numerous foreign players were restrained from developing their business in Russia or have postponed business initiatives due to lack of reliable information."
EWDN offers a range of content and a selection of industry events. It is also developing a variety of professional business tools designed to improve business communication between Russian and international market participants.
The site is the brainchild of a group of Western and Russian professionals with strong knowledge in the related fields as well as startup, financial and media experience assisted by a native English- speaking editorial staff.
The site cooperates with international and local consulting firms already present on the Russian IT markets such as PricewaterhouseCoopers, FaberNovel, IKS-Consulting and PMR Publications. Among EWDN's sources for market data and analysis are a number of groups, including the Russian Venture Company, a state- owned fund of funds dedicated to new projects, Russoft, the national association of software and outsourcing companies, the Public Opinion Foundation (FOM), a polling and consumer studies institute, and Superjob.ru, an HR and recruitment portal.
EWDN content draws on the best Russian language business and industry news sources such as MarchmontNews.com, the bilingual website on business news and events in the Russian regions, Oborot.ru, specializing in Russian e-commerce, TeleSputnik.ru, covering digital TV and satellite issues, and ICT Online, a portal dedicated to local IT markets.
More Information:
http://www.ewdn.com
((Comments on this story may be sent to newsdesk@closeupmedia.com))
Copyright 2011 Close-Up Media, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
n/a
WA:Barnett quadruples lead over Ripper: poll
AAP General News (Australia)
12-31-2010
WA:Barnett quadruples lead over Ripper: poll
PERTH, Dec 31 AAP - WA Premier Colin Barnett has almost quadrupled his lead over Labor's
Eric Ripper as preferred premier, the latest Newspoll shows.
Mr Barnett's once precarious Liberal-Nationals alliance government could easily win
an election with 58 per cent of the two-party-preferred vote - up six percentage points
since the September 2008 election, the survey published by The Australian on Friday shows.
Labor has slipped to just 42 per cent - down six points since the election - and its
primary vote is 29 per cent, down eight points. The Liberal-Nationals' primary vote is
at 49 per cent, up six points.
Sixty per cent of voters said they preferred Mr Barnett as premier, compared with just
16 per cent for Mr Ripper.
The polling between October and December coincided with a string of problems for Mr
Barnett, but the only impact was a small rise in his dissatisfaction rating, up three
points to 35 per cent since the previous survey.
Mr Ripper's dissatisfaction rating rose one point to 43 per cent.
AAP ih/rs
KEYWORD: NEWSPOLL
� 2010 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.
POLL10 BOWMAN QLD
AAP General News (Australia)
08-19-2010
POLL10 BOWMAN QLD
CANDIDATE PARTY VOTES % SWING
------------------------------------------------------
+LAMING, Andrew LNQ 0 00.00 00.00
KEOGH, David GRN 0 00.00 00.00
PETERS, Jenny ALP 0 00.00 00.00
CHIDGEY, Dave ON 0 00.00 00.00
WINDOLF, Karina FFP 0 00.00 00.00
KENT, John Aaron DLP 0 00.00 00.00
FORMAL 0 00.00 00.00
INFORMAL 0 00.00 00.00
TOTAL 0
Two Candidate Preferred:
Candidate1 XXX 0 00.00 00.00
Candidate2 XXX 0 00.00 00.00
2007 result: LP 37,886; FFP 2,405; GRN 4,475; ALP 36,207; ON 433; DEM 676; Formal
82,082; Informal 2,873; Total 84,955.
Notional swing needed 0.01 per cent.
KEYWORD: BOWMAN - Queensland. 91,892 enrolled. 00.00% counted.
� 2010 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.
Vic: Counsellors on hand as kids return to school without mates
AAP General News (Australia)
04-12-2010
Vic: Counsellors on hand as kids return to school without mates
Counsellors will be on hand for the more than 500 students returning from holidays
to a Melbourne primary school this morning .. who lost three classmates in an apparent
murder-suicide on the weekend.
Police are continuing their investigations in to the deaths of 37-year-old RAJESH "EDDIE"
OSBORNE .. and his three children .. 12-year-old ASIA .. 10-year-old JARIUS and seven-year-old
GRACE.
The three children were popular pupils at Roxburgh Park Primary School .. with Principal
IAIN GARFIRTH saying all three had qualified for an accelerated learning program.
* Those seeking support and information about suicide prevention can contact Lifeline
on 13 11 14 or SANE Helpline on 1800 18 SANE (7263).
AAP RTV jrd/tm/psm/
KEYWORD: HOME (MELBOURNE)
2010 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.
Main stories on today's 3AW news
AAP General News (Australia)
08-28-2009
Main stories on today's 3AW news
MELBOURNE, Aug 28, AAP - Main stories on today's 3AW 1200 news bulletin:
- The woman at the centre of rape allegations against a Carlton footballer is denying
she received $20,000 from police.
- A serial firebug remains at large following two more arsonist attacks on homes in
the Springvale area.
- A brutal bashing at Frankston has left a man fighting for his life.
- AFL captains have united in the fight against alcohol-fuelled violence.
- Health officials say doctors should not be concerned about the safety of the swine flu vaccine.
- Melbourne's creeks and tributaries are highly polluted according to the state opposition.
- Sport: AFL Hawks are training at Waverley Park preparing for their game against Essendon
without Lance Franklin.
- A motorbike's collided at Craigieburn with a woman and four children.
- Malcolm Turnbull giving more signs he will vote for an amended emissions carbon trading scheme.
- Traffic police alarmed at number of drink drivers caught in back streets of St Kilda.
- A Californian couple have been arrested after a 29-year-old woman told police she
was abducted when she was 11.
- Finance: All Ordinaries up to 4480, $A 84.07 US centre.
- AFL Tigers will have a light run against the Eagles tonight.
AAP szp
KEYWORD: MONITOR 3AW 1200
2009 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.
Vic: Crane truck driver injured when vehicle topples over
AAP General News (Australia)
04-20-2009
Vic: Crane truck driver injured when vehicle topples over
MELBOURNE, April 20 AAP - A crane truck driver has been seriously injured when his
vehicle tipped over at building site in Port Melbourne.
The man suffered suspected spinal injuries after the crane truck toppled over in Williamstown
Road, shortly before midday (AEST) on Monday, Ambulance Victoria said.
A spokeswoman said the victim, who's in his 50s, was taken to The Alfred hospital for treatment.
A WorkSafe Victoria spokesman said inspectors were on their way to the accident scene
but no further details were available.
AAP sjm/gfr/cdh
KEYWORD: CRANE
2009 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.
Fed: Emissions trading how it works
AAP General News (Australia)
12-15-2008
Fed: Emissions trading how it works
Emissions trading - how it works:
* Cap-and-trade trading mechanism sets a price for the right to generate carbon pollution.
* Initial starting price estimated at $25 per tonne of carbon, capped at $40 a tonne,
increasing annually by 5 per cent above inflation until 2014-15.
* Companies buy or are given free permits, which are tradable.
* Number of tradable carbon pollution permits will be equal to the cap, which is the
limit on aggregate annual emissions.
* No limit on emissions from individual sectors - firms or facilities and companies
are free to emit at whatever level they choose.
* Companies surrender permits for each tonne of carbon they emit.
* Scheme due to start in July 2010.
AAP rl/maur/tnf
KEYWORD: CLIMATE WORKS (FACTBOX)
2008 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.
Oly: US death is a tragedy but Beijing is a safe place - Rudd
AAP General News (Australia)
08-10-2008
Oly: US death is a tragedy but Beijing is a safe place - Rudd
BEIJING, Aug 10 AAP - Prime Minister Kevin Rudd has brushed aside suggestions the stabbing
murder of an American tourist in Beijing could be part of an anti-Western backlash during
the Olympic Games.
After attending church in the Chinese capital today, Mr Rudd said the death of the
US Olympic volleyball coach's father-in-law at a popular tourist landmark yesterday was
a tragedy.
But Beijing was generally a safe and welcoming place, he said.
"This is a very large city of 12 million people and in my experience of this city over
the years, foreigners have always been made to feel very welcome," he told reporters.
"And foreigners walking around the city have always been made to feel safe.
"This seems to be a tragic incident .. a tragic occurrence for the family, but beyond
that I couldn't comment on the details.
AAP ce/jmt
KEYWORD: OLY08 DEATH RUDD
2008 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.
Comcast/South Florida Upgrades Network
Wireless News
03-06-2008
Comcast/South Florida Upgrades Network
WIRELESS NEWS-March 6, 2008-Comcast/South Florida Upgrades Network (C)2008 10Meters - http://www.10meters.com
Comcast/South Florida said that it is again making major changes to its cable network to meet customer demand for new, advanced entertainment and information services.
Two significant infrastructure changes are currently underway:
- The addition of six new high definition channels and VOD choices.
- Network modifications to provide a platform for DOCSIS 3.0.
"We are undergoing a major upgrade to Comcast's South Florida cable system's infrastructure," said Regional Senior Vice President for South Florida, Filemon Lopez. "We are committed to giving our South Florida customers the latest technology available, and for that to happen we have to make constant improvements to our cable network."
In the last quarter of 2007 Comcast made modifications to its network bandwidth capabilities, increasing the available space on its system by one-third, providing an improved platform for these upgrades.
Comcast is in the process of increasing the number of high definition channels in the South Florida Region. The new channels are in the process of being added to cable distribution centers throughout Miami-Dade, Broward and Monroe Counties:
- Food Network HD -- Channel 414 - USA Network HD -- Channel 420 - History Channel HD -- Channel 422 - Discovery Channel HD -- Channel 424 - Animal Planet HD -- Channel 426 - Sci-Fi Network HD -- Channel 427
Additionally, expanded HD choices are offered through Comcast's On Demand via Channel 1 service.
"This is only phase one of our HD expansion plans this year. Customers have told us they value having a choice of HD programs instead of just having more HD channels. These additional channels and new Channel 1 On Demand selections allow customers to choose what HD programs or movies they want and view them at a time convenient for them," said Lopez.
Comcast/South Florida is also making modifications to its network to prepare for the roll out DOCSIS 3.0 in 2009. DOCSIS 3.0 is a new broadband system allowing for up to 100 Mbps (megabits per second) download speeds.
"This new service will revolutionize the way our customers use their computers. With all the emphasis being put on streaming video and gaming, DOCSIS 3.0 provides a virtual superhighway of internet speed for our customers that will be hard to match by any competitors in our market," said Lopez.
((Comments on this story may be sent to newsdesk@closeupmedia.com))
((Distributed via M2 Communications Ltd - http://www.m2.com))
(Copyright M2 Communications Ltd. 2008)
Race: Racing NSW callls on government to move Papal visit
AAP General News (Australia)
08-29-2007
Race: Racing NSW callls on government to move Papal visit
SYDNEY, Aug 29 AAP - Racing officials have called on the NSW government to find an
alternate venue for next year's Catholic World Youth Day celebrations, scheduled to be
held at Randwick Racecourse.
Peter V'Landys, chief executive of Racing NSW, said Randwick trainers could not suffer
the loss of consecutive spring carnivals with this year's carnival almost certainly in
jeopardy due to the outbreak of equine influenza (EI) in the state.
"The racing industry cannot take two massive hits in a row and we urge the government
to reconsider Randwick as the venue for World Youth Day," V'Landys said.
"It would be terrible for the trainers to lose the spring carnival again."
Randwick Racecourse is within in the exclusion zone around Centennial Park where EI
was detected in horses at the equestrian centre.
AAP cw/it/bwl
KEYWORD: STALLIONS YOUTH
2007 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.
Qld: Six Bandidos to face court over Rebels fire
AAP General News (Australia)
04-15-2007
Qld: Six Bandidos to face court over Rebels fire
BRISBANE, April 15 AAP - Six men, including five members of the Bandidos motorcycle
gang, will appear in a Brisbane court tomorrow, charged over the arson of a rival bikie
gang's clubhouse.
Superintendent Rob Weir, of the Organised Crime Squad, today said five Bandidos' members,
including current and former presidents, had been charged with setting fire to a Rebels
clubhouse on March 27.
A sixth person, an associate of the club members, also has been charged over the incident
and will also appear before Brisbane Magistrates Court.
The clubhouse at Albion, on Brisbane's inner-north will be demolished after the blaze
destroyed the entire top floor of the two-storey building and caused severe smoke and
water damage to the lower floor.
Inspector Weir said the arson was believed to be an act of retaliation following increasingly
violent clashes between the rival gangs.
The fire came after about 20 men from the Rebels and rival club the Bandidos were involved
in a fierce brawl near Caboolture, north of Brisbane, in February.
"We will be alleging that it was an act of retaliation and that was their purpose ...," he said.
The six people arrested yesterday are currently in police custody awaiting their court
appearance in Brisbane Magistrates Court tomorrow.
Their names have yet to be released but those charged include a 38-year-old Kulangoor
man, two men aged 34 and 47 from Chambers Flats, a 32-year-old Morayfield man, a 38-year-old
Stony Creek man and 45-year-old from Regents Park.
However, Inspector Weir would not rule out further charges and said the recently established
Task Force Hydra would continue to investigate Queensland's outlaw motorcycle gangs.
"I can assure the public that Task Force Hydra will continue to investigate, most vigorously,
this group and other outlaw motorcycle groups," he said.
AAP ews/jt/cdh
KEYWORD: BIKIES NIGHTLEAD
2007 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.
Diary Events for Thursday, December 14, 2006
AAP General News (Australia)
12-14-2006
Diary Events for Thursday, December 14, 2006
EVENTS LISTED IN CHRONOLOGICAL ORDER AND LOCAL TIME UNLESS OTHERWISE STATED:
ADELAIDE
No items listed
BRISBANE
1030 - Dutton Park ferry farewell hosted by University of Queensland vice-chancellor Professor
John Hay. Under the poinciana trees opposite the ferry terminal on Sir William McGregor
Drive at UQ's St Lucia campus. Shirley Glaister 3365 1931.
1315 - Westpac AGM. Journalist/photographers must register 10 minutes prior to meeting.
Ballroom Le Grand, Sofitel Brisbane, 249 Turbot St. Marketlink Services 1800 804 255.
1735-1830 - Climate change address by entrepreneur, author and philanthropist, Jamie McIntyre.
Arrive to register 1710, Brisbane Chifley at Lennons, 66 Queen Street Mall. Rhiannon at
World Solutions Institute 02 9361 4500.
CANBERRA
1015 - Royal Australian Air Force F/A Hornet will conduct a flypast in support of the
Australian Defence Force Academy 2006 Graduation Parade, Australian Defence Force Academy,
Northcott Drive, Campbell, ACT. Contact: Jennifer Reilly 02 6268 8623 or 0411 403 489.
1100 - Raiders General Manager Don Furner and players Alan Tongue and Lincoln Withers
will unveil a new billboard and 2007 home and away playing strips, Raiders HQ Billboard,
Corner Haydon Drive and Battye Streets, Bruce, ACT. Contact: Ben Pollack 02 6253 3515.
All day - Political cartoon exhibition - Behind the Lines - opens at the National Museum
of Australia. Contact: 6208 5338.
DARWIN
No items listed.
HOBART
No items listed.
PERTH
No items listed.
MELBOURNE
1000-1230 - UK energy expert Dr Gill Owen (Warwick University Business School, UK), special
guest at The Australian Business Council of Sustainable Energy (BCSE) workshop. 60 Leicester
Street, Carlton. Contact: Amy Kean 9349 3077, 0403 247 212 or Jim Downey 0414 547 217.
1030 - Paediatrician Susie Gibb to discuss research on bed wetting and teenagers. Rendezvous
Hotel, 328 Flinders Street (between Queen & Elizabeth streets). Contact: Margot Gorski
9533 6783, 0412 393 394.
2030 - Women Out Front - fundraiser for the Olivia Newton-John Cancer Centre, hosted by
Julia Zemiro (Rockwiz) and performers including Grace Knight and the McClymont Sisters,
The Gershwin Room, The Esplanade Hotel, St Kilda. Contact: Jodie Harrison 0425 754370
or Lillina Thoms 0405 180 815.
SYDNEY
0930 - Federal Health Minister Tony Abbott and Member for Macarthur Pat Farmer to begin
a 24-hour `vertical marathon' of Sydney Tower to raise money for Ovarian Cancer Research.
Sydney Tower, Pitt St Mall entrance. Contact: Carolyn Grant 9368 7277 or 0407 898 727.
1000 - Youth Fusion project launch - a forum which aims to promote social cohesion and
oppose extremism by empowering Muslim youth to speak out. FAIR Centre, Suite 3, 36 Queen
St, Auburn. Contact: Andrew Coombe 0438 777 145.
1000 - Continues all day, until January 28 - A Bird In The Hand exhibition of paintings
by Tony Clark and John Wolseley to begin. Level 2 Contemporary Project Space, Art Gallery
of NSW, Art Gallery Road, The Domain, Sydney. Contact: Claire Martin 9225 1791 or 0412
268 320.
1030 - Story embargoed for Friday 4am (AEDT) - Australian Science Media Centre national
media briefing on 2006: A Year of Drought and an Opportunity for Change, Bureau of Meteorology,
Level 16, 300 Elizabeth Street, Sydney. Contact: Peta Newbold 08 8207 7415 or 0410 496
800 or Susannah Eliott 0424 676 136.
1130 - Aboriginal Employment Strategy school-based trainee program announcement graduation
and expansion. AES head office, 1-9 Glebe Point Road, Glebe. Contact: Phil Lockyer 0427
938 908.
1400 - The funeral of a homeless man murdered in Sydney Square near St Andrew's Cathedral
last week. St Andrew's Anglican Cathedral, Sydney. Contact: Margaret Rodgers 0411 692
499 or 9265 1507.
1600 - Public forum on: Do we need protection from law? Lecture theatre 67.104 (McKinnon
Building), University of Wollongong. Contact: Rick Mohr 4267 1694 or 4221 4632.
1800 - Professor Jerald Greenberg from Macquarie University to give a free lecture on
management, justice and employee theft. Mason Theatre (Building E7B) at Macquarie University.
Contact: Ben Searle 9850 8066 or Greg Walsh 9850 7383.
SPORT
GOLF - Gow & Lonard Charity Golf Day -
Morning field play available, Lakes Golf Course, Eastlakes
CRICKET - 3rd test - to December 18 -
Australia v England, Perth
SOCCER - 2006/07 A-League Season Draw -
Round 17 - to December 17
2000 - Sydney FC v Perth Glory FC, Aussie Std
TENNIS - Australian Open training camp - to December 14
Melbourne Park
ATHLETICS - Zatopek Classic -
Olympic Park, Melbourne
SURFING - 2006 Foster's Men's WCT -
Rip Curl Pipeline Masters, Oahu, Hawaii - to December 20
SURFING - 2006 ASP Women's WCT -
Billabong Pro, Honolua Bay, Maui-Hawaii - to December 20
GALLOPS-
Wagga
Bendigo
Townsville
Geraldton
New Zealand
TROTS -
Penrith
Geelong
Gold Coast
Maryborough
Young
GREYHOUNDS -
Dapto
Sandown
Albion Park
Angle Park
Bendigo
Maitland
Wangaratta
Hobart
AAP RTV kaj/goc/cdh/wz
KEYWORD: DIARY EVENTS THURSDAY DECEMBER 14, 2006
2006 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.
Fed: Beazley urges caution on China FTA
AAP General News (Australia)
08-07-2006
Fed: Beazley urges caution on China FTA
CANBERRA, Aug 7 AAP - Federal Labor Leader Kim Beazley has urged caution in negotiating
a free trade agreement with China amid reports that federal cabinet is split over elements
of the proposed deal.
Industry Minister Ian Macfarlane and Finance Minister Nick Minchin are challenging
Deputy Prime Minister and Trade Minister Mark Vaile's plan for a broad agreement with
China, The Australian newspaper reported today.
The ministers were nervous about abandoning tariffs to protect the automotive and clothing
industries from cheap Chinese imports, the report said.
Mr Vaile has asked for all industry sectors to be part of the next round of negotiations
with China.
Mr Beazley today urged slow and careful progress towards a deal, saying it should not
jeopardise Australian manufacturing.
"We have a good relationship with China and an excellent trading relationship, and
an FTA would not necessarily add that much to it," he told ABC radio.
"We must not do it in an environment in which there is wreckage in Australian manufacturing
industry, and there is a very severe danger of that."
Mr Beazley said his preference was for multilateral rather than bilateral trade deals.
"I have supported one or two bilateral agreements in the past but I think it's more
important that we get the multilateral agenda up," he said.
"As far as China is concerned, we want to keep that good relationship with China but
on that free trade agreement with them we should hasten very slowly."
The government maintains heavy protection for the motor vehicle and clothing sectors,
although tariff rates are set to fall from 2010.
AAP rp/grc
KEYWORD: CHINA BEAZLEY
) 2006 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.
Democrat wants to bar U.S. Internet premiums
International Herald Tribune
03-03-2006
Internet network operators in the United States would be prohibited from charging companies for faster delivery of their content to consumers or favoring some content providers over others under a new proposal from a Senate Democrat.The senator, Ron Wyden of Oregon, said in advance of his bill's introduction Thursday that he wanted to ease growing fears that open Internet access could be blocked or compromised by the Bell phone carriers or cable operators, possibly creating tiers of service for delivering content to consumers, much the way the post office charges more for overnight mail delivery than for regular delivery.Consumer groups and Internet companies like Google and Amazon contend that any move by the network operators to impose fees for premium delivery service would harm Web sites unwilling to pay for faster delivery. The Wyden legislation, the Internet Nondiscrimination Act of 2006, aims to prohibit network operators from assessing charges that give some content providers better access than others or blocking subscribers from accessing content.''You best compete by letting every company play on a level field, but these proposals would tilt the field,'' Wyden said of the plans discussed by some network operators.He added that his bill would prevent network operators from giving preferential treatment to affiliated companies. Time Warner Cable, he said, should not be able to give other Time Warner companies better access to the network than their rivals.The bill more squarely deals with the concerns of consumer groups than a broader bill proposed last summer by a Republican senator, John Ensign of Nevada. That bill, which has won support from 16 Republican senators, would prevent Internet service providers from blocking access, but would largely leave network operators to manage their own networks, including potentially charging content providers for a premium service.The Federal Communications Commission has largely stood on the sidelines as this debate has evolved. Though the commission has said it supports the principle of open, undifferentiated access to the networks, it has not taken any regulatory action. Phone and cable companies are of the view that they should be able to offer Internet companies the option of paying for faster delivery of their content.
2006 Copyright International Herald Tribune. http://www.iht.com
понедельник, 27 февраля 2012 г.
Fed: Nanny tax breaks to be reviewed
AAP General News (Australia)
02-10-2005
Fed: Nanny tax breaks to be reviewed
CANBERRA, Feb 10 AAP - A benefit giving tax breaks to families with nannies is to be
reviewed, federal Family and Community Services Minister Kay Patterson said today.
The program, part of the childcare benefit, gives tax rebates to parents who can't
use regular childcare services.
The In-Home Care benefit, barely eight months old, would be reviewed to see if it could
be improved, Senator Patterson said.
Some 4,325 families receive the benefit, but many nanny agencies claim the funds directly.
AAP shh/sb/lb/de
KEYWORD: CHILDCARE
2005 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.
Emergia selects Nortel Networks to extend optical network into Europe.
M2 PRESSWIRE-14 May 2002-NORTEL NETWORKS: Emergia selects Nortel Networks to extend optical network into Europe (C)1994-2002 M2 COMMUNICATIONS LTD
RDATE:05142002
MADRID, Spain -- Emergia Hispana S.A., part of the Telefonica Group, has selected Nortel Networks* [NYSE/TSE: NT] to provide optical networking equipment and services. This will be the first optical networking project for Emergia in Europe, and will encompass extension of its U.S. and Latin American infrastructure into Europe. The first phase is expected to initially connect London, Lisbon and Madrid by June 2002.
Nortel Networks was previously selected by Emergia (December 1999) to build Latin America's first terabit optical network across that continent, and to connect Telefonica's networks in Latin America to the United States and the Caribbean. "We are very satisfied with the quality and service we continue to receive from Nortel Networks," said Jacinto Diaz, chief executive officer, Telefonica International Wholesale Services. "The completion and operational service of Emergia's Latin American ring has been a success, and we expect to continue with that success at the new expansion of our network in Europe."
Emergia's high capacity fiber optic ring, which provides broadband connectivity between Latin America, the United States and Europe, has been integrated into Telefonica International Wholesale Services, a business unit of Telefonica Group that provides wholesale communications services at a global level. Telefonica International Wholesale Services has an active presence in more than 250 cities in 20 countries; a network of more than 200,000 kilometers of fiber optics and 1,500 metropolitan rings; an international backbone; and more than 150 direct connections with international carriers. "Our next generation optical network equipment is redefining the economics of networking, driving substantial capital and operational expenditure savings for our customers," said Jordi Casamitjana, managing director, Iberia, Nortel Networks. "Our leading DWDM transport solutions offer service providers like Emergia the lowest cost-per-connected bit, while significantly enhancing time-to-market," Casamitjana said. "We have been working with Telefonica for more than 10 years, supporting its efforts to provide the most effective services to its customers."
This new deal strengthens the relationship between Nortel Networks and the Telefonica group, not only in Spain, but also in Latin America and Europe. In addition to optical equipment, Nortel Networks has been selected this year to supply Telefonica M?viles with radio access equipment for build out of its third generation (3G) Universal Mobile Telecommunications System (UMTS) networks in Spain and Germany. Emergia plans to use Nortel Networks OPTera* Connect DX optical switch and OPTera Long Haul 1600 Optical Line System to integrate with Nortel Networks existing optical footprint with Emergia. This integrated, 10 gigabits-per-second (Gbps), SDH based solution features the industry's highest capacity, open optical interfaces for maximum flexibility, and optimal interconnection to Internet routers and switches. Nortel Networks will also provide its Preside* network management solution for end-to-end network visibility, provisioning and maintenance of Emergia's optical network. OPTera Connect DX enables service providers and carriers to increase network capacity, provide flexible services, improve connection and network management capabilities, and enhance network reliability. OPTera Connect DX is the most widely deployed 10 Gbps optical switch in the world with over 5,000 network elements in service. OPTera Long Haul 1600 is a widely deployed DWDM transport platform - with over 12,000 network elements installed worldwide - that enables service providers to optimize their networks through data native interfaces and flexible add-drop capabilities. Nortel Networks is an industry leader and innovator focused on transforming how the world communicates and exchanges information. The company is supplying its service provider and enterprise customers with communications technology and infrastructure to enable value-added IP data, voice and multimedia services spanning Metro and Enterprise Networks, Wireless Networks and Optical Long Haul Networks. As a global company, Nortel Networks does business in more than 150 countries. More information about Nortel Networks can be found on the Web at www.nortelnetworks.com.
Certain information included in this press release is forward-looking and is subject to important risks and uncertainties. The results or events predicted in these statements may differ materially from actual results or events. Factors which could cause results or events to differ from current expectations include, among other things: the severity and duration of the industry adjustment; the sufficiency of our restructuring activities, including the potential for higher actual costs to be incurred in connection with restructuring actions compared to the estimated costs of such actions; fluctuations in operating results and general industry, economic and market conditions and growth rates; the ability to recruit and retain qualified employees; fluctuations in cash flow, the level of outstanding debt and debt ratings; the ability to make acquisitions and/or integrate the operations and technologies of acquired businesses in an effective manner; the impact of rapid technological and market change; the impact of price and product competition; international growth and global economic conditions, particularly in emerging markets and including interest rate and currency exchange rate fluctuations; the impact of rationalization in the telecommunications industry; the dependence on new product development; the uncertainties of the Internet; the impact of the credit risks of our customers and the impact of increased provision of customer financing and commitments; stock market volatility; the entrance into an increased number of supply, turnkey, and outsourcing contracts which contain delivery, installation, and performance provisions, which, if not met, could result in the payment of substantial penalties or liquidated damages; the ability to obtain timely, adequate and reasonably priced component parts from suppliers and internal manufacturing capacity; the future success of our strategic alliances; and the adverse resolution of litigation. For additional information with respect to certain of these and other factors, see the reports filed by Nortel Networks with the United States Securities and Exchange Commission. Unless otherwise required by applicable securities laws, Nortel Networks disclaims any intention or obligation to update or revise any forward-looking statements, whether as a result of new information, future events or otherwise.
* Nortel Networks, the Nortel Networks logo, the Globemark, OPTera and Preside are trademarks of Nortel Networks.
CONTACT: Ben Roome, Nortel Networks Tel: +44 (0)1628 433 113 e-mail: benroome@nortelnetworks.com Jose-Luis Menoyo, Nortel Networks Tel: +34 91 709 4567 e-mail: menoyo@nortelnetworks.com
((M2 Communications Ltd disclaims all liability for information provided within M2 PressWIRE. Data prepared by named party/parties. Further information on M2 PressWIRE can be obtained at http://www.presswire.net on the world wide web. Inquiries to info@m2.com)).
Food Companies Visit Classroom to Score Bigger Piece of Consumer Pie.
Case of Fruit
Americans keep getting busier and busier, and baking is fast becoming a lost art form. That was bad news for Rochester, NY-based Agrilink Foods, makers of the Comstock and Wilderness fruit pie filling brands.
In the summer of 1999, the manufacturer joined forces with its main competitor in the fruit filling category - Knouse Co.'s Lucky Leaf brand - in an effort to increase baking's appeal to a younger demographic. Sweetening the initiative was an educational kit for middle and high school teachers, cooked up by the Green Bay, Wisc-based Goltz Seering Agency (GSA). The goal: to get kids excited about baking, thus preventing the extinction of fruit filling as a pantry staple.
"We targeted teens with hopes of inspiring future consumers to take an interest in cooking and baking," says Janet Bonkowski, PR director at Goltz Seering. "Parents are baking less and less, so it's not a skill that's getting passed down."
In the Test Kitchen
Homework was paramount in crafting a classroom campaign that wouldn't flop with kids and teachers. After amassing a pile of secondary research about consumers' waning baking habits, the GSA team conducted a feasibility study (involving phone interviews with educators) to determine whether or not a fruit- filled curriculum would even fly. The target, in this case, was "family and consumer sciences teachers" (hint: that's "Home-Ec" to us old fogies).
"We asked teachers, 'If this kit were available, would you order it? Use it? When would you need it?" Bonkowski says. Just as they suspected, teachers were starved for good classroom content - but wary of heavily branded promotional materials.
In phase two of its research, the team amassed a focus group of half a dozen educators in the Midwest (budget and time constraints prevented the agency from tapping a more geographically diverse sample). Through this exercise, the team learned that a well-timed campaign would have to launch not during back-to- school season, but rather in January - at the time when teachers were submitting their budget requests for the following school year.
The focus group also helped fine-tune the ingredients in the classroom kit. A poster idea, for example, was eliminated from the mix as an unnecessary expense, while more dollars were allocated to top-notch video production and kid talent. Teachers also warned that graphics had to be "down with it" and video segments needed to be shortened, from the originally-slated 15 minutes each to 10 minutes or less. Also, content that smelled even remotely hokey would be tuned out by kids.
Back to School
In January 2000, Goltz Seering produced 5,000 kits - each of which included seven lesson plans, with handouts corresponding to related videotape segments. Segments such as "From the Grower to the Grocer" and "Snack Attack" (focusing on after school snacks) highlighted not only basic baking techniques and recipe ideas, but also information about how fruits are grown, harvested, transported and manufactured. (Did you know that Michigan produces 75% of all cherries used to make fruit filling?)
The lesson plan booklet also encouraged teachers to visit the sponsors' Web sites ( http://www.piefilling.com and http://www.knouse.com ) for additional recipe ideas.
Rather than mailing the kits cold, however, the agency team warmed up its act by dispatching a teaser postcard to 15,000 consumer science teachers nationwide, inviting them to order the educational kit via phone or email. "There are actually about 30,000 teachers at this course level in the country, but we could only go out to half of them, for budgetary reasons," Bonkowski says. "Names were selected randomly and chosen from about 21 states where pie filling had a strong sales presence."
Order forms for the kits also were posted on the Comstock, Wilderness and Lucky Leaf Web sites. And banner ads promoting the kits appeared in some of teachers' favorite online haunts, including David Levin's Learning@ Web sites ( http://www.ecnet/users/gdlevin/home.html ) and the Home and Family Internet Resource Guide ( http://www.homenfamily.com ).
A La Mode
Did the campaign make the grade? By December 2000, nearly 3,700 kits (roughly 74% of the print run) had been requested and distributed to teachers. Moreover, 309 teachers returned evaluation forms that had been included in the kits. Of those respondents, 86% cited the material as "excellent or very good" and 95% said they'd use the kit again. To date, the kit has been distributed and used in 42 states.
Has the campaign truly swayed kids' attitudes toward baking? Or will ovens nationwide continue to collect dust? Only time will tell.
(Bonkowski, 920/435-9800)
What's That Smell?
Any time the scent of marketing wafts close to school grounds, parents and educators start to get nervous. As such, a soft sell approach was in order. The partnership between Agrilink and Knouse proved critical, because it made the campaign more about fruit filling and baking - and not about the brand names. "We tried to be sensitive about not promoting the brands too much, because we didn't want teachers to feel like they were being used as a marketing vehicle. Instead we focused on promoting the category. The approach was similar to the way a commodities group like cattle ranchers or milk processors would collaborate," Bonkowski says.
Hard Pressed
Kids and teachers dug the fruit filling angle, but journalists did not. A release about the campaign issued to trade press reporters yielded zilch in the way of coverage (PRN not withstanding). Fortunately, the media was not a primary campaign target.
Campaign Ingredients
Budget: $250,000 ($20,900 for research;$157,825 for program materials/development; $21,700 for promotion; $5,300 for evaluation/analysis; $19,000 for shipping/fulfillment to date))
Key client contacts: David Anderson and Melissa Tillmann (Comstock/Wilderness); Lee Esser, director of marketing and trade relations (Lucky Leaf)
Key Goltz Seering staffers: AE Debbie Craemer; principal Laural Virtues; PR director Janet Bonkowski; creative director David Richards; writer/producer Marti Gillespie; senior art director Marilee Foeltanz; purchasing coordinator Tracy Sorensen.
Secret ingredient: To energize its team about fruit fillings after acquiring the Comstock account, Goltz Seering held a "cook-off" event, challenging its staffers to compete in an internal recipe contest. Clients came in to judge the "fruits of their labor."
воскресенье, 26 февраля 2012 г.
New accelerated wear apparatus will test artificial joints more quickly.
In its search for a more rapid screening device for artificial joints, the US National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) has joined forces with four US companies.
Those involved in the Orthopaedic Accelerated Wear Resistance Consortium include Biomet Inc and Zimmer Inc, both of Warsaw, Indiana and Johnson & Johnson Professional Inc, Raynham, Massachusetts and Osteonics Corp, Allendale, New Jersey.
Innovative devices have long been necessary to speed up the screening of new materials for orthopaedic implants, says NIST. Currently, it takes about six months for conventional equipment to simulate the natural wear of artificial hips. Such a long testing period means higher R&D costs for companies which are trying to bring improved products to the maket.
The machine developed by the Consortium, under the umbrella of cooperative research and development agreements, can evaluate a diverse combination of materials, produces debris and changes in surface texture resembling wear that implants have in the body and can complete a screening in about one week.
The next step, say NIST researchers, is to use the machine to study how potential, alternative implant materials, other than the standard ultrahigh molecular weight polyethylene paired with a cobalt/chromium alloy, withstand the effects of motion, environment and a variety of stress-loading cycles that represent the physical routines of different people.
For further information, contact: John Tesk, A143 Polymer Building, National Institute of Standards and Technology, Gaithersburg, MD 20899-0001, USA; tel: +1-301-975-6799; e-mail: john.tesk@nist.gov; Internet address: http://www.nist.gov/public_affairs/news.htm
XS, Inc. Secures $20 Million For Acceleration of Agriculture E-commerce Site; Morgan Stanley Dean Witter Private Equity Provides Financing.
RESEARCH TRIANGLE PARK, N.C.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Nov. 18, 1999--
XS, Inc., parent company of XSAg.com, an e-commerce exchange site for trading agricultural products, today announced that it has entered into definitive agreements with Morgan Stanley Dean Witter Private Equity for a $20 million round of financing to fund the rapid expansion of the company. Launched in January, XSAg.com is expected to process $100 million in transactions next year.
"The agricultural industry recognizes the need to have an efficient market for production inputs," said XS, Inc. founder and Chief Executive Officer Fulton Breen. Morgan Stanley Dean Witter Venture Partners ("MSDW Venture Partners") is the lead investor of the $20 million in venture capital being provided to XS.
"We're extremely pleased to be backing XS, Inc.," said Guy de Chazal, Managing Director of MSDW Venture Partners. "As Internet-based business-to-business e-commerce has become a reality, Morgan Stanley Dean Witter Private Equity is investing in companies that are leading this revolution in their respective industries. We are confident that XS will become the e-commerce leader for the American farmer's purchases of agricultural products."
XSAg.com has experienced dramatic growth through the summer and fall. It has expanded from facilitating agricultural chemical transactions to include seeds, and will soon be offering equipment and parts, fertilizer and veterinary products. XSAg.com simplifies the buying and selling process by enabling manufacturers, distributors, dealers and growers to conduct secure transactions on its site in total anonymity throughout the entire process. Transaction sizes have ranged from $2,000 to $150,000.
Proceeds of Financing To Fund Site Expansion, Marketing
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The majority of the $20 million will be invested in the continued evolution and expansion of the Company's virtual marketplace, and accelerating awareness, understanding and enthusiasm for XSAg.com among the 350,000 targeted American producers and distribution channel members.
Marketing plans include advertising, direct marketing and public relations campaigns that deliver the company's strategic positioning to its core audiences. "We must effectively communicate to the American farmer that XSAg.com is much more than the simple site facilitating the buying and selling of agricultural inputs. The American agricultural industry is increasingly being threatened by lower cost producers of commodities. Just as an exchange floor has brought about efficient global trading of these commodities, XSAg.com allows users to put our exchange floor to work for them buying or selling agricultural inputs," Mr. Breen explained.
"By using the efficient trading floor model, growers can take control of their costs and by extension, their lifestyle. The grower is much more motivated than a corporate purchasing agent to adopt Internet technology to save money. The grower is the CEO of his company. He's experiencing depressed crop prices, he understands the auction model and he must cut costs to stay in business," he said.
Morgan Stanley Dean Witter Venture Partners is part of the private equity business of Morgan Stanley Dean Witter (NYSE: MWD), a preeminent global financial services firm. Since its inception 15 years ago, Venture Partners has invested over $450 million in more than 90 companies in the United States. Venture Partners manages a group of funds that invest in emerging growth companies within the information technology and healthcare industries primarily in the United States.
Morgan Stanley Dean Witter Capital Partners
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Morgan Stanley Dean Witter Capital Partners is part of the private equity business of Morgan Stanley Dean Witter (NYSE: MWD), a preeminent global financial services firm. Since its inception 15 years ago, Capital Partners has invested over $3 billion of equity investments in more than 60 companies around the world. Capital Partners manages a group of funds that invest in companies operating in a broad range of industries including telecommunications, financial services, healthcare, technology, energy and chemicals on a global basis.
XS, Inc.
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Using proprietary software, XSAg.com provides a secure auction site for manufacturers, distributors and dealers to sell chemicals, seeds and other agricultural products to farmers across the nation at discounts of up to 30 percent or more. XSAg.com acts as a neutral market maker - bringing buyers and sellers together - and provides a seamless e-commerce fulfillment operation, including discounted freight, credit facilities and transfer of funds. For information regarding the corporation visit www.xsinc.com.
3G to Propel Smartphones' Share in Czech Republic, Pyramid Finds.(Report)
In 2010, smartphones' share of new handsets sold was 16 percent, but this proportion will grow to 51 percent by 2015 as operators in the Czech Republic continue to widen their devices portfolio and offer attractive device subsidies, according to a new report from Pyramid Research (www.pyr.com).
Czech Republic: Mobile Data and Mobile Broadband Pull Market Out of Nosedive offers a precise profile of the country's telecommunications, media and technology sectors based on proprietary data from Pyramid's research in the market. It provides detailed competitive analysis of both the fixed and mobile sectors, tracks the market shares of technologies and services and monitors the introduction and spread of new technologies.
Download an excerpt or purchase the report here: http://www.pyramidresearch.com/store/CIRCZECHREPUBLIC.htm?sc=PRN060211_CIRCZH
Despite a declining year in the telecom market in 2010, Pyramid expects telecom service revenue to grow at a CAGR of 1.4 percent. "The data segments of both the mobile and fixed markets will show the strongest growth in the forecast period, increasing its share of the revenue pie," says Sylwia Boguszewska, Analyst at Pyramid. "Pyramid expects mobile data, in particular mobile broadband, to offer an eye-catching revenue potential and generate a cumulative revenue of Kc145.8 billion ($7.4 billion) and Kc47.4 billion ($2.4 billion), respectively, over the forecast period," she adds. This growth will be driven by operator initiatives to provide hardware and software to clients at a minimal cost.
Pyramid expects 3G subscriptions to almost double in the forecast period, driven by operator investment in extending 3G coverage for the Czech population. Currently, Vodafone covers 48 percent, T-Mobile covers 45 percent, and Telefonica covers 43 percent of the population. "The operators also decided to join forces and signed network-sharing agreements" says Boguszewska. "In February 2011, T-Mobile and Telefonica O2 signed a 3G network-sharing agreement for the provision of high-speed mobile Internet to areas without broadband coverage," she adds. "Mobile operators should monetize their investments in their network upgrades to take advantage of the boost in smartphone adoption and deliver relevant services and applications to encourage data usage," indicates Boguszewska.
Czech Republic: Mobile Data and Mobile Broadband Pull Market Out of Nosedive is part of Pyramid Research's Europe Country Intelligence Report Series and is priced at $990. Download the excerpt or purchase the report here: http://www.pyramidresearch.com/store/CIRCZECHREPUBLIC.htm?sc=PRN060211_CIRCZH.
Keywords: Electronics, Mobile Broadband, Networks, Pyramid Research, Software, Technology, Telecommunications.
This article was prepared by Telecommunications Business editors from staff and other reports. Copyright 2011, Telecommunications Business via VerticalNews.com.
Out-of-State Customers Bring Increased Risk.(OpEd)
Byline: Laura Marquez-Garrett, Attorney, Foster Pepper PLLC
As state regulators push to expand the reach of their consumer protection laws, financial service providers who do business with customers from other states face increasing risk. This holds true even when a transaction actually takes place in the state where the company is based.
Consider the following scenarios:
Example one - Resident of State A travels to State B and gets a consumer loan. Should the company providing the loan be subject to regulation in State A, even though the transaction took place in State B?
Example two - Resident of State A obtains consumer financial services from a company in State B via the Internet. The company is licensed by State B to provide the services, but is not licensed by State A. Should State A be allowed to regulate the transaction according to its own laws?
For financial service providers targeted by regulators from other states, there are several key issues to bear in mind.
First, don't assume that another state can take legal action. Regulators are quick to assert personal jurisdiction over out-of-state entities and their principals, but this type of jurisdiction is not a creature of state statutes. There is a due process requirement in the Fourteenth Amendment.
Similarly, even if a case for jurisdiction can be made against a company, don't assume that the same holds true for its owners, shareholders or employees. There is ample authority for the proposition that jurisdiction over an individual cannot be based solely on jurisdiction over a company.
In cases where a consumer physically travels to another state, a company and its principals may have particularly strong jurisdiction defenses.
Second, don't assume that subject matter jurisdiction exists. Does the statute being cited authorize out-of-state regulation? Or, instead, is it replete with references to state courts and certain location requirements, such that interpreting it to apply to out-of-state entities might render the statute, as a whole, nonsensical?
Washington state regulators, for example, sometimes rely on the Check Cashers and Sellers Act. Yet many of its provisions appear to contain explicit and implicit in-state limitations.
Some states have taken steps to address potential shortcomings in their laws, which, in current form, are often incapable of addressing the realities of multistate Internet transactions. In the absence of recent and relevant amendments, state statutes should be scrutinized closely.
Third, consider whether constitutional concerns regarding the regulation of interstate commerce are implicated. These issues were recently considered by the Tenth Circuit in Quik Payday Inc. v. Stork and the Seventh Circuit in Midwest Title Loans v. Mills.
Both cases involved amendments to the state Uniform Consumer Credit Codes. The amendments purported to expand the ability of state regulators to reach lenders in other states by redefining what it means for a loan to be made "in" a state.
In the case of Quik Payday, the Tenth Circuit determined that Kansas regulators could require companies transacting with state residents over the Internet to obtain a Kansas license. But the court expressly declined to address the issue of ongoing regulation, including interest rates, repayment schedules, and loan renewals.
With Midwest Title, the Seventh Circuit determined that state laws could not be imposed on commerce occurring wholly outside of Indiana.
Be careful about drawing any conclusions, though. While useful for framing potential concerns, both decisions were fact-specific and there is still considerable room for debate.
These are just some of the first lines of defense to consider when regulators cross state boundaries. Early consideration is critical to enable strong bargaining positions from the start.
Lastly, and as regulators are all too well aware, defending against enforcement attempts-regardless of the strength of those defenses-can result in costs exceeding settlement. Accordingly, open dialogue is key to a cost-efficient resolution.
Google Buzz Settlement: Privacy Audits For 20 Years.(Reprint)
Reprinted with permission from FindLaw.com
Google has entered into a settlement with the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) to address perceived privacy violations relating to the social network, Google Buzz.
The Google Buzz settlement requires Google to implement a comprehensive privacy program and to be subject to independent privacy audits for the next 20 years.
Why could this end up being a big deal?
Google found itself in the cross-hairs of the FTC with respect to alleged deceptive tactics and violations of Google's privacy practices having to do with Google Buzz.
According to the FTC, Google had given its Gmail email users the impression that they could choose if they wanted to join the network, while the options for declining Buzz actually were ineffective.
In addition, the FTC asserted that Google's controls for limiting the sharing of personal information were confusing and difficult to implement. For example, Buzz contained a feature that allowed it to publicly list a user's frequent email contacts; while this feature could be turned off, the default setting was to leave it on.
The Google Buzz settlement does serve notice to other companies that the FTC is watching and checking to ascertain whether privacy promises in policies actually are adhered to in practice.
However, the penalty as to Google is not too severe. Yes. Google needs to develop a comprehensive privacy policy, and it will be subject to independent privacy auditing for 20 years. But it is in Google's best interests anyway to have sound privacy policies and practices.
Creating an atmosphere of security and safety for the personal information of customers equates to good business. Users will tend to gravitate over time to places on the Internet where they know that their private information will not be compromised.
The views expressed in this column are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of the author's law firm or its individual partners.
This article is for general information and does not include full legal analysis of the matters presented. It should not be construed or relied upon as legal advice or legal opinion on any specific facts or circumstances. The description of the results of any specific case or transaction contained herein does not mean or suggest that similar results can or could be obtained in any other matter. Each legal matter should be considered to be unique and subject to varying results. The invitation to contact the authors or attorneys in our firm is not a solicitation to provide professional services and should not be construed as a statement as to any availability to perform legal services in any jurisdiction in which such attorney is not permitted to practice.
Duane Morris LLP, a full-service law firm with more than 700 attorneys in 24 offices in the United States and internationally, offers innovative solutions to the legal and business challenges presented by today's evolving global markets. Duane Morris LLP, a full-service law firm with more than 700 attorneys in 24 offices in the United States and internationally, offers innovative solutions to the legal and business challenges presented by today's evolving global markets. The Duane Morris Institute provides training workshops for HR professionals, in-house counsel, benefits administrators and senior managers.
Mr Eric Sinrod
Duane Morris LLP
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Philadelphia
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суббота, 25 февраля 2012 г.
Internet Marketing Guru Jeff Johnson Offers Free Internet Marketing Training.
Internet marketing expert Jeff Johnson is about to open the doors to his brand new Super Affiliate Coaching Club. To support the launch of his new coaching club, Jeff Johnson has released a series of free internet marketing training videos.
Anyone can have access to these training videos and there is absolutely no cost. But there is a catch: the doors to Jeff Johnson's Super Affiliate Coaching Club will open on Wednesday, March 30, 2011. And as soon as the doors to this private coaching club open, the free internet marketing training videos will come down.
Each of the 6 training videos last from 30 to 40 minutes in length. One of the videos is a presentation on "Market Research" It is the exact presentation that Jeff Johnson gave to his private clients as part of his $2000 Traffic Voodoo membership program. The presentation is 25 minutes in length and it details "The Jeff Johnson Way" of doing Market Research.
According to Mr. Johnson, "Both newbie and advanced marketers have to do market research before they can a market a product as an affiliate, or before they market their own products" Jeff Johnson believe that Market Research is 'The' critical component that most marketers get wrong. But after watching this 25 minute Market Research presentation, both new and advanced marketers will have a much better understanding of the profit potential of every market they are targeting.
As part of the free training, Mr. Johnson reveals what he calls his "Traffic Getting Blog Blueprint" Jeff Johnson has become a master at generating free traffic with blogs and in this video he will reveal how he does it, step-by-step.
In this free internet marketing training Jeff Johnson also includes a section of how to generate free traffic and leads by using Youtube as part of a marketing arsenal. As with the other video tutorials, Mr. Johnson goes into step-by-step detail.
As mentioned above, this is a very limited opportunity. There is no cost to watch the videos, but they will be coming down very soon.
To get more information on how to immediately access Jeff Johnson's Free Internet Marketing Training Videos, visit www.webbusinessresearch.com
Related LinksWeb Business Research, Strategies & Case Studies.
Keywords: Advertising, Internet, Marketing, Multimedia, Online.
This article was prepared by Marketing Weekly News editors from staff and other reports. Copyright 2011, Marketing Weekly News via VerticalNews.com.
HUD MAKES $35 MILLION AVAILABLE TO HOUSING AUTHORITIES TO CREATE NEW EDUCATIONAL, JOB TRAINING FACILITIES FOR RESIDENTS NEW PROGRAM ILLUSTRATES OBAMA ADMINISTRATION'S COMMITMENT TO EDUCATION REFORM.
WASHINGTON -- The following information was released by the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development:
The U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) announced today that it is offering $35 million to public housing authorities to develop facilities that will provide early childhood and adult education, and/or job training programs for public housing residents. The new Capital Fund Education and Training Community Facilities Program (CFCF) further illustrates the Obama Administration's commitment to link affordable housing with education reform and early childhood education. The Notice of Funding for CFCF was posted on Grants.gov today here.
"Education offers a path to a better life," said HUD Secretary Shaun Donovan. "This new program will provide public housing authorities the necessary resources to give their residents educational and enrichment opportunities that will open doors to boundless opportunities."
Housing authorities have until January 14, 2011, to apply for CFCF funding to construct new facilities, rehabilitate existing structures or purchase facilities that will provide early childhood and adult education, and/or job training programs for public housing residents based on an identified need. The funding can also be used to revitalize an existing community center that will offer comprehensive integrated services to help public housing residents achieve better educational and economic outcomes resulting in long-term economic self-sufficiency. While use of the facility is primarily for public housing residents, families in the community may utilize and benefit from the new centers and their resources.
The maximum grant award is $5 million. Applicants must "leverage" or have financial commitments of at least five percent of the grant amount and identify at least one education or training supportive service provider, such as a community college, that will partner with the housing authority to provide the services required. Agencies that are awarded funding are given four years to have an operating facility.
CFCF, which is being funded though a special set-aside from HUD's Capital Fund Program, adds to the Obama Administration's commitment to including educational components to its housing programs. Both the Choice Neighborhoods (CN) and HOPE VI Revitalization Programs, that are currently taking applications, require providing early childhood educational opportunities a priority.
The Choice Neighborhoods initiative aligns quality educational opportunities with community development resources for long-term, economically viable neighborhood transformation. Now in its pilot year, the competitive program will award up to $65 million to public housing authorities, local governments, nonprofit organizations, and for profit developers that apply jointly with a public entity to extend neighborhood transformation efforts beyond public and/or assisted housing, to link housing revitalization with education reform and early childhood education. CN builds on the success of the HOPE VI Revitalization Program that has for nearly 20 years transformed neighborhoods with distressed public housing into revitalized mixed-income communities.
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HUD's mission is to create strong, sustainable, inclusive communities and quality affordable homes for all. HUD is working to strengthen the housing market to bolster the economy and protect consumers; meet the need for quality affordable rental homes: utilize housing as a platform for improving quality of life; build inclusive and sustainable communities free from discrimination; and transform the way HUD does business. More information about HUD and its programs is available on the Internet at www.hud.gov and espanol.hud.gov.
In praise of cultural imperialism? (effects of globalization on culture)
The gates of the world are groaning shut. From marble balconies and over the airwaves, demagogues decry new risks to ancient cultures and traditional values. Satellites, the Internet, and jumbo jets carry the contagion. To many people, "foreign" has become a synonym for "danger."
Of course, now is not the first time in history that chants and anthems of nationalism have been heard. But the tide of nationalism sweeping the world today is unique. For it comes in reaction to a countervailing global alternative that - for the first time in history - is clearly something more than the crackpot dream of visionaries. It is also the first time in history that virtually every individual at every level of society can sense the impact of international changes. They can see and hear it in their media, taste it in their food, and sense it in the products that they buy. Even more visceral and threatening to those who fear these changes is the growth of a global labor pool that during the next decade will absorb nearly 2 billion workers from emerging markets, a pool that currently includes close to 1 billion unemployed and under-employed workers in those markets alone. These people will be working for a fraction of what their counterparts in developed nations earn and will be only marginally less productive. You are either someone who is threatened by this change or someone who will profit from it, but it is almost impossible to conceive of a significant group that will remain untouched by it.
Globalization has economic roots and political consequences, but it also has brought into focus the power of culture in this global environment - the power to bind and to divide in a time when the tensions between integration and separation tug at every issue that is relevant to international relations.
The impact of globalization on culture and the impact of culture on globalization merit discussion. The homogenizing influences of globalization that are most often condemned by the new nationalists and by cultural romanticists are actually positive; globalization promotes integration and the removal not only of cultural barriers but of many of the negative dimensions of culture. Globalization is a vital step toward both a more stable world and better lives for the people in it.
Furthermore, these issues have serious implications for American foreign policy. For the United States, a central objective of an Information Age foreign policy must be to win the battle of the world's information flows, dominating the airwaves as Great Britain once ruled the seas.
CULTURE AND CONFLICT
Culture is not static; it grows out of a systematically encouraged reverence for selected customs and habits. Indeed, Webster's Third New International Dictionary defines culture as the "total pattern of human behavior and its products embodied in speech, action, and artifacts and dependent upon man's capacity for learning and transmitting knowledge to succeeding generations." Language, religion, political and legal systems, and social customs are the legacies of victors and marketers and reflect the judgment of the marketplace of ideas throughout popular history. They might also rightly be seen as living artifacts, bits and pieces carried forward through the years on currents of indoctrination, popular acceptance, and unthinking adherence to old ways. Culture is used by the organizers of society - politicians, theologians, academics, and families - to impose and ensure order, the rudiments of which change over time as need dictates. It is less often acknowledged as the means of justifying inhumanity and warfare. Nonetheless, even a casual examination of the history of conflict explains well why Samuel Huntington, in his The Clash of Civilizations, expects conflict along cultural fault lines, which is precisely where conflict so often erupts. Even worse is that cultural differences are often sanctified by their links to the mystical roots of culture, be they spiritual or historical. Consequently, a threat to one's culture becomes a threat to one's God or one's ancestors and, therefore, to one's core identity. This inflammatory formula has been used to justify many of humanity's worst acts.
Cultural conflicts can be placed into three broad categories: religious warfare, ethnic conflict, and conflict between "cultural cousins," which amounts to historical animosity between cultures that may be similar in some respects but still have significant differences that have been used to justify conflict over issues of proximity, such as resource demands or simple greed.
Religion-based conflicts occur between Christians and Muslims, Christians and Jews, Muslims and Jews, Hindus and Muslims, Sufis and Sunis, Protestants and Catholics, and so forth. Cultural conflicts that spring from ethnic (and in some cases religious) differences include those between Chinese and Vietnamese, Chinese and Japanese, Chinese and Malays, Normans and Saxons, Slavs and Turks, Armenians and Azerbaijanis, Armenians and Turks, Turks and Greeks, Russians and Chechens, Serbs and Bosnians, Hutus and Tutsis, blacks and Afrikaners, blacks and whites, and Persians and Arabs. Conflicts between "cultural cousins" over resources or territory have occurred between Britain and France, France and Germany, Libya and Egypt, and many others.
Another category that might be included in our taxonomy is quasi-cultural conflict. This conflict is primarily ideological and is not deeply enough rooted in tradition to fit within standard definitions of culture, yet it still exhibits most if not all of the characteristics of other cultural clashes. The best example here is the Cold War itself, a conflict between political cultures that was portrayed by its combatants in broader cultural terms: "godless communists" versus "corrupt capitalists." During this conflict, differences regarding the role of the individual within the state and over the distribution of income produced a "clash of civilizations" that had a relatively recent origin.
Finally, as a reminder of the toll that such conflicts take, one need only look at the 20th century's genocides. In each one, leaders used culture to fuel the passions of their armies and other minions and to justify their actions among their people. One million Armenians; tens of millions of Russians; 10 million Jews, Gypsies, and homosexuals; 3 million Cambodians; and hundreds of thousands of Bosnians, Rwandans, and Timorese all were the victims of "culture" - whether it was ethnic, religious, ideological, tribal, or nationalistic in its origins. To be sure, they fell victim to other agendas as well. But the provocative elements of culture were to these accompanying agendas as Joseph Goebbels was to Adolf Hitler - an enabler and perhaps the most insidious accomplice. Historians can, of course, find examples from across the ages of "superior" cultures eradicating "inferior" opponents - in the American West, among the native tribes of the Americas and Africa, during the Inquisition, and during the expansion of virtually every empire.
SATELLITES AS CULTURAL DEATH STARS
Critics of globalization argue that the process will lead to a stripping away of identity and a blandly uniform, Orwellian world. On a planet of 6 billion people, this is, of course, an impossibility. More importantly, the decline of cultural distinctions may be a measure of the progress of civilization, a tangible sign of enhanced communications and understanding. Successful multicultural societies, be they nations, federations, or other conglomerations of closely interrelated states, discern those aspects of culture that do not threaten union, stability, or prosperity (such as food, holidays, rituals, and music) and allow them to flourish. But they counteract or eradicate the more subversive elements of culture (exclusionary aspects of religion, language, and political/ideological beliefs). History shows that bridging cultural gaps successfully and serving as a home to diverse peoples requires certain social structures, laws, and institutions that transcend culture. Furthermore, the history of a number of ongoing experiments in multiculturalism, such as in the European Union, India, South Africa, and the United States, suggests that workable, if not perfected, integrative models exist. Each is built on the idea that tolerance is crucial to social well-being, and each at times has been threatened by both intolerance and a heightened emphasis on cultural distinctions. The greater public good warrants eliminating those cultural characteristics that promote conflict or prevent harmony, even as less-divisive, more personally observed cultural distinctions are celebrated and preserved.
The realization of such integrative models on a global scale is impossible in the near term. It will take centuries. Nor can it be achieved purely through rational decisions geared toward implementing carefully considered policies and programs. Rather, current trends that fall under the broad definitional umbrella of "globalization" are accelerating a process that has taken place throughout history as discrete groups have become familiar with one another, allied, and commingled - ultimately becoming more alike. Inevitably, the United States has taken the lead in this transformation; it is the "indispensable nation" in the management of global affairs and the leading producer of information products and services in these, the early years of the Information Age.
The drivers of today's rapid globalization are improving methods and systems of international transportation, devising revolutionary and innovative information technologies and services, and dominating the international commerce in services and ideas. Their impact affects lifestyles, religion, language, and every other component of culture.
Much has been written about the role of information technologies and services in this process. Today, 15 major U.S. telecommunications companies, including giants like Motorola, Loral Space & Communications, and Teledesic (a joint project of Microsoft's Bill Gates and cellular pioneer Craig McCaw), offer competing plans that will encircle the globe with a constellation of satellites and will enable anyone anywhere to communicate instantly with anyone elsewhere without an established telecommunications infrastructure on the ground near either the sender or the recipient. (Loral puts the cost of such a call at around $3 per minute.)
Technology is not only transforming the world; it is creating its own metaphors as well. Satellites carrying television signals now enable people on opposite sides of the globe to be exposed regularly to a wide range of cultural stimuli. Russian viewers are hooked on Latin soap operas, and Middle Eastern leaders have cited CNN as a prime source for even local news. The Internet is an increasingly global phenomenon with active development under way on every continent.
The United States dominates this global traffic in information and ideas. American music, American movies, American television, and American software are so dominant, so sought after, and so visible that they are now available literally everywhere on the Earth. They influence the tastes, lives, and aspirations of virtually every nation. In some, they are viewed as corrupting.
France and Canada have both passed laws to prohibit the satellite dissemination of foreign - meaning American - content across their borders and into the homes of their citizens. Not surprisingly, in many other countries fundamentalist Iran, communist China, and the closely managed society of Singapore - central governments have aggressively sought to restrict the software and programming that reach their citizens. Their explicit objective is to keep out American and other alien political views, mores, and, as it is called in some parts of the Middle East, "news pollution." In these countries, the control of new media that give previously closed or controlled societies virtually unlimited access to the outside world is a high priority. Singapore has sought to filter out certain things that are available over the Internet - essentially processing all information to eliminate pornography. China has set up a "Central Leading Group" under the State Planning Commission and the direct supervision of a vice premier to establish a similar system that will exclude more than just what might be considered obscene.
These governments are the heirs of King Canute, the infamous monarch who set his throne at the sea's edge and commanded the waves to go backward. The Soviet Union fell in part because a closed society cannot compete in the Information Age. These countries will fare no better. They need look no further than their own elites to know this. In China, while satellite dishes are technically against the law, approximately one in five citizens of Beijing has access to television programming via a dish, and almost half of the people of Guangzhou have access to satellite-delivered programming. Singapore, the leading entrepot of Southeast Asia, is a hub in a global network of business centers in which the lives of the elites are virtually identical. Business leaders in Buenos Aires, Frankfurt, Hong Kong, Johannesburg, Istanbul, Los Angeles, Mexico City, Moscow, New Delhi, New York, Paris, Rome, Santiago, Seoul, Singapore, Tel Aviv, and Tokyo all read the same newspapers, wear the same suits, drive the same cars, eat the same food, fly the same airlines, stay in the same hotels, and listen to the same music. While the people of their countries remain divided by culture, they have realized that to compete in the global marketplace they must conform to the culture of that marketplace.
The global marketplace is being institutionalized through the creation of a series of multilateral entities that establish common rules for international commerce. If capital is to flow freely, disclosure rules must be the same, settlement procedures consistent, and redress transparent. If goods are also to move unimpeded, tariff laws must be consistent, customs standards harmonized, and product safety and labeling standards brought into line. And if people are to move easily from deal to deal, air transport agreements need to be established, immigration controls standardized, and commercial laws harmonized. In many ways, business is the primary engine driving globalization, but it would be a mistake to conclude that the implications of globalization will be limited primarily to the commercial arena.
In politics, for example, as international organizations arise to coordinate policy among many nations on global issues such as trade, the environment, health, development, and crisis management, a community of international bureaucrats is emerging. These players are as comfortable operating in the international environment as they would be at home, and the organizations that they represent in effect establish global standards and expectations - facilitating the progress of globalization.
The community of nations increasingly accepts that such supranational entities are demanded by the exigencies of the times; with that acceptance also comes a recognition that the principal symbol of national identity - namely sovereignty - must be partially ceded to those entities. The United States in particular seems to have problems with this trend. For example, the United States was involved in creating the World Trade Organization and now undermines its effectiveness by arbitrarily withdrawing from its efforts to blunt the effects of the Helms-Burton act. Still, the recognition that sometimes there are interests greater than national interests is a crucial step on the path to a more peaceful, prosperous world.
TOWARD A GLOBAL CULTURE
It is in the general interest of the United States to encourage the development of a world in which the fault lines separating nations are bridged by shared interests. And it is in the economic and political interests of the United States to ensure that if the world is moving toward a common language, it be English; that if the world is moving toward common telecommunications, safety, and quality standards, they be American; that if the world is becoming linked by television, radio, and music, the programming be American; and that if common values are being developed, they be values with which Americans are comfortable.
These are not simply idle aspirations. English is linking the world. American information technologies and services are at the cutting edge of those that are enabling globalization. Access to the largest economy in the world - America's - is the primary carrot leading other nations to open their markets.
Indeed, just as the United States is the world's sole remaining military superpower, so is it the world's only information superpower. While Japan has become quite competitive in the manufacture of components integral to information systems, it has had a negligible impact as a manufacturer of software or as a force behind the technological revolution. Europe has failed on both fronts. Consequently, the United States holds a position of advantage at the moment and for the foreseeable future.
Some find the idea that Americans would systematically seek to promote their culture to be unattractive. They are concerned that it implies a sense of superiority on Americans' part or that it makes an uncomfortable value judgment. But the realpolitik of the Information Age is that setting technological standards, defining software standards, producing the most popular information products, and leading in the related development of the global trade in services are as essential to the well-being of any would-be leader as once were the resources needed to support empire or industry.
The economic stakes are immense considering the enormous investments that will be made over the next 10 years in the world's information infrastructure. The U.S. government estimates that telecommunications investment in Latin America alone during this period will top $150 billion. China will spend a similar amount, as will the member states of the Association of South East Asian Nations. In fact, the market for telecommunications services is expected to top $1 trillion by the turn of the century.
During the decade ahead, not only will enormous sums be directed toward the establishment of the global network of networks that the Clinton administration has dubbed the "Global Information Infrastructure," but those sums will pay for the foundations of a system that will dictate decades of future choices about upgrades, systems standards, software purchases, and services. At the same time, new national and international laws will be written, and they will determine how smoothly information products and services may flow from one market to another. Will steps be taken to ensure that Internet commerce remains truly free? What decisions will be made about the encryption of data that will impact not only the security of information markets but the free flow of ideas and the rights of individuals in the Information Age? Will governments allow the democratizing promise of the Internet to enable virtually anyone with a computer to contact anyone else?
The establishment of the Global Information Infrastructure is not just an enormous commercial opportunity for the world's information leader. The development of the rules governing that infrastructure will shape the nature of global politics decisively, either enhancing or undermining freedoms, thereby either speeding or slowing the pace of integration, understanding, and tolerance worldwide. The nature of individual and national relations will be transformed. Those wires and constellations of satellites and invisible beams of electronic signals crisscrossing the globe will literally form the fabric of future civilization.
Consequently, it could not be more strategically crucial that the United States do whatever is in its power to shape the development of that infrastructure, the rules governing it, and the information traversing it. Moreover, even if much of this process of developing what we might call the "infosphere" is left to the marketplace (as it should be), governments will control crucial elements of it. Governments will award many of the biggest infrastructure development contracts offered in the next decade: Some will assist their national companies in trying to win those contracts, and state officials will meet to decide the trade rules that will govern international traffic in the world's telecommunications markets, the global regulatory environment, encryption standards, privacy standards, intellectual property protections, and basic equipment standards. Governments will determine whether these are open or closed markets and what portion of development dollars will be targeted at bringing the benefits of these technologies to the poor to help counteract information inequities. Already some government intercessions into this marketplace have failed. Notably, Japan's efforts to shape the development of high-definition television standards sent that nation down an analog path in what turned out to be a digital race. Yet there are many places where there is an important role for governments and where the United States should have a carefully considered overarching policy and an aggressive stance to match.
EXPORTING THE AMERICAN MODEL
Many observers contend that it is distasteful to use the opportunities created by the global information revolution to promote American culture over others, but that kind of relativism is as dangerous as it is wrong. American culture is fundamentally different from indigenous cultures in so many other locales. American culture is an amalgam of influences and approaches from around the world. It is melded - consciously in many cases - into a social medium that allows individual freedoms and cultures to thrive. Recognizing this, Americans should not shy away from doing that which is so clearly in their economic, political, and security interests - and so clearly in the interests of the world at large. The United States should not hesitate to promote its values. In an effort to be polite or politic, Americans should not deny the fact that of all the nations in the history of the world, theirs is the most just, the most tolerant, the most willing to constantly reassess and improve itself, and the best model for the future. At the same time, Americans should not fall under the spell of those like Singapore's Lee Kuan Yew and Malaysia's Mahathir bin-Mohamad, who argue that there is "an Asian way," one that non-Asians should not judge and that should be allowed to dictate the course of events for all those operating in that comer of the world. This argument amounts to self-interested political rhetoric. Good and evil, better and worse coexist in this world. There are absolutes, and there are political, economic, and moral costs associated with failing to recognize this fact.
Repression is not defensible whether the tradition from which it springs is Confucian, Judeo-Christian, or Zoroastrian. The repressed individual still suffers, as does society, and there are consequences for the global community. Real costs accrue in terms of constrained human creativity, delayed market development, the diversion of assets to enforce repression, the failure of repressive societies to adapt well to the rapidly changing global environment, and the dislocations, struggles, and instability that result from these and other factors. Americans should promote their vision for the world, because failing to do so or taking a "live and let live" stance is ceding the process to the not-always-beneficial actions of others. Using the tools of the Information Age to do so is perhaps the most peaceful and powerful means of advancing American interests.
If Americans now live in a world in which ideas can be effectively exported and media delivery systems are powerful, they must recognize that the nature of those ideas and the control of those systems are matters with which they should be deeply concerned. Is it a threat to U.S. interests, to regional peace, to American markets, and to the United States's ability to lead if foreign leaders adopt models that promote separatism and the cultural fault lines that threaten stability? It certainly is. Relativism is a veil behind which those who shun scrutiny can hide. Whether Americans accept all the arguments of Huntington or not, they must recognize that the greater the cultural value gaps in the world, the more likely it is that conflict will ensue. The critical prerequisite for gaining the optimum benefits of global integration is to understand which cultural attributes can and should be tolerated - and, indeed, promoted - and which are the fissures that will become fault lines.
It is also crucial that the United States recognize its limitations. Americans can have more influence than others, but they cannot assure every outcome. Rather, the concerted effort to shape the development of the Global Information Infrastructure and the ideas that flow within it should be seen merely as a single component of a well-rounded foreign and security policy. (And since it is not likely to be an initiative that is widely liked or admired or enhanced through explicit promotion, it is not an approach that should be part of American public diplomacy efforts.)
Of course, implementing such an approach is not going to be easy in an America that is wracked by the reaction to and the backlash against globalization. Today, the extreme left and right wings of both major political parties are united in a new isolationist alliance. This alliance has put the brakes on 60 years of expanding free trade, has focused on the threats rather than the promise posed by such critical new relationships as those with China and other key emerging markets, and has seized on every available opportunity to disengage from the world or to undermine U.S. abilities to engage or lead effectively. It will take a committed effort by the president and cooperation from leaders on Capitol Hill to overcome the political opposition of the economic nationalists and neoisolationists. It will not happen if those in leadership positions aim simply to take the path of least political resistance or to rest on the accomplishments of the recent past. In a time of partisan bickering, when the emphasis of top officials has shifted from governing to politicking, there is a risk that America will fail to rise to these challenges. While the Clinton administration has broken important ground in developing a Global Information Infrastructure initiative and in dealing with the future of the Internet, encryption issues, and intellectual property concerns, these efforts are underfunded, sometimes managed to suit political rather than strategic objectives, shortsighted (particularly the steps concerning encryption, in which rapid changes and the demands of the marketplace are being overlooked), and poorly coordinated. At the same time, some of America's most powerful tools of engagement - which come in the form of new trade initiatives - seemingly have been shelved. This problem is most clearly manifested in the fact that fasttrack negotiating-authority approval has not yet been granted and in the real possibility that Congress will refuse to grant such approval before the turn of the century.
The Clinton administration and its successors must carefully consider the long-term implications of globalization, such as the impact of the rise of new markets on America's economic influence and how America can maintain its leadership role. Aspects of American culture will play a critical role in helping to ensure the continuation of that leadership. American cultural diversity gives the United States resources and potential links with virtually every market and every major power in the world. America's emphasis on the individual ensures that American innovation will continue to outstrip that of other nations. Working in its favor is the fact that the "Pax Americana" is a phenomenon of the early years of globalization and that the U.S. ascendancy to undisputed leadership came at the same time as the establishment of international institutions such as the United Nations, the World Bank, and the International Monetary Fund; thus, for all the challenges of adjustment, the United States has more leadership experience than any other nation in this new global environment. Also, though some may decry Americans' emphasis on "newness" and suggest that it is a result of their lack of an extensive history, it also represents a healthy lack of cultural "baggage": It is this emphasis on newness that puts the United States in the best position to deal with a world in which the rapidity of change is perhaps the greatest strategic challenge of all.
IDENTITY WITHOUT CULTURE
The opportunity lies before us as Americans. The United States is in a position not only to lead in the 21st century as the dominant power of the Information Age but to do so by breaking down the barriers that divide nations - and groups within nations - and by building ties that create an ever greater reservoir of shared interests among an ever larger community of peoples. Those who look at the post-Cold War era and see the "clash of civilizations" see only one possibility. They overlook the great strides in integration that have united the world's billions. They discount the factors that have led to global consolidation and the reality that those factors grow in power with each new day of the global era - integration is a trend that builds upon itself. They argue that America should prepare for the conflicts that may come in this interim period without arguing that it should accelerate the arrival of a new era with every means at its disposal.
Certainly, it is naive to expect broad success in avoiding future conflicts among cultures. But we now have tools at our disposal to diminish the disparities that will fuel some of those conflicts. While we should prepare for conflict, we should also remember that it is not mere idealism that demands that we work for integration and in support of a unifying global culture ensuring individual rights and enhancing international stability: It is also the ultimate realpolitik, the ultimate act of healthy self-interest.
Allowing ourselves to be swept up in the backlash against globalization would undermine America's ability to advance its self-interests. Americans must recognize that those interests and the issues pertaining to them reach across the disciplines of economics, politics, science, and culture. An interdisciplinary approach to international policymaking is thus required. We must also fully understand the new tools at our disposal. We must understand the profound importance and nature of the emerging infosphere - and its potential as a giant organic culture processor, democratic empowerer, universal connector, and ultimate communicator. Moreover, it is not enough to create and implement the right policies using the new tools at our disposal. Policymakers must better communicate the promise of this new world and make clear America's stake in that promise and the role Americans must play to achieve success. The United States does not face a simple choice between integration or separation, engagement or withdrawal. Rather, the choice is between leading a more peaceful world or being held hostage to events in a more volatile and violent one.
Want to Know More?
The Clash of Civilizations and the Remarking of the World Order, by Samuel Huntington (New York: Simon & Schuster, 1996), is the hot book of the moment on the topic of culture and its impact on international relations. It supports the thesis that culture is the great divider among peoples but fails to acknowledge the cultural consolidations that have brought the world into the few big blocks described in the book. It also fails to postulate a positive agenda for the United States in this new world, overlooks the powerful technological forces that might work to help bridge cultural divides, and succumbs to the notion that we live in a post-ideological era, which is absurd given that the ideological fault-line issue of the past century - how to justly distribute income - is more pressing and challenging today than ever before. Another recent work of note on the question of culture's impact on the evolution of the global community is Benjamin Barber's Jihad versus McWorld (New York: Times Books, 1995), in which he argues that world conflict increasingly will center on tensions between local values and globalizing forces. For theories if how cultural foundations may affect a society's political and economic development, see Trust: The Social Virtues and the Creation of Prosperity (New York: Free Press, 1995) in which Francis Fukuyama ties a society's ability to create complex organizations such as multinational corporations to the level of trust found in individual relationships within the culture. Finally, Seymour Martin Lipset's American Exceptionalism (New York: W. W. Norton, 1996) deals with the relationship between national and cultural identity in the United States. Just as enlightening, however, would be to invest in a subscription to Wired magazine or to devote an hour a week to visiting international Web sites using any of the awkward, clumsy, and frustrating network navigation software packages on the market. Whatever their defects, they cannot help but amaze even the cynical. You can find links to some examples of these Web sites on FOREIGN POLICY'S home page at www.foreignpolicy.com.
AVID ROTHKOPF is managing director of Kissinger Associates and an adjunct professor of international affairs at Columbia University. He served as a senior official in the U.S. Department of Commerce during the first term of the Clinton administration.