Tuesday, November 13, 2007

Yahoo bows to congressional pressure and scrutiny

I'm working on a story for tomorrow's air about Yahoo's settlement with jailed Chinese dissidents who accused Yahoo of helping the Chinese government torture them when the Internet company turned over private user information that identified them.

If you have strong thots about it, ping me.

The terms of the settlement is private, so there isn't much details. Biggest question is why Yahoo would have settled since this opens the floogates to similar suits, which will happen unless Yahoo changes its disclosure practices when Chinese officials come knocking with supoena in hand.

Morton Sklar, attorney of World Organization for Human Rights, which filed the lawsuit on behalf of the jailed dissidents and their families, said the families settled so there was hope of securing their release.

"The settlement provides more immediate help for the detainees and their families, but also provides a precedent making clear that U.S. companies have to do much more than just follow the orders of their host governments; that they have to look to U.S. laws and U.S. human rights standards when they make their decisions abroad," Sklar said.

Besides compensating the families, Yahoo will provide a humanitarian relief fund to support other political dissidents and their families, according to a Yahoo statement.

"After meeting with the families, it was clear to me what we had to do to make this right for them, for Yahoo, and for the future," Chief Executive Jerry Yang said in the statement. "Yahoo was founded on the idea that the free exchange of information can fundamentally change how people lead their lives, conduct their business, and interact with their governments. We are committed to making sure our actions match our values around the world."

Monday, November 12, 2007

A tasty approach to a plunging dollar


From Boing boing:



Dollar devaluation for dummies

"To rectify the oversupply of American Dollars, Florian removed one from circulation -- by eating it. The harsh realities of currency valuation can be hard to swallow."

China confirms toys contained date-rape drug

There was yet another toy recall last week. Now, a Chinese safety watchdog confirms the problem.

As a parent, this makes me totally paranoid about toy shopping. And Christmas is coming up. My son is making lists already. I'm glancing at it, wondering what wooden toy equivalent would be suitable. Of course, then you have to worry about toxic paint!

Are you going to shop differently this holiday season? Let me know.


BEIJING - China's safety watchdog confirmed Saturday that toy beads recalled in the United States and Australia after sickening children contain a substance that can turn into the "date-rape" drug after ingested.


The toys, coated with the industrial chemical 1,4-butanediol, were made by the Wangqi Product Factory in Shenzhen, a city just over the border from Hong Kong, the General Administration of Quality Supervision, Inspection, and Quarantine said in a statement.

When ingested, the chemical metabolizes into the "date-rape" drug gamma hydroxy butyrate, also known as GHB, which can cause breathing problems, loss of consciousness, seizures, drowsiness, coma and death.

Millions of units of the popular toys, which are sold as Aqua Dots in the United States and as Bindeez in Australia, were recalled in those countries as well as Britain, Malaysia, Singapore and elsewhere this past week after children began falling sick from swallowing the toy's bead-like parts.

In the latest case, the Aqua Dots or Bindeez were supposed to have been coated with nontoxic 1,5-pentanediol, a chemical commonly used in computer printer ink. But that chemical generally sells for three or four times the price of the toxic compound found on the tainted toys, 1,4-butanediol.

Americans leaving their island

This is heartening news: more US students are venturing abroad to study.

I studied in a small town outside of Madrid for a year, as a part of an study abroad program. I picked up Spanish, traveled around Europe and most importantly, learned a lot about myself.

There were 30 of us on the program from the various UC campuses. I was one of two Asian Americans. Spain, then in the early 90s, didn't have much immigration. So everywhere I went, I was "la China", the Chinese chick. It began a lot of interesting discussions with Spaniards about race, ethnicity, what it means to be an American.

This is a crucial time for Americans to be abroad, when so much of the world despises our foreign policy.



By JUSTIN POPE, AP Education Writer Mon Nov 12, 7:41 AM ET

Growing numbers of U.S. colleges and universities are sending more students abroad for international study opportunities, and to a wider range of countries.
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More than 223,000 U.S. students studied abroad during the 2005-2006 academic year, up 8.5 percent from the year before, according to the latest annual survey by the Institute of International Education, being issued Monday. The number who get academic credit for study abroad is up 150 percent over the past decade.

As recently as five years ago, although nearly every college was talking about internationalization, many were struggling to develop programs and make them feasible for students, said Allan Goodman, IIE president and CEO.

"A lot of people had the words but not the plan," he said. "In the last five years, more people have put the beef in the sandwich."

The report also contains encouraging news for U.S. universities that depend on a steady stream of foreign students, particularly to fill graduate programs. Enrollment by international students rose 3 percent last academic year to about 583,000 — the first significant jump since 2001-2002. More encouragingly, first-time enrollments rose 10 percent.

Goodman attributed the increase to an easing of visa problems and aggressive recruiting efforts by American institutions.

He said there is capacity for much more growth.

"Half of all the international students that come here go to about 150 schools," he said. "We have about 4,000 altogether. We have an enormous capacity to expand, and almost no other country can do that."

The United Kingdom was again the leading destination for U.S. students, with 32,109 students enrolled there. But that number was flat from the year before, and other traditionally popular destinations like Italy, France and Spain saw only small gains.

Study in Asia, however, rose 26 percent. The number of U.S. students in Latin America rose 14 percent and 31 percent in the Middle East.

Forty campuses sent more than 1,000 students abroad. New York University sent the most (2,809) followed by Michigan State and the University of Texas-Austin. The University of Southern California was the largest host school for international students.

Much of the growth in study abroad for U.S. students is coming from short-term programs, in which students may get a taste of a foreign culture but less of a true immersion experience. IIE reports that 53 percent of study abroad now takes place in short-term programs, lasting a summer, a January term, or less than 8 weeks. Only 5.5 percent is in long-term programs, lasting longer than one semester.

Still, Goodman says a taste of life in a foreign culture is helpful, and students often return for another program or after graduation.

Wednesday, November 7, 2007

PayPal in Singapore

PayPal is betting that its online payment service will take off in Singapore.

Singapore maybe, but it'll likely face problems in places like China and Vietnam. You need high Internet penetration for one and user trust. When you order something in China, it gets personally delivered to your hotel or home -- then you hand the delivery dude or gal your wad of cash. Consumers there don't trust giving information over the phone or online.

Any bets on how long it'll take to change consumer behavior in China?


The Business Times Singapore

November 7, 2007 Wednesday

PayPal opens international HQ in S'pore;
It will also set up new technology development centre

BYLINE: Ong Boon Kiat

SECTION: SINGAPORE

LENGTH: 391 words

PAYPAL, the worldwide online payments system, is setting up its new international headquarters in Singapore. The company yesterday also announced that it would establish a new technology development centre here, which will require more than 200 new staff members over five years.

The moves will swell the size of PayPal's 30-strong Neil Road office, which it shares with its parent, the online auction firm eBay. The office was set up last year.

PayPal chief technology officer Scott Thompson said yesterday that PayPal had been attracted by the talent pool and business environment in Singapore. Establishing an international HQ, he added, reflected the increasingly global nature of PayPal's business.

PayPal took in $470US million in revenue in its third financial quarter, with 43 per cent of it coming from outside the US. Next year, international revenue is expected to surpass US revenue, he said. As international HQ, the Singapore facility will co-ordinate PayPal's business entities outside the US and Canada, Mr Thompson said.

The facility will also house a new technology development centre, its second in Asia after Chennai. Like the Indian facility, it will contribute to the development of PayPal's global payment products.

The perils of eating in the global village

Interesting story in the Baltimore Sun about the tough job the Food & Drug Administration faces as it tries to ensure the safety of our food:

FOOD RECALLS APT TO BE DU JOUR;
FOODSTUFFS' INCREASINGLY GLOBAL ORIGINS, MULTIPLE AGENCIES BAR THOROUGH CHECKS

BYLINE: Dan Thanh Dang and Larry Carson, SUN REPORTERS

SECTION: BUSINESS; Pg. 1D

LENGTH: 843 words

Consumers suffering from recall fatigue should get used to news of contaminated food as underfunded regulatory agencies struggle to police a burgeoning food system that's supplied by all corners of the world market, food safety experts said yesterday.

Just this weekend, more than 1 million pounds of E. coli-contaminated ground beef was recalled by Pennsylvania-based Cargill Meat Solutions Corp. from stores including Giant Food and Wegmans in Maryland.

In the past month, more than a half-dozen recalls have been issued for tainted meat products ranging from ground beef to frozen meat pizzas and potpies.

"It's one thing after another," said Michelle McFadden, 38, who was shopping yesterday at the Giant in Ellicott City.

She, like other shoppers, said there's little they can do to protect themselves, other than cooking food well and watching for news alerts. She decided to play it safe by not buying beef for awhile.

Kathleen Joesting said she found out too late about the recent recall.

The Ellicott City resident had already eaten a burger for dinner on Saturday before her husband heard the news and rummaged through their trash. He discovered that the ground beef they purchased from the Giant was part of a contaminated batch.