Sunday, January 27, 2013

Singapore ruling party rebuked in by-election as disquiet rises

SINGAPORE (Reuters) - Singapore's long-dominant People's Action Party (PAP) lost heavily in a single-seat by-election on Saturday, a barometer of how the government is dealing with discontent in the wealthy Asian country over immigration and the high cost of living.

The result in the Punggol East ward - 54.5 percent of the vote for the Workers Party and 43.7 percent for the PAP, with the rest split by two others - does not alter the balance of power in parliament, where the ruling party will still hold 80 of 87 elected seats.

But the rebuke in the relatively young and affluent constituency sends a signal to the PAP about the level of dissatisfaction in the city-state of 5.3 million people that is a hub for banks and multinational companies.

"I want a difference," said Nita, a woman in her 30s. "If the Workers Party can do well in Punggol East, the other constituencies are also watching."

Some analysts had expected the PAP to eke out a victory, especially if the three opposition candidates diluted the anti-government vote. The next general election is due in 2016.

The seat in Punggol East, won by the PAP in 2011 with 54 percent of the vote, was vacant after the speaker of parliament quit in December over an extramarital affair. Other recent scandals include last year's arrest of the civil defense chief and head of the police anti-drug unit on corruption charges.

"I respect the choice of Punggol East voters," Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong said in a statement. He called on people to refocus on national issues including the 2013 budget and a new population and immigration plan the government is preparing to deliver.

"The PAP will continue to improve the lives of Singaporeans, and present our report card for voters to judge in the next general elections," he said.

The PAP - founded by Lee Kuan Yew, Singapore's first leader for three decades and father of the current prime minister - has won every national election since independence in 1965, transforming the post-colonial port into a major financial center by keeping the economy open and society regimented.

But the 2011 election was its worst showing ever, prompting the government to engage more openly with increasingly vocal citizens over their concerns about property prices, public transport and immigration. Foreigners now make up about 38 percent of the population, up from about 25 percent in 2000.

Rolling out measures to help Singaporeans, it has raised the levy on foreigners buying property and boosted spending on housing grants, subsidized childcare and cash gifts for babies to try to raise one of the world's lowest fertility rates.

But as Saturday's by-election shows, many people expect more from the government, or at least a bigger say for the opposition.

"The PAP forgets us after the elections - only gives candies during elections and terms and conditions after," said Daniel Chua, a 58-year-old consultant. "The Workers Party has the heart to serve."

(Additional reporting by Jion Chun Teo; Editing by Doina Chiacu)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/singapore-ruling-party-rebuked-election-disquiet-rises-165513090--business.html

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SPICY IP: Part I: Is decompilation of software legal under the Indian ...

In discussions with a few of my colleagues in software development related to mobile applications for Android, Windows, and iOS platforms, a question arose whether studying an existing application (already developed and available for a device) and using the existing application as a study tool is legal under the Indian Copyright Act? ?At first glance the relevant provision (Section 52) under the Indian Copyright Act prescribes that studying software is legal. ? ?
However, there are many practical issues that come up while analyzing the statute: As developers know, one cannot study software without first decompiling it.? Decompilation, ?inter-operability?, are words that are not defined in the Act.? Decompilation may be equated to reverse engineering of a product ? whether software or hardware. This post analyzes Section 52 of the statute and in particular sub-sections 52(ab) and (ac), and find whether reverse engineering / decompilation of software applications is legal. ?The answer to the question is not exactly clear ? For Indian, maybe it is ?- given ?the way in which other jurisdictions have applied the similar statutes.? This post is divided into two parts.? Part I deals with the background information as relates to the development of decompilation / reverse engineering laws in US and Europe. Part II deals with the application of these laws to the Indian context.? Long post follows. Because European law on copyright protection of computer programs is based on the counterpart American experience, American jurisprudence is discussed first. REVERSE ENGINEERING IN US: Under American law, until recently, there were no explicit provisions about decompilation or reverse engineering. The basic copyright law, that has been amended from time-to-time just provides fair use exceptions and courts are left free to interpret fair use. In 2010, the Library of Congress with the US Register of Copyrights, provided six additional classes, that would not be considered infringement. See link.? Relevant to the issue of reverse engineering are the classes: ?..(2) Computer programs that enable wireless telephone handsets to execute software applications, where circumvention is accomplished for the sole purpose of enabling interoperability of such applications, when they have been lawfully obtained, with computer programs on the telephone handset.

...Emphasis added.

Case law sets out guidelines about reverse engineering.? And it was under the provisions of section 107 (fair use) that reverse engineering was addressed.?

The first case to be taken up by US Courts on the issue of reverse engineering was: Sega Enterprises Ltd. v. Accolade, Inc.:?In Sega, Sega manufactured a video game console under a brand name Genesis. ?The console contained a lock-out device (microchip) which looked for a particular code sequence in a game cartridge. This code sequence was provided only on Sega manufactured cartridges and no other.? Cartridges manufactured by other manufacturer did not have this code sequence, and could not function with the Sega console.?

Accolado, a game maker, also provided games on cartridges.? To be able to use a game cartridge from Accolado with the Genesis console, Accolade disassembled the Genesis console and found the chip containing the code reader, and found out the specific code sequence which Sega put in their cartridges.? This made it possible for Accolade to manufacture cartridges compatible with the Genesis console. ?During the process of reverse engineering Accolado made several copies of Sega?s micro code and thereby infringing Sega?s copyright. Sega suited for this infringement of their copyright to the specific microcode system and Accolado claimed fair use. ?The District court in the Northern District of California found for Sega, that an infringement had taken place and it ?could not be seen as a fair use because of the commercial nature of the reverse engineering.? ?The Court of Appeal found otherwise and reversed the district court. ?Decompilation was an infringement of Sega?s copyright but was found to be fair use. The court stated that if "disassembly provides the only means of access to those elements of the code not protected by copyright and the copier has a legitimate reason for seeking such access" is a fair use of the copyrighted work. The court stated that reverse engineering is a fair use if the purpose is to achieve compatibility between an original (i.e. not copied from another) computer program, and a device for using this program. The second case taken up by US Courts about reverse engineering also involved video game consoles, and was Atari Games corp. v. Nintendo of America, Inc.? In Atari, the consoles were manufactured by Nintendo.? However, Nintendo also had a patent on the security lock-out device.? Atari had tried to reverse engineer the microchip but failed.? However, Atari obtained the information related to the microchip from the US Copyright Office (Library of Congress), claiming they needed this information in a litigation with Nintendo. Atari thereafter created a program that emulated the Nintendo lock-out microchip, and this made it possible for Atari?s game cartridges to be used on Nintendo consoles.? The district court specifically ruled that Atari had, when creating the compatible program used more than necessary to get compatibility.

Nintendo filed for copyright and patent infringement and was successful at the district court ? Atari?s claim for fair use was not accepted.? The Court of Appeal for the Federal Circuit (CAFC) came to the same conclusion and ruled, ?reverse engineering was fair use only when the original product had been purchased legally.?? Getting the information from the US Copyright Office on false grounds destroyed any possibility for Atari to successfully claim fair use. ?However, before these questions were tested the case was settled.

This case showed that copying a program to understand and copy unprotected underlying ideas would have been probably been alright if Atari had achieved information legally.? In a third case, in Vault Corp. v. Quaid Software Ltd., the court decided that a Louisiana Software License Enforcement Act clause permitting a copyright holder to prohibit software decompilation or disassembly was preempted by the Copyright Act, and was therefore unenforceable. REVERSE ENGINEERING IN Europe: In EU copyright protection of computer programs is an outcome of computer program Directive. ?See link. The concept of reverse engineering was not unique to EU law. Before it, Art. 15 of the EC semiconductor chip protection Directive permitted reverse engineering of the layout of a semiconductor microchip. ?This semiconductor related directive was similar to that of the US Semiconductor Chip Act of 1980 where provisions relating to decompilation were explicitly provided. The computer programs Directive (hereafter Directive) contains two different provisions relating access to interface information. Article 5(3) deals with reverse analysis techniques other than decompilation, (also known as black box method). ?Article 6 deals with decompilation methods themselves. ? Black Box Method (or passive monitoring method):

An engineer starting to develop a product with a particular standard may start work from published documentation about the interface information with that standard. ?Usually because source code is not published, and available documentation is often incomplete or out dated, it is necessary to conduct reverse analysis to ascertain the interface information required to provide an interoperable product.

Generally, this information may be learned from "black box" reverse engineering ?techniques. These techniques merely involve monitoring the activity of an existing product and are passive in nature ? i.e. there is no active monitoring of do not involve translation of the analyzed program?s object code into the original source code. ?Examples of information that may be obtained through black box techniques are test runs, line traces, storage data dumps and screen rendering. Article 5(3) of the Directive provides 3. The person having a right to use a copy of a computer program shall be entitled, without the authorisation of the right?holder, to observe, study or test the functioning of the program in order to determine the ideas and principles which underlie any element of the program if he does so while performing any of the acts of loading, displaying, running, transmitting or storing the program which he is entitled to do.? Emphasis added. There are multiple aspects to this article in the Directive: First the person invoking the Article must have a right to use a copy of a computer program.? Hence this is the first hurdle that is passed by legitimate software licensees or owners (no pirates please). Most developers who intend to develop interoperable products would be licensed users of the original product for which the new product is being developed.? As an example, consider various tools created by different third party developers for Adobe? Photoshop? software.?? All such developers are usually licensed users for the Photoshop? software.? Hence it is permissible for them to analyze a copy legitimately. Second, Article 5(3) permits a developer to observe study or test the functioning of the program. ?This is what a developer does when conducting black box analysis. Third and most importantly, Article 5(3) permits the developer to determine the "ideas and principles" underlying any element of the computer program. This includes determining interface specifications which being the rules and methods by which a program interacts with other products, constitutes "ideas and principles". Fourth, Article 5(3) permits the developer to observe, study and test the functioning of the program while "loading, displaying, running, transmitting or storing" the program. Finally, Article 5(3) provides that for the analysis to be allowed, one must be "entitled to do" the underlying operation involved. ?Accordingly, this is tied to the first part in the article, and is a second tier protection against use of this article illegitimately to expand permitted use of a program. In some cases techniques permitted by Article 5(3) do not yield enough interface information required. It then becomes necessary to decompile a program ?i.e. active monitoring is required. ?Article 6 of computer program Directive provides the required freedom for decompilation. Article 6 of the Directive: 1. The authorisation of the rightholder shall not be required where reproduction of the code and translation of its form within the meaning of points (a) and (b) of Article 4(1) are indispensable to obtain the information necessary to achieve the interoperability of an independently created computer program with other programs, provided that the following conditions are met: (a) those acts are performed by the licensee or by another person having a right to use a copy of a program, or on their behalf by a person authorised to do so; (b) the information necessary to achieve interoperability has not previously been readily available to the persons referred to in point (a); and (c) those acts are confined to the parts of the original program which are necessary in order to achieve interoperability. 2. The provisions of paragraph 1 shall not permit the information obtained through its application: (a) to be used for goals other than to achieve the interoper?ability of the independently created computer program; (b) to be given to others, except when necessary for the inter?operability of the independently created computer program; or (c) to be used for the development, production or marketing of a computer program substantially similar in its expression, or for any other act which infringes copyright. From Article 6, it seems that decompilation of a program may not be done solely to research its underlying ideas unrelated to interoperability and then implement those ideas in a program that competes with the decompiled program. The word indispensable has been used in Article 6.? This word suggests that it is not a mere wish but rather is required (grammatical construct: Air is required for breathing).? In practice, because decompilation requires great sophistication, time and expense and will not be conducted lightly: accordingly if a developer decompiles software then the reasons for decompilation would play a great role, most probably in the developer?s favor.? This then becomes an economic standard for indispensability.? * Hence the usage of reports, and the initial pilot study to confirm data theft ? are economically justified and decompilation is indispensable. Under Article 6(a), the act of decompilation is done by a legitimate user.? Compare this provision to the Atari case discussed above ? where Atari lost on both grounds and fair use exception under US law was not available to it. Under Article 6(b), necessary interface information must not have been previously been readily available to the developer. ?This provision should be interpreted according to the the economic hardship theory ? i.e. economically justified and indispensable. Under Article 6(c), decompilation must be confined to the parts of a program that are necessary to ensure interoperability. ??This seems to be a grey area: it is not entirely clear how only a specific part of a program can be decompiled, leaving the rest untouched.? In software, either a program is decompiled or not ? there are no mid-level choices available. In addition, software code is not written as a text book that has a page number to start and end with.? Software is written in parts ? where one part may invoke another and vice-versa.? Article 6, paragraph 2 limits the scope of Article 6 ? and accordingly limits what may be done with the decompilation.? The limitation is with regard to interoperability : information gained through decompilation may be used only to achieve the interoperability of the independently created program. Article 5(3) therefore, is very different from Article 6, and has no such restriction.

Article 6, paragraph (2)(c) provides that information obtained through decompilation may not be used for the development production or marketing of a computer program substantially similar in its expression, or for any other act which infringes copyright. * Here it may be argued that an employee is restricted from decompiling a program created for his employer?s purpose, AND cannot use a decompiled program to create a competing program as that of his employer.

Source: http://spicyipindia.blogspot.com/2013/01/part-i-is-decompilation-of-software.html

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Saturday, January 26, 2013

The Obama Administration Wants States to Grab Your Personal ...

Real ID: Stopping your cat from stealing your identity? Tiny Banquet Committee, Flickr

Last year, when I tried to use my (perfectly legal, thank you) Montana state driver's license to enter a bar in Washington, DC, the bouncer rejected it on the basis that "no real ID would have bear holograms." Actually, in the Big Sky state we do?but the guy was on to something: Montana is one of 37 states still defying the Real ID Act of 2005, a Bush-era law intended to fight terrorism by standardizing security requirements for state IDs. The Department of Homeland Security was forced to grant yet another extension last month for states that haven't complied with the law. But experts say the delay doesn't mean the Obama administration is backing off the controversial security requirements.?

In order to comply with the Real ID Act, states must obtain from you, at minimum, photo identification, your birth certificate (or other date of birth verification), your social security number, documentation of legal status, and proof of your home address. State IDs that don't comply with these security requirements are supposed to be barred from airports and federal buildings, although DHS hasn't enforced that yet. More controversially, the law requires that?states make this personal information sharable to other states, in a de facto database that could be easily accessed by the federal government. But as Chris Calabrese, legislative counsel at the American Civil Liberties Union, explains: "That hasn't really happened, the database never got built. But the federal government still has the legal tools to access this information."

"The Real ID Act is a loser every way you slice it," Jim Harper, director of information policy studies at the CATO Institute, tells Mother Jones. "But this is the first time DHS is only extending its deadline for certain states. They could be positioning themselves to actually start enforcing this against states like Montana that don't have a lot of people and don't have a big airline industry."

But Homeland Security Janet Napolitano?who herself was was critical?of the law as Arizona governor?might have a fight on her hands. At least sixteen?states have actually passed legislation rejecting the law, and DHS estimates?it will cost states a minimum of $3.9 billion to implement over ten years.?

Calabrese tells Mother Jones that though some of the privacy advocates' worst fears about REAL ID?like a giant database of personal information?haven't been realized, other concerns remain. States following the law must require home addresses on your license, "which can be a nightmare for victims of abuse." States that scan and store personal documents online as required by the law (although in 2008 an exception was made for birth certificates), are also "leaving personal information floating around for identity theft," Calabrese adds.

The law does have its defenders, who argue that these security requirements make US borders more secure from foreign terrorists and undocumented immigrants (which are not infrequently lumped together?in discussions of the Act.) Jessica Zuckerman, research associate at the Heritage Foundation, argues that "the?Real ID Act is enhancing security at the DMVs and secure databases prevent fraud." My colleague Kevin Drum has written about how a national ID?could help end the voter fraud controversy, but points out that Real ID still leaves us with "50 different cards managed by 50 different bureaucracies."

For Marc Rotenberg, executive director of the Electronic Privacy Information Center (EPIC), the key concern is that "because of Real ID, states are collecting far more information about you than they have in the past." That information is sometimes shared with commercial data-miners. EPIC has also submitted a friend of the court?brief to the Supreme Court in a case challenging lawyers' use of personal information obtained from DMVs to find potential clients for group action lawsuits. EPIC is arguing that the court should limit states from disclosing such information.?

But even though Real ID has proven unpopular with Democrats and Republicans alike,?don't expect it to disappear. "No politician is going to step up and say we need to get rid of this loser because they don't want to look bad on security," says Harper. So, if you're dead set on keeping your information to yourself, you might do what my bear-hologram license has forced me to do: Don't drive, and bring your passport to happy hour.?

Source: http://www.motherjones.com/politics/2013/01/real-id-drivers-license-civil-liberties

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Friday, January 25, 2013

Unions suffer sharp decline in membership

WASHINGTON (AP) -- Union membership plummeted last year to the lowest level since the 1930s as cash-strapped state and local governments shed workers and unions had difficulty organizing new members in the private sector despite signs of an improving economy.

Government figures released Wednesday showed union membership declined from 11.8 percent to 11.3 percent of the workforce, another blow to a labor movement already stretched thin by battles in Wisconsin, Indiana, Michigan and other states to curb bargaining rights and weaken union clout.

Overall membership fell by about 400,000 workers to 14.4 million, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. More than half the loss, about 234,000, came from government workers, including teachers, firefighters and public administrators.

But unions also saw losses in the private sector even as the economy created 1.8 million new jobs in 2012. That membership rate fell from 6.9 percent to 6.6 percent, a troubling sign for the future of organized labor, as job growth generally has taken place at nonunion companies.

"To employers, it's going to look like the labor movement is ready for a knockout punch," said Gary Chaison, professor of industrial relations at Clark University in Worcester, Mass. "You can't be a movement and get smaller."

Union membership was 13.2 percent in 1935 when President Franklin D. Roosevelt signed the National Labor Relations Act. Labor's ranks peaked in the 1950s, when about 1 of every 3 workers was in a union. By 1983, roughly 20 percent of U.S. workers were union members.

Losses in the public sector are hitting unions particularly hard because that has been one of the few areas where membership had grown over the past two decades. About 51 percent of union members work in government, where the rate of union membership is 37 percent, more than five times higher than in the private sector.

Until recently, there had been little resistance to unions organizing government workers. But that began to change when Republican Gov. Scott Walker of Wisconsin signed a law in 2011 eliminating most union rights for government workers. The state lost about 46,000 union members last year, the vast majority in the public sector.

The recession that began in 2008 also led to much deeper cuts in state and local government than any previous recession, according to a report this month from the Nelson Rockefeller Institute of Government at the State University of New York at Albany. Since August 2008, state government employment has declined by 135,000, while local government employment fell by 546,000.

Teachers unions were among the hardest hit, with the ranks of unionized public school teachers and educators falling by 123,000 last year. Dennis Van Roekel, president of the National Education Association, the nation's largest teachers union, accused politicians who cut public education funding of "inflicting tremendous harm to our nation's 50 million students and risking our children's future."

Despite the steady membership decline, unions remain a potent political force because of the money they spend helping union-friendly candidates seeking public office. Unions spent more than $400 million during the 2012 election cycle to support President Barack Obama's re-election, keep a Democratic majority in the Senate and aid other state and local candidates.

But as more governors and state lawmakers target unions, labor leaders have been forced to spend more money fighting political skirmishes and less on organizing new members.

"Organizing is very expensive, and it gets fought now in the public sector as well as in the private sector," said Barry Hirsch, a labor economist at Georgia State University.

Dwindling membership means unions carry far less influence than they used to in setting a benchmark for wages and benefits that might be followed at nonunion companies. Unions are already gearing up to defeat Republican governors in Ohio, Michigan, Florida, Pennsylvania, and Wisconsin, where they fear more anti-union measures could crop up soon.

Union officials blame membership losses on the lingering effects of the recession, as well as GOP governors and state lawmakers who have sought to weaken union rights.

"Our still-struggling economy, weak laws and political as well as ideological assaults have taken a toll on union membership and in the process have also imperiled economic security and good, middle-class jobs," said AFL-CIO President Richard Trumka.

In Indiana, where a new right-to-work law took effect last March, the state lost about 56,000 union members. The law prohibits unions from requiring workers to pay union fees, even if they benefit from a collective bargaining agreement. Michigan lawmakers approved a similar measure in December.

Another problem for unions is an aging membership that is not being replaced by younger members. By age, the union membership rate was highest among workers age 55 to 64 (14.9 percent) and lowest among those 16 to 24 (4.2 percent).

In New York, the state with the highest union density, nearly one-quarter of the workforce belonged to a union. North Carolina had the lowest at 2.9 percent.

Among full-time wage and salary workers, union members in 2012 had median weekly earnings of $943, while those who were not union members earned $742.

___

Online:

Bureau of Labor Statistics: http://www.bls.gov

___

Follow Sam Hananel on Twitter: http://twitter.com/SamHananelAP

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/unions-suffer-sharp-decline-membership-163236370.html

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White House: Britain is stronger by being part of the EU

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The White House said on Wednesday that the United States believes Britain is stronger by being a part of the European Union and the EU is stronger as a result of Britain's membership.

White House spokesman Jay Carney made the comments at a press briefing after British Prime Minister David Cameron promised Britons a vote on whether the country should stay in the EU or leave.

(Reporting by Jeff Mason; Editing by Sandra Maler)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/white-house-britain-stronger-being-part-eu-181603692--business.html

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Exercise tied to better colon cancer survival odds

NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - People with colon cancer who spend more time walking and fewer hours on the couch are less likely to die over the seven to eight years after being diagnosed, a new study suggests.

The findings don't prove exercise itself boosts a person's survival chances, researchers said. But the pattern held even after the study team took into account how advanced patients' cancers were, their age and other aspects of their diet, lifestyle and health.

"Any activity is better than none," including walking, stretching and gardening, said Peter Campbell, the lead researcher on the study from the American Cancer Society.

"Five to ten minutes at a time is fine, and the type of activity we're talking about here, this isn't marathon running or climbing the Alps."

Campbell's analysis included about 2,300 people who developed colon cancer out of an initial pool of 184,000 volunteers in a cancer prevention and nutrition study launched in 1992.

Over an average of eight years after their diagnosis, 846 people with colon cancer died - including 379 from cancer.

The researchers found that study participants who exercised the most - equal to two and half hours of walking per week or more - both before and after being diagnosed were 28 to 42 percent less likely to die during the follow-up period than those who barely exercised at all.

Spending six or more hours of leisure time on the couch daily before diagnosis, compared to less than three hours, was tied to a 36 percent higher chance of dying. Being sedentary after a cancer diagnosis was linked to a 27 percent increased risk of death - although that particular finding could have been due to chance, the researchers noted this week in the Journal of Clinical Oncology.

To account for the fact that very sick people can't exercise, Campbell and his colleagues excluded anyone who died within two years of their last survey, and found similar results.

Researchers have known for a while that obesity and exercise affect a person's risk of getting colon cancer in the first place, said Dr. Jeffrey Meyerhardt from the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute in Boston, who has also studied exercise and colon cancer survival.

"The question when you're a patient with colorectal cancer is, ?Do those things matter once I get the disease? Are there things I can do in addition to standard treatment to reduce my risk of recurrence?'" he told Reuters Health.

Researchers said there are a couple of possible explanations for why exercise, both pre- and post-diagnosis, might benefit people with cancer.

"What we think is at least part of what is happening is, people are going into surgery and adjuvant treatment in a more fit state," Campbell told Reuters Health.

In addition, he said, "If you're active both before and after diagnosis, there are a lot of changes that occur in your blood," such as in levels of insulin and other hormones.

"There are a lot of systemic changes that occur that probably decrease your chance of recurrence and ultimately dying."

People in the study who exercised regularly were less likely to die in general and of cardiovascular disease - such as heart attacks and lung disease - in particular. For those patients, exercise likely has the same benefit as for cancer-free people, Campbell said.

"Patients that have colon cancer, about two-thirds of them survive after five years and what they end up dying of is what all older people end up dying of, and that's usually cardiovascular disease."

He said people with colon cancer should discuss with their doctors when they can get back to physical activity. Some patients with anemia, for example, might want to hold off on exercise, and others who are immune compromised should probably avoid public gyms.

Meyerhardt recommended that people who exercised before their diagnosis return to that level of activity. Those who are new to exercise should take small steps toward increasing their activity, he added, such as walking and physical therapy.

However, Meyerhardt emphasized, exercise isn't a substitute for standard colon cancer treatments like surgery, and in some cases, chemotherapy.

SOURCE: http://bit.ly/WhX6oU Journal of Clinical Oncology, online January 22, 2013.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/exercise-tied-better-colon-cancer-survival-odds-192228962.html

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How Boehner Tamed an Unruly GOP Caucus

John Boehner is finally learning how to tame the rebellious House GOP caucus. The passage on Wednesday of a measure allowing the Treasury to keep borrowing money until May 19 warded off the risk of a debt default that could have been politically disastrous for Republicans. And it marked a win for the House speaker, who managed to rally his party behind the legislation only weeks after suffering embarrassing setbacks during the fiscal-cliff standoff and after narrowly surviving a revolt in the caucus earlier this month.

But the victory came at a price. Boehner and other GOP leaders have embraced a stark budget austerity that is winning plaudits with conservatives but may prove politically risky for the party, because it would require deep cuts in popular social programs such as Medicare, even as the GOP remains adamantly opposed to raising additional tax revenue from the rich.

The budget austerity will guide the GOP's approach to a series of clashes in the coming months with President Obama and congressional Democrats.

What exactly did Boehner have to promise fellow Republicans for their support on the debt-limit measure?

The commitments he?s made to rank-and-file members regarding the "sequester" cuts set to hit March 1, along with another short-term spending bill later in the month needed to keep government funded, will come due then. More significant is that Boehner has committed to writing a House budget that will erase the nation?s annual deficits within 10 years.

"That?s going to be pretty damn tough,? said William Hoagland, senior vice president of the Washington-based Bipartisan Policy Center. It will be especially hard if Boehner tries to do so without allowing more tax revenue to be put on the table. Effectively, then, that would require a ?scorched earth? policy on entitlements and other spending, Hoagland said.

At least for now, Wednesday?s vote to temporarily suspend the debt ceiling provided Boehner with a respite from his recent woes. The tumult of the fiscal cliff led to questions about whether he had lost control of his own GOP conference.

Those embarrassments included his having to scrap his ?Plan B? legislation on the fiscal cliff and later being forced to rely more on Democrats than his own party members to get passage of both the final fiscal-cliff deal and then a Hurricane Sandy relief bill. Much of this reflected lasting anger among conservatives over Boehner?s deals with Obama and the Democratic-led Senate last session. The prevailing view among many conservative House members is that he has been too willing to compromise and has caved in too easily.

The tension boiled over on the first day of the new Congress when some conservatives tried to oust Boehner as speaker. The Ohio Republican survived that rebellion, narrowly. Just seven more Republican defections could have blocked him from getting the 214 votes needed, a simple majority of the lawmakers who voted.

Many of the members in the dump-Boehner faction seemed ready over the weekend to reject the debt-ceiling increase, which would have once again put the speaker against the ropes.

But instead, this bill was passed 285-144, largely on the backs of 199 of Boehner?s fellow Republicans. In fact, Republicans lined up nearly 6-to-1 in support of the measure. Just 33 of them ended up opposing it--and many of those only after passage became assured during the vote-counting.

Senate Democrats plan to take up the measure in coming days.

Meanwhile, Boehner and other Republicans are playing down the bill?s main purpose--the debt-limit increase--by emphasizing its provision to force the Senate to pass a budget plan this spring for the first time in four years, or see members? pay withheld. In fact, the name they?ve given the measure is the ?No Budget, No Pay Act.?

Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., in a statement, opined that Boehner had to ?add a gimmick or two to get their bill past the tea party.? But he noted that Senate Budget Committee Chairwoman Patty Murray, D-Wash., had already announced earlier in the day the Senate would move a budget resolution through committee and to the floor this year.

Even so, Reid said he wants to ?give credit where credit is due, and thank Speaker Boehner for his leadership here in defusing another fight over the debt ceiling.?

In fact, Boehner and other top House Republican leaders were laying the groundwork for Wednesday?s vote even before the House GOP gathered last week for its annual issues and policy retreat in Williamsburg, Va.

The hurdle was to sell the almost contrary idea of temporarily allowing more debt--as a necessary strategic step in order to allow more time to take on the nation?s skyrocketing debt problem.

To get there, House Appropriations Chairman Hal Rogers, R-Ky., explained to National Journal on Wednesday that Boehner and other House GOP leaders promised rank-and-file members they would stick to the cuts agreed to in the sequestration process, which on March 1 are to lower 2013 discretionary spending to $974 trillion unless Democrats agree to mandatory cuts as a replacement.

Rogers said Boehner has promised the sequestration cut, which is split evenly between military and discretionary domestic spending, ?will stay in effect unless it shall be replaced by other spending of equal size from other parts of the budget.? And he said Boehner has promised that the $974 billion figure will also be reflected in the spending measure needed later in March to keep government running for the remainder of the year.

But ?Obama and congressional Democrats are insisting that such deficit-reduction maneuvers also include new tax revenues, and so the upcoming fights over the sequester and how to keep government running are likely to represent the bigger battles ahead for Boehner, as opposed to Wednesday?s temporary debt-ceiling vote.

On top of that, Boehner himself underscored in a statement that the House is committed to a policy of balancing the budget within 10 years.

If that is the deal Boehner and Budget Committee Chairman Paul Ryan, R-Wis., have made with conservatives, then Steve Bell, of the Bipartisan Policy Center, said, ?I foresee nothing but really serious difficulties for Boehner and the Republican Party in the years ahead.?

?What I can tell you as a practical matter is what will have to happen [in cuts] to the domestic and entitlement areas will simply be too much even for the vast majority of the Republican conference to accept,? said Bell.

For now, top House Republican aides seemed to be basking in the view that Boehner is gaining some traction with his victory in Wednesday?s vote--and in what appears to be a failed effort by top Democrats, who had urged their members not to vote for the bill.

?I think the whole purpose of this exercise was to focus further down the road--on dealing with sequester and [continuing resolution],? said a senior House GOP aide. ?It takes the threat, the cudgel that the Democrats could use that we are threatening the viability of the nation off the table, so we can start making some of the hard choices we?ve got to make about spending going forward.?

?A victory for Boehner? I think it?s a victory for the conference,? said the aide.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/boehner-tamed-unruly-gop-caucus-195048662--politics.html

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How Innovation is born. ? Spirit of Giving

his article was written by Ken Cashin for the inaugural issue of?Izaak Magazine?? an in-depth, behind the scenes, all-access publication highlighting the incredible, everyday happenings at the?IWK Health Centre. Researchers like Dr. Jason Berman are using some of the world?s most unlikely sources to find the most miraculous cures.

Zebra Fish

Zebra Fish

When it comes to medical research, inspiration can be a driving force. And, when that inspiration comes from a desire to make life better for young patients, ground breaking innovation can be born. Such is the case with Dr. Jason Berman. He is a world-leading pediatric haematologist- oncologist who runs a zebrafish research laboratory at the IWK Health Centre.

His enthusiasm and energy is contagious as he discusses his first-of-a-kind research program in Halifax with the potential to provide unique cancer drug-testing services in zebrafish to pharmaceutical companies and cancer specialists across Canada and around the world. Dr. Berman looks for such answers in zebrafish ? small striped fish that are remarkably similar to humans in their genetics and cell biology. Zebrafish are gaining international recognition in their ability to help researchers better understand human diseases. By studying blood-cell development in zebrafish, Dr. Berman and his team are hoping to pinpoint the genetic changes that lead to leukemia.

Dr. Berman treats children with cancer, including leukemia, lymphoma and solid tumours, as well as blood disorders like haemophilia and anemia. While many of his patients have acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) and can be cured with current multi-agent chemotherapy, some suffer from more aggressive subtypes of ALL, such as T-cell disease (T-ALL), while approximately 20 per cent suffer from acute myelogenous leukemia (AML). Dr. Berman?s unique research approach focuses on these more difficult-to-treat forms of leukemia, using the zebrafish model to identify and test new potential treatments. ?The zebrafish is a vertebrate and shares many of the same genes with humans,? explains Dr. Berman. ?Because they are fertilized externally, are transparent, and reproduce in large numbers, they are a very useful tool for studying how changes in genes affect both normal development and the abnormal development that can result in diseases like cancer.?

Dr. Berman and his team are currently testing different compounds in several cancers including: T-ALL, AML and sarcomas (common bone tumours in children) to identify new drugs or combinations that stop and reverse the abnormal cancer growth and kill the cells that start the cancer. ?In 2012, most children with cancer have a very good chance of cure, but often at the significant cost of toxic treatments with lots of complications,? says Dr. Berman. ?By better understanding the genetic and molecular factors underlying particular diseases using rapidly evolving technologies and innovative model systems like the zebrafish, we will be able to provide better, more personalized and targeted treatment that will result in improved outcomes and fewer side effects.?

Dr. Jason Berman

Dr. Jason Berman

Reviewed by an international panel by the Beatrice Hunter Cancer Research Institute, Dr. Berman received Cancer Care Nova Scotia?s Peggy Davison Clinician Scientist Award in May 2011, which provides $100,000 per year for three years to build cancer research programs. Previously held by only one other individual, funding through this prestigious award is helping Dr. Berman use the zebrafish to study white blood cell development, mast cell biology, leukemia and solid tumours. The award, he says, is a great tribute to both pediatric oncology and the zebrafish model and demonstrates the support, faith and encouragement that Cancer Care Nova Scotia has in the potential of his research program to impact the future for cancer patients. ?This award enables us to attract the best and the brightest from across Canada and beyond to work with us and establish our laboratory as an international centre of research excellence, fostering the training of the next generation of leading cancer researchers right here in our province.?

He says it gives hope to children who have to endure the challenges of chemotherapy. One such child is Olivia Mason, daughter of Tammy and Barry Mason of Bedford, N.S., who has been a patient of Dr. Berman?s since being diagnosed with AML in February 2011. ?We know first-hand the struggles that children endure going through intensive chemotherapy to treat AML. The current treatment is very difficult and it is heartbreaking to watch your child endure this illness and treatment,? the Masons commented through Cancer Care Nova Scotia. ?Olivia is strong and determined. We know she will make it.

However, we anxiously await the day that Dr. Berman, and his team, announce that they have found an easier way to treat AML. With the Peggy Davison Award to Dr. Berman, we know that they are one step closer to that announcement.?

Make a gift?to the IWK Health Centre Foundation.

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Categories: IWK Health Centre, research, Oncology, IWK Foundation | Tags: leukemia, research, IWK, Oncology, IWK Health Centre Foundation, IWK Helath Centre, Haematology, Lab, Zebra Fish, Lymphoma, Blood Disorders | Permalink.

Source: http://iwkfoundation.wordpress.com/2013/01/24/how-innovation-is-born/

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Thursday, January 24, 2013

Kelly Osbourne: Engaged to Matthew Mosshart!

Source: http://www.thehollywoodgossip.com/2013/01/kelly-osbourne-engaged-to-matthew-mosshart/

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European shares edge up as economic sentiment improves

LONDON (Reuters) - European stocks edged toward 22 month highs on Wednesday, driven by upbeat corporate earnings, an easing in fears about the U.S. hitting its debt ceiling and a better outlook for the global economy.

Strong investor confidence data from Germany, Japan's plans to shore up the world's third largest economy, and improving economic numbers this month from the world's top two economies, the U.S. and China, have all cheered investors.

European Central Bank chief Mario Draghi added his weight to the brighter outlook saying, in a speech in Frankfurt, that "the darkest clouds over the euro area subsided" in 2012.

"The sense of panic experienced in the financial system at times over the last few years looks unlikely to return," said Nick Kounis, head of macro economic research at ABN AMRO.

"We expect global growth to improve gradually this year before gaining strength next year," he said.

After a rally on Wall Street, which saw the widely watched Standard & Poor's 500 index <.spx> hit a fresh five-year closing high, Europe's main share markets all opened higher.

The FTSE Eurofirst 300 index <.fteu3> of top European shares rose 0.1 percent to 1,166.83 While London's FTSE 100 <.ftse>, Paris's CAC-40 <.fchi> and Frankfurt's DAX <.gdaxi> open as much as 0.3 percent higher.

Earnings from likes of tech firms Google and IBM were supporting the gains along with news that BHP Billiton , the world's biggest mining company, had boosted its iron ore output in the December quarter.

However, a slight retreat in Asian shares after they had hit 17-1/2 month highs left the MSCI world equity index <.miwd00000pus> just below the fresh 20-month peak of 352.54 hit on Tuesday.

In the debt market German Bund futures edged higher at Wednesday's open however traders said the gains were unlikely to be sustained with investors still upbeat about higher-yielding euro zone bonds.

Yields fell across the euro zone debt market on Tuesday after Spain sold a new 10-year bond that drew massive demand from foreign investors.

Sentiment is also expected to improve as Republican leaders in the U.S. House of Representatives said they aim to pass on Wednesday a nearly four-month extension of the U.S. debt limit to May 19.

Meanwhile the yen held firm against the dollar and the euro as monetary easing announced on Tuesday by the Bank of Japan failed to provide an immediate a stimulus as some had hoped.

The BOJ doubled its inflation target to 2 percent and adopted an open-ended commitment to buy assets starting in 2014, sparking an unwinding of yen short positions from speculators looking for more immediate easing steps.

The dollar fell 0.4 percent to 88.30 yen while the euro slid 0.8 percent to 117.42 yen. The dollar hit a 2-1/2-year high of 90.25 yen on Monday.

(Reporting by Richard Hubbard. Editing by Peter Graff)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/asian-shares-inch-higher-improving-global-confidence-034935499--finance.html

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Are You A Jerk Who Wants To Share Your Sexual Conquests? Sadly, There?s An App For That

playbook1Our own John Biggs could tell you that there were some terribly neat projects to be found at the PennApps Hackathon, but not every app there was? on the up-and-up, let's say. Case in point: a group of young developers whipped up an iOS app called Playbook that lets people upload and rate pictures of their romantic conquests with their so-called "bros." Really. Just let that sink in for a moment.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/qftfquLSePg/

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Insurer WellPoint's 4Q profit jumps 38 percent

INDIANAPOLIS (AP) ? WellPoint Inc.'s fourth-quarter earnings jumped 38 percent compared to the final quarter of 2011, when the nation's second largest health insurer incurred a big hit from its Medicare Advantage business.

But the Blue Cross Blue Shield insurer also said Wednesday it could make less this year than it did in 2012, as it prepares for expansion resulting from the health care overhaul and other growth opportunities.

The Indianapolis company earned $464.2 million, or $1.51 per share, in the three months that ended Dec. 31. That's up from $335.3 million, or 96 cents per share, in the last quarter of 2011. Excluding the investment and tax settlement gains and other adjustments, earnings totaled $1.03 per share.

Operating revenue inched up less than 1 percent to $15.27 billion. That excludes investment gains.

Analysts expected, on average, earnings of 94 cents per share on $15.29 billion in revenue, according to FactSet. Analysts typically exclude investment gains from their estimates.

In the final quarter of 2011, WellPoint took a $50 million hit from its Medicare Advantage business, which involves privately run versions of the government's Medicare program that covers the elderly and disabled people. The insurer had problems with a plan in Northern California that attracted more customers with a higher risk profile than it expected because a competitor left the market. That helped push quarterly earnings down 39 percent.

In the final quarter of 2012, the insurer's performance got a lift from $243 million in investment gains and an income tax settlement.

WellPoint's membership grew more than 5 percent to 36.1 million people, largely due to its recently completed, $4.46 billion acquisition of Medicaid coverage provider Amerigroup Corp. Medicaid is the state-federal program that provides health coverage for the needy and disabled people.

For the full year, WellPoint earned $2.7 billion, or $8.18 per share, on $60.73 billion in operating revenue.

The Blue Cross Blue Shield company said it expects 2013 earnings of at least $7.60 per share, counting costs tied to the Amerigroup deal, on operating revenue of between $71.5 billion and $73 billion.

Analysts forecast $7.94 per share on $70.25 billion in revenue.

WellPoint Spokeswoman Kristin Binns said in an email the company's forecast "reflects an appropriate level of conservatism" due to uncertainties like the severity of the current flu season, medical use trends and the implementation of the health care overhaul. She said the company is focusing on investing for growth this year and next, in part because it is preparing for the overhaul's coverage expansions.

The overhaul aims to help millions of people buy health care coverage, and it will take a big step toward that goal this fall, when state-based insurance exchanges begin operating to sell policies on the individual market and to people with coverage through a small employer. Income-based tax credits are expected to help many people buy coverage.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/insurer-wellpoints-4q-profit-jumps-38-percent-113119400--finance.html

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Gene interactions make cocaine abuse death eight times more likely

Jan. 22, 2013 ? Scientists have identified genetic circumstances under which common mutations on two genes interact in the presence of cocaine to produce a nearly eight-fold increased risk of death as a result of abusing the drug.

An estimated one in three whites who died of cocaine exposure is a carrier of variants that make cocaine abuse particularly deadly.

The variants are found in two genes that affect how dopamine modulates brain activity. Dopamine is a chemical messenger vital to the regular function of the central nervous system, and cocaine is known to block transporters in the brain from absorbing dopamine after its release.

The same dopamine genes are also targeted by medications for a number of psychiatric disorders. The researchers say that these findings could help determine how patients will respond to certain drugs based on whether they, too, have mutations that interact in ways that affect dopamine flow and signaling.

The scientists had previously identified a total of seven mutations on two dopamine-related genes, some of which were linked to the risk for cocaine abuse death. Years of molecular genetics studies showed that the mutations had specific functions -- a single variant alone was associated with an almost three-fold increase in risk of dying of cocaine abuse -- and led researchers to hypothesize that the variants probably interacted because the genes themselves relied on each other for proper function.

A statistical analysis that dissected the complex interactions among the variants combined with cocaine exposure revealed gene-gene-environment interactions that would dramatically increase the risk of death from cocaine abuse.

"Finding an impact factor of 8 just blew us away," said Wolfgang Sadee, professor of pharmacology and director of the Program in Pharmacogenomics at Ohio State University and senior author of the study. "Beyond that, this represents a new paradigm. Going forward, we can ask whether such interactions do exist between variants that may be a normal variation in the population. These kinds of interactions may underlie the genetics of behavior."

These specific findings apply primarily to whites. The researchers found that a different combination of variants affect the risk of cocaine abuse death in African Americans, and that in this population, some of the variants had protective properties.

The research is published in the online journal Translational Psychiatry.

The mutations are mostly single-nucleotide polymorphisms, or SNPs (pronounced "snips"). Each gene contains two alternative forms -- called alleles -- that are functionally identical in most people. However, in some cases, the activity level, or expression, of an allele can differ from its partner allele in a single gene.

The SNPs described here are on two genes: the dopamine receptor D2, which is a target for antipsychotic drugs, and the dopamine transporter DAT, the main target of cocaine and amphetamines.

The variants' clinical relevance was determined in earlier work led by Sadee that analyzed human brain autopsy tissues of people who had died of cocaine overdose and from age-matched drug-free controls.

The variants identified in this work are harder to detect and analyze than many mutations because these variants have no role in making protein; they exist in deeper and often overlooked regions of genes. Sadee's lab has designed a technique to predict and determine their functions based on measurements of how much messenger RNA, a carrier of genetic information, each specific allele expresses.

Having a defined set of a manageable number of variables then made a statistical analysis both possible and a critical step to more fully understanding the effects of these variants. First author Danielle Sullivan, a doctoral student in biostatistics at Ohio State, built logistic regression models to search for the main effects and interactions among the variants associated with the higher risk of cocaine death.

"A combination of variants turned out to have a high effect on the risk of dying. That is called epistasis -- a gene-gene-environment interaction that is seen only when there is that extra stimulus, in this case the cocaine," Sadee said. "It's a three-way system, which is incredibly complex unless you know beforehand that these variables are all related to each other."

Sadee said consideration of how gene-gene-environment interactions affect the impact of single genes could help solve the mystery of "missing heritability." Scientists know that genes are behind the causes of many diseases and conditions, but to date have been unable to document the complete genetic history of any given disease.

More immediately, what he has discovered about these variants is likely to increase understanding of numerous psychiatric disorders and improve the effectiveness of medical therapies for these problems. Dopamine-related conditions include attention deficit-hyperactivity disorder, bipolar disorder, phobias, anxiety and schizophrenia.

"The gene-gene interaction that we've reported here, eliciting what might be a 'perfect dopamine storm' under cocaine stimulation, could well contribute to other conditions and affect response to drugs such as antipsychotics and amphetamines," Sadee said.

Clinical studies led by his lab so far suggest that gene-gene interactions occurring without an environmental stimulus such as cocaine do appear to help predict response to certain medications.

He is also extending the research to a handful of other genes that affect signaling in the brain.

"Each gene gives us new combinations, each one has novel variants that can be tested in this way. And they may be considered normal variations -- they're not associated with a disease process, but if there are multiple variants together, they may push this whole system in the direction that makes disease more likely or influences individual response to circumstances like stress or drugs," Sadee said.

This work was supported by the National Institutes of Health, the National Institute of General Medical Sciences, the National Institute on Drug Abuse and the National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences (formerly the National Center for Research Resources).

Additional co-authors include Julia Pinsonneault and Audrey Papp of the Department of Pharmacology and Program in Pharmacogenomics; and Hong Zhu and Stanley Lemeshow of the Department of Biostatistics in the College of Public Health, all at Ohio State; and Deborah Mash of the University of Miami School of Medicine.

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Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Ohio State University. The original article was written by Emily Caldwell.

Note: Materials may be edited for content and length. For further information, please contact the source cited above.


Journal Reference:

  1. D Sullivan, J K Pinsonneault, A C Papp, H Zhu, S Lemeshow, D C Mash, W Sadee. Dopamine transporter DAT and receptor DRD2 variants affect risk of lethal cocaine abuse: a gene?gene?environment interaction. Translational Psychiatry, 2013; 3 (1): e222 DOI: 10.1038/tp.2012.146

Note: If no author is given, the source is cited instead.

Disclaimer: This article is not intended to provide medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. Views expressed here do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/health_medicine/genes/~3/WuxNytFZ-J0/130122122222.htm

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Wednesday, January 23, 2013

iPhone 6 Fingerprint Technology: Coming in 2013?!

Source: http://www.thehollywoodgossip.com/2013/01/iphone-6-fingerprint-technology-coming-in-2013/

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Bali Holidays: Luxury At Its Best

When we plan vacations we expect to spend quality time with our family and friends, relaxation, some adventure, shopping and loads of fun. We do a lot of research; choose a destination, book travel, hotel etc for an ideal holiday. Where you plan to visit depends a lot on your budget and the kind of vacation you want to go for. If you wish to spend some time with your loved ones in privacy and isolation, you can opt for an island holiday this year. When we talk about islands, Bali is one of the most exquisite islands in Indonesia.

There is so much you can do on this beautiful island from water sports to surfing, shopping, dance performances and nightlife. If you and your family love adventures, you can opt to go surfing here, if you like to spend time with your family and just relax, you can spend time on the white sand beaches here, visit temples or go sightseeing. Whatever you choose to do once youre there, you will just fall in love with the island and would definitely visit again.

Now that youve decided to visit Bali for a vacation, you will surely be checking on some accommodation options. There are huge numbers of tourists visiting the island throughout the year. Therefore, you will find many options from budget hotels to 5 start resorts, guesthouses, pent houses and villas to stay in Bali. Bali offers numerous choices when it comes to accommodation. What you choose depends on your budget and the kind of vacation you plan. One of the best places to put up and enjoy your holiday on this island is a luxurious villas Bali. These villas are easily available for rent and wont cost you much.

Luxury Bali villas offer you absolute privacy and comfort on your vacation. You can spend quality time with your loved ones and avail various facilities in these villas. You will indeed experience luxury and make your holiday a memorable experience.

So indulge yourself in these luxurious Bali villas and enjoy all the facilities you can think of on a vacation. You can rent a villa anywhere on the island. These villas are situated in almost all the key areas of this island mostly visited by the tourists. These villas are especially designed with all modern amenities to give you a luxurious feel. The furniture and decor are lavish. These villas are multi bedrooms, with a private swimming pool, terrace, open kitchen, dining and living area.

You can decide the location you wish to put up, we offer villas on rent from Legian to Umalas or Seminyak to Ubud. You can check the locations and types of villas online as per your daily budget. You can book a villa located on the edge of a quite village, or go for a villa with a beach view.

You can enjoy various services at villas in Bali like a personal chef/cook, air transfers, car rentals, serving staff, security, cleaning staff etc. You can also avail additional services like house-keeping, laundry, sightseeing, baby sitting. You can also rejuvenate your mind and soul, enjoy the spa therapies offered by us at great discounts.

About the Author:
So go ahead and book a luxury villas bali suitable for your family and friends and have fun in villas in bali on your vacation.

Source: http://www.articlesnatch.com/Article/Bali-Holidays--Luxury-At-Its-Best/4396490

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Tuesday, January 22, 2013

Five Unique Retail Marketing Ideas to get Customers - Training tampa

In the past, retail businesses may have survived on foot traffic and word-of-mouth referrals. Now, as online retailers compete with brick-and-mortar stores, consumers are inundated with shopping options. In today?s market, it is crucial that retailers implement specific marketing ideas to stand out from the crowd and convert potential customers. The following are a few simple yet innovative ways in which retailers can improve their marketing strategies:

1. Target market segments with custom vinyl banners. Does your target customer have school-age children? Sponsor a local Little League team or elementary school, and in return, ask to display a custom vinyl banner that indicates your business has helped out. Parents will subconsciously associate your brand with philanthropy and community involvement ? clearly, a win-win deal if you?re targeting parents.

2. Partner with another local business in an adjacent market to offer a cross-promotion. Many grocery chains offer rewards cards that can accrue points for discounts at gas stations. This idea gets customers to think of the two businesses at once; while spending money at the grocery store, the customer is reminded of the gas discount and vice versa. This is not limited to corporate partnerships; local businesses can join up and offer each customer a coupon for another type of business. For example, a cosmetics company could supply samples to lunch patrons at a cafe on Mother?s Day. The restaurant gets free gifts for their diners, and the cosmetics company reaches their target demographic in a personal and unique way.

3. Distribute coupons and promotional flyers to capture specific segments of your market. Make sure to include an irresistible deal and an example of your best selling product or service on the flyer.

4. Does your business sell products that tend to have wasteful packaging? Give customers a discount for bringing back a certain number of empty packages. No packaging involved in your products? Put out a recycling bin for batteries or other unwieldy items to dispose. Customers will stop by for the convenient disposal option and stay to shop.

5. Reach out over Instagram and Twitter. These two social networks are heavily dependent on spur-of-the-moment content. Set up accounts to advertise your business for free, and take advantage of your customers? own networks by offering a discount for a retweet or comment. Increase the discount if the retweet or comment is sent while the customer is in your store.

About The Author:

Madyson Grant is a small business owner who loves to blog about helpful tips to others in the business.

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Source: http://www.trainingtampa.com/2013/01/20/five-unique-retail-marketing-ideas-to-get-customers/

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Gunmen seize fuel tanker with 16 crew off Ivory Coast

ABIDJAN (Reuters) - Gunmen seized a Nigerian-owned, Panama-flagged tanker with 16 Nigerian crew off Ivory Coast's port of Abidjan as it prepared to unload 5,000 tonnes of fuel, port officials said on Monday.

Attacks on shipping are increasing in the Gulf of Guinea - second only to the waters around Somalia for piracy. But the ITRI incident was only the second of its kind in Ivorian waters.

The tanker, named the ITRI and owned by Lagos-based Brila Energy, was commandeered on Thursday, Abidjan's port authority said in a statement.

Serge Constant of Koda Maritime, an Ivorian firm that was managing its stopover in Ivory Coast, said there has been no contact with it since.

Constant said the ITRI's onboard tracking system had been disabled. Abidjan port officials said the ITRI's last known position was off the coast of neighboring Ghana. But Ghanaian authorities said they had been unable to locate the ITRI.

"...We now seem to be back to square one. The information is contradictory. We don't know who's telling us the truth and who isn't," said Constant.

Piracy subsided to a five-year low in 2012 due mainly to a drastic reduction in Somali hijackings in the seas off the Horn of Africa. But 10 vessels with a total of 207 crew were seized in the Gulf of Guinea off West Africa last year, according to the International Maritime Bureau.

Many of the pirate gangs in the Gulf of Guinea are offshoots of militant groups that once operated in Nigeria's oil-rich Niger Delta before they agreed an amnesty in 2009.

Analysts say coordinated efforts by Nigerian authorities and neighboring countries have forced Nigerian pirates to seek easier targets outside their home waters.

"Nigeria and Benin have had joint actions for two years, and they have been quite successful. We haven't seen the kinds of heavy attacks that we used to see," said Martin Ewi, a senior researcher with South Africa's Institute for Security Studies.

"Ivory Coast seems to be attracting those that have been driven out."

In October, suspected Nigerian pirates seized a Bahamas-flagged tanker carrying more than 32,000 metric tonnes of gasoline near Abidjan's port. The 24 crew were later freed unharmed.

(Reporting By Joe Bavier; Additional reporting by Kwasi Kpodo in Accra; Editing by Richard Valdmanis and Mark Heinrich)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/gunmen-seize-fuel-tanker-16-crew-off-ivory-181102278.html

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Solving the Password Problem

Getting hacked is becoming an Internet rite of passage. Consider 2012 alone: First Zappos was hacked, its customers' passwords and other personal information exposed. Then LinkedIn announced that its users' passwords had been compromised. Then eHarmony. Then Yahoo. More than 30 million users' passwords were stolen. The growing, painful password problem is twofold: Hackers have gotten very good at what they do, with more capable tools than ever, and those tools can work so well because we are still really bad at choosing?and remembering?passwords.

Coming up with a password is a compromise between security and convenience. Very complex passwords are highly secure but difficult to remember. To make them work, users end up in a constant loop of resetting forgotten passwords or relying on writing them down on sticky notes. Simpler passwords are easier for us to remember but all too easy for others to discern. Even if you think your pet's name is rare and choose SenorFluffypants as a password, that information would be easy for an adversary to find on, say, Facebook. Because passwords are annoying and tedious to keep track of, most of us resist changing our obvious passwords, many of which can be found in leaked databases. The top passwords of 2012 remain what they have been for years: password, 123456, and 12345678.

Passwords like those are especially easy to crack, says Peter Theobald of KLG Computer Forensics. "Anyone with a password that can be found in the dictionary, even if it's a minor variation followed by a number, gets found quickly," he says.

It's possible that one or more of your passwords has already been stolen (you can check PwnedList, an online database with more than 966 million compromised passwords on file), but even if it hasn't, relying on weak passwords is a fool's game. Once hackers get into an account, they immediately start searching for any linked or related accounts. Before long, a complete stranger could be wreaking havoc on your social reputation, credit rating, and finances. If you suspect that one of your online accounts has been hacked, immediately change the passwords on any other important account you have; hackers have programs designed to try the cracked password at other sites. Even if you've been smart enough to maintain separate passwords for different accounts, hackers will leverage access to your email to reset passwords for other sites. ("Forgot your password? Have a new one sent to your email account.") But when you do reset passwords, don't repeat mistakes of the past. There are ways to make passwords both secure and memorable.

The Bad Guys


Before we examine what good passwords look like, it helps to know your adversary. Using a PC with inexpensive multicore graphics processing units (GPUs), a hacker can try about 8 billion password combinations in a second?thousands of times faster than just a few years ago, when the processing depended on just the CPU. Because they're designed for parallel computing, GPUs are much better at the large-scale mathematical operations needed for cracking passwords. Powerful password-cracking software is available for free, and hackers also have access to growing shared lists of millions of actual user passwords.

By analyzing these lists, professional password crackers know that when forced to pick a password with a mix of upper- and lowercase letters, a number, and a special character, users tend to choose a familiar word or a dictionary word, capitalize the first letter, and add the number and special character at the end (such as Fido1*). The geekiest among us may replace vowels with numbers (leetspeak), such as F1d01, or shift our hands on the keyboard to mask the actual password. But hackers know this, and a simple algorithm is all they need to get past it.

Even passwords that combine more than one strategy are vulnerable. Take, for example, the password MyS3cr3t!. It meets typical security guidelines, and online password-strength meters would call it strong. With faster processing, and programming rules that add characters and punctuation to a word list, a hacker could crack that password in just 12 hours.

Don't Be an Idiot: Make a Bad Password Good


It's not all that hard to turn a mediocre password into a great one. All it takes is the addition of some strategically placed numbers and symbols?and a good base word or phrase in the first place (which means saying goodbye to pet names and favorite sayings). Below, we chart a password's journey from weak to strong, showing how long it would take for a commonly used algorithm to crack each version.

Password: Aquarius
Time to Crack: 9.08 Mintues

Password: Aquarius1
Time to Crack: 1.59 Days

Password: Aquar$ius1
Time to Crack: 19.24 Years

Password: Aqu57ar$iu3s
Time to Crack: 17,400,000 Years

Source: http://www.popularmechanics.com/technology/how-to/computer-security/solving-the-password-problem-14993917?src=rss

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Q&A: How to Manage Business Transitions ... - Blacks Consulting

Most retail operations go through a management change at some time or another, whether the business is being transferred to a new owner, or there is a transition to a new management team. These transitions can be difficult if you do not have the right plan in place, so we sat down with Blacks Retail Senior Consultant Steve Pruitt to talk about how businesses can put themselves in the best position to undergo change.

Steve has worked with numerous private retail operations, helping them to adjust to new owners, concepts, and teams. Here he shares with us some of the basics of managing retail changes:

Blacks' Founder and Senior Consultant Steve Pruitt.

Blacks? Founder and Senior Consultant Steve Pruitt.

Since you are an inventory expert, our first question is what kind of inventory strategy do you recommend if you?re about to undergo change?

Steve: During these times it?s always best to be lean and mean with your inventory. When you?re going through a transition there is always the possibility that something could not go as you expect, and lean inventory enables you to have fluid cash flow.

You want your floor to look crisp, with enough new inventory to generate consumer interest and sales, but be light in terms of stock.

What?s the best way to deal with staff during these transitions?

Steve:
Communication is key. Your staff needs to understand what is going on, and how it will affect them. If you keep it from them, they will probably figure it out anyway, and lose morale because they don?t know where they stand. Most retailers that I?ve worked with who have small teams try to keep these teams intact through the transition, then it is up to the new management to decide who they want to keep permanently.

How should you approach marketing during these transitions?

Steve: Marketing should be consistent. You want to stay on message with your marketing plan, until the new team is in place. Then, they can decide if they want to roll out new marketing initiatives.

What about timing?

Steve: During a management or ownership change, timing is everything. You usually want to get it done as quickly as possible, but to do this you have to have a plan in place well in advance and be ready to implement it.

To help you put a plan in place you may need a consultant or a mediator who can review your goals and give you an objective set of eyes.

Would you say that most businesses could benefit from having an objective third party manage their transitions?

Steve: It depends on how much change is involved, but generally when a store is transferring to new ownership I would suggest that they get a third-party consultant to help them realize the business opportunities and how they can best take advantage of them. You want to know what the potential opportunities and pitfulls are before you make the transition.

And, in some cases, you may need a mediator to work with the existing team and the new team to ensure a smooth transition.

How long after a changeover should you expect to see results?

Steve: It depends, but I would say that if you see the same growth as the previous year within the year of the transition, but with increased productivity, that?s a great start. Then you have a solid platform for stronger growth going forward.

This entry was posted on Monday, January 21st, 2013 at 10:53 am and is filed under Management & Consulting. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed.

Source: http://blacksretail.com/2013/qa-how-to-manage-business-transitions/

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