Thursday, February 28, 2013

Penney's shares plunge after 4Q massive loss

FILE - In this Friday, July 27, 2012, file photo, Teresa Chavez shops at JC Penney's in the Southaven Towne Center Mall in Southaven, Miss. On Thursday, Feb. 28, 2013, a day after J.C. Penney reported a much wider-than-expected loss, the retailer?s stock is plummeting. (AP Photo/The Commercial Appeal, Kyle Kurlick, File)

FILE - In this Friday, July 27, 2012, file photo, Teresa Chavez shops at JC Penney's in the Southaven Towne Center Mall in Southaven, Miss. On Thursday, Feb. 28, 2013, a day after J.C. Penney reported a much wider-than-expected loss, the retailer?s stock is plummeting. (AP Photo/The Commercial Appeal, Kyle Kurlick, File)

(AP) ? J.C. Penney was the biggest loser Thursday.

Shares of J.C. Penney Co. plunged nearly 17 percent on Thursday, the largest decline on the Standard & Poor's 500 index on the day. The drop came a day after the department-store chain reported its fourth consecutive larger-than-expected quarterly loss on another steep sales decline.

Penney shares, which are now trading at around $18, now have lost nearly 60 percent of their value since early February of last year after CEO Ron Johnson revealed his plan to ditch hundreds of sales in favor of everyday low prices. After Johnson announced his vision in late January 2012, investors drove Penney's shares up 24 percent to $43 in a vote of confidence.

The stock drop is the latest sign that Johnson's turnaround strategy is failing on Wall Street as much as on Main Street. The company's quarterly and full-year results, which it reported Wednesday after the markets closed, revealed that shoppers still aren't buying it. But the sell-off shows that investors, too, are concerned that the plan won't work.

"I fear it will be much worse as consumers continue to walk away from J.C. Penney and its financial health continues to deteriorate," said Walter Loeb, a New York based independent consultant.

Penney's spokeswoman Daphne Avila declined to comment on Thursday's stock movement. But Johnson on Wednesday acknowledged to investors that the 1,100-store chain had made some mistakes. He also told them that Penney would start offering sales in stores every week.

"Experience is making mistakes and learning from them," Johnson told investors on Wednesday. "I have learned a lot."

If J.C. Penney's results are any indication, Johnson is right. Penney reported on Wednesday after the markets closed that it widened its quarterly loss to $552 million, or $2.51 per share. Revenue fell 24.8 percent to $12.98 billion.

Revenue at stores opened a least a year dropped 31.7 percent. The measure is a key indicator of a retailer's health. Customer traffic dropped 17 percent in the quarter, worse than the 10 percent drop in the third quarter.

Results for the full year were even more staggering. For the fiscal year, Penney lost $985 million, or $4.49 per share, compared with a loss of $152 million, or 70 cents per share, in the year ended January 28, 2012. Revenue dropped 24.8 percent to $12.98 billion.

It's a disappointing turn of events for Johnson, the mastermind of Apple's successful retail stores who took the top job at Penney in November 2011. A couple of months later, on Feb. 1 of last year, Johnson got rid of the nearly 600 sales Penney offered each year and lowered prices in the store by 40 percent. He also got rid of the word "sales" from the company's marketing.

But customers weren't responding to the changes, and Johnson has tweaked his strategy a few times, including bringing back the word "sale" in its marketing last spring. The latest change came early February when Penney began adding back more sales events and putting price tags on half of its merchandise to show customers how much they're saving by shopping at Penney.

Penney said that it's seeing positive results from its makeover of some of its stores with sectioned-off shops that feature different brands. The company plans to have 700 of its 1,100 stores nationwide remodeled in the coming years, but critics question whether the company is running out of time ? and money.

In November, Penney said that it would end the latest fiscal year with $1 billion in cash. But the company winded up ending the year with $930 million in cash, which was better than analysts had feared but below the company's target.

The company also told investors on Wednesday that it delayed $85 million in payments to its suppliers from the fourth quarter to the early part of the first quarter. That suggests they're running out of cash.

And two rating agencies ? Standard & Poor's Ratings Services and Fitch Ratings ? raised further concerns on Thursday about Penney's ability to meet its loan commitments. Both lowered their credit ratings on Penney, which were already in junk status, by one notch.

"Our analysis suggests (Penney) will deplete cash" in the third quarter, wrote Kimberly C. Greenberger, an analyst at Morgan Stanley in a report published Thursday.

_______

Follow Anne D'Innocenzio at www.twitter.com/adinnocenzio

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/f70471f764144b2fab526d39972d37b3/Article_2013-02-28-JC%20Penney-Stock%20Plunge/id-214a519339e14fe085dc3f84cd0bae07

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10 Things to Know for Today

Fresh snow covers Anish Kapoor's sculpture "Cloud Gate" and gives it the appearance of a cracked egg as a lone pedestrian walks around the stainless steel attraction in Chicago's Millennium Park, as a winter storm of rain and snow begins Tuesday, Feb. 26, 2013. Forecasters expect the storm to leave behind three to six inches of snow in the greater Chicago area. (AP Photo/Charles Rex Arbogast)

Fresh snow covers Anish Kapoor's sculpture "Cloud Gate" and gives it the appearance of a cracked egg as a lone pedestrian walks around the stainless steel attraction in Chicago's Millennium Park, as a winter storm of rain and snow begins Tuesday, Feb. 26, 2013. Forecasters expect the storm to leave behind three to six inches of snow in the greater Chicago area. (AP Photo/Charles Rex Arbogast)

Pope Benedict XVI kisses a baby during his general audience in St. Peter's Square at the Vatican, Wednesday, Feb. 27, 2013. Pope Benedict XVI basked in an emotional sendoff Wednesday at his final general audience in St. Peter's Square, recalling moments of "joy and light" during his papacy but also times of great difficulty. He also thanked his flock for respecting his decision to retire. (AP Photo/Gregorio Borgia)

Robin Kelly celebrates her special primary election win for Illinois' 2nd Congressional District, once held by Jesse Jackson Jr., Tuesday, Feb. 26, 2013, in Matteson, Ill. After a primary campaign dominated by gun control and economic woes, voters chose Kelly over Debbie Halvorson and Anthony Beale, making her the likely replacement for Jesse Jackson Jr., three months after his legal troubles and battle with depression forced the son of the civil rights leader to resign from Congress. (AP Photo/Charles Rex Arbogast)

Your daily look at late-breaking news, upcoming events and the stories that will be talked about today:

1. CIAO, BENEDICT XVI

The pope recalls "joy and light" and also moments of difficulty in his last final audience as pontiff before he retires.

2. HAGEL CONFIRMED AFTER BITTER SENATE FIGHT

Among his daunting challenges as defense secretary: dealing with $46 billion in budget cuts set to kick in on Friday.

3. CONGRESSMAN PROPOSES END TO AUTOMATIC BUDGET CUTS

U.S. Rep. Adam Smith's bill would cut more than $300 billion over the next eight years and put off the sequester.

4. WHO'S TO BLAME IN A DEADLY HOT AIR BALLOON CRASH

Some Egyptians said safety standards had declined amid political turmoil, others said the pilot may bear responsibility.

5. US CONSIDERS DIRECT AID TO SYRIAN REBELS

The AP reports the Obama administration is considering supplying help to the Free Syria Army.

6. SLOW-MOVING STORM AIMS AT NEW ENGLAND

The heavy wet, snow as headed east after closing schools and making travel treacherous.

7. NYC MAYOR HELPS ELECT JACKSON REPLACEMENT

Former Illinois legislator Robin Kelly, who favors strict gun control, was helped by Michael Bloomberg's super PAC in the race.

8. WHY OFFICIALS SUSPECT MISSING BOATERS ARE A HOAX

The Coast Guard found no registration of the boat described and no one reported a family of four missing.

9. GETTING YOUR COMPUTER TO TALK TO YOUR COFFEE MAKER

Machine-to-machine communication, or the "Internet of Things," is getting a lot buzz at this year's wireless trade show.

10. HOW TO EAT FAMILY-STYLE IN THE SCHOOL CAFETERIA

Philadelphia charter school students pass serving dishes around circular tables, use real plates and silverware and bypass French fries for fennel salad.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2013-02-27-10-Things-to-Know-Today/id-fcaebe7be2474850a5e2accb1304937c

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How budget cuts could affect you

(AP) ? Government agencies are already taking steps to comply with automatic spending cuts scheduled to take effect Friday.

?Defense Department

One of the Navy's premiere warships, the aircraft carrier USS Harry S. Truman, sits pier-side in Norfolk, Va., its tour of duty delayed.

The carrier and its 5,000-person crew were to leave for the Persian Gulf on Feb. 8, along with the guided-missile cruiser USS Gettysburg.

?Department of Homeland Security

Hundreds of illegal immigrants have been freed from jail across the country.

Immigration and Customs Enforcement officials say they had reviewed several hundred cases of immigrants and decided to put them on an "appropriate, more cost-effective form of supervised release" in a moved started Tuesday.

___

Other impacts that are in the offing.

?Veteran funerals

Veteran funerals at Arlington National Cemetery could be cut to 24 a day from 31, meaning delays in burials for troops from past wars. Troops killed in action in Afghanistan will be the priority ? they are usually laid to rest within two weeks, Army spokesman George Wright said.

But overall funerals would be reduced by about 160 a month because of furloughs among civilian employees who work with families to schedule services as well as furloughs among crews that dig the graves and do other grounds work.

?Food and Drug Administration

There could be an estimated 2,100 fewer food safety inspections and increased risks to consumers because of the cuts and the fact that lack of a new 2013 budget means the Food and Drug Administration is held at last year's spending level.

Food and Drug Administration Commissioner Margaret Hamburg says most of the effects wouldn't be felt for a while, and the agency won't have to furlough workers.

? The economy

President Barack Obama says the sequester will cause a "tumble downward" for the economy. He acknowledges many people may not immediately notice the full impact of the so-called sequester cuts if they take effect Friday. But he says yanking $85 billion from the economy this year would be a "big hit" on a nation still trying to fully recover from a recession.

?Congressional trips

Congressional trips overseas likely will take a hit. House Speaker John Boehner told Republican members in a closed-door meeting that he's suspending the use of military aircraft for official trips by House members. Lawmakers typically travel on military planes for fact-finding trips to Afghanistan or Pakistan, or other congressional excursions to foreign locales.

?Military Intelligence

Pentagon investments in countering cyber threats and nuclear proliferation will be at risk, says Michael Vickers, the undersecretary of defense for intelligence. And the head of the Defense Intelligence Agency, Lt. Gen. Michael Flynn, says the agency could be hit hard because it depends heavily on military and civilian personnel to accomplish its mission.

?U.S. Coast Guard

Coast Guard rescue aircraft will fly fewer hours and cutters will patrol the seas for fewer hours, says the service's Commandant Adm. Robert J. Papp.

Emergencies will be a priority and interdictions of illegal immigrants, drugs and illegal fishing could decline.

?Health Care

Hospitals, doctors and other Medicare providers will see a 2 percent cut in government reimbursements because once cutback takes effect, Medicare will reimburse them at 98 cents on the dollar.

But they aren't complaining because the pain could be a lot worse if President Barack Obama and congressional Republicans actually did reach a sweeping agreement to reduce federal deficits. Automatic cuts taking effect Friday would reduce Medicare spending by about $100 billion over a decade. But Obama had put on the table $400 billion in health care cuts, mainly from Medicare. And Republicans wanted more.

?Transportation Department

The nation's busiest airports could be forced to close some of their runways, causing widespread flight delays and cancellations.

Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood predicts flights to cities like New York, Chicago and San Francisco could have delays of up to 90 minutes during peak hours because fewer controllers will be on duty.

Though the spending cuts are scheduled to go into effect on Friday, furloughs of controllers won't kick in until April because the Federal Aviation Administration is required by law to give its employees advance notice. In addition to furloughs, the FAA is planning to eliminate midnight shifts for air traffic controllers at 60 airport towers, close over 100 control towers at smaller airports and reduce preventative maintenance of equipment.

?Federal workers

More than half of the nation's 2.1 million government workers may be required to take furloughs if agencies are forced to trim budgets.

At the Pentagon alone that could mean 800,000 civilian workers would be off for 22 days each, spread across more than five months ? and lose 20 percent of their pay over that period.

Other federal agencies are likely to furlough several hundred thousand more workers.

?Education

Some 70,000 students currently enrolled in pre-kindergarten Head Start would be cut from the program and 14,000 teachers would lose their jobs. For students with special needs, the cuts would eliminate some 7,200 teachers and aides. Up to 29 million student loan borrowers and some lenders may have to lay off staff or even close; some of the 15 million college students who receive grants or work-study assignments at some 6,000 colleges would also see changes.

?National parks

Visiting hours at all 398 national parks are likely to be cut and sensitive areas would be blocked off to the public. Thousands of seasonal workers looking for jobs would not be hired, according to Interior Secretary Ken Salazar.

Salazar and National Park Service director Jon Jarvis said visitors would encounter fewer rangers, locked restrooms and trashcans emptied less frequently.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/89ae8247abe8493fae24405546e9a1aa/Article_2013-02-28-Budget%20Battle-Glance/id-ccd62d0e9b154669a5ee81bb9ce93e09

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Rackspace Social Media Support Team Wins Customer Service ...

Rackspace?s Social Media Support Team this week took home a silver award for Front Line Customer Service Team of the Year at the seventh annual Stevie Awards for Sales & Customer Service. The award is an awesome recognition of our passion for customers and Fanatical Support.

The Rackspace Social Media Support Team lives by the ethos of ?Be Helpful.? The team actively monitors social media networks for conversations about our products, services, or other areas where Rackers have subject matter expertise. When we find these conversations, we strive to provide prompt, accurate, and helpful responses.

The Stevie Awards for Sales & Customer Service are the world?s top sales, contact center and customer service awards. The Stevie Awards organizes several of the world?s leading business awards shows including the prestigious American Business AwardsSM? and International Business AwardsSM. The Stevie Awards for Sales & Customer Service, which are judged by many of the leading figures in business, honor and ?recognize the accomplishments of sales, customer service, call/contact center and sales professionals worldwide.?

The Social Media Support Team was examined by a panel of business professionals, which named it a silver award winner in the Front Line Customer Service Team of the Year, under the Customer Service & Call Center Awards Team category.

More than 1,100 entries from organizations of all sizes and in virtually every industry were submitted to this year?s competition, an increase of 10 percent over 2012.? Finalists were determined by the average scores of 120 professionals worldwide, acting as preliminary judges.? Entries were considered in 30 categories for customer service professionals, including Contact Center of the Year, Award for Innovation in Customer Service and Customer Service Department of the Year; 41 categories for sales professionals, ranging from Senior Sales Executive of the Year to Sales Training to Coaching Program of the Year to Sales Department of the Year of the Year; and categories to recognize new products, services and solution providers.

More than 100 members of eight specialized judging committees determined Stevie Award placements from among the finalists during final judging this year.

Want to see just how Fanatical the Rackspace Social Media Support Team is? Check out this video:

Social Media Support Team Delivering Cake to Awesome Racker

Source: http://www.rackspace.com/blog/rackspace-social-media-support-team-wins-customer-service-stevie-award/

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Video: Battle of the Retailers: Buy JC Penney or Macy's?

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Source: http://video.msnbc.msn.com/cnbc/50972274/

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India: Market Fire Kills At Least 18 In Kolkata

KOLKATA, India -- A fire broke out at an illegal six-story plastics market in the Indian city of Kolkata early Wednesday morning, killing at least 19 people, police said.

The blaze, which started before 4 a.m., was likely caused by a short circuit, said West Bengal fire minister Javed Khan. The fire was under control by mid-morning, he said, but toxic gases being released by the blaze were hampering rescue efforts.

A police official, speaking on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak to the media, said at least 19 people had died. He said police were looking for the owner of the building, which was filled with dozens of small shops selling various plastic products.

Another 10 people were hospitalized in critical condition and the death toll was expected to rise, Khan said.

He called the scene of the fire "an illegal, unauthorized market."

However, local residents said the market had been operating in the building for nearly 40 years. They said there was only one entrance to the building, which made rescue efforts difficult.

The building housed several warehouses on its upper floors, where chemicals, paper and plastics were stored.

Police said the victims were porters working in the market, who also slept there at night. Eighteen of the dead were men.

Mamata Banerjee, the state's top elected official, who visited the site soon after the blaze was brought under control, issued an ultimatum to the building's owners to install fire safety equipment within two months.

Banerjee said the previous government that ruled the state for more than three decades had allowed the building to operate without any permits or safety measures.

She said she has ordered police, fire service and the city administration to file a report on the cause of the blaze and take steps to prevent the recurrence of such fires.

In December 2011, at least 93 people died in a deadly fire in a hospital in Kolkata. Soon after that, Banerjee had promised that her government would crackdown on lax safety procedures in public buildings.

Safety regulations are routinely ignored in India, where fire stairways and evacuation drills are rare. Even if fire extinguishers are present, they are commonly several years old and almost never serviced.

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/02/27/indian-market-fire-kills-_n_2770314.html

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Bernanke: 6% unemployment still years away

Unemployment probably won't reach the 6 percent level until 2016, Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke told Congress on Wednesday.

Bernanke, who is delivering a second day of testimony on Capitol Hill, continued to defend the central bank's easy monetary policy and warned Congress against letting looming spending cuts take place.

"There still seems to be quite a bit of unused resources, people that could be working, capital that could be used and is not being used," Bernanke said of the economy. "We believe the monetary policies that we've conducted have helped get stronger recovery and more jobs than we otherwise would have had."

Bernanke said that based on Fed estimates, "we've helped create many private sector jobs, government jobs to support the economy quite significantly."

With the jobless rate in January at 7.9 percent, Bernanke said his "reasonable guess" would be that it will take three more years before the unemployment rate reaches 6 percent. Late last year, the Federal Reserve said it would keep interest rates low until unemployment reached about 6.5 percent.

Bernanke also sees little risk of a spike in interest rates in the near term but did warn of the potential economic damage from the automatic spending cuts that go into effect on Friday.

Read More: Americans Call Sequester a 'Bad Idea': NBC/WSJ Poll

The Fed chairman advocated a gradual approach to dealing with the country's fiscal problems. "The more gradual this is, as long as there is offsetting changes in the further horizon, the less the immediate impact will be on jobs and growth in this recovery in 2013," he said.

"I think there is some cost to the economy of these repeated, I won't say 'crises,' but these repeated episodes where Congress is unable to come to some agreement and therefore some automatic thing kicks in, I think that's on the whole not a good thing for confidence."

Source: http://www.nbcnews.com/business/bernanke-6-unemployment-still-years-away-1C8592802

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Wasp transcriptome creates a buzz

Tuesday, February 26, 2013

New research delivers a sting in the tail for queen wasps. Scientists have sequenced the active parts of the genome ? or transcriptome ? of primitively eusocial wasps to identify the part of the genome that makes you a queen or a worker. Their work, published in BioMed Central's open access journal Genome Biology, shows that workers have a more active transcriptome than queens. This suggests that in these simple societies, workers may be the 'jack-of-all-trades' in the colony - transcriptionally speaking - leaving the queen with a somewhat restricted repertoire.

Studying primitively eusocial species - like these wasps - can tell us about how sociality evolves. Seirian Sumner and colleagues sequenced transcriptomes from the eusocial tropical paper wasps ? Polistes canadensis. All social species ultimately evolved from a solitary ancestor ? in this case a solitary wasp, who lays the eggs and feeds the brood. But how does this ancestral solitary phenotype split to produce specialised reproducers (queens) and brood carers (workers) when a species becomes social?

This paper gives a first insight into the secret lives of social insects. It shows that workers retain a highly active transcriptome, possibly expressing many of the ancestral genes that are required for our solitary wasp to be successful on her own. Conversely, queens appear to shut down a lot of their genes, presumably in order to be really good reproducers.

Long-standing analyses based on the fossil record holds ants and wasps in a clade known as Vespoidea, with bees as a sister group. The team reassess the relationships between the subfamilies of bees, wasps and ants and suggest that wasps are part of a separate clade from ants and bees, though further genome sequences and comparative data will help to resolve this controversy.

The dataset offers a first chance to analyse subfamily relationships across large numbers of genes, though further work is required before the term Vespoidia could be dropped, or reclassified. Sumner says: 'This finding would have important general implications for our understanding of eusociality as it would suggest that bees and ants shared an aculeate wasp-like ancestor, that ants are wingless wasps, and that bees are wasps that lost predacious behaviours.'

Their work suggests that novel genes play a much more important role in social behaviour than we previously thought.

###

BioMed Central: http://www.biomedcentral.com

Thanks to BioMed Central for this article.

This press release was posted to serve as a topic for discussion. Please comment below. We try our best to only post press releases that are associated with peer reviewed scientific literature. Critical discussions of the research are appreciated. If you need help finding a link to the original article, please contact us on twitter or via e-mail.

This press release has been viewed 38 time(s).

Source: http://www.labspaces.net/127021/Wasp_transcriptome_creates_a_buzz

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Getting to grips with multicore's hugely disruptive technology ? an ...

There was some serious brainpower assembled at the recent Multicore World 2013 conference in Wellington.

Some of the subject matter was way-beyond the once over lightly understanding that I have of computers and computing. But the clear message was that there?s currently a big gap between what multicore computers (many cores on one chip) are capable of, and the programs to run them.

As an analogy, it is as if a car engine has eight cylinders, but there?s only fuel getting through to one or two of them ? vastly decreasing its possible performance.

Put another way, multicore hardware is way, way ahead of multicore software. (When you consider that 64+ cores on a chip are now being manufactured, it is obvious, as has often been stated, that hardware capability is no longer an issue). How this clear gap is resolved is very much a problem in search of an answer.

It would?ve been good to see a heavier concentration of government and corporate IT heavyweights at the two-day conference held at the Wellington Town Hall.

The line-up of speakers would grace any northern hemisphere conference (and no doubt pull in hundreds of attendees), looking over the horizon at where the actual bits and bytes of computing is heading.

In other words, as opposed to the frothy apps and gee-whiz retail end of things, this conference was about where all the hard work of computers, memory, transactions and data crunching takes place.

One of the underlying themes of the conference put together by Oamaru-based Nicolas Erdody (Open Parallel) is that NZ Inc has an opportunity as the world grapples with how to utilise the huge amount of power available, but not yet being accessed.

The (parallel) programming required to take advantage of multicore, where the instructions to and from each core has to inform and be informed by every other core, is not easy.

As Poul-Henning Kamp, a Danish software writer and inventor of ?Varnish? commented; ?parallelism is hard?..really, really hard.?

And one thing that hasn?t been decided is what computer language is best suited for writing parallel programming is still unclear ? and indeed numbers of languages could evolve.

New Zealand has the opportunity to be a niche operator and software supplier in this emerging world ? providing answers where others find it too difficult.

Ex-patriot Kiwi Dr Ian Foster (originally from Wellington, and these days among other roles the Professor of Computer Science at the University of Chicago) helped frame some of the already apparent and emerging possibilities capable through multicore in his keynote address.

(His, and the other presenters talks can be found here).

He described the exponentialism that multicores potentially provide as offering new paradigms that ?can bring about huge transformations?.

Where he sees the grunt of multicore having near-future effects are:

-????????? Digital visual effects

-????????? Digital fabrication (additive manufacturing)

-????????? Industrial internet (heavy industrial internet)

-????????? Data analytics (big data)

Foster says multicore is a hugely disruptive technology ? New Zealand has an opportunity to ride its wave, or (especially if the country doesn?t build a second fibre optic cable linking us to the rest of the world) be left behind.

Disclaimer:

I helped write some of the publicity and press releases around Multicore World 2013. The thoughts above are mine alone however.

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sticK is by Peter Kerr, a writer for hire. I have a broad science and technology background and interest, with an original degree in agricultural science. My writing speciality is making the complex understandable. I am available for outside consultancy work, and for general discussions of converting a good idea into something positive

Source: http://sticknz.net/2013/02/28/getting-to-grips-with-multicores-hugely-disruptive-technology-an-opportunity-for-nz-inc/

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New Jersey lawmakers pass online gambling bill

TRENTON, N.J. (AP) ? New Jersey legislators gave final approval Tuesday to a bill legalizing gambling over the Internet, sending it to Gov. Chris Christie, who has indicated he will sign it quickly.

The state Assembly and Senate passed an updated version of the bill that Christie vetoed on Feb. 7, making the changes he asked for including setting a 10-year trial period for online betting, and raising the taxes on the Atlantic City casinos? online winnings.

Assuming Christie signs the bill ? he said last week he would do so quickly if the legislature made the changes he wanted ? New Jersey would become the third state in the nation to legalize gambling over the Internet. It also would represent the largest expansion of legalized gambling in New Jersey since the first casino began operating in Atlantic City in 1978.

Nevada and Delaware have passed laws legalizing Internet betting, which also is going on offshore, untaxed and unregulated.

?Finally, some good news for Atlantic City?s future,? said state Sen. Raymond Lesniak, one of the strongest proponents of online gambling. ?Internet gaming will give an immediate boost to the outlook for Atlantic City?s future, preventing the closing of at least one casino, and saving thousands of jobs. Now we can get to work making Atlantic City the Silicon Valley of Internet gaming by being the hub for other states to join.?

The idea is to help the struggling casinos by attracting new gamblers who are not now visiting the casinos. The comps, like free hotel rooms, show tickets, meals or other freebies, would be accrued from online play, but would have to be redeemed in person at a casino, presumably enticing a player to spend more money while there.

The bill will not take effect until the state Division of Gaming Enforcement sets a start date, sometime between three and nine months after the law is signed. Casino executives have estimated it could take six months to a year to get the system up and running.

It would allow the playing online, for money, of any game currently offered by Atlantic City?s 12 casinos; online poker is expected to be a particularly popular option.

Gamblers would have to set up online accounts with a particular casino, and could set daily limits on their play. They also would be subject to the same per-hand limits as gamblers physically present in the casino. Casino executives say final rules have to be approved by the gambling enforcement division, but they expect the state to require gamblers to have to appear in person at a casino to open their accounts and verify their age, identity and other personal information. Payouts could be made remotely to a credit card account or bank account when a player cashes out, if the state approves such an arrangement, the executives said.

They conceivably could even gamble through social media sites, as long as the sites worked with casinos who have an online gambling license, Lesniak said.

The casinos would utilize software programs that would, among other things, seek to verify that a person is at least 21 years old. Ted Friedman, CEO of Secure Trading, a Delaware Internet payment processor, said his firm?s software validates player information, including age, against multiple public and private databases.

It also uses authentication tools that will ask the player a series of multiple choice questions that only the specific player would know the answer to. Based on the identity checks and answers provided, an algorithm is run to determine the confidence level that the player is who they say they are and are of legal age.

The bill would allow gamblers in other states to place bets in New Jersey as long as regulators determine such activity is not prohibited by federal or any state?s law. It even has provisions for allowing people in other countries to play, although federal law would have to be changed before that could happen, Lesniak said.

The third time was the charm for online gambling in New Jersey. The legislature had passed two previous versions of the bill, only to see Christie veto them.

Christie vetoed New Jersey?s first attempt at Internet gambling in March 2011, citing concerns about its constitutionality and worrying about the proliferation of illegal back-room Internet betting parlors that would be difficult to find and prosecute. A second bill tried to address those concerns by providing hefty fines for anyone who runs or even advertises such a back-room betting parlor.

But Christie still wasn?t done objecting, noting in his Feb. 7 veto message that he had been torn over whether to expand gambling in New Jersey to such an extent. His two biggest requested changes were having Internet gambling reviewed by the state after 10 years to see how well it was working, and increasing the tax rate on the casinos? online winnings from 10 percent to 15 percent.

___

Wayne Parry can be reached at http://twitter.com/WayneParryAC

Source: http://talkingpointsmemo.com/news/new-jersey-internet-gambling.php?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed:+tpm-news+(TPMNews)

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Wednesday, February 27, 2013

Novel combination therapy shuts down escape route, killing glioblastoma tumor cells

Novel combination therapy shuts down escape route, killing glioblastoma tumor cells

Wednesday, February 27, 2013

Glioblastoma, the most common and lethal form of brain tumor in adults, is challenging to treat because the tumors rapidly become resistant to therapy. As cancer researchers are learning more about the causes of tumor cell growth and drug resistance, they are discovering molecular pathways that might lead to new targeted therapies to potentially treat this deadly cancer.

Scientists at the Ludwig Institute for Cancer Research in San Diego worked collaboratively across the laboratories of Drs. Paul Mischel, Web Cavenee and Frank Furnari to investigate one such molecular pathway called the mammalian target of rapamycin or mTOR. This signaling pathway is hyperactivated in close to 90 percent of glioblastomas and plays a critical role in regulating tumor growth and survival. Therapies that inhibit mTOR signaling are under investigation as drug development targets, but results to date have been disappointing: mTOR inhibitors halt the growth but fail to kill the tumor cells.

A study published this week in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences uncovers an unexpected but important molecular mechanism of mTOR inhibitor resistance and identifies a novel drug combination that reverses this resistance.

The story begins with a closer look at a gene-encoded protein called promyleocytic leukemia gene or PML. The study investigators explored the role of PML in causing resistance to mTOR inhibitor treatment. They found that when glioblastoma patients are treated with drugs that target the mTOR pathway, the levels of PML rise dramatically. Further, they showed that PML upregulation made the tumor cells resistant to mTOR inhibitors, and that if they suppressed the ability of the tumor cells to upregulate the PML protein, the tumor cells died in response to the mTOR inhibitor therapy.

"When we looked at cells in in vivo models and patients treated in the clinic, it became clear that the glioblastoma cells massively regulated PML enabling them to escape the effects of mTOR inhibitor therapy," reported senior author Paul Mischel, MD, Ludwig Institute member based at the University of California at San Diego.

"Our team hypothesized that if we could use a pharmacological approach to get rid of PML and combine it with an mTOR inhibitor, it could change the response from halting growth to cell death. The question was how?" added Mischel.

Previous research had shown that the use of low-dose arsenic could cause degradation of the PML protein in patients with leukemia. The team hypothesized that if arsenic could degrade PML, it may reverse resistance to mTOR inhibitors. The combination of mTOR and low-dose arsenic in mice indeed showed a synergistic effect, with massive tumor cell death along with very significant shrinkage of the tumor in mice with no ill side effects.

"Current therapy upregulates PML, turning off the mTOR signaling pathway. The tumor cells hide, waiting for the target signal to return," said Mischel. "When low-dose arsenic is added, not only does it stop the cell from returning, it shuts down the escape route killing the tumor cell."

These results present the first clinical evidence that mTOR inhibition promotes PML upregulation in mice and patients, and that it mediates drug resistance. The clinical relevance was confirmed when researchers looked at before- and after-treatment tissue samples from patients treated with mTOR inhibitors, confirming that PML goes up significantly in post treatment of mTOR inhibitors.

"These data suggest a new approach for potential treatment of glioblastoma," said Mischel. "We are moving forward to test that possibility in people."

Post-doctoral students Akio Iwanami and Beatrice Gini from the Mischel lab as well as Ciro Zanca from the Furnari/Cavenee lab, also contributed significantly to this paper.

###

Ludwig Institute for Cancer Research: http://www.licr.org

Thanks to Ludwig Institute for Cancer Research for this article.

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Source: http://www.labspaces.net/127038/Novel_combination_therapy_shuts_down_escape_route__killing_glioblastoma_tumor_cells

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Estimates reduce amount of additional land available for biofuel production by almost 80%

Feb. 27, 2013 ? Amid efforts to expand production of biofuels, scientists are reporting new estimates that downgrade the amount of additional land available for growing fuel crops by almost 80 percent. Their report appears in the ACS journal Environmental Science & Technology.

Steffen Fritz and colleagues explain that growing concern exists in the U.S. and the European Union on how production of biofuels will impact food security. This has led to a realization that increased production of biofuels must take place on so-called "marginal land," acreage not suitable for growing food crops, but capable of growing switch grass, Indian beech trees and Barbados nut trees. Concerned that previous estimates were targeting some areas where land is not marginal, the scientists did the calculations using data obtained through crowdsourcing, which were based on higher-resolution datasets.

They concluded that previous studies had overestimated the amount of arable land, had underestimated the amount of land already being cultivated and had not fully considered other competing uses for land other than farming. The revised estimates show that 140 million-2.6 billion acres of additional land could be cultivated for biofuel production. That compares with previous estimates of 800 million-3.5 billion acres. This study highlights the large uncertainties in estimating land availability and points out that such estimates should be used with caution.

The authors acknowledge funding from European Community's Framework Programme via the Project EuroGEOSS, EnerGEO, Pashmina and ASAP programme of the Austrian Research Promotion Agency.

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by American Chemical Society.

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Journal Reference:

  1. Steffen Fritz, Linda See, Marijn van der Velde, Rachel A. Nalepa, Christoph Perger, Christian Schill, Ian McCallum, Dmitry Schepaschenko, Florian Kraxner, Ximing Cai, Xiao Zhang, Simone Ortner, Rubul Hazarika, Anna Cipriani, Carlos Di Bella, Ahmed H. Rabia, Alfredo Garcia, Mar?yana Vakolyuk, Kuleswar Singha, Maria E. Beget, Stefan Erasmi, Franziska Albrecht, Brian Shaw, Michael Obersteiner. Downgrading Recent Estimates of Land Available for Biofuel Production. Environmental Science & Technology, 2013; : 130128103203003 DOI: 10.1021/es303141h

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

Disclaimer: Views expressed in this article do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/top_technology/~3/hNryhAx_7IU/130227102056.htm

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Loss Of Online Privacy Kills Free Speech - Business Insider

A few months back, an advertising executive argued that more online privacy would kill free speech.

Richard Frankel, president of the advertising company Rocket Fuel, titled the post ?How the Do Not Track Plan Will Ultimately Kill Free Speech.?

It?s understandable that advertisers are so resistant to the concept of Do Not Track ? it could change the way they access data, which would force them to innovate their business models and practices.?

Just because DNT could impact the advertising industry in the short-term, however, doesn?t warrant its intense broadcasting of fear, uncertainty and doubt (FUD), and at times, outright deception. Frankels?s piece was one in a string of ad exec attacks on privacy that claim that the Internet will be doomed if consumers get more of the privacy they want.

In the interest of transparency, let me explain my angle here. I?m an attorney, privacy advocate, and analyst at Abine, an online privacy company in Boston. We make simple tools that give people a choice over whether their personal info is collected, stored, and sold online.

Unlike the advertising companies, we don?t collect or sell any user data. We only get paid if users like our free products and choose to buy our premium ones. It?s an up-front relationship that?s clear to our customers.

And beyond my role at Abine, I care deeply about preserving the web as a place where we can say and explore interesting, sometimes controversial, things. As a fan of free speech and expression, I have a vested interest in keeping the Internet open and uncensored.

Make no mistake about it: we live in a state of surveillance. Hundreds of advertising and tracking companies follow everything we do online -- the articles we read, the videos we watch, the sites we always visit, the Facebook comments we make, and more.

They combine that online data with offline data like our voting record, employment history, and marriage licenses, and use it to build an extremely detailed profile. Companies like Facebook scan the contents of photos and private messages for Homeland Security ?risk words? like ?infection,? ?body scanner,? or ?hacker? and turn them over to law enforcement.

Even if you delete your embarrassing Facebook posts, companies like Social Intelligence sell the past 7 years of posts to hiring managers. The wireless companies you pay for mobile service turn over 1.3 million customer records to law enforcement each year, which include texts and your phone?s GPS location wherever it went.

The divide between public and private surveillance is virtually nonexistent, and advertising companies are part of this ecosystem.

When you?re constantly being watched, you necessarily lack privacy. And when you?re constantly being watched, you act differently. That seems like an obvious point to those of us who?ve belted out song lyrics alone in our cars but would be terrified to do the same on stage in front of thousands or who laugh at things with their friends that they?d never say in front of their bosses, but observation effects are also well-established in scientific research, law, and popular culture (Big Brother, anyone?).

Privacy scholar Neil M. Richards writes that ?surveillance inclines us to the mainstream and the boring?when we are watched while engaging in intellectual activities, broadly defined?thinking, reading, web-surfing, or private communications?we are deterred from engaging in thoughts or deeds that others might find deviant.?

Deviance just means difference: deviation from the norm, creativity, standing out from the crowd. If you knew you were being watched and that your activities may resurface down the road in a job interview, on a date, in a newspaper, you?d be less likely to go that political rally, that Alcoholics Anonymous meeting, that gay bar, or that protest, all things that you have a right to do that are valued parts of a free, democratic society.

With privacy, you have control over who gets to see what you?re doing and where you are. You get to be one way around your boss, another around your kids, another around your best friends since elementary school. You get to pick that divide.

But when you?re watched all the time and you never know how that information will be used or where it?ll turn up, you censor yourself everywhere. This is called the Panopticon Effect. All this openness that social networks insist we want by default, the pervasive data collection that advertisers argue is good for us: they make anyone who?s paying attention censor themselves.

A key part of free speech is anonymous speech. Anonymous speech is a constitutionally protected First Amendment right, and as the Supreme Court stated in McIntyre v. Ohio Elections Commission, ?an honorable tradition of advocacy and of dissent.?

Online advertising constantly fights against anonymity and pseudonymity, trying to learn everything about web users to unmask them and peel away layers of demographic info, interests, and behaviors. Many social networks like Facebook have real name policies, insisting that members use their full, legal names on their accounts or be banned.

Frankel says that ?With higher ad revenues comes more rich content that spurs vibrant discussion.? I disagree. You know what spurs vibrant discussion? People, especially people behind pseudonyms. Ever been on a message board? A Reddit thread?

The most ?vibrant? discussions happen when people feel sufficiently protected to be honest. Sure, some people hide behind pseudonyms to harass others, but the core of the First Amendment avoids censoring the positive, protected uses of speech just because certain bad actors may abuse it.

To say that advertising is the only thing driving creative content doesn?t give credit to humanity?s ingrained creativity. First, plenty of content providers get paid for their work directly, from recording artists to bestselling authors to journalists. 43% of Americans pay content creators?authors of magazine articles and books?for e-books, and there are 400,000 paid subscribers to the Wall Street Journal alone.

The majority of people blogging and posting on social media today create content out of a desire to express themselves that?s unrelated to money. Just talk to any one of the thousands of bloggers and podcasters, particularly the anonymous ones, who pay to host their own websites just to get their message out to the public.

Most of these people don?t blog or podcast for a living; they do it because they love it and because their message is important to them. There?s power?and satisfaction?in speaking one?s mind, and it exists independently from ad money.

Privacy isn?t a hindrance to free speech; it?s the driving force behind it. Privacy provides both the boundaries of and protection for the space in which we can be ourselves. Privacy nurtures self-expression, creativity, speaking your mind, associating with whomever you wish, and exploring your interests.?

These are the First Amendment?s protections:? freedom of speech, of association, and of assembly.? They?re so important for self-actualization and self-determination that our founders immortalized them in the Bill of Rights. Privacy isn?t about having something to hide; it?s about having something to live for.

Why the ad industry is wrong about Do Not Track

A few months back, an advertising executive argued that more online privacy would kill free speech. Richard Frankel, president of the advertising company Rocket Fuel, titled the post ?How the Do Not Track Plan Will Ultimately Kill Free Speech.?

It?s understandable that advertisers are so resistant to the concept of Do Not Track ? it could change the way they access data, which would force them to innovate their business models and practices.? Just because DNT could impact the advertising industry in the short-term, however, doesn?t warrant its intense broadcasting of fear, uncertainty and doubt (FUD), and at times, outright deception.

Frankels?s piece was one in an ongoing string of ad exec attacks on privacy that claim that the Internet will be doomed if consumers get more of the privacy they want.

In the interest of transparency, let me explain my angle here. I?m an attorney, privacy advocate, and analyst at Abine, an online privacy company in Boston. We make simple tools that give people a choice over whether their personal info is collected, stored, and sold online. Unlike the advertising companies, we don?t collect or sell any user data.

We only get paid if users like our free products and choose to buy our premium ones. It?s an up-front relationship that?s clear to our customers. And beyond my role at Abine, I care deeply about preserving the web as a place where we can say and explore interesting, sometimes controversial, things.

As a fan of free speech and expression, I have a vested interest in keeping the Internet open and uncensored.

Make no mistake about it: we live in a state of surveillance. Hundreds of advertising and tracking companies follow everything we do online -- the articles we read, the videos we watch, the sites we always visit, the Facebook comments we make, and more.

They combine that online data with offline data like our voting record, employment history, and marriage licenses, and use it to build an extremely detailed profile. The divide between public and private surveillance is virtually nonexistent, and advertising companies are part of this ecosystem.

In this post, I?ll address Frankel?s argument - and the other advertisers using similar arguments - which goes something like this: 1) behavioral (or tracking-based) advertising is how online advertisers make money; 2) without advertising, content providers like online newspapers won?t be able to survive; 3) with paid subscriptions; only rich people who can afford content will get it, creating class segmentation.

In brief, here?s why they?re wrong:

1) the majority of online advertising revenue comes from contextual ads, which don?t pose any personal privacy risks;
2), the online advertising industry?s move to real-time bidding platforms are actually hurting content providers far more than a shift from behavioral advertising to contextual advertising ever could; and
3), beyond this being a reductio ad absurdum argument (?everything will be locked behind a paywall if we stop tracking!?), this segmentation already exists through the filter bubble that the advertising industry and its tracking has caused.

Realistically, online privacy isn?t going to hurt anything but these advertisers? antiquated business models, which will have to adapt to respect the privacy of their target audiences.

Let?s first examine the fallacy that online tracking doesn?t use personal information. Frankel argues that ?Targeted, relevant ads don?t harm consumers?personal information is not necessary, or collected, to produce them.?

This statement is less than fully honest when we look at Rocket Fuel?s own website, which boasts that it can ?zero in on? people based on ?age, gender, profession, ethnicity, and relationship status,? among many other personal characteristics. They have more than 20,000 audience segments, including soccer moms and caregivers:

The company goes on to say that they can find ?users engaged in highly targeted activities that define their interests and personalities? by going ?beyond behavioral, contextual, or geo-targeting by combining intelligent demographic, lifestyle, purchase-intent, and social data with our own suite of targeting algorithms, blended analytics, and expert analysis.?

And they?re not just using your online activity here:? ?Online data has evolved from simply providing insights like browsing activity, shopping cart info, sign ups, etc. into an incredible selection of more than 20,000 unique audience segments. Advertisers can even leverage offline purchase and consumption data for their online campaigns.?

Obviously, significant amounts of personal information are being collected. And the traditional advertiser counter-argument that ?it?s not personally identifiable; it?s only aggregate info? has been debunked time and time again by researchers like Stanford?s Arvind Narayanan and Jonathan Mayer (also see privacy professor Paul Ohm?s excellent summary of the failure of anonymization) and publications like the Wall Street Journal, which found in a December 2012 study that nearly 25% of the web?s 70 most popular sites shared personal data, like name and email address, with third-party companies.

Ad companies like Mixpanel come right out and say ?Now you can tie any kind of data to your users to see exactly who they are and what they have done.? The myth that de-identified data is private is even weaker now with the rise of ?data enhancement? that matches online info with offline data sets.

The only reason these ads can be personalized is because of the personal information, the data collection, that powers them. That?s the real harm here, and that?s always been the harm, despite advertisers trying to shift the focus to targeted ads. No one cares about targeted ads: at worst, they?re annoying or creepy. Let?s just drop it.

The thing people don?t like is having their personal info harvested, mined, sold, and used in ways they can?t even imagine: for determining their credit limits or creditworthiness, playing into whether they get a job, showing them different prices than other people see for the same online shopping items, or influencing their insurance rates.

Even Frankel seems to doubt himself: he says that ?consumers have become more open to [ads],? and then contradicts himself 6 paragraphs later when he says ?Everyone claims to hate online advertising.? His second statement is more accurate: an October 2012 UC Berkeley study found that most people--69%--never or hardly ever find ads useful, and 85% never or hardly ever click them; and a 2012 Pew phone survey of 2,253 participants found that 68% of them were ?not okay with targeted advertising because [they] don?t like having [their] online behavior tracked and analyzed.?

Microsoft surveyed their users about privacy in 2012 and found that 83% of Americans, 84% of Germans, and 81% of UK residents think that ?tracking of personal information is out of hand and consumers need easier ways to block it.? I won?t keep going; you get the picture. The advertising industry keeps preaching about how great data collection is for all of us. If the benefits are so clear, then why not let consumers choose to enable it? Overwhelmingly, the opposite is happening.

Let?s fact-check some of Frankel?s, and the advertising industry in general?s, more unsubstantiated statements:

Online ads have become ?less invasive?

If by ?invasive? he means ?in your face? like pop-ups, then he?s right. But just because data collection is invisible doesn?t mean it?s somehow safer or less intrusive. Advertisers employ a massive array of secret tracking techniques, collecting far more personal information than ever before in history, and they haven?t had the best rap while doing it: remember KISSmetrics creating undeletable cookies?

Google circumventing privacy controls in Safari and getting a $22.5 million FTC fine? Ad network Chitika?s opt-out that only lasted 10 days in contrast to any reasonable consumer?s expectations? Facebook tracking logged-out users anywhere there?s a Like button on the web?

Online tracking is only getting worse: UC Berkeley?s Web Privacy Census, powered by Abine?s privacy software, found an alarming increase in tracking on the top US websites, showing that online tracking will double in 2.5 years if present trends continue.

?The alternative to an ad-supported Internet is a pay-for-play world supported by subscriptions or private ownership. Consumers may think they want an ad-free Internet, but do we really want to pay subscription fees to access all the sites we currently visit for free??

Frankel wrongly equates ?behavioral advertising? with ?all advertising? and offers a false choice between an ad-supported Internet and an all-paid subscription Internet. He neglects to mention that the vast majority of advertising revenue comes from contextual ads, ads that relate to the content the viewer sees and not the personal characteristics of the viewer.

Contextual ads don?t present a privacy problem, and they make up the majority of online advertisements. The reality is that privacy controls will not have a negative impact on the economics of the Internet (at least not past this short-term period of transition), as I?ve argued elsewhere.

And it?s not as though advertisers are truthfully concerned about publishers? bottom lines. Significant evidence suggests the opposite: although online advertising is getting cheaper for advertisers, it?s getting more costly for publishers.

In the past, publishers had the power when pricing ads. You wanted a full-page New York Times ad? There?s a set price for that. With the recent advent of real-time online bidding platforms, advertisers hurt content providers by competing more effectively and cutting down the content provider?s take and involvement.

And at bottom, there?s plenty of research showing that plenty of people will pay small price increases for more privacy. A few dollars is all that?s needed to make the difference, so we?re not talking about a prohibitive expense. Offer people a choice: those who don?t mind surrendering their privacy can keep the status quo, but people who want to avoid it can throw in a few bucks to do so.

The Do Not Track option could serve as the dividing line to signal a consumer?s choice about privacy. Of course, it would need to live up to consumer expectations and actually stop tracking on websites, which notable websites like Twitter have done.

Do Not Track would ?reduc[e] the effectiveness of advertising?

To the contrary. Do Not Track has great potential to increase the effectiveness of advertising. Why? Because Do Not Track lets people tell advertisers not to use certain personalized ads that they find ineffective, usually because they find them creepy or annoying.

Do Not Track is a clear communication from web users to advertisers about which ads those users prefer; which ads work better for them. If ads annoy people and make them build negative associates with the things advertised, they?re not effective advertising.

Even with Do Not Track, advertisers still get to collect and sell user data for advertising: they just can?t show personalized online ads. According to the definition of Do Not Track offered by advertisers (which is at odds with what real people want), people who don?t want to be tracked will still see ads, but not personalized ones. Meanwhile, all other web users will keep seeing behaviorally targeted ads.

Across the board?regardless of whether a consumer clicked Do Not Track?advertisers will still collect all consumers? personal data exactly as before. Again, their definition, not ours.? This definition means that consumers get to voice which type of ads they prefer?personalized or not?and advertisers can still collect and sell everyone?s info. It?s a win-win for advertisers, far from the end of the Internet economy and a blow to advertising effectiveness.

?If independent publishers lose a large percentage of their ad revenues because Do Not Track or other initiatives restrict the free flow of information on the web, they?ll have less money to fund unbiased, journalistic content creation?

We already have a restricted flow of free information on the web, thanks to advertising. Ever heard of a filter bubble? It?s ?a situation in which a website algorithm selectively guesses what information a user would like to see based on information about the user (such as location, past click behavior and search history) and, as a result, users become separated from information that disagrees with their viewpoints, effectively isolating them in their own cultural or ideological bubbles.?

In other words, the more that advertisers or websites (or both, in the case of sites like Google and Facebook) know about you, the more they envelop you with targeted content. You don?t see the same Google search results as everyone else, or the same Amazon home page. Even news sites are targeted to show you articles they think you?ll like. Personal data collection fuels filter bubbles.

Frankel says that greater privacy will ?muffle the voices of many consumers who can?t or won?t pay to express their opinions.? You know what muffles voices? Surveillance, tracking, and the threat that what you say today will be used against you in the future.

That?s why anonymous speech is constitutionally protected and why many people choose to mask themselves when they make political comments. Online advertising works extremely hard to unmask those people, identify them, sell their data, and barrage them with ads. And that?s not what people want.

Source: http://www.businessinsider.com/loss-of-online-privacy-kills-free-speech-2013-2

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Finance: Currency Trading Article Category ? Social Network

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Source: http://tavoweb.lt/blog/452/finance-currency-trading-article-category/

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Will Oscar host Seth MacFarlane be asked back? Probably not.

Seth MacFarlane's Oscar hosting gig, full of low-brow and sexist jokes, received mixed reviews. The Academy struggles to reach a younger audience and remain a family-friendly show.

By Gloria Goodale,?Staff writer / February 25, 2013

Oscar host Seth MacFarlane speaks on stage at the 85th Academy Awards in Hollywood, Calif, on Sunday. After a performance full of sexist and racist jokes, viewers wonder if he will be asked to host again.

Mario Anzuoni/Reuters

Enlarge

As Oscar host Seth MacFarlane is surely learning Monday, helming the annual awards ceremony dwarfs all other challenges. Rescue hostages from under the nose of armed revolutionaries? Piece of cake! Free American slaves amidst a young nation?s bloody civil war? In my sleep!

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But host a three-hour industry telecast to the satisfaction of a global audience of a billion and counting? The faint-hearted need not apply.

Mr. MacFarlane, the creator of Fox?s ?Family Guy,? has been criticized for making sexist, racist, homophobic, and anti-Semitic jokes (does this miss any groups?) as well as general bad taste and lousy clock control (the show ran until midnight EST, a half hour over schedule).

But pop culture audiences seem to be as divided as political ones. According to Fizziology, a social media research firm, 13 percent of Facebook and Twitter users discussing the show ranked MacFarlane as ?the best host ever.? And early Nielsen ratings show the broadcast up nearly 20 percent over the 2012 show with some 37 million US viewers.

But there is one question that all Oscar viewers are asking: Will he be back?

Not if the Academy is a tad more careful next time, suggests Thelma Adams, Yahoo! Movies contributing editor. The ?central conundrum? is having a show that remains true to its film industry audience.

?Watch an episode of ?Family Guy? and you?ll know it?s not a good match for Hollywood honchos sitting in stiff chairs in tuxes and tiaras,? she says. The first thing to acknowledge is that the audience inside the Dolby Theater, where the show is held in Hollywood, ?is a tough and tense crowd.?

There are several groups on whom MacFarlane?s humor was wasted.

Gwendolyn Foster, a film professor at University of Nebraska at Lincoln, says her female students were ?appalled? at what they consider MacFarlane?s outdated and sexist routines.

?Everyone agrees it was like watching an old sexist 'Dating Game' episode,? she says via e-mail. ?Seth McFarlane was as smarmy as the host of the 'Dating Game,' which is perfect because the Dating Game, if memory serves me, was on during the Vietnam War, when many Americans preferred to bury their heads in the sand and pretend the war was not happening, or pretend the war was a good thing.?

The Anti-Defamation League (ADL) issued its own rebuke of MacFarlane?s bit in the guise of his animated Teddy Bear persona, the main character in his 2012 film, ?Ted.??A computer-animated Ted, presenting with actor Mark Wahlberg, made the joke that Jews controlled Hollywood, and that being Jewish was required to work in the industry. "I was born Theodore Shapiro and I would like to donate to Israel and continue to work in Hollywood forever," he said.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/ug_UN9uJq9g/Will-Oscar-host-Seth-MacFarlane-be-asked-back-Probably-not

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Judd, Vanderpump and more to go 'Dancing'

Adam Taylor / ABC

By Ree Hines, TODAY contributor

In just three weeks, glitz, glam and a whole lot of spray tan return to prime time as "Dancing With the Stars" kicks off its 16th season. The battle for the mirror-ball trophy will see 11 stars -- or reasonable facsimiles -- face off for ballroom bragging rights. But which 11 stars?

ABC teased the first star Sunday night -- Super Bowl champ and Baltimore Ravens wide receiver Jacoby Jones. As for the rest of the cast, they were revealed Tuesday on "Good Morning America."

Here are the stars who'll soon get ready to rumba:

  • Wynonna Judd
  • D.L. Hughley
  • Lisa Vanderpump
  • Andy Dick
  • Victor Ortiz
  • Zendaya
  • Aly Raisman
  • Kellie Pickler
  • Ingo Rademacher
  • Dorothy Hamill

See how well all of the hoofer hopefuls perform when the new season of "Dancing With the Stars" kicks off March 18 at 8 p.m. on ABC.

What do you think of the cast? Take our poll below and then share all your thoughts about the new batch of ballroom beginners on our Facebook page.

Source: http://theclicker.today.com/_news/2013/02/26/17100409-wynonna-judd-lisa-vanderpump-more-to-go-dancing-with-the-stars?lite

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Tuesday, February 26, 2013

A new Wharton admissions test fuels a consulting boom - Fortune ...

By John A. Byrne

Wharton Business SchoolWebsite and MBA catalogue(Poets&Quants) -- When the University of Pennsylvania's Wharton School announced last July that it was going to add a new team-based discussion as part of its MBA admissions process, the school made it clear it wanted to assess applicants in "an unscripted environment," free from the influence of admission consultants and other advice givers.

Instead, Wharton has unwittingly given the admissions consulting business a big boost. Several of the leading MBA admissions firms have since launched specific offerings priced between $400 and $500 a pop to help prepare anxious applicants for the group-based discussions. The online simulations by consultants are largely meant to mimic the real thing at which six applicants are posed a question they are expected to discuss.

"We knew people were going to be freaked out about it, so we developed a way for them to feel more comfortable with it," explains Angela Guido, a consultant with mbaMission who spearheaded the development of a 90-minute simulation for the firm. "It's a pretty exact replica of what happens in their interview. We have four to six participants, and the conversation is modeled on exactly what the real thing is like."

MORE:?Columbia B-school's Glenn Hubbard: Is an MBA worth it?

By month's end, mbaMission expects to run at least 10 sessions. The firm charges applicants $400 for the practice session unless they purchase a full admissions package of consulting, which would run $3,600 for one school to $9,400 for seven schools. Practice sessions run by mbaMission on Feb. 23 and Feb. 24 were sold out, as is a forthcoming Feb. 27 session.

The MBA Exchange and Accepted.com, admissions consulting firms that are among the largest in the business, are selling similar offerings. Several other firms, including Clear Admit, say they are helping applicants prepare for the test with more traditional consulting assistance. Accepted.com said it began offering its $500 service -- which includes mock team and individual interviews, written feedback on both, and a one-on-one telephone consult -- after being "bombarded" with questions about the Wharton interview and requests for specific coaching.

So much for hopes of an unscripted environment...

It's an unintended consequence of Wharton's initial hope to take prospective students "off the page" of a typical MBA application. "Over the last 10 to 20 years, because of blogs and the applicant community and discussion forums, people have developed a really good sense of what the admissions process looks like, down to what kinds of questions are asked and how they manage the interview," Vice Dean Karl T. Ulrich explained in an interview when the school announced the new test. "So in some ways that was one of the reasons we wanted to try some other approaches, because it had become kind of a game in which everyone knew the rules. We wanted to get the applicants in an unscripted environment, with a more dynamic kind of interaction."

But the new test set off a new round of anxiety among applicants and fueled the new offerings by consulting firms. "There is tremendous value in having a dress rehearsal," explains Linda Abraham, founder and CEO of Accepted.com.?"That benefit is why MBA programs provide mock interviews and mock group interviews to their grads."

MORE:?Inside MBA admissions: How a top school decides

Even before Wharton officially announced the new team-discussion admissions test, The MBA Exchange had introduced its new $395 service to help applicants prep for the novel addition to the school's MBA application. The Chicago-based firm announced its offering nearly 10 days before Wharton confirmed it was going forward with the new test. The MBA Exchange product features hour-long video conferences for groups of four to six applicants. MBA Exchange says it has already run 14 sessions for 63 clients and has three more scheduled through early March.

"Because facial?expressions, gestures, body language, etc. are so important, our prep?sessions take place via high-definition video," says Dan Bauer, founder and managing director of The MBA Exchange. A consultant plays the role of Wharton?admission officer, welcoming the participants and presenting the "prompt" for?them to discuss. Clients select and use pseudonyms to ensure?confidentiality. "Immediately after the team discussion, we review the?group's performance ?with them," adds Bauer. "We also video record the entire session and?provide a confidential link so each participant can see and further analyze?both team and individual performance. Finally, we send a written scorecard?to each participant grading his or her individual performance on five key?dimensions along with our specific comments and suggestions on what he or?she did right and which tactics should be improved before the actual team?session with Wharton."

Although initial reactions by applicants to the test have been generally positive, the Wharton discussion has met some controversy. Some applicants say that they have been asked to travel from Asia or Europe at great expense for the test, especially when Wharton's schedule of on-campus and off-campus sessions have been unable to accommodate them. "That has rubbed some people the wrong way," says Guido. "One client was given the option to punt or fly a really long way and she decided not to do it. Wharton was asking her to purchase a really expensive ticket for the group interview, and she just said forget it."

Currently, round two applicants invited to the sessions are shown a video of Dean Thomas Robertson discussing the school's three pillars -- social impact, global presence, and innovation -- and then told about a fictitious donation of $1 million. After each of the six applicants in the session is given one minute for an introduction, they are then asked how they would invest the money in support of one of the pillars. An admissions official observes the session, presumably to assess each candidate's performance.

Admissions consultants: Helpful addition or thwarting the process?

Asked if the consulting sessions? thwart Wharton's efforts to get an "unscripted view" of applicants, most of the firms say it's na?ve to think they wouldn't create new ways to help MBA candidates with the test.

"I really like to think that what we designed is actually honoring their intention," says Guido of mbaMission, "Look, there is tension between ad consultants and admissions committees. They want to see the unpolished candidate and we won't let them. But we are not trying to get people to change their behavior. If we coach them over and over again on what to say, I can see them taking issue with it. But you can't train someone out of who they are."

MORE:?Anatomy of a major B-school turnaround

Adds Abraham of Accepted.com: "As long as there is a need for consulting and editing or interview coaching, we will innovate in response to the schools' new methods of meeting potential students."

Clear Admit, another MBA consulting firm, is taking a different approach from offering applicants a simulation. "We decided that trying to simulate a group interview wasn't the ideal approach for prepping candidates," says Stacey Oyler, a consultant with Clear Admit.?Instead, the firm's consultants are giving their clients expectations for the group interview experience, letting them know what Wharton is assessing, and talking through the types of people they may encounter in the group test.

"We talk with clients about the three pillars and encourage them to come up with great ideas for each one," adds Oyler. "We know from our own group interview experience that Wharton is looking for candidates who can showcase strong interpersonal skills and who are able to facilitate the discussion while contributing their own unique ideas."

The mbaMission service is a WebEx-like experience with audio and whiteboards but no video. Two consultants observe the session and offer both group and then individual feedback. "A lot of people have ... told us that what it helped them to do is think about their role in the group so that they went in with at least a few ideas of how they would orient themselves to the group," says Guido. "Having a plan of how to help move the groups forward while not stepping on people's toes gave them a greater sense of security."

More from Poets&Quants:

Source: http://management.fortune.cnn.com/2013/02/26/wharton-admissions-test/

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