Friday, April 30, 2010

NEWS: Putting news videos into your hands

PETALING JAYA: The Star 3G video call service, which allows users to watch videos of The Star news reports on their cellphones, is gaining popularity in the Klang Valley.

Several users of the service said they liked being able to update themselves on what was happening around them, anytime and anywhere they happened to be.

Lily Ng, a client services officer at Great Goddard Sdn Bhd which produces corporate brochures, said she uses the video service to watch the news during her lunch breaks.

“I just discovered it and I use it everyday because it is convenient. I spend five to 10 minutes on it during weekdays. But on weekends, I will have more free time to tune in,” she said. “I have even introduced it to a couple of friends.”

Another Star 3G video call service enthusiast, Eddie Lim, finds the service easy to use and good for alerting him on any breaking news.

He said that whenever he hears an interesting piece of news, he would dial into the service to look for more information.

“I like the fact that you can skim through the news clips to find what you want,” said Lim, who is assistant general manager for mobile services provider M3 Technologies Bhd.

Other subscribers said they find the service useful while at the LRT and bus stations, and at taxi stands, or whenever they have to wait somewhere.

Maxis only

The Star 3G video call service is presently only available to Maxis cellular service subscribers and is accessible through any 3G-capable cellphone.

After you dial in, videos of news clips will be streamed to your phone without any annoying buffering. You can select the clips you want to view by using the phone’s keypad. Each video is three minutes long.

Find out how to dial-in at this webpage: http://thestar.com.my/3gvideo.

The company that created the quick-delivery video platform for this service is Nano Media Technology Sdn Bhd, a three-year-old company headquartered in Technology Park Malaysia, Kuala Lumpur.

Mark Hoo, its managing director, said users only pay 30sen a minute for the service. There is no subscription fee.

NEWS: No danger from broadband infrastructure

KUANTAN: The Pahang state assembly was told that broadband infrastructure, including at children’s playgrounds, is according to international procedures and standards.

Chairman of the state information, science and innovation committee, Datuk Mohd Sharkar Shamsudin, said the construction is based on guidelines set by the Housing and Local Government Ministry.

He said the guidelines mean the construction meets conditions that ensure the physical safety of people, including the radiation aspect.

“In terms of radiation, the level of transmission from towers and transmitters is low,” he said in reply to a question by Choong Siew Onn (DAP-Tras) relating to having such infrastructure at more suitable places.

Mohd Sharkar said such infrastructure construction is based on consumer demands.

Demand for broadband Internet is increasing in line with the Government’s policy to widen the service by year end, he said. — Bernama

NEWS: US, Europe press China to drop tech security rule


NO TO RULING: A major US business group says that it sees signs of growing protectionism in Chinese industries and called on the government to open markets further to foreign companies. — AP

BEIJING: Global technology suppliers face a looming Chinese deadline to reveal the inner workings of computer encryption and other security products in a move the United States and Europe say is protectionist.

Suppliers must comply with the rules that take effect on Saturday or risk being shut out of the billions of dollars in purchases that the Chinese Government makes of smartcards, secure routers, antispam software and other security products.

Encryption codes and other trade secrets would have to be disclosed to a government panel, and the foreign companies worry they might be leaked to Chinese rivals.

It is the latest in a string of disputes over complaints Beijing is using regulations to support its companies at the expense of foreign rivals. It comes less than a month after China defused a separate conflict with the United States and Europe by scaling back a plan to favour Chinese technology in government procurement.

Washington and the European Union say no other nation imposes such a demand and want Beijing to scrap or at least postpone it.

Washington wants China to “follow global norms,” said Nkenge L. Harmon, a spokesman for the US Trade Representative, in an e-mail on Wednesday.

In a meeting this month, she said, US officials “pressed China to address the concerns of foreign governments and industry before implementing the testing and certification rules.”

The requirement “has no real base in reality,” the visiting EU trade commissioner, Karel De Gucht, said on Tuesday. “We cannot see what they see in regard to security, so we are in fact disputing this.”

De Gucht said he raised the issue with Chinese Commerce Minister Chen Deming, though he gave no details.

Broad effect

The demand reflects the communist government’s unease about relying on foreign technology to manage its secrets and Beijing’s desire to help fledgling Chinese high-tech companies catch up and compete with global rivals.

The rules cover 13 types of products, including database and network security systems, secure routers, data backup and recovery systems and antispam and antihacking software — all essential parts of computer and telecommunications networks.

Such technology is enmeshed in products sold by Microsoft Corp, Cisco Systems Inc and other industry giants.

Acquiring such know-how would also help Beijing improve its extensive system of Internet monitoring and filtering, essentially giving security forces the keys to pry into encrypted messages and data.

Beijing faced a storm of criticism after it said in November it would favour Chinese goods in government procurement of computers and other technology in an effort to promote domestic innovation.

The government backed down this month and promised to make it easier for foreign companies to qualify as domestic suppliers.

Beijing announced the computer security rules in 2008. They were due to take effect last year, covering all such sales in China. But after US complaints, they were postponed to this year and scaled back to cover only government procurement.

Industry researchers say suppliers worry that technology they disclose might be leaked to Chinese competitors. They say some countries prohibit sales of security products to banks or other customers if sensitive details such as encryption coding have been revealed to Chinese regulators.

Beijing says such disclosure is needed for national security but also has said the rules are meant to develop Chinese industry. Trade groups note government panels that would review foreign products include employees of rival Chinese companies.

An official of a foreign trade group said the goal appears to be to force foreign suppliers out of China because it knows they cannot reveal key details. The official asked not to be identified further to avoid straining his relations with the government.

“We see many actions in the area of innovation, in other areas of industrial policy, which suggest to us that in the future in a number of areas, the market opportunity will begin to get narrower,” said the president of the American Chamber of Commerce in China, Christian Murck.

Any reduction in foreign access to government purchasing could mean a windfall for China’s own fledgling computer security suppliers, some of which are owned or linked to its military or security agencies.

When the disclosure rules were first announced in 2008, the president of a Chinese state-sanctioned business group was quoted in state media as saying they were meant to help the country’s computer security industry develop. He said the rules would shield Chinese suppliers from foreign rivals that controlled 70% of the market.

Several attempts

Spokespeople for Microsoft, Cisco and Dell Inc did not immediately respond to requests for comment on how the companies might be affected.

A key stumbling block to any legal challenge is that Beijing has yet to sign the Government Procurement Agreement, a treaty that extends WTO (World Trade Organiation) free-trade rules to official purchases and would require it to treat foreign and Chinese suppliers equally.

Beijing wants to see China develop computer and telecoms industries and issued a 15-year plan in 2006 to support research in 11 areas from nuclear power to lasers to genetics.

The country has the most populous technology market, with more than 380 million Internet users and 590 million mobile phone accounts.

The government has tried to leverage that to promote its high-tech industries, but communist leaders fret that its companies lag behind the global industry.

Beijing has tried repeatedly to compel foreign companies to hand over know-how on encryption and other technologies but retreated after objections from the United States and other trading partners.

It tried to force companies to adopt its homegrown wireless encryption standard but dropped that after foreign protests. — AP

NEWS: Businesses, consumers to lead IT spending

KUALA LUMPUR: Corporate and consumer spending on IT products and services in Malaysia will continue to make up for the shortfall in government spending in that segment this year, said industry researcher IDC.

Maggie Tan, associate research director at IDC Asean, said businesses and consumers spent US$3.92bil (RM12.6bil) on information technology products and services last year.

In comparison, the Government’s IT spending totalled US$523.1mil (RM1.67bil) in the same period.

Tan was speaking at IDC’s Asean Directions 2010 conference here, an annual event.

She said this corporate and consumer spending will continue to exceed the government spending this year.

Local consumers, she predicted, will continue to buy portable computers and other devices, which accounted for US$1.69bil (RM5.42bil) of the total spending last year.

“It’s not just about people buying laptops with Windows 7; Malaysian consumers feel they must always own the latest and most stylish products,” she said.

As for the corporate sector, businesses will continue to spend on cloud-computing services this year, she said without specifying which sectors.

The economic dip last year made local companies look for cost savings and these organisations are finding that cloud computing is the way to go, according to IDC.

This year’s conference is themed Capitalising on the Recovery: Building the Foundation for the Intelligent Economy.

According to Tan, the economic recovery has thrust South-East Asian markets back into the spotlight this year. “There is opportunity for Malaysian companies to market their software and services to other countries such as Indonesia and Vietnam,” she said.

NEWS: Apple chief makes case against Adobe Flash


NO FLASH: The iPad is not compatible with Flash technology. — AFP

SAN FRANCISCO: Apple chief executive Steve Jobs took his case against Flash software public, arguing that the Adobe product is a flop on touchscreen mobile gadgets such as iPad and iPhone.

Flash was created during the PC (personal computer) era for PCs and mice,” Jobs said in a long message posted at the Cupertino, California-based firm’s website.

“But the mobile era is about low power devices, touch interfaces and open web standards — all areas where Flash falls short,” Jobs said.

Online videos and games are commonly based on Flash, and Apple’s adamant refusal to allow Flash on its iPod, iPhone and iPad devices has been a sore point with Adobe.

Lack of Adobe support has also been among top criticisms of Apple gadgets, which have been global hits nonetheless.

Jobs contended that most online video is available in formats other than Flash and therefore “iPhone, iPod, and iPad users aren’t missing much video.”

He conceded that Apple mobile gadgets don’t play Flash-based online games but noted that thousands of games, many of them free, are available at the firm’s App Store on the Internet.

“We have routinely asked Adobe to show us Flash performing well on a mobile device, any mobile device, for a few years now,” Jobs said. “We have never seen it.” — AFP/Relaxnews

NEWS: Colour, animated E-Ink is on the way

AMONG the many e-reading advantages touted by iPad converts are the device’s abilities to run animation and display full-colour images. But don’t give up on E-Ink readers just yet: The next generation of E-Ink will up the e-reader ante, reports tech journal The Red Ferret, following a conversation with E-Ink vice-president of marketing Sriram Peruvemba.

E-Ink is the proprietary “electronic paper” technology that is used in most dedicated e-readers, such as the Kindle, Nook, and Sony Reader. Displays are high-contrast, use very little power, can be read easily in both dim and bright light, and are said to closely resember the sharp look of physical ink on paper.

Despite these benefits, the E-Ink devices’ lack of animation support and colour leads many to opt for smartphones, laptops, or iPads as their e-readers of choice.

In his conversation with The Red Ferret, Peruvemba demonstrated new E-Ink technology that supports animation (the example used in the demo is a moving newspaper graphic) and features a higher-contrast display.

He also says colour E-Ink is on the way, reports The Red Ferret on its YouTube channel, although it will not be a full-colour display such as that of a smartphone or computer.

For more information, you can watch the video: bit.ly/bzF7qM or read The Red Ferret’s write-up: www.redferret.net/?p=20538. — Relaxnews

NEWS: Society will gain from broadband proliferation

PUTRAJAYA: Broadband proliferation is poised to bring radical improvements for society, said Sweden-based Ericsson AB’s strategic marketing director, Bo Ribbing.

He said said by 2020 more than 50 billion devices would be connected via broadband and each person would be surrounded by an average of 10 such devices.

“We are moving towards a converged broadband-enabled world with connectivity embedded into all kinds of devices,” he said at a media briefing on 2020 — 50 Billion Devices Connected here.

Ribbing said engaging in connecting new types of devices would bring significant profit potential to operators and service providers.

According to Ericsson, M2M (machine-to-machine) technology would support wired or wireless communication between devices.

It said wireless M2M encompassed a wide range of wireless network technologies including cellular networks, satellite networks, radio frequency identification (RFID), WiFi and WiMAX.

“Currently, most of the wireless M2M market is related to RFID applications where access control, animal ID, automobile immobilisation and electronic toll collection encompassed 56% of the market,” it said.

Ericsson Malaysia’s head of business development, multimedia and consulting system integration, Sebastian Barros, said new opportunities would be generated in industries like automotive, home appliances and utilities for information and communications technology stakeholders.

He said M2M has been there for years, but currently wireless M2M is having a new lease on life thanks to the mobile broadband explosion in most of the markets.

“As the mobile broadband-everywhere vision becomes a reality, any device that needs an Internet connection will have one,” he said.

According to Barros, it is estimated that roughly a billion machines were produced globally in 2008 for housing, transportation and industrial purposes.

Barros said among these, energy meters, automobiles and communication devices stood out as the key industries for wireless M2M in the coming 10 years.

“Adoption of wireless M2M technology is still at a very embryonic stage accounting for just 1% of total cellular connections,” he said.

He said Europe is experiencing a big adoption of wireless M2M technology across a wide range of vertical markets. — Bernama

NEWS: The Malaysian Digital Association is born

PETALING JAYA: The Malaysian Digital Association (MDA) has been formed to consolidate and raise the profile of the digital advertising and marketing industry.

The MDA comprises online publishers, digital service providers, media owners, publishers, media agencies, creative agencies and others.

The media giants in MDA are Star Publications (M) Bhd, which publishes The Star newspaper, The Star Online news portal, and various other portals; satellite TV broadcaster Astro All Asia Networks plc, and integrated media investment group Media Prima Bhd.

Also there are major advertising companies Ogilvy One Worldwide and Leo Burnett & Arc Worldwide.

One of MDA’s main goals is to standardise and audit pageviews, unique visitors and the time Internet users spend surfing various websites.

This will enable advertisers to better, more accurately gauge a site’s popularity when making advertising expenditure decisions.

Serm Teck Choon, an MDA council member and a representative for Star Publications, said the association wants to create one common standard of such viewing statistics, and hopes to achieve this within a year.

Credibility boost

According to the MDA, there are currently no audits on such information and advertisers have to take the claims of the website owners as gospel truth.

Another MDA goal is to standardise technical issues, such as banner advertisement sizes which currently vary from website to website.

It will also promote and educate advertisers on the potential of digital advertising. There are currently no figures available on the size of digital advertising market, so the MDA is working to gather such figures.

Terence Dorairaj, MDA president, said the formation of the association is a milestone for the digital industry in Malaysia.

“This standardisation will bring much needed credibility and will be a catalyst for the growth of digital advertising expenditure,” he said.

Dorairaj is chief operating officer at Digital Five Sdn Bhd, a subsidiary of Astro and is a digital entity that publishes content across several wireless and web-based platforms.

The other MDA committee members are vice-president Rene Menezes (who is chief executive officer of Media Two Point Zero); secretary Gary Tay, (chief executive officer of Amphibia Digital Sdn Bhd) and treasurer Meera Thuraivel (group advertising manager for Malaysiakini).

There are also 13 elected council members.

Tuesday, April 27, 2010

NEWS: Draft trade agreement worries tech companies

WASHINGTON: Technology companies and public interest groups are warning that an international trade agreement being drafted could expose Internet access providers, web search engines and other online businesses to damaging legal risks.

The United States and nearly a dozen trading partners released the current version of the Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement (ACTA) yesterday amid mounting complaints about the negotiations taking place behind closed doors. An eighth round of talks was held last week in New Zealand.

The far-reaching agreement aims to crack down on counterfeiting, copyright violations and other intellectual property theft, and would cover everything from fake pharmaceuticals to online piracy of music and movies.

But critics fear it could cripple technology companies by holding them responsible for copyright infringement by their users.

“We appreciate this step toward transparency, but we’re concerned ACTA could rewrite laws that have made the Internet a platform for economic growth, creativity and free expression,” Google Inc said in a statement.

Although ACTA negotiations began in the fall of 2007, many provisions in the agreement are still being debated. The nations taking part include the United States, European Union member states, Japan, South Korea, Canada, Mexico, Morocco, New Zealand, Singapore, Switzerland and Australia.

The countries that eventually sign on to the final treaty will be expected to bring their own laws and legal practices into compliance. For its part, the United States maintains that ACTA will not require any changes to domestic law.

Hidden agenda?

That has led many opponents to charge that the United States is using ACTA to export its own copyright regime to other countries. And they fear that while the agreement will include tough sanctions that exist in the United States to protect copyright holders, it will lack legal safeguards that also exist in the States. to provide critical balance.

Many technology companies are particularly concerned that the treaty could open the door to broad “secondary liability” for Internet service providers, social networking sites, videosharing sites and other online services for alleged copyright infringement by their users.

That could hurt telecom giants such as AT&T Inc and Verizon Communications Inc and popular online platforms such as Facebook and Google Inc’s YouTube.

“There is a lot of language that is still up for grabs that relates to the really central point about how much responsibility ISPs and other Internet intermediaries should bear, and when they should be subject to legal demands or liability relating to conduct occurring on their systems,” said David Sohn, senior policy counsel for the Center for Democracy & Technology, an interest group that advocates for civil liberties online.

At the same time, Sohn said he worries that the pact will lack meaningful language on immunity for Internet companies. He noted that the Digital Millennium Copyright Act, a 1998 US law, requires companies to remove infringing content, but in return protects them from monetary damages. The ACTA draft, on the other hand, includes limitations on remedies, but lacks specifics, he said.

Sohn also said he fears that the draft agreement does not reflect a key precedent established in a landmark 1984 Supreme Court ruling upholding the legality of Sony’s Betamax video recorder. The court ruled that even though the Betamax could be used to make illegal copies of movies, it also had significant non-infringing uses.

Other provisions in the draft agreement that concern public interest groups and technology companies include statutory damage awards for infringement violations and measures to punish people who circumvent digital locks protecting copyrighted material.

Some supporters

Despite these reservations, the ACTA draft drew praise from other corners.

In a statement, the Motion Picture Association of America said the draft “represents a solid building block, an important step forward in the work of like-minded governments to strengthen protection against Internet piracy, the fastest growing threat to filmed entertainment and other segments of the copyright industries.”

That point was echoed by Nefeterius Akeli McPherson, a spokesman for the US Trade Representative. Intellectual property theft, she said, is “a job killer, and it’s an export killer.”

She added that the US Trade Representative is “attentive to the balance struck by the US Congress” in weighing the need for both strong enforcement of copyright protections and measures to “shield Internet service providers who play by the rules.”

Sherwin Siy, deputy legal director for Public Knowledge, another public interest group critical of ACTA, welcomed the release of the draft agreement. Yet Siy remains sceptical that public pressure will ultimately change the final shape of the treaty.

Plus, he said, “a lot of the public discussion about the details will take place two years after this should have started.” — AP

NEWS: YouTube yanks Downfall parodies

NEW YORK: Adolf Hitler, for years a vessel of frustration in a popular Internet parody, has been quieted. Downfall, a German film released in 2004 about Hitler’s last days, has been adopted for wildly popular YouTube clips that have spanned mock rants about topics as varied as playing Xbox videogames to Kanye West to Apple’s new iPad.

Every spoof is from the same scene in the film: A furious, defeated Hitler, played by Bruno Ganz, unleashes an impassioned, angry speech to his remaining staff, huddled with him in his bunker.

The scene takes on a widely different meaning when paired with English subtitles about, say, a late-season collapse by the New York Mets baseball team. Most any subject could be — and was — substituted, made even funnier by the scene’s intense melodrama, artful staging and timely cutaways.

But on Tuesday, the clips on YouTube, many of which had been watched by hundreds of thousands, even millions, began disappearing from the site. Constantin Films, the company that owns the rights to the film, asked for them to be removed, and YouTube complied.

Martin Moszkowicz, head of film and TV at Constantin films in Munich, said the company had been fighting copyright infringement for years. Jewish organisations have also complained about the tastefulness of the clips, he said.

“When does parody stop? It is a very complicated issue,” Moszkowicz said. “So we are taking a simple approach: Take them all down. We’ve been doing it for years now. The important thing is to protect our copyright. We are very proud of the film.”

Abraham Foxman, national director of the Anti-Defamation League, said the league was “delighted.”

“We find them offensive,” Foxman said of the videos. “We feel that they trivialise not only the Holocaust but World War II. Hitler is not a cartoon character.”

Moszkowicz disputed the idea that all the attention to Downfall, which grossed US$5.5mil (RM19mil) at the US box office and was nominated for a best foreign language film Oscar, had helped the movie.

“We have not been able to see any increase in DVD sales,” he said. “There is no correlation between Internet parodies and sales of a movie, at least not that I am aware of.”

Moszkowicz said he didn’t know why the videos were only recently taken down and suggested that it could have been “something on the YouTube end.”

YouTube, which is owned by Google, declined to comment on Wednesday about the takedown of the videos.

Many Hitler clips were still online that day, and new parodies were popping up featuring Hitler ranting about his removal from YouTube (http://bit.ly/beHGAf).

For years, the Hitler mockery has held an unusually steadfast position in Internet culture. While most online parodies come and go overnight, new Downfall spoofs have been continually created for years. It’s not known exactly how many have existed but estimates run in the hundreds.

They have served as a kind of soapbox for real and mock anguish, a way to comically vent about anything and everything.

The film’s director, Oliver Hirschbiegel, told New York magazine in January that he was constantly sent the parodies and he very much liked them.

“The point of the film was to kick these terrible people off the throne that made them demons, making them real and their actions into reality,” Hirschbiegel told the magazine.

“I think it’s only fair if now it’s taken as part of our history and used for whatever purposes people like. If only I got royalties for it, then I’d be even happier.”

The loss was felt across the Web on Wednesday as if a grand, beloved tradition had been stifled.

In one of its most commented-on posts, the blog Techcrunch lamented that a voice had been lost, writing: “Memes on the Internet don’t get any better than the Hitler one.” — AP

NEWS: Canada privacy chief criticises new Facebook changes


WARNING: Canada's privacy commissioner is criticising Facebook's move to embrace third-party integration, expressing concern over the availability and storage of users’ personal data and keep it indefinitely. — AP

MONTREAL: Facebook users may be targets of blackmail after changes that erode personal security protections on the world’s most popular social network website, Canada’s privacy czar warned.

In assessing Facebook’s announcement that it was embracing third-party integration, privacy commissioner Jennifer Stoddart expressed concern over how outside technology firms that develop games and other applications for the network could mine users’ personal data and keep it indefinitely.

They were previously required to delete personal data after 24 hours.

“I’m very concerned about these changes. More than half a million developers will have access to this data,” Stoddart told The Globe and Mail newspaper.

“The information will be stored indefinitely and it opens the possibility that a lot of people can be blackmailed from all corners of the world.”

Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg made headlines last week during the firm’s annual “f8” developers conference in San Francisco, where he rolled out a series of features, such as social plug-ins and “Open Graph” protocol, aimed at dramatically broadening the web’s interconnectedness.

Stoddart, who has overseen a number of privacy rights investigations, has taken a strong stand against the growing popularity of social networks, and Facebook in particular.

After a lengthy probe, she made a series of recommendations to the site in July about the privacy of its users.

Facebook, which has around 400 million subscribers worldwide, agreed to better secure user privacy last year after a Canadian probe led by Stoddart criticised the company’s policy of holding onto personal information from deactivated accounts in violation of Canadian law.

The firm was also accused of inadequately restricting outside software developers’ access have to personal information people put on profile pages. — AFP/Relaxnews

NEWS: ‘The Internet will fail’ and other erroneous tech predictions


HILARIOUS: Some of the things that have been predicted about the Internet have been way off the mark. — Relaxnews/Creatista

IN 1995 American astronomer and author Clifford Stoll told the world that “The truth i[s] no online database will replace your daily newspaper, no CD-ROM can take the place of a competent teacher and no computer network will change the way government works.”

“Lacking editors, reviewers or critics, the Internet has become a wasteland of unfiltered data. You don’t know what to ignore and what’s worth reading,” said Stoll in the February 27, 1995 issue of Newsweek magazine in an article entitled The Internet? Bah!

After 15 years, our view of the Internet is very different. We now live in a world where newspaper publishers are turning to online media to help out their flailing publications, where people are learning life skills thanks to online degrees, and well, governments are still governments.

Men’s lifestyle site, Asylum, published an article about some of the other bold technology predictions that haven’t quite come true in their April 21 article, ‘The Internet Will Fail’ - Bold Predictions That Completely Bombed.

Their list of predictions includes science-fiction author and journalist Bruce Sterling’s “Using Twitter for literate communication is about as likely as firing up a CB radio and hearing some guy recite The Iliad”; Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer’s belief that “There’s no chance that the iPhone is going to get any significant market share. No chance,” and an unknown author’s prediction that “TV will never be a serious competitor for radio because people must sit and keep their eyes glued on a screen; the average American family hasn’t time for it,” from a 1939 edition of The New York Times.

The full list of “painfully inaccurate” predictions can be read online at bit.ly/bvkp1S while Clifford Stoll’s 1995 Newsweek article can be read here: bit.ly/bBoeYh. — Relaxnews

Thursday, April 22, 2010

NEWS: Laptop tracking programme goes awry


SPYCAM: A family is alleging in a federal lawsuit that Harriton High School used school-issued laptop webcams to spy on students at home, potentially catching them and their families in compromising situations. — AP

PHILADELPHIA: A suburban school district here snapped secret webcam pictures of a high school student when he was partially undressed or sleeping in his bed, and captured instant messages he exchanged with friends, the student charged in court papers.

The Lower Merion School District concedes its efforts to find missing school-issued laptops was misguided, and officials vowed anew on Friday to release the findings of their internal investigation, “good and bad.”

The LANrev software took screenshots and webcam photos every 15 seconds when activated. The district thereby captured over 400 screenshots and webcam images of Harriton High School sophomore Blake Robbins, according to court filings last week in his lawsuit.

The suit, filed in February, exposed the tracking software and prompted an FBI investigation into possible wiretap violations, along with debate among parents about whether to support the potential class-action lawsuit.

“A substantial number of webcam photos have been recovered in the investigation,” school board President David Ebby said in a statement Friday. “As we have made clear since day one, we are committed to providing all of the facts — good and bad — at the conclusion of the investigation.”

Lawyers involved in the case met on Friday afternoon to discuss pending issues in the case.

Misuse

Mark Haltzman, who filed the lawsuit on behalf of Robbins and his family, said evidence now shows the district used the tracking software for non-authorised reasons — for instance, when students failed to pay the required insurance or return the laptops at year’s end. At least once, a name mix-up led the district to activate the wrong student’s laptop, he charged.

According to Haltzman, technology co-ordinator Carol Cafiero refused to answer his questions at a recent deposition, citing her constitutional right against self-incrimination. She and technician Michael Perbix were the only employees authorised to activate the webcams. Perbix did not fight the deposition.

Haltzman called Cafiero a possible “voyeur” and wants access to her personal computer to see if she downloaded any student images. To support the charge, he cited her response to an e-mail from a colleague who said viewing the webcam pictures was like watching a “soap opera.”

“I know, I love it!” Cafiero allegedly replied.

Her lawyer, Charles Mandracchia, did not immediately return a message on Friday, but has said his client did nothing wrong.

Despite widespread concern about the alleged spying, hundreds of parents have signed on to oppose the Robbins family’s suit for financial and other reasons. The district, meanwhile, insists it has no evidence of any intentional misuse of the tracking software.

Meanwhile, Democratic US Sen. Arlen Specter introduced a bill on Thursday to treat video surveillance the same as electronic communication under the federal Wiretap Act. — AP

NEWS: Brain games may not make you smarter

LONDON: People playing computer games to train their brains might as well be playing Super Mario, new research suggests.

In a six-week study, experts found people who played online games designed to improve their cognitive skills didn’t get any smarter.

Researchers recruited participants from viewers of the BBC’s science show Bang Goes the Theory. More than 8,600 people aged 18 to 60 were asked to play online brain games designed by the researchers to improve their memory, reasoning and other skills for at least 10 minutes a day, three times a week.

They were compared to more than 2,700 people who didn’t play any brain games, but spent a similar amount of time surfing the Internet and answering general knowledge questions. All participants were given a sort of I.Q. test before and after the experiment.

Researchers said the people who did the brain training didn’t do any better on the test after six weeks than people who had simply been on the Internet. On some sections of the test, the people who surfed the Net scored higher than those playing the games.

The study was paid for by the BBC and published online yesterday by the journal Nature.

“If you’re (playing these games) because they’re fun, that’s absolutely fine,” said Adrian Owen, assistant director of the Cognition and Brain Sciences unit at Britain’s Medical Research Council, the study’s lead author.

“But if you’re expecting (these games) to improve your I.Q., our data suggests this isn’t the case,” he said during a press briefing.

One maker of brain games said the BBC study did not apply to its products. Steve Aldrich, CEO of Posit Science, said the company’s games, some of which were funded in part by the US National Institutes of Health, have been proven to boost brain power.

“Their conclusion would be like saying, ‘I cannot run a mile in under four minutes and therefore it is impossible to do so,” Aldrich said.

Posit Science has published research in journals including the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences showing their games improved memory in older people.

Computer games available online and marketed by companies like Nintendo that supposedly enhance memory, reasoning and other cognitive skills are played by millions of people worldwide, though few studies have examined if the games work.

Small effects

“There is precious little evidence to suggest the skills used in these games transfer to the real world,” said Art Kramer, a professor of psychology and neuroscience at the University of Illinois. He was not linked to the study and has no ties to any companies that make brain training games.

Kramer had several reservations about the BBC study’s methodology and said some brain games had small effects in improving people’s cognitive skills.

“Learning is very specific,” he said. “Unless the component you are trained in actually exists in the real world, any transfer will be pretty minimal.”

Instead of playing brain games, Kramer said people would be better off getting some exercise. He said physical activity can spark new connections between neurons and produce new brain cells. “Fitness changes the building blocks of the brain’s structure,” he said.

Still, Kramer said some brain training games worked better than others. He said some games made by Posit Science had shown modest benefits, including improved memory in older people.

Other experts said brain games might be useful, but only if they weren’t fun.

“If you set the level for these games to a very high level where you don’t get the answers very often and it really annoys you, then it may be useful,” said Philip Adey, an emeritus professor of psychology and neuroscience at King’s College in London.

If people are enjoying the brain games, Adey said they probably aren’t being challenged and might as well be playing a regular videogame.

He said people should consider learning a new language or sport if they really wanted to improve their brain power. “To stimulate the intellect, you need a real challenge,” Adey said, adding computer games were not an easy shortcut. “Getting smart is hard work.” — AP

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www.nature.com/nature

NEWS: Facebook widens reach to tailor broader Web


TURNING POINT: Zuckerberg presenting a keynote address at a conference in San Francisco. — AP

NEW YORK: Facebook is spreading its wings to the broader Web with new tools that will allow users to see personalised versions of websites they visit elsewhere.

The move could change the way people experience the online world, though it could come with deeper privacy implications.

By accessing Facebook’s tools, websites will be able to customise the experience based on the list of friends, favourite bands and other things users have shared on their Facebook profiles.

“The Web is at a really important turning point now,” Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg said at a conference for web and software developers in San Francisco.

“Most things aren’t social and they don’t use your real identity. This is really starting to change.”

It already has, with Facebook among its earliest pioneers. The world’s largest online social network has long insisted, with varying success, that its users go by their real identities when they sign up for the service, offering a contrast to the culture of pseudonyms common elsewhere online.

And Facebook has sometimes transported those identities beyond its own service. Facebook Connect, announced last year, lets people use their Facebook log-ins to sign in to other websites, without needing a separate account.

The latest changes take this a step further. It means Facebook users will be able to see a Web tailored to them based on their interests and social connections, as long as they are already logged in to Facebook.

So when visiting a news site for the first time, they could see which of their Facebook friends liked recent articles. A music site such as Pandora, meanwhile, could start playing music from the user’s favourite bands.

Users will also be able to share items on their Facebook profiles without leaving the other websites, simply by clicking “like” buttons next to the news article or other items they are reading.

Zuckerberg told developers at the f8 conference that the experience will mean a more personalised, social, smarter Web.

“There is an old saying that says when you go to heaven, all of your friends are there and everything is just the way you want it to be,” Zuckerberg said during his keynote, wearing sneakers and a dark sweat shirt. “So together let’s make a world that’s that good.”

If it works and users embrace it, Facebook could gain valuable insights that could help it sell more advertising, potentially rivaling online ad leader Google Inc, which typically tailors ads based on keywords in search terms and web content.

“If I were Google I would be really scared because Facebook might end up with a lot more intelligence than them,” said Alain Chuard, founder of social marketing firm Wildfire. “Google is just an algorithm, but Facebook could rule the Web.”

But Facebook’s plans could backfire if it doesn’t make it clear what it’s trying to do. Facebook needs to make it easy for individual users to choose not to have their outside activities posted on Facebook’s website, said Greg Sterling, an Internet analyst who also writes for SearchEngineLand.com.

“How many people are really going to want all this information about them shared?” Sterling said. “That’s the big unanswered question here.” — AP

Saturday, April 17, 2010

NEWS: Computers can read minds now


THE NEXT STEP: A computer monitor showing the NeuroSys project, a language-based brain computer interface, displayed during an Intel's open house in New York. Software that uses brain scans to determine what items people are thinking about was among the technological innovations showcased at the event. — AP

MIND reading may no longer be the domain of psychics and fortune tellers — now some computers can do it, too.

Software that uses brain scans to determine what items people are thinking about was among the technological innovations showcased on Wednesday by Intel Corp, which drew back the curtain on a number of projects that are still under development.

The software analyses functional MRI scans to determine what parts of a person’s brain is being activated as he or she thinks. In tests, it guessed with 90% accuracy which of two words a person was thinking about, said Intel Labs researcher Dean Pomerleau.

Eventually, the technology could help the severely physically disabled to communicate. And Pomerleau sees it as an early step toward one day being able to control technology with our minds.

“The vision is being able to interface to information, to your devices and to other people without having an intermediary device,” he said.

For now, the project’s accomplishments are far more modest — it can only be used with prohibitively expensive and bulky fMRI equipment and hasn’t yet been adapted to analyse abstract thoughts.

The system works best when a person is first scanned while thinking of dozens of different concrete nouns — words like “bear” or “hammer.”

When test subjects are then asked to pick one of two new terms and think about it, the software uses the earlier results as a baseline to determine what the person is thinking.

The software works by analysing the shared attributes of different words. For example, a person who is thinking of a bear uses the same parts of the brain that light up when he or she thinks of a puppy or something else furry.

A person thinking of a bear also shows activity in the amygdala — home of the fight-or-flight response.

While Intel primarily makes computer processors and other hardware, it often works to develop and demonstrate new technologies in an effort to stimulate the market and advance its reputation. Other innovations on display at Wednesday’s Intel event in Manhattan included:

• Cellphone technology that would use motion, GPS and audio data gathered through users’ cellphones to track what they’re doing and who they’re with. The technology can distinguish activities such as walking, giving a business presentation and driving. It also compares audio readings from different cellphones to determine who is in the same room.

This would allow users to share their activity information with their close friends and watch avatar versions of their friends throughout the day. It would also let users track and analyse data about how they spend their time;

• “Dispute Finder” technology that monitors users’ conversations and Internet browsing to warn them when they encounter contested or inaccurate information. The software mines the Internet to find instances in which writers have claimed something is untrue. It then uses speech recognition technology to monitor conversations;

• A transparent holographic shopping display that could be used in department stores to point consumers to featured items. Shoppers could also use the giant screen to search the store’s inventory, call up maps, and send item information to their cellphones; and,

• A TV set-top box that connects wirelessly to your laptop and monitors your Internet search history, as well as your TV viewing, to offer relevant video. — AP

NEWS: New body making an impact against cyberattacks

CYBERJAYA: Countries can now react faster to cyberattacks, thanks to the establishment of The International Multilateral Partnership Against Cyber Threats (Impact) Global Response Centre a year ago.

Prior to Impact’s establishment, there was a lack of co-ordination between governments, Internet service providers (ISPs) and antivirus companies in any reaction to cyberthreats.

Datuk Mohd Ain, chairman of Impact, said that when cyberattacks were launched against Estonia’s parliament, banking and newpaper websites in 2007, the attacks came from various places in the world, making it difficult for the country’s Computer Emergency Response Team (CERT) to respond effectively.

“The CERT struggled to call in the governments and ISPs from the countries where the attacks came from for a co-ordinated response,” he said.

Worse, Estonia did not have diplomatic ties with some of the other countries.

Thus, the idea for Impact, which comprises a cyberthreats resource centre, was born. An international organisation headquartered here, it is a one-stop contact point for countries that come under cyberattack.

“Impact bands governments all over the world against cyberthreats. It also works with prominent network security giants such as Trend Micro, F-Secure, Symantec and Kaspersky,” Ain said.

Expert help

Through Impact’s partnership with these security vendors, countries can get cutting-edge expertise.

Raymond Genes, chief technology officer at Trend Micro, said Impact helps governments better understand cyberthreats and to be better prepared to handle such attacks.

If Estonia were to be attacked today, all the CERT authority would have to do is call Impact, which would then organise and co-ordinate the response by the governments and ISPs in the countries where the attacks were originating from.

Genes also said that Impact provides collective intelligence on online security.

Syarisa Abubakar, director of policy at Impact’s centre of policy and international co-operation, said Impact has rolled out its services to 39 countries after just one year in operation.

“These countries include those in Africa, The Middle East and Asia Pacific. Some are developing nations where there are no cyberlaws or CERTs,” she said.

Impact also assesses the cyberneeds of some of these countries. “We have already done a needs assessment for Afghanistan and will be doing the same for East African companies at the end of this month,” Syarisa said.

“We will be reviewing the cyberlaws in these countries and their technical expertise requirements in the event of a cyberattack,” she added.

NEWS: Jaring starts building a computing grid


NEW SERVICE: Science, Technology and Innovation Minister Datuk Dr Maximus Ongkili signing a plaque to mark the launch of Jaring's OneGrid. Also present are (from left) Sabah Resources and IT Development Minister Datuk Dr Yee Moh Chai, Perak Menteri Besar Datuk Seri Dr Mohd Zambry Abd Kadir, Awang, and Khir.

KUALA LUMPUR: Internet service provider Jaring Communications wants to link all the datacentres in the country to form a computing grid.

Such a grid of computers will make it easier and faster to crunch out solutions to all sorts of problems, such as medical cures, better buildings and safer vehicles.

“It will also become faster to complete various computing tasks,” said Jaring chief executive officer Dr Mohamed Awang Lah. “What now takes days or weeks, could be completed in hours.”

If all goes well, this will become Jaring’s OneGrid high-performace computing service. OneGrid will eventually form part of the national cloud-computing infrastructure that will push local industries forward.

Jaring chairman Datuk Md Khir Abdul Rahman said the national computing grid will be especially beneficial to the local research and development circles because it will allow researchers to do more despite having tight monetary budgets.

“Research organisations requiring high computing capabilities will be able to pool and share resources,” Khir said.

To get the ball rolling, Jaring has signed agreements with the Perak and Sabah state governments to develop world-class datacentres. It was not disclosed when these datacentres will be completed, or how much they will cost.

“We hope the Government will provide strong support to encourage other state governments to participate in this programme,” Khir said.

In conjunction with the launch of OneGrid, Jaring has initiated collaborations with several local universities that have expressed interest in developing cloud and grid computing infrastructure for education, research and administration purposes.

A memorandum of understanding with Universiti Pendidikan Sultan Idris in Perak was signed at the launch to kick off the initiative.

Jaring said six other universities, including Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia in Selangor and Universiti Sains Malaysia in Penang, have confirmed their participation.

While it is developing the national cloud-computing infrastructure, Jaring will use OneGrid to offer rendering services for creative content development and manufacturing industries.

NEWS: Clash of the 3D movie makers


CRITICISED: Katzenberg is taking Warner Bros. to task for converting Clash of the Titans to 3D using "a quick and cheap post-production process" to cash in on the success of 3D movies. — Legendary Pictures and Warner Bros. Pictures

LOS ANGELES: Extra revenue being pulled in by 3D movies at the box office can more than make up for the money lost from falling sales of DVDs, according to the CEO of movie studio DreamWorks Animation SKG Inc.

Jeffrey Katzenberg, one of the biggest proponents of the big-screen format, said the 3D revolution is reversing a decades-long trend that saw Hollywood studios become more reliant on home videos for their revenue and profit than on theatrical releases.

“Suddenly, the theatrical marketplace has turned in the opposite direction,” he said in an interview following his appearance at a conference held by the National Association of Broadcasters in Las Vegas.

His company’s forecast for its upcoming sequel Shrek Forever After follows the pattern.

3D BOOM: Katzenberg says any drop in video sales for Shrek Forever After will be more than offset by the incremental revenue from 3D. — DreamWorks Animation

“Whatever the decline would be for Shrek when it goes to the home video market will be more than offset by the incremental revenue we’ll see from 3D,” he said.

But he implored studios to keep up the quality of 3D movies. He has criticised Warner Bros. for converting Clash of the Titans into 3D after seeing the success of Avatar in theatres using what he called a “quick and cheap post-production process.”

Clash was shot using regular 2D cameras, while Avatar was shot with 3D cameras and had actors don special suits that allowed their movements and expressions to be recreated in 3D using computer software. All of DreamWorks’ animated movies are also created in 3D from the start.

Some critics say the conversion process leads to images that aren’t immersive, but look like they are on separate flat planes.

PROVING A POINT: Dreamworks' 3D animation How to Train Your Dragon has grossed more than RM962mil worldwide since its March 26 release.

“I just want us all to be cautious and to err to the side of delivering more than expected, not the minimum level or less than expected,” Katzenberg said. “You can’t ask people to pay more without giving them more.”

Despite the criticism, Clash has gone on to gross US$231mil (RM785mil) worldwide since its April 2 release. DreamWorks’ How To Train Your Dragon has grossed US$283mil (RM962mil) worldwide since its March 26 release.

A representative of Warner Bros. did not immediately respond to a request for comment. — AP

NEWS: South Korea tightens rules to curb Internet gaming addiction

STRICTER LAWS: The South Korean government is implementing tougher rules to combat Internet gaming addiction, including a “fatigue system” encouraging players to switch off. — AFP/Relaxnews

SEOUL: South Korea announced tougher rules to combat Internet gaming addiction including a “fatigue system” encouraging players to switch off.

The announcement follows deaths blamed on the addiction, including the case of a couple accused of letting their baby daughter starve while they raised a “virtual” child on the Internet.

The culture ministry said three major game operators would have to introduce a “shutdown” programme from September. Younger users will be limited to a time period set by a parent or guardian.

The firms would also have to restrict access by teenagers at night by using a “fatigue system,” which makes games harder as time goes by so that the player becomes bored, it said in a statement.

Currently only four games use the fatigue system but a total of 15 games will have it by the end of this year, it said.

Official data estimates the highly-wired nation has two million web addicts, or 8.8% of total online users.

The couple in the baby death case are currently on trial for negligent homicide.

Police have alleged they “raised” an online girl game character while leaving their own prematurely born daughter at home, feeding her just once a day between 12-hour stretches at an Internet cafe.

In March a 32-year-old man died after reportedly playing for five days with few breaks. A similar incident was reported involving a 28-year-old man in 2005. — AFP/Relaxnews

NEWS: Spotlight on National ICT Month 2010

ERI KEMBANGAN: Malaysia is on track to meet its targeted 50% broadband penetration by the end of this year in keeping with the National Broadband Plan.

“With the roll out of Telekom Malaysia’s high-speed broadband and its commitment to providing high speeds, we will be able to meet this target by end 2010,” said Science, Technology and Innovation (Mosti) Minister Datuk Seri Dr Maximus Ongkili.

Currently, broadband penetration is 32%, according to the Association of the Computer and Multimedia Industry of Malaysia (Pikom).

With the country on track to reach that goal, Pikom said it is confident the local e-commerce market will grow 20% this year.

C.J. Ang, Pikom president, said the coming National ICT Month 2010 will further prime the sector by reminding all businesses of the benefits of engaging in e-commerce.

The event is scheduled to run from July 13 to Aug 12 and is themed e-Commerce for Global Reach this year.

It will also highlight the current state of e-commerce development in the country, as well as spotlight information and communications technology for small- and medium-scale enterprises (SMEs).

Other planned activities include a business success forum, leadership summit, computer fair and computer games competition.

“Discussions have been initiated over seminars for SMEs, with SME Corp Malaysia and other SME-related associations,” said Wei Chuan Beng, Pikom chairman.

These will be held starting from next month until December in several states, including Selangor, Penang, Perak, Johor, Pahang, Sabah and Sarawak.

Pikom said the business success forum will feature prominent Malaysian businessmen as speakers and is a joint effort with the Asian Strategy and Leadership Institute. It will include an e-commerce solutions and e-government services showcase.

Ongkili was officiating at the Pikom press conference to announce the National ICT Month 2010.

The event is organised by Mosti and Pikom, with support from the Multimedia Development Corporation, Malaysia Administrative Modernisation and Management Planning Unit, and the Malaysian Communications and Multimedia Commission.

NEWS: Why ‘screenagers’ are driving the touchscreen PC market

SCREENAGERS: The younger generation has grown up with their parent’s finger-controlled devices and are eager to extend this multitouch experience to their PC computing. — Relaxnews

A NEW report states that by 2015 more than 50% of personal computers purchased for consumers under the age of 15 will have touchscreens.

On the other hand, businesses and organisations will be much slower to adapt to and implement the new technology in the workplace. Less than ten percent of organisations are expected to include touchscreens in their PC purchases in 2015 predicted market researcher Gartner in a press release.

While businesses and older generations have had to learn how to adapt to touchscreen devices after years of mouse and keyboard computer interaction, the younger generation, or “screenagers”, have grown up with their parent’s finger-controlled devices and are eager to extend this multitouch experience to their PC computing.

Videos of toddlers playing with iPhones and iPads have spread across the Web as viewers look on amazed at how easily the child can interact with a touchscreen product they have never seen before.

“What we’re going to see is the younger generation beginning to use touchscreen computers ahead of organisations,” said Leslie Fiering, research vice-president at Gartner.

Next generation touchscreen laptops, tablets, mobile phones and TVs will be enhanced to provide younger users with the media content they crave on their devices — movies, magazines, e-books and entertainment.

As prices drop touchscreen device makers may find their products being sold to educational institutions en masse as students put finger and pen to digital screen instead of paper.

Innovation in touchscreen business applications may lag behind, maimed by slow adoption within organisations.

“As with many recent technology advances, touch adoption will be led by consumers and only gradually get accepted by the organisation,” Fiering said.

“What will be different here is the expected widespread adoption of touch by education, so that an entire generation will graduate within the next 10 to 15 years for whom touch input is totally natural.” — Relaxnews

NEWS: Twitter to feather its nest with advertising

SAN FRANCISCO: Is Twitter the next Google, the next Pets.com, or something in between? It may have begun answering that question with its long-awaited first step into advertising.

The startup is trying to make money without alienating the tens of millions of people who have gotten used to tweeting and following friends, celebrities and others without commercial interruptions. Just as it has through most of its four-year existence, Twitter is treading cautiously.

The new ads, called “Promoted Tweets,” will pop up only on searches at Twitter’s website, and the messages will be limited to a small group of test marketers, including Virgin America, Best Buy Co, Sony Pictures and Starbucks Corp.

Fewer than 10% of Twitter’s users were expected to see the ads yesterday, but the messages should start appearing on all relevant searches within the next few days.

The move heralds a turning point for Twitter, which has held off on selling ads even as its widening audience turned it into an obvious marketing magnet and investors poured US$155mil (RM527mil) into the San Francisco company.

The last cash infusion seven months ago valued privately held Twitter at about US$1bil (RM3.4bil), even though its only significant revenue had come from giving Google Inc and Microsoft Corp better access to its service. The technology powerhouses paid Twitter an undisclosed amount for that right.

Scary thought

Twitter’s apparent ambivalence about making money reminded some Silicon Valley observers of the profitless Internet startups that wooed investors during the dot-com boom of the late 1990s, only to crash and burn at the turn of 21st century.

The new advertising system should give a better inkling about whether Twitter will be more like Google or Pets.com, whose most valuable asset turned out to be a sock puppet.

Google itself took several years after its 1998 inception before it began selling short ads next to its search results, spawning one of the world’s biggest marketing vehicles with ad revenue of nearly US$23bil (RM78.2bil) last year.

Twitter already is parroting Google in some respects. That’s not surprising given that Stone and fellow co-founder, Twitter CEO Evan Williams, briefly worked at Google after Williams sold his blogging company to the Internet’s search leader in 2003.

Twitter’s chief operating officer, Dick Costolo, also worked at Google after selling another advertising service, called FeedBurner, to the company in 2007.

There’s a twist to the way Twitter is using its search engine as an advertising springboard. Instead of displaying commercial messages on the margins of the search results, Twitter will blend them with the rest of the tweets and label them as promotions.

The ads will be confined to Twitter’s standard 140-character limit so they can be passed along, or “re-tweeted,” to other users. Twitter plans to pull Promoted Tweets that aren’t attracting attention.

That will pressure advertisers to be pithy and creative, a priority that could make the marketing messages seem less intrusive, said Forrester Research analyst Josh Bernoff, co-author of Groundswell, a book on social media.

“You want to create something that interests people rather than just screams at them,” Bernoff said.

A danger?

Michael Wilson, a Brigham Young University student who lives in Salt Lake City, is worried Twitter’s advertisers eventually will dominate the service.

“I think it’s going to be harder and harder to have your voice heard,” he said.

That’s also a concern for Michael Irizarry of New Rochelle, New York, who uses Twitter for personal musings and to promote his DJ business.

“It’s more like Twitter is now here to advertise your product, instead of you actually tweeting what you’re doing,” he said.

Many companies already use their own Twitter accounts to connect with customers and offer discounts to people who follow them.

What remains to be seen is whether Twitter’s new advertising system will prove effective enough to persuade companies to pay for a featured spot in the search results instead of just trying to reach people through the free communications channel, said Gartner Inc analyst Andrew Frank.

“The jury is still out on whether this will work,” he said.

Rocketing upwards

There’s no doubt Twitter has turned into a mass medium. The website’s worldwide audience has ballooned to 69 million people, up from 4 million people at the end of 2008, according to comScore Inc. Those figures don’t include the visitors who use their mobile phones or third-party programs to tweet.

Twitter says it distributes about 50 million tweets per day, creating ample opportunities for more advertising once the company is comfortable enough to allow marketing messages beyond its search results.

Twitter’s engine processes about 30 million monthly searches in the United States, comScore said, a pittance compared to the 10 billion handled by Google.

Eventually, Twitter hopes to insert advertisers into the “timelines” of messages that users see from the people they network with — when the message seems appropriate, Costolo said yesterday at an advertising conference in New York.

For instance, postings about the Academy Awards might provoke a “Promoted Tweet” about a new movie or conversations about American Idol may spur ads about certain songs or recording artistes.

Extra

Twitter also recently introduced a feature that allows its users to specify their location, opening another advertising opportunity.

The ability to interact more directly with consumers and solicit their feedback on how to improve their products and services is bound to appeal to advertisers, predicted Ian Wolfman, chief marketing officer at IMC2, a marketing agency whose clients include Coca-Cola Co and Procter & Gamble Co.

It’s “something a TV ad doesn’t do,” he said.

Promoted Tweets evidently won’t bring in much revenue either, for starters.

Virgin America, one of the advertisers that Twitter invited to test the concept, isn’t paying for its first burst of promotional messages, according to Porter Gale, the airline’s vice-president of marketing.

Twitter declined to comment when asked whether it’s charging the test group of advertisers. But Costolo made it clear that making money still isn’t Twitter’s top priority.

“Initially this is not about maximising revenue,” he said. “It is about getting it right.” — AP

NERWS: Facebook unveils revamped online safety sitePALO ALTO (California): Facebook has launched a revamped internal site designed to help people stay

PALO ALTO (California): Facebook has launched a revamped internal site designed to help people stay safe and report threats while on the popular online hangout.

Facebook’s “Safety Center,” which features new tools for parents, teachers, teens and law enforcement, is the first major endeavour from the social networking site and its four-month-old global safety advisory board.

The company unveiled its Safety Center a day after meeting with child advocacy officials in Britain, who had been pushing the company to install a so-called “panic button” on the site for some time, following the kidnapping and murder there of a teenager by a man she encountered on Facebook.

Britain’s Child Exploitation and Online Protection Center (CEOP) had wanted Facebook to install a prominent link on British users’ profile pages that would take them to CEOP’s own safety site designed to help children deal with online threats.

In a statement yesterday, the centre called Facebook’s move “long overdue,” and “nothing more than we would expect from any responsible social network provider.”

But it added that “critical issues remain unresolved” since Facebook did not actually install a “panic button.”

“We believe that without the deterrence provided by direct visible access to the CEOP button on each and every page children will not be appropriately empowered, parents cannot be reassured and the offender will not be deterred,” the centre said on its website.

Features added

Facebook’s board is composed of Internet safety groups Common Sense Media, ConnectSafely, WiredSafety, Childnet International and The Family Online Safety Institute.

Some new features of the safety centre include more content on staying safe, such as dealing with bullying online, an interactive portal and a simpler design.

The presence of sexual predators is a problem for social networking sites and their users. Facebook, based in Palo Alto, California, has helped identify, and has disabled accounts of, registered sex offenders.

In 2008, Facebook said it agreed to assist 49 Attorneys-General to protect kids against Internet predators. — AP