Wednesday, August 31, 2011

Carolina Panthers Tight End Jeremy Shockey Saved A Choking Teammate's Life Yesterday

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Carolina Panthers tight end Jeremy Shockey saved teammate Ben Hartsock from choking on a piece of pork yesterday.

After a chunk of pork tenderloin got caught in Hartsock's throat, someone tried and failed to give Hartsock the Heimlich.

When it become apparent that Hartsock couldn't breathe, Shockey hit him in the back and dislodged the pork.

The situation got "really scary" before Shockey stepped in, the Panthers told Hartsock's agent.

"He was in good spirits and he’s real thankful for Shockey," the agent said.

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AT&T Officially Announces HTC's Jetstream Tablet For A Whopping $700 (T)

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AT&T just announced the HTC Jetstream, the carrier's first 4G tablet.

It will launch September 4 for $700 with two-year data plan contract from AT&T.

The tablet will support AT&T's 4G LTE and HSPA+ networks.

Currently, AT&T's LTE network, which is much faster than its current 4G offering, is not available. It should launch in five cities later this fall.

The Honeycomb tablet runs on a 1.5 GHz Snapgradon processor and its 8-megapixel camera can capture 1080p HD video. The front-facing camera captures 1.3-megapixel images for video conferencing.

The AT&T data plans range from 250 MB for $15 per month to 3 GB for $35 per month.

Perhaps most interesting is the tablet's compatibility with the Scribe pen, which will be included free of charge for a limited time. We're not big fans of smartpens, but it may become a selling point on release day.

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Amazon's Big Tablet Will Only Start Shipping Next Year (AMZN)

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Amazon' 10-inch tablet will start getting built in the first quarter of 2012, DigiTimes reports.

By all accounts, Amazon is planning to release two tablets: one smaller, 7 inch tablet which will compete more with the Nook and be a kind of "super Kindle", and a bigger 10 inch tablet which will compete with the iPad.

According to sources DigiTimes spoke to, both tablets are being built by Foxconn (yes, that Foxconn) which is already building the Kindle, and the small tablet will ship in the fall and the big tablet next year. 

Don't Miss: Everything We Know About The Secret Tablet So Far ?

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Politics In 60 Seconds

Good morning. Here's the news:

1. For millions of Americans, the recession has become a way of life. They work week-to-week, job-to-job, doing what they can to stay afloat. Their standard of living steadily erodes. 

2. US consumer spending rebounded in July as Americans bought cars and trucks and other long-lasting items. Disposable incomes rose.

3. The Wall Street Journal reports: "Alan Krueger, President Barack Obama's pick to head the White House Council of Economic Advisers, will likely serve as an administration advocate for more aggressive government intervention to revive job growth."

4. Texas Governor Rick Perry Republican said yesterday that no new economic stimulus is needed to “get America working again.” He declined to give specifics about how his plan to jump start the nation’s economy would create jobs.

5. According to a new poll, Governor Perry has opened up a substantial (27%-14%) lead over former Massachusetts Governor Mitt Romney among Republicans nationally.

6. There will be five 2012 GOP presidential candidates' debates in quick succession after Labor Day.  The Romney campaign thinks that these and other forces will slow down the Perry juggernaut. We're of the view that they could just as easily accelerate Perry's momentum.

7. The Wall Street Journal reports: "European politicians signaled Tuesday that there is no quick fix to the row over Finland's insistence on receiving collateral for taking part in Greece's second bailout, even as the European Commission insisted talks were yielding progress."

8. The Washington Post reports: "European Central Bank President Jean-Claude Trichet and European Economic and Monetary Affairs Commissioner Olli Rehn said banks within the 17-nation euro currency zone have been steadily raising the amount of capital set aside as a cushion against losses and will not face the sort of cash crunch that helped trigger the recession in 2008."

9. Hans-Olaf Henkel argues that the eurozone must create two currencies; one for the strong economies and one for the weak. Mr. Henkel, it might be said, is calling for the Geuro and the Euro.

10.  WikiLeaks has posted nearly 134,000 leaked diplomatic cables on the web in the last week. The New York Times reports: "A sampling of the documents showed that the newly published cables included the names of some people who had spoken confidentially to American diplomats and whose identities were marked in the cables with the warning “strictly protect.”" Publication raises the acute concern that no one in their right mind will speak confidentially with US diplomats in the future.


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European Markets Are On A Big Late Rally

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MONEY GAME TIP OF THE DAY: Corporate Bonds Can Be Safer And Better Than Sovereigns

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Now that the U.S. has been downgraded by Standard and Poors, are U.S. AAA-rated companies better bets than than U.S. AA plus-rated Treasuries?

There are 70 U.S. companies whose debt is cheaper than U.S. Treasuries Automatic Data Processing, ExxonMobil, Johnson & Johnson, and Microsoft. So it's reasonable to think that they deserve more of your attention.

FT's Gillian Tett seems to think so, and he gives two simple, specific reasons:

Companies are no subject to whims of political fervor-- which is not always rational per se. Mobility. These companies can move operations ands funds overseas whenever they like.

Part of what this boils down to is that investors need to think of who understands their balance sheets, is more transparent, and is more rational -- AAA-rated American companies, or its AA-rated government?

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UK Minister Accidentally Reveals To The Cameras A Controversial Report On Afghanistan

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Britain's ruthless paparazzi just photographed another top-secret document as Development Secretary Andrew Mitchell walked out of a meeting.

The Daily Mail has more:

Andrew Mitchell was photographed clutching a confidential briefing paper saying Hamid Karzai's decision to step down would improve the country's prospects 'very significantly'.

In a humiliating blunder the International Development Secretary inadvertently displayed the file, marked 'Protect – Policy', as he left a meeting at No?10.

Daily Mail also has photos.

Previously assistant commissioner Bob Quick was photographed with sensitive terror documents, as have other UK politicians.

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The New Era Of Capitalism Brings More Inequality And Unrest

Rick Bookstaber is a senior policy advisor at the SEC, who keeps an independent blog.

(Rick Bookstaber is a senior policy adviser at the SEC. This guest post represents personal opinion from his blog.)

I spent the 1981-82 school year in Israel as a visiting professor at the Hebrew University in Jerusalem through a Fulbright Fellowship. This was the year of the bombing of the Ossiraq Nuclear reactor near Baghdad and the Lebanon War. Though less threatening than the 1967 Six-Day War and the 1974 Yom Kippur war, the cost in lives was palpable, because of the small size of Israel and the many interrelationships of its society. Our babysitter there, still a high school student, had six friends killed. One of the professors that I worked with at the Hebrew University lost his son, a mathematician who served as a tank commander. (There are not many countries where tank commanders hold PhD's in mathematics).

During the war I was traveling throughout Israel with a biblical geography class. We drove through the narrow mountain pass by Mount Carmel, part of the ancient international coastal highway that the Egyptian army used 3000 years ago as they marched to points east. On this same route, now a paved highway but still cutting narrowly through the mountains, our tour bus followed behind an army truck with artillery shells stacked on its open bed. Later that day we arrived at the remains of the ancient fortified city of Hatzor which was strategically stationed to protect against Assyrians approaching from the north. A mobile antiaircraft installation stood on a rise a stone's throw away, its missiles pointed northward.

For all the distress and tragedy that surrounded that war, one thing that it brought forward was the great vitality of Israeli society. Being at such risk and having the realization of death so nearby made life valued and vibrant. It brought the things of importance to the forefront. There was no space for trivialities, no discussion of prestige addresses or showy cars; no concern with the quality of restaurants or the latest social scene. The Israeli society of 1981 was true to the country's egalitarian roots, the idealism of the Zionist movement embodied in the socialist Kibbutzim.

Things are different now. Protests have erupted in Israel decrying the wide disparity in the distribution of income, a widening gap that is seen in few other developed economies. A handful of families that dominate the Israeli economy are the targets of the protests. The tax code allows the families to recycle their capital with hardly any dampening effect, leapfrogging to seize one enterprise after the next in what the Israelis term a pyramid strategy. They control some 30 percent of the economy, including the banks, supermarket chains, cellphone and insurance companies, and media.

Just as Greece, one of the economically weakest EU countries, became the canary in the coal mine for credit issues that then struck the European countries more broadly, Israel, historically one of the most egalitarian countries and now one with the greatest disparity in the distribution of income, may become the canary in the coal mine for a broad crisis in the socioeconomic realm.

Israel may have made the biggest u-turn in terms of social disparity, but it is not alone. Similar disparities are emerging in the United States. Since 1993, more than half of the nation’s income growth has been captured by the top 1 percent of earners, and the gains have grown larger over time: from 2002 to 2007, out of every three dollars of national income growth, the top 1 percent of earners captured two.

The most recent of a drum roll of articles that have appeared in the last several years on the subject appears in, “Can the Middle Class be Saved?” in this month's Atlantic.

The author Don Peck writes:

America’s classes are separating and changing. A tiny elite continues to float up and away from everyone else. Below it, suspended, sits what might be thought of as the professional middle class—unexceptional college graduates for whom the arrow of fortune points mostly sideways, and an upper tier of college graduates and postgraduates for whom it points progressively upward, but not spectacularly so. The professional middle class has grown anxious since the crash, and not without reason. Yet these anxieties should not distract us from a second, more important, cleavage in American society—the one between college graduates and everyone else....The return on education has risen in recent decades, producing more-severe income stratification. But even among the meritocratic elite, the economy’s evolution has produced a startling divergence.

These disparities in the U.S. are not the subject of protests as in Israel. At least not yet. Right now the opposite seems to be the case. Surprisingly and somewhat inexplicably those who would be the natural vanguard of such protest--the unemployed, underemployed, and more broadly those who see their standard of living diminishing --continue to root for the success and the protection of the wealthy. But things can change quickly; it is a slippery slope down from invectives against the Acela Corridor.

Capitalism-lite: Can you spell 'capitalism' without capital?

Among the many sources of this rising disparity in income is the changing nature of capitalism. A little bit of capital goes a lot further in building out the virtual world than it did in the burgeoning industrial revolution with its railroads, steam-driven mills and iron foundries, or even in the pre-rust belt, brick and mortar 20th century. Not only does it take less capital, the capital that is required need not be committed for very long before the outcome of the enterprise is manifest.

The reduced capital requirements for creating even multibillion dollar businesses can be thought of as providing a new type of leverage, what might be called functional leverage. Functional leverage means that a given amount of capital can capture a greater base of production. Which means that it is easier for the entrepreneur to bootstrap up from one enterprise to the next while maintaining a much higher equity stake than would have occurred during the period of capital intensive production. Think of the trajectory of Google, Facebook, LinkedIn or GroupOn. How much capital was needed to push the businesses past the billion dollar valuation mark, and how long was that capital required? When the IPOs in these businesses finally do occur, it is not so much to allow access to further capital than to provide a channel for the owners to monetize their stake.

Functional leverage widens the distribution of income by changing the odds and payout for risk-taking activities. Think of a casino where the bet limit is kept low and the odds of winning are close to fifty percent. At the end of the day there will be winners and losers, but the implications for their relative wealth will be small; the distribution of income that arises will be tight around the mean. With functional leverage of the new capitalism, the casino allows very high limits and the bets are ones with high odds but high payoffs. Such a casino alters the distribution of wealth by creating a large right-hand tail.

Thus the rise of the super-elite is not a product of educational differences, but rather a result of the new capitalism which creates bigger winners, and does so much more quickly than in the capital-intensive capitalist era. Less capital is needed, it is applied for a shorter period before the results are realized, and because less capital is required, the entrepreneur captures more of the value of the enterprise. The result is an accentuation in the very wealthy.

The new capitalism also comes with its version of the monopoly power that catapulted the Gettys and Rockerfellers into the stratosphere: lock-in. Lock-in occurs when consumers have invested so much in a product that its not worth making a switch even if a competitor is offering a marginally better product. Think of transferring all your Gmail or Facebook connections to someplace else, or running up the learning curve for using an alternative to Windows. Lock-in creates barriers to entry and pricing power not unlike that enjoyed in the past century by the barons of steel, railroads and oil, albeit through a much different mechanism.

Of course, the move toward capitalism-lite is not the only force behind the widening distribution of income. It might explain what is occurring on the right-hand tail, but there is another edge to the scissors: workers are being pushed further toward the left tail. For example, financial innovation that allows a broader group to enter the game and increase risk to their wealth in the process – extending down to the lower middle class. Financial innovations in the mortgage market are the prime example. And there is the change in manufacturing.

Since 2000, U.S. manufacturing has lost a third of its jobs. As Peck notes, the real median wages of men have fallen by 32 percent since their peak in 1973 once you account for the those who have become unemployed. Part of this is due to global competition, but part of it is increased efficiency and a move toward products that are less labor intensive. We have remained preeminent in agriculture even though now only two percent of the U.S. workforce are farmers. The same might now be occurring in industry. Also, there is what I have called the consumption trap – as more of our time is spent in the virtual world, there is dwindling demand for goods that are labor (and capital) intensive.

Marx considered the role of labor and capital during the Industrial Revolution and called capital the king and workers the subjugated. Now we may be moving into an era of capitalism where capital -- and workers -- become incidental.


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ABC Attacked By "Dancing With The Stars" Fans For Casting Of Chaz Bono

"Dancing With the Stars" aims for provocative casts, and Chaz Bono joining the show this week has already yielded strong reaction -- some of it ugly.

Bono, the only child of Sonny Bono and Cher, was born a woman but legally changed his gender and name last year. The announcement Monday that he would join the highly rated ABC dance competition immediately made him one of the highest-profile transgendered people in the world. 

It also brought to the surface prejudices about Bono and others who have changed their gender, judging from the "Dancing With the Stars" message board. In hundreds of comments, Bono was the most common subject.

Also read: 'DWTS' Cast: Ricki Lake, Ron Artest, Kristin Cavallari, David Arquette & Nancy Grace

"HUGE HUGE fan of this show since season two and eagerly await each season to get my dancing/entertainment 'fix'!! But when I heard that Chaz Bono was going to be on, I was sick. Not that I have anything personally again her/him, I just don't want that lifestyle choice continually flaunted in the media esp ABC," went one typical anti-Bono comment.

But for everyone who vented disgust -- or questioned whether Bono would dance with a man or woman -- there were many who defended Bono and accused his critics of bigotry.

Also read: Meet J.R. Martinez, the 'DWTS' Star Not Just Famous for Being Famous

Bono's casting is only the latest to make a lighthearted reality show the impetus for deeper discussions about values, tolerance, bigotry and politics. Gay "American Idol" contestants have opted not to announce their sexuality, perhaps out of concerns about alienating intolerant viewers. And Bristol Palin's "Dancing" casting two seasons ago seemed to have influenced voters with opinions on her mother's politics. 

If Americans quickly vote Bono off the show -- or keep him on despite a middling performance, as they did with Palin -- it could reveal plenty about attitudes toward transgendered people.

An ABC spokesman said Bono, 42, was in rehearsals for the show and unavailable to comment. The network, meanwhile, had no comment Tuesday on the comments posted by "Dancing" fans on its message board.

Among the other comments:

"Chaz Bono How low can this show sink. Well you have certainly addressed the gay commuity. Guess this will not be a family show any longer!!!! Lost my family!"

"YOUR choice to bring Chaz Bono into the mix goes too far. I am not about to risk the potential for on screen dialogue about sex changes and gender confusion while my 7 and 9 year old are watching. If you want the 'anything goes' hippy culture, then soon that is all you will get. You've lost us. In case any of you are wondering ... no, we are NOT tolerant. We are not tolerant to allow any and all influences to come unfiltered into our home and especially to our children. This is truly a sad farewell."

Some of the objections were flat-out confusing -- one person seemed to suggest Bono had to be paired with a woman -- because he was still a woman: "Chaz will have to dance with one of the girls because she/he says she/he is a man but chromesomes [sic] say different no matter how many surgeries you have."

The show has historically paired men and women regardless of sexuality. The openly gay Lance Bass was paired with Lacey Schwimmer.

Transgendered people believe that their gender identity does not correspond to the one into which they were physically born. Many seek surgery or hormones to change their physical gender. In an interview with ABC News in May, Bono explained:

"It's actually pretty simple if you look at it. ... We all in the womb start out as female and then hormones come and we either stay female or we become male. I think of it as hormones that, you know, went in the brain but not in the body, and that's all being transgender is. It's just that the sex of your body and the gender of the brain don't match up."

Many criticisms of Bono on the "Dancing" message board have nothing to do with gender. Some complained that he is overweight and only famous because of his parents. Those two criticisms have faced many, many contestants before him.

This post originally appeared at TheWrap.


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Be Prepared For A Disastrous ISM Manufacturing Report

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If the “whisper number” for this week’s ISM Manufacturing report is correct then we can expect a disastrous report.  According to LPL Financial the regional manufacturing reports are consistent with a contracting ISM figure:

Based on weakness in various regional ISM and Federal Reserve manufacturing sentiment surveys already released for August (Philly Fed, Empire State manufacturing, Richmond Fed, Dallas Fed), the consensus expects the August reading on the ISM to dip below 50 (to 48.5), from the 50.9 reading in July. The so-called “whisper number” among traders (who often informally have their own forecasts for key economic data and events that differs from the consensus estimate culled from economists) is probably closer to 44.0 or 45.0. Thus, expectations for ISM are quite low. A reading below 50 on the ISM has historically corresponded with contraction in the manufacturing sector, while a reading about 50 suggests an expanding manufacturing sector. The last time the ISM was below 50 was in July 2009, the first month of the current economic recovery.

They warn, however, that it’s unwise to overreact to the negative number.  As they show, it’s not unusual for the ISM to contract during an economic expansion:

As noted in Chart 1, it is not unusual to see the ISM to approach, and dip below, 50 in the midst of an economic expansion. The index dipped below 50 in the middle of the long 1982–1990 expansion and did several round trips above and below 50 in the 1991–2001 recovery, notably in 1995 and again in 1998. In the 2001–2007 expansion, the ISM dipped back toward the 50 level in 2004, before reaccelerating in 2005. More recently, we point out that manufacturing activity/output—vehicle production, industrial production, durable goods shipments and orders, manufacturing employment etc.,have held up much better than measures of manufacturing sentiment like the ISM and the regional Federal Reserve manufacturing indices.

As sustained reading of 42 or below indicates recession, and the ISM did get to that level in both the 1991 and 2001 recessions. It got as low as 33.3 at the worst of the 2007–2009 Great Recession.

chart

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The August Rally Continues Thanks To Scraps Of Good News In Europe

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Most of Asia opened lower but rallied to close flat in the Nikkei and Shanghai, and with 1.6% gains in the Hang Seng. Lower because of U.S. corporate sentiment, Japan saw a bounce when its own corporate sentiment improved.

European markets opened low but quickly rallied to 1% gains.

Bouygues SA lifted markets when it said it would buy back shares. Other small but good headlines included comments from Olli Rehn that Greek debt is on a durable declining path, a larger than expected fall in German unemployment and positive comments from the Irish finance minister.

Dow futures point to a near-100 point open.

Since August 22 the Global Dow is up 6%, but since July 22 it is down 12%.

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France Says There Must Be No Bilateral Accords On Greece

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European politicians seem to be making little progress in resolving a dispute over the Greek bailout that has been raging on since August 16.

Here's the latest:

- French government spokeswoman Valerie Pecresse told reporters today that France "want[s] this deal to be implemented and nothing but this deal. We reassert that there can be no bilateral agreement without the approval and agreement of the entire euro zone," according to Reuters. However, the July 21 agreement actually did make provisions for some sort of collateral arrangement between Finland and Greece (though not any other countries).

- German newspaper Handelsblatt reported today (via Dow Jones Newswires) that EU leaders were considering bank shares as collateral. This provision could extend to nations beyond Finland, and may also sidestep legal issues that would accompany a cash agreement.

- Finnish Prime Minister Jyrki Katainen announced today that he sees the situation being resolved in "a few days or weeks" -- hardly reassuring.

Last week Finland sparked controversy when it negotiated a bilateral collateral agreement with Greece as a condition of its participation in the Greek bailout. A host of other EU countries jumped on board the collateral bandwagon, and now bickering over collateral threatens to unravel the bailout deal altogether -- or at the very least delay it indefinitely.

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Seesmic Flips The Switch On Its Latest Pivot (CRM)

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Loic le meurSeesmic, the startup that makes a suite of popular social media tools, is ready to launch its next product, Seesmic CRM, which will let companies interact with customers in social media. 

Seesmic has a storied history, starting out as a video service and pivoting many, many times to this day. The latest pivot comes after Twitter started cracking down on its developer ecosystem and said it didn't want developers making Twitter apps, which is what Seesmic then was. 

So Seesmic raised $4 million from Salesforce to get into the enterprise side of social media software, and its new product is going to launch at Salesforce's Dreamforce conference. 

Salesforce's partnership with Seesmic is interesting. After all, Seesmic is getting into the CRM space which basically defines Salesforce. Salesforce also recently bought a social media monitoring company, a space where Seesmic was thinking about heading into. Seesmic says it's not competing with Salesforce because it focuses on social media CRM. We'll see. (Of course, the best way to resolve that would be for Salesforce to buy its investee.)

Seesmic and its founder Loic Le Meur sometimes get bad press for pivoting the company again and again and failing to find a business model, but what Le Meur is doing is admirable. This is what startup entrepreneurship is about: bobbing and weaving and adapting. Hopefully for Seesmic, this time will be right.

Previously: Loic Le Meur Pivots Again ?

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10 Things You Need To Know This Morning (GRPN, AMZN, HPQ, AAPL)

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jeff bezosImage: AP

Good morning! Here's what you need to know:

Please Note: Business Insider will never share your information with any other companies. You also have the ability to unsubscribe from these newsletters at any time simply by following the unsubscribe link located at the bottom of each email

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LA Porn Industry Shut Down After Performer Tests HIV Positive

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Derrick BurtsDerrick Burts -- Porn's 2010 HIV victim

Image: YouTube

An unnamed adult film performer has tested positive for HIV causing a temporary shutdown of the Los Angeles adult film industry.

According to The L.A. Times, the move was prompted by industry trade group the Free Speech Coalition while further testing is performed to confirm the results.

The infected performer has yet to be named and was tested at an out-of-state facility.

The Coalition will not say how they became aware of the results, only that once confirmation is achieved the group will attempt to contact all parties the individual has had intercourse with.

The Times notes it's unclear how the group will do that.

This is the second case of HIV in the industry this year. Derrick Burts tested HIV positive in December 2010 and has since become a vocal supporter for condoms in the porn industry.

Film studios have been less than receptive claiming the mandatory 30-day tests are sufficient to keep performers uninfected.

Burts is working with the L.A. Based AIDS Healthcare Foundation to pass a 2012 ballot measure requiring adult performers seeking permits in Los Angeles county to use condoms.

The former actor intends to submit a petition with 41,138 signatures to put the matter before the public for the first time in June.

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Gold Falls Back To $1819

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A big equity rally in the past hour saw a commensurate fall in gold. It's back to $1,819 after hitting $1,842 yesterday.

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Berlusconi Chooses Retirement Delays Instead Of Tax On Wealthy In New Austerity Plan

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A new austerity proposal in Italy provoked an outcry today, with popular criticism leveled from all sides.

The latest incarnation of Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi's newest austerity plan favors pension cuts and delays in the retirement age over an increase in taxes on the rich.

It also proposes a constitutional amendment that would do away with provincial governments.

Instead of a "solidarity tax" levied against citizens who earn more than $130,000 per year, these new cuts would prohibit workers from counting time spent in the military or in college in calculating their retirement ages. This could delay retirement -- particularly for professionals -- for years.

MPs -- whose number would also be cut by half in the deal -- would still have to pay the tax.

Experts cited by WSJ questioned the feasibility of this plan, as well as the likelihood that a stronger stance against tax evasion would make significant strides in reducing Italy's more $2.7 trillion public debt.

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The Average Loan In Foreclosure Has Been Delinquent For A Record 599 Days

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LPS Applied Analytics released their July Mortgage Monitor Report today. From LPS: LPS' Mortgage Monitor Report Shows Average Loan in Foreclosure Is Delinquent for Record 599 Days; First-Time Foreclosure Starts Near Three-Year Lows

The July Mortgage Monitor report released by Lender Processing Services, Inc. shows that foreclosure timelines continue their steady upward trend, as a payment has not been made on the average loan in foreclosure in a record 599 days. Of the nearly 1.9 million loans that are 90 or more days delinquent but not yet in foreclosure, 42 percent have not made a payment in more than a year with an average delinquency of 397 days, also a new record. At the same time, first-time foreclosure starts in June were near three-year lows, and first-time delinquencies accounted for only 25 percent of new delinquent inventory.

As of the end of June, 4.1 million loans were either 90 or more days delinquent or in foreclosure, as delinquencies remain two times and foreclosures eight times pre-crisis levels. Foreclosure sales remain constricted, with foreclosure starts outnumbering sales by a factor of almost three to one.

According to LPS, 8.34% of mortgages were delinquent in July, up from 8.15% in June, and down from 9.31% in July 2010.

LPS reports that 4.11% of mortgages were in the foreclosure process, down slightly from 4.12% in June, and up from 3.74% in July 2010. This gives a total of 12.45% delinquent or in foreclosure. It breaks down as:

• 2.48 million loans less than 90 days delinquent.
• 1.90 million loans 90+ days delinquent.
• 2.16 million loans in foreclosure process.

For a total of 6.54 million loans delinquent or in foreclosure in July.

chart

This graph shows the total delinquent and in-foreclosure rates since 1995.

The total delinquent rate has increased recently (part of the increase is seasonal), but the rate has fallen to 8.34% from the peak in January 2010 of 10.97%. A normal rate is probably in the 4% to 5% range, so there is a long long ways to go.

However the in-foreclosure rate at 4.11% is barely below the peak rate of 4.21% in March 2011. There are still a large number of loans in this category (about 2.16 million) - and the average loan in foreclosure has been delinquent for a record 599 days!

chart

This graph provided by LPS Applied Analytics shows the number of loans entering the foreclosure process each month and the number of foreclosure sales .

Looking at this graph, one might expect the number of loans in the foreclosure process to be increasing sharply since there are so many more starts than sales.

And there are very few cures too - what is happening is a large number of loans each month have been moving from "in foreclosure" back to "90+ days delinquent" status - so the number of loans "in foreclosure" hasn't increased recently.

chart

The third graph shows mortgage origination by the original term.

This graph is interesting because of the surge in shorter duration loans.

This is probably being driven by two factors: 1) older borrowers are hoping to pay off their loans as part of their retirement planning and are taking out 15 year mortgages, and 2) many jumbo borrowers are probably taking out 5 year loans with a balloon payment since 30 year jumbo rates are much higher.

Earlier:
• Case Shiller: Home Prices increased in June
• Real House Prices and Price-to-Rent

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Here's What Zynga's Next Hit Game Looks Like

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The Most Extraordinary Highways in the World

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Since the beginning of civilization, the need for public, interconnecting roads became evident for the speediness of communication and national defense.

With the creation of advanced motors, paved roads combined with other tactics created the most proficient roadways to better serve travelers. 

Some roads have been around for centuries whereas others are known for their specific engineering characteristics.

From longest to busiest to deadliest, here are the most remarkable roadways ever built.

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The Global Rally Loses Steam In Europe

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Asian markets rallied again, with only Shanghai down for the second day. The Hang Seng was up 1.7% and the Sensex was up 1.5%.

Update: European markets started sharply higher but lost gains early. Now the DAX, the Cac 40 and the FTSE MIB are  in the red. The FTSE is still up 2.3% after not trading turing yesterday's rally.

A few things to worry about in Europe.

Spread crept higher going into a 8 billion euro Italian bond auction. The 10year bond rose from 5% at the begining of the week to 5.1% yesterday to 5.22%. The BTP/Bund spread after the auction rose above 300 basis points.

Plus traders say the ECB bought a significant amount of the Italitan 10-year, according to Reuters.

The EMU economic sentiment index fell to 98.3 versus expectations of 104.

New complications with Finland's Greece deal.

US futures point to a negative open.

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BREAKING: Justice Department Files Lawsuit To Block AT&T, T-Mobile Merger

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The U.S. Department of Justice has filed an anti-trust lawsuit to block AT&T's planned $39 billion merger T-Mobile.

“AT&T’s elimination of T-Mobile as an independent, low- priced rival would remove a significant competitive force from the market,” DOJ said in its filing obtained by Bloomberg.

AT&T shares are down about 4 percent on the news, while those of Sprint — seen as losing out if the merger were to go through — are up over 7 percent.

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Actually That High Stakes Italian Bond Auction Went Pretty Well

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bondAn auction of $11.2 billion in Italian bonds went off without a hitch this morning, with yields on 10-year government bonds remaining at a respectable 5.22%.

The auction was under heavy scrutiny from investors as it was widely regarded to be a test of the European Central Bank's bond-buying firepower.

Nonetheless European markets turned negative around the time of the auction.

Yields on 10-year Italian government bonds fell from a record 6.40% earlier this month after the ECB started buying up Italian and Spanish government bonds. Bond yields have remained generally under control since then.

The ECB is not permitted to purchase bonds directly from governments, so this morning's auction proved that ECB secondary market intervention was still having a strong impact on bond prices. Reuters reports that the ECB was seen purchasing a significant quantity of Italian bonds nearing maturity.

Shahid Ikram -- head of sovereigns at Aviva Investors -- told Bloomberg, "This is where the litmus test comes, the test to see whether the ECB’s buying power can hold yields where they are."

Despite the success of the sale, the FTSE MIB had fallen more than 1% by 6:15 AM ET, with Italian 10-year bonds to bunds spreads rising to 298bps.

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Here Comes The Challenger Jobs Report...

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2 Hedge Fund Managers Fined $111 Million Each For Being Empty Suits

The Grand Court of the Cayman Islands recently found two hedge fund managers of a now-defunct fund guilty of willful neglect their duties fining them $111 million each.

This case is significant because it's the first time in the context of a failed fund that the court has found two directors guilty of willful neglect or default in the discharge of their duties, HedgeWeek reported.

Long story short, they were fined for sitting on the board of their relative's hedge fund and doing nothing. They were empty suits who never attended a board meeting and signed documents without reading them, according to the Cayman Islands court judge who ruled on the case.

“Directors of Cayman Islands investment funds can no longer live under the misconception that they are immune from liability for a company's losses if they do not themselves take an active role in the company's business," said Shaun Folpp, a managing associate at Olgier Cayman who acted on behalf of the plaintiff.

Stefan Peterson and Hans Erkstrom were the directors slapped with that whopping fine, according a 37-page court document (Download PDF).

The hedge fund they managed was Weavering Macro Fixed Income Fund.  The fund was founded by Swedish-born financier, Magnus Peterson, and incorporated in April 2003.

The fund collapsed in 2009 after the fund failed to meet investors redemption requests.  PriceWaterhouseCoopers said it could only meet $90 million of the $223 million requests since November of 2008, The Telegraph reported.

It later became the subject of an investigation by the U.K.'s Serious Fraud Office (Yep. That's seriously the agency's name).

Weavering was domiciled in the Cayman Islands, but it was listed on the Irish Stock Exchange. Because it was listed on the Irish Stock Exchange the fund had to have two independent directors.

Both of the directors happened to be closely related to Magnus.  Stefan is Magnus Peterson's younger brother and Erkstrom is their stepfather, the court documents said.

Prior to joining Weavering, Stefan was an employee at Storebrand Investments, a large insurance company.  He was working in their Oslo, Norway offices as a portfolio manager for its credit hedge fund.

At the time of his appointment to Weavering, Erkstrom was 79 and he had retired from his position as the head of the Trustee Department for Skandinaviska Enskilda Banken for about 13 years.   He was 85 when he handed evidence over to the court, the document showed.

While both of the men appeared to have the proper background experience on paper, the judge said in his ruling it's “difficult to avoid the conclusion that Mr. Magnus Peterson chose to appoint his relatives as a means of meeting the minimum legal requirements without burdening himself with a real board of directors."

Apparently, the directors would sign over documents without really reading them.  They also never asked for a written report or attended a board meeting while the hedge fund was still active, the judge said in the ruling.

That's why the liquidators sought damages from the directors.

From HedgeWeek:

The proceedings, brought by the Joint Official Liquidators of the failed investment fund, Weavering Macro Fixed Income Fund (the Fund), sought damages against each director flowing from their decision not to take any, or any meaningful, role in the business of the fund, and their decision to simply sign documents which were put before them, without applying their minds to their content.

“The case shows that directors of Cayman Islands investment funds cannot sit idly by, leaving the management and control of the fund to its service providers. A director’s duty to supervise the affairs of the company, and to exercise reasonable care, skill and diligence are non-delegable,” said Folpp.


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Of Course, Eric Cantor Is A Total Hypocrite

In a way, I may be wasting my time doing any kind of rational analysis of Eric Cantor’s demand that any disaster aid in the wake of Irene be offset by spending cuts elsewhere. Cantor is, of course, being totally hypocritical; where were the demands for offsets to the cost of invading Iraq?

Still, it may be worth talking about just how bad an idea this is in terms of basic economics — and in this case, regular economics, not fancy-schmancy macro.

Think of the government budget as involving tradeoffs similar to those an individual household makes. On one side, there are all kinds of things the government could be doing, from dropping freedom bombs to providing children with dental care; think of each of these things as involving a certain marginal benefit per additional dollar spent, with the marginal benefit declining in the total amount spent on each concern. On the other side, raising revenue has a cost, both the direct cost of the money taken from taxpayers and the possible reduction in incentives from higher tax rates.

What the government should do, in this case, is set all the marginals equal: the marginal benefit of an additional dollar spent on bombs, dental work, national parks, soup kitchens, etc, should all be equal, and this common marginal benefit should equal the marginal cost of raising an additional dollar of revenue.

Now suppose a disaster strikes. What this does is raise the marginal benefit of spending on disaster relief. The appropriate response is to move all the marginals to get them in line: spend less on everything else, and also raise more in taxes. So even there it shouldn’t be all offsetting spending cuts.

But wait: even more important, the government can borrow (or, in principle, lend, if it pays off all its debt). So it should balance its budget in present discounted value terms, not year by year. This means that the tradeoffs should include future spending and taxes as well as this year’s spending and taxes. And a natural disaster, like a war, is a temporary event; it should be met largely through higher taxes and lower spending in the future rather than right away, which is another way of saying that it should be paid for in large part by a temporary increase in the deficit.

This isn’t some novel idea, by the way — it’s the standard theory of public finance during war, going all the way back to Ricardo. And the logic of wartime finance applies equally to natural disasters.

So the bottom line is that basic, regular economics says that Cantor isn’t making sense. Are you surprised?


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Hurricane Katia Could Be A Category 3 Storm By Sunday

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Forming in the same general weather patterns that guided Irene's course up the U.S. Eastern seaboard, Tropical Storm Katia was officially named Tuesday and looks to be headed toward Puerto Rico.

According to the National Weather Service Katia's path is slightly north of Irene's and should put it northeast of Puerto Rico by Sunday.

Currently about 535 miles southwest of the Cape Verde Islands Katia's moving quickly with sustained 40 mph winds and according to the National Hurricane Center could be a powerful Category 3 hurricane by this weekend (via CBS Tampa).

The Center reports Katia will have hurricane intensity by late Wednesday or early Thursday.

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Qaddafi's Daughter Aisha Gives Birth To A Baby Girl In Algeria

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UPDATE: AFP reports that Colonel Gaddafi's daughter Aisha gave birth to baby girl in Algeria

qaddafiPREVIOUSLY: Muammar Qaddafi's family has fled Libya to neighboring Algeria, according to the AP.

The Algerian government said Qaddafi's wife, two of his sons and their children entered the country on Monday. It did not say whether Qaddafi was with the family.

Also now rebels are claiming to have killed Khamis Qaddafi during clashes in Southern Libya, according to Reuters.

Over the weekend rebels claimed to have seen a caravan of armored Mercedes leaving the country, which was rumored to have contained Libyan VIPs,

Fighting continues today between Libyan rebels and loyalists in Sirte, Qaddafi's home town. If The Colonel himself has fled, then it could end soon.

Algeria has been ruled for 12 years by Abdelaziz Bouteflika, who weathered mass protests early in the year.

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More Reasons Why Greece's Finnish Collateral Deal Is Rubbish

  x You have successfully emailed the post. Forget other European countries trying to jump on the collateral bandwagon. There's an even better reason why Greece's collateral deal with Finland won't work.

According to FT Alphaville, a negative pledge clause in existing bond legal documents actually prohibits the collateralization of bailout loans without doing the same for other, foreign-law bonds.

The owners of the bonds do have the right to waive the clause, but in any practical scenario this would be unlikely. German business newspaper Handelsblatt wrote that "Greece could get a wave of lawsuits from private creditors" should any collateral deal go through.

If Greece failed to provide collateral against these bonds as well as EFSF loans, these bonds would be in default.

FT Alphaville thinks there might still be a way to get collateral to work without activating the negative pledge clause. If the European Financial Stability Facility (EFSF) lent directly to an outside agency in charge of the collateral, policymakers might be able to get around this paperwork.

But, we've pointed out before, providing collateral even just to EFSF lenders could leave Greece with fewer funds than it needs to stay afloat. This situation does not bode well for the viability of the Greek bailout.

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Here's Groupon CEO Andrew Mason Doing Yoga. In His Underwear. In Front Of A Christmas Tree. (GRPN)

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It's really great that we live in a world where a quirky, funny guy like Andrew Mason can also be CEO of a huge soon-to-be-public company, and we want to keep living in such a world for a very, very long time. 

Still, it's amusing to go through some of his old YouTube videos from back before Groupon was a world-engulfing phenomenon. Thus, this:

Don't Miss: The Truth About Groupon ?

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European Social Media Powerhouse Wikio Changes Name And Focus, Raises Big Round

  x You have successfully emailed the post. Wikio Group, the European social media powerhouse, has a big announcement this morning. It's changing its name and focus and is raising almost $25 million. 

Wikio is a rollup of social media properties by Pierre Chappaz, who previously sold price comparison engine Kelkoo to Yahoo for over $400 million.

The company started out as a Digg-like aggregator but it seems that, as in the US, the aggregator model never broke past a niche appeal to bloggers and tech early adopters. Wikio also acquired Overblog, a popular free blogging service, and announced a plan to start a Demand Media-like product.

Now Wikio is changing its name to Ebuzzing, the social media marketing company it bought and which brought in the lion's share of its business. Ebuzzing brings together brands and bloggers for advertising and promotions. It seems that Wikio (now Ebuzzing) is turning itself into a social media advertising network. 

The pivot was probably at least partially brought on by Google's search algorithm revamp, which cut Wikio's traffic in half.

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Robert Shiller Talks About The Substantial Downside For Equities

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Robert Shiller joined Consuelo Mack on WealthTrack this past weekend to discuss the ongoing problems in the economy. Shiller of course is notable for having predicted both the Nasdaq bubble and the housing bubble. He remains one of the few academics who understands how markets and the broader economy relate to one another.

In this interview Shiller explains why he believes the psyche of the investing class and the general economic participants are being negatively impacted by the economic malaise. He refers to it as a positive feedback loop that is very difficult to reverse. In equities, Shiller makes some rather alarming comments. He says the current volatility is not healthy and could very well be preceding a “substantial” decline in equities. He makes no firm predictions, but he maintains that the current fragile environment could result in major downside.

He explains why equities still appear expensive, why housing is likely to remain under pressure, why the general economy is likely to suffer a continuing malaise and why TIPS are his favorite investment currently:

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Advertising And The Future Of Apple

After Steve Jobs stepped down as CEO of Apple last week, speculation about the company's future began immediately.The consensus seemed to be that Jobs built a strong culture, hired smart people, and taught a way of thinking that will serve Apple well in the future. The story line went like this-- while Jobs will be missed, he is no longer essential to the future of the company and it will go on brilliantly without him.I don't buy this for a second. Genius is non-transferable.Jobs hasn't just created better computers, he has created a world that nobody else could envision. He brought an artist's sensibility to a field previously populated by capable but tone-deaf engineers. He didn't just make beautiful looking hardware, he took what was a dead screen full of little green letters on a blue background and turned it into an astounding, enchanting world of graphics, music, and video that has become a central feature of contemporary life. He has made work more fun, knowledge more available, and entertainment more rewarding.Anyone who has had the pleasure of buying an Apple product knows the great aesthetic delight of turning it on for the first time and seeing the beauty that ensues. Even going to an Apple store is a completely unique and strangely arresting experience.On Friday, Apple became the world's largest company, surpassing ExxonMobil in market value. It will not simply evaporate. The most likely scenario is that Apple will continue to shine for a few years while the initiatives that Jobs started are still in the pipeline, and then slowly the company's radiance will start to dim. They will be successful and will continue to produce excellent products for a long time -- but the startling brilliance will slowly fade.Many successful creative enterprises turn out to be the extended shadow of one individual. My best guess is that Apple is such an enterprise.Interestingly, one of the first indications of whether Apple is capable of continuing its explosion of creative energy without Jobs at the helm may be found in its advertising. The product pipeline will take years to screw up. But the ad pipeline can be screwed up in no time.About a year from now, with Jobs in the background, the knuckleheads at Apple (there are knuckleheads everywhere) will have a chance to get their sweaty hands on the advertising.Jobs is a brilliant technology visionary. But let's not forget that he is also the best ad man of his generation. He is what you might call a "classicist." Apple advertising is simple. It is almost always product-focused (the product usually sits smack dab in the middle of a white page.) The TV spots for the iPad and iPhone are usually nothing more than simple but compelling product demonstrations.Here are some clues to look for in Apple's advertising that will indicate that dull hands are grabbing at the wheel:
1. Creeping Brandism: The Apple brand was built bottom-up. That is, the products defined the brand. Virtually every Apple ad was about a product, not  the brand (okay, there was "Think Different" but that didn't last.) Keep an eye out for the erosion of this discipline.
2. Agency change: Vapid marketing people relegated to the background all these years by Jobs' dominance may suddenly start flexing. They wouldn't dare contradict Jobs' legacy, but they could accomplish the same thing by undermining the agency.
3. The Tortured Logic of Account Planning: Look for ads about you the consumer instead of Apple products. Look for moronic online "engagement" gimmicks. Or look for social media pandering.
4. Complications: Part of the brilliance of Apple advertising has been its simplicity.  Keep an eye out for complicated ideas or ads with more than one product.
5. Media: Apple has used online media sparingly. The preponderance of its advertising has been conducted in traditional media -- TV, print, and outdoor. Watch to see if Apple suddenly starts going all trendy and new age in its media choices.
If you start seeing any of these signs coming out of Cupertino, sell your shares. Advertising will be an early indicator of whether people without vision and taste are moving in at Apple. It will be interesting to watch.

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China Is About To Slash Income Taxes For 60 Million People

Some 60 million Chinese will wake up newly exempt from income tax tomorrow morning, as the government tries to boost poorer peoples’ spending power and fuel sustainable economic growth.

Though a few top earners will pay more, almost everyone else will get a break, according to Finance Ministry calculations.

“This is good news for most people, especially low- and middle-income employees,” says Yi Xianrong, a finance expert at the China Academy of Social Sciences think tank.

The tax break offers consumers some relief in the face of high inflation, which was running at an annual rate of 6.5 percent last month and eating into family budgets.

The biggest beneficiaries will be those at the bottom of the tax scale. The lowest rung of the income-tax ladder has been raised from 2,000 renminbi ($313) per month to 3,500 RMB ($547). The average Chinese wage is around 3,000 RMB a month.

The tax reform, made more generous after a wave of online protest against earlier government proposals for stingier changes, means that only about 8 percent of Chinese will pay any income tax at all, according to Wang Jianfan, deputy director of the Finance Ministry’s tax policy department.

Like many developing countries, China relies very little on hard-to-collect income tax for its revenue. Last year it raised only 6.6 percent of its taxes from personal income. Instead, the government goes after the business sector, which is easier to monitor.

Raising the income tax threshold will cost the government 160 billion RMB ($25 billion) in lost revenue, according to the Finance Ministry, but this is “no big deal” for Chinese public finances, according to Arthur Kroeber, head of the Beijing-based Dragonomics economic consultancy.

“Fundamentally, China’s fiscal conditions are very strong”, Mr. Kroeber says, pointing to government estimates of a budget deficit below 2 percent this year.

What the government gets for its $25 billion, says Dr. Yi, is goodwill at a time when ordinary people are grumbling increasingly loudly about rocketing food prices. “If people’s purchasing power goes up, that is good for social stability,” Yi says.

Household income has been falling as a share of GDP, relative to corporate and government revenues, for several years, but the new tax breaks are unlikely to reverse that trend because income tax plays such a minor role in China’s economy.

“If the government wants to redistribute income from the corporate to the household sector, tax policy is not going to do the trick,” warns Kroeber.

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The Major Global Corporations That Aided Libya's Secret Police

MonitoringImage: AP

When George Bush lifted trade restrictions against Libya in 2004, Colonel Qaddafi's regime went on a "surveillance-gear shopping spree."

Evidence of this global buying were present on the bottom floor of a six-story Tripoli building Monday as reporters from The Wall Street Journal were taken to the dictators Internet monitoring station.

The French tech firm Bull SA, and their subsidiary Amesys installed many of the systems Qaddafi's regime used to closely watch Libyans online activity.

Even Boeing held talks with the dictator earlier this year to install state-of-the-art Internet monitoring products, but the civil war put an end to any further contracts. Qaddafi put a strong focus on Internet activity despite that of the 6.6 million people in Libya only 100,000 residents had Internet subscriptions.

The Journal reports on the Amesys system installed in 2009:

The Eagle system allows agents to observe network traffic and peer into people's emails, among other things. In the room, one English-language poster says: "Whereas many Internet interception systems carry out basic filtering on IP address and extract only those communications from the global flow (Lawful Interception), EAGLE Interception system analyses and stores all the communications from the monitored link (Massive interception)."

On its website, Amesys says its "strategic nationwide interception" system can detect email from Hotmail, Yahoo and Gmail and see chat conversations on MSN instant messaging and AIM. It says investigators can "request the entire database" of Internet traffic "in real time" by entering keywords, email addresses or the names of file attachments as search queries.

As the Arab Spring blew up around him Qaddafi struggled to place further controls on communications, but it was too late.

Read the full story at The Wall Street Journal >


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ACCIDENTS WAITING TO HAPPEN: The Most Dangerous People In Reality Television

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For Bravo and its "Real Housewives" franchise, the tragic death of Russell Armstrong has spelled serious business problems.

And though we don't subscribe to the theory that putting something on camera makes it real, plenty of people have raised questions about how reality TV affects its subjects and its viewers.

You don't have to look far to find stars whose issues with anger, alcohol, or self-esteem are imparting terrible TV lessons at best -- or, at worst, pushing them towards personal collapse, right before our eyes.

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7 Deadly Sins Of Social Media

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Steph Parker is a PR & social media professional working in Philadelphia.

Social media’s been a great tool for marketing, networking, and sharing information. This relatively new technology has truly revolutionized the way businesses, brands, and communities interact with one another. When used right, it starts engaging discussions. It informs people of the latest developments. It helps businesses compete in this global economy. When used incorrectly, it’s an incredibly inefficient use of resources, simply put.

See if you’re committing any of the digital “sins” from this list, and learn how to fix them!

1. Assault

Are you constantly sending out tweets? Is your Facebook wall covered with links, photos, and your latest Foursquare check-ins? Just as much as you dislike being bombed with status updates, your followers do, too. If you’ve found a great link, or have important news to share, prioritize. Pick which updates are most important to your networks, and then create a schedule in which to post them. Unless you’re a newswire or a “broadcaster” who has big social influence in the digital world, hold off on constantly sending posts. Your networks will be more apt to listen to what you have to say if you aren’t constantly doing the talking.

2. Neglect

While you can’t monopolize your networks’ newsfeeds, you can’t disappear from them, either. Remember the quiet kid in class? The few times she raised her hand, the teacher usually didn’t notice because it was such a rarity. That same principle applies. You don’t need to become a social butterfly and initiate every single discussion, but participating to some capacity is key. If people visit your page and notice that it’s bare or outdated, they’ll pass on by without looking back. Take a page out of Assault’s book and try outlining a schedule of posts if you have trouble talking on the fly.

3. Obscurity

There are lots of cool things on the Internet. However, if you’re trying to build credibility as a marketing genius, posting an abundance of links to funny cat videos won’t help you (no matter how cute they are). People should be able to get a sense of what you’re an authority on when they visit your page, and read your posts. If you’re the CEO at a PR firm who has a love of music, include your interest somewhere in your bio. Share a link to a new song you like, or a concert you’re seeing from time to time, but don’t let that lead the conversation. Your main mission is to showcase how much experience and knowledge you have in your industry. Follow the classic 80/20 dieting rule: adhere to the plan 80% of the time, and indulge 20%.

4. Detachment

Remember how our last example involved a CEO highlighting an interest in music? That’s just one of the many ways you can incorporate a little of your personality into your messages. If you have a sarcastic streak, make your next tweet about SEO witty (if you find a way). It’s easy to hide behind a computer screen and let the web do most of the work, but people want to talk to other people, not robots on auto-pilot. No matter how informative or important your post is, remember to be approachable. More often than not, people are guided by the same principles they follow in real life for befriending someone online.

5. Inconsistency

As you read earlier, social media is great for getting conversations going. While you should be contributing, don’t simply pose a question to your network, and then disregard the responses you get. If someone makes a thoughtful point, respond to it. Re-post it and elaborate on it. Take the topic to a new level. Some of the most valuable information out there is found when people come together to express their points of view. One of the key things to remember is that social media is social; the more people talk about something, the more of an impact it has. The more you perpetuate the discussion and make intelligent contributions, the more respect you’ll command from your audience.

6. Disconnection

Engage in a variety of networks and services, and give people multiple ways to connect with you! You probably wouldn’t shop at a store that only had one type of shirt and one type of pants, right? You’d rather have a few racks of clothing to browse through to get a better sense of the store. This same idea is true for using social networking sites. The more types of services you use, the better represented you are online. You can use a site like Last.fm to connect over music preferences, while using a bookmarking site like Digg to share your favorite news stories. Your credibility won’t become muddled as long as you remember the specific objective of each service, and post with a purpose.

7. Quantitativeness

It’s not all about the numbers. Sure, to a point you should keep your follower count (and Klout score) in mind, but it shouldn’t be the top source of motivation for your posts. Whether you’re in the PR industry or not, the real motivation for posting should be building relationships with new audiences, and maintaining relationships with old ones. Social media ROI is significant, but only if you weigh qualitative aspects more heavily. It’s easy to “Like” a Facebook page, and it’s just as easy to hide it from sight. You’re still quantifiable as a fan, but qualitatively you’re not actively engaged or listening. See the difference?
Social media is a lot like dating: you don’t want to appear disinterested, but you don’t want to come on too strong, either. If you make calculated moves at the right times, let your personality shine, and focus more on the conversation than the end-result, you’ll build a strong, healthy relationship with your networks.


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