Showing posts with label holds. Show all posts
Showing posts with label holds. Show all posts

Friday, 20 August 2010

Tech industry holds closed door talks on open internet


Net neutrality supporters have hit out at secretive negotiations and deals
Watches now enjoy Tech industry holds closed door talks on open internet
Net neutrality supporters have hit out at secretive negotiations and deals
An industry body representing some of the biggest names in technology has hosted a closed-door meeting to discuss the future of the open internet.

Public advocacy groups said such back-room dealings were detrimental.

The meeting follows the publication of a controversial plan by Google and Verizon that could allow net providers certain types of internet traffic to be given priority over others.

Consumer bodies called those proposals an "internet killer".

Last week a crowd of about 100 people marched to Google's headquarters in California to present boxes that they said contained 300,000 signatures upholding the values of net neutrality, a founding principle of the net that states that all web data is treated equally no matter where it comes from.

The Google/Verizon plan suggests loopholes for mobile traffic and for some specialised content.

Protestors urged the search giant to honour its famed "don't do evil" motto.

Premium net

The Google/Verizon scheme was announced after the US Federal Communications Commission (FCC) halted its own private sessions with internet companies and broadband providers to thrash out a consensus on the thorny subject of net neutrality.

An agreement is central to the government's ambitions to provide high speed net access to every American by 2020.

Premium net

The Google/Verizon scheme was announced after the US Federal Communications Commission (FCC) halted its own private sessions with internet companies and broadband providers to thrash out a consensus on the thorny subject of net neutrality.

An agreement is central to the government's ambitions to provide high speed net access to every American by 2020.


The government says 100 million Americans do not have broadband
Some internet service providers have said that the rise in internet traffic is putting an ever growing burden on the infrastructure of the net.

As a result, they say, they should be able to charge more for heavy internet traffic or users or to carry traffic for bandwidth intensive services such as web video.

Some critics have said net neutrality could stifle innovation.

On the other side of the debate, campaigners say net neutrality is a central tenant of the internet and guarantees free and open access to all.

They argue that watering down the concept of net neutrality would pave the way for a two tiered internet, where the ability to pay would determine what services people could access.

'Openness principles'

Amid the present impasse, this latest meeting conducted by the Information Technology Industry Council (ITI) in Washington was held to try and find a way forward.


Young and old took part in last weeks protest at the Googleplex
'Openness principles'

Amid the present impasse, this latest meeting conducted by the Information Technology Industry Council (ITI) in Washington was held to try and find a way forward.


Young and old took part in last weeks protest at the Googleplex
It was said to involve representatives from Verizon, AT&T, Skype, Microsoft, Cisco and the Communications Workers of America.

In a statement to BBC News, the Council's president Dean Garfield said that "great progress has been made to develop internet openness principles in recent weeks" but more needed to be done "to ensure cross-sector support and to preserve internet access, innovation and investment.

"This new effort will build on that work to arrive at something that can achieve both public and private sector support and strike the balance of encouraging continued innovation and investment in the internet."

In a recent interview with the BBC Mr Garfield said he believed the way forward was through a private sector initiative.

"All the other solutions are ones that will take a fairly long time to effectuate. Private sector leadership is important here, " said Mr Garfield at the time.

Google did not attend but said that it was "an important issue and we support any attempt to move the ball forward".

Illegitimate negotiations

From the perspective of net neutrality supporters, news of another "set of secret negotiations" is worrying.


The FCC said America is ranked 15th in the world for high speed net access
"Industry talks that don't have any public process or consumer interest are not likely to result in good policy making that promotes the public interest," Aparna Sridhar, policy counsel for Free Press told BBC News.

"Developing meaningful open internet rules is a job that is best done at the FCC with full public input from a diverse variety of stakeholders and not limited corporate closed door meetings."

That was a view backed by another advocacy group, Media Access Project.

"These 'negotiations' are illegitimate," said Andrew Jay Schwartzman, the project's senior vice president.

"They do not involve representatives of people who use the internet for free expression and commerce and they lack representation from the infant businesses that depend on an open internet to build the future Ciscos, Microsofts and Skypes."

Ms Sridhar of Free Press said the present confusion and ensuing rancour has been exacerbated by the FCC.

"Unfortunately there is a bit of a vacuum right now because the Commission hasn't acted so various industry players are taking advantage and stepping in to fill that vacuum."
Coppied by http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/technology-11032409

Saturday, 14 August 2010

Celebrity enjoy this China holds day of mourning for Gansu landslide victims


We are saw this China holds day of mourning for Gansu landslide victims
China is holding a day of mourning for those killed in floods and mudslides, as the death toll rose to 1,239 people.

Public entertainment has been suspended, with cinemas and karaoke bars closed, and government offices and embassies are flying flags at half-mast, state media reported.

Teams are continuing to recover bodies in Gansu province in the wake of Saturday's landslides in Zhouqu county.

Another 505 people remain missing and thousands are in temporary shelters.

Continue reading the main story
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Chinese town reeling after landslide
Aerial view: Before and after
In pictures: Relief race
Chinese health authorities say hygiene and safety for those left homeless is a priority, as concerns mount over a lack of clean drinking water.

Ahead of the day of mourning the Ministry of Culture issued a circular ruling that films, karaoke and online entertainment be suspended, Xinhua reported.

Shortly after midnight many Chinese websites had changed their front pages to black and white.

On Sunday morning, thousands of people gathered in Beijing's Tiananmen Square to watch China's flag hoisted and then lowered to half mast.

Memorial ceremonies have also been held in Zhouqu itself and in Gansu's provincial capital, Lanzhou.

Threat of more floods
The BBC's Chris Hogg in Beijing says that large scale national mourning like this is rare in China.

There was a day of commemoration in April for the victims of the Yushu earthquake, and two years ago three days of mourning for the victims of the quake in Sichuan.


Threat of more floods
The BBC's Chris Hogg in Beijing says that large scale national mourning like this is rare in China.

There was a day of commemoration in April for the victims of the Yushu earthquake, and two years ago three days of mourning for the victims of the quake in Sichuan.

Continue reading the main story
Zhouqu landslide in figures


1,239 people confirmed dead
45,000 people evacuated
7,000-strong emergency crew deployed
300 buildings buried by mud
66% of county without power
Asian monsoon's range of devastation
In Zhouqu, soldiers are trying to remove debris from the Bailing River amid fears that more rain could cause it to overflow, causing more chaos for a town that is already one third underwater.

Heavy rain has been sweeping across central and western China for most of the week, with more rain forecast for Zhouqu county in the next few days.

The Ministry of Civil Affairs says at least 45,000 people have evacuated their homes.

Survivors are now living in tents, which are drenched through, pitched on unstable slopes.

Some cases of dysentery were reported by state media.

The government has brought in mobile water purification units, able to provide clean water for 30,000 people, according to China News Service.

Sichuan province to the south has also been affected, with 38 people still missing, after rains spread, triggering landslides.

According to Xinhua, the heavy rains have affected more than 305 million people across the country and cost $1.7bn (£1.1bn).
Coppied by http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-asia-pacific-10975066