Friday, February 27, 2015

Japan's NTT Comm in talks to buy German e-shelter: source

The logo of Japan's biggest mobile phone operator NTT DoCoMo Inc. is seen at its shop in Tokyo February 17, 2015. REUTERS/Issei Kato



The logo of Japan's biggest mobile phone operator NTT DoCoMo Inc. is seen at its shop in Tokyo February 17, 2015.


Credit: /Issei Kato






- NTT Communications Corp is in talks to acquire German data center provider e-shelter for about 100 billion yen ($836 million), according to a source familiar with the matter.

An acquisition of e-shelter by Nippon Telegraph & Telephone Communications is the latest in the NTT Corp's overseas expansion due to a dwindling home market.


NTT bought South African IT firm Dimension Data for 382 billion yen ($3.2 billion) in 2010, followed by takeover deals with a combined worth of 85.5 billion yen ($715.42 million) of two U.S. cloud computing firms, Virtela Technology Services Inc and RagingWire Data centers in 2013.


The talks were first reported by the Nikkei business daily.


E-shelter is a data center developer and provider founded in 2000. It has data centers in Hamburg, Berlin, Frankfurt, Zurich, Vienna, and Munich.


($1 = 119.5100 yen)


(1 Japanese yen = $0.0084)


Google submits plans to expand Silicon Valley headquarters


- Google Inc submitted plans on Friday for a vastly expanded headquarters at the Silicon Valley city where the tech giant is based, presenting a bucolic vision of movable structures to be built under curving and translucent canopies.

The submission of the plan to the City Council in Mountain View, California, which the company chose for its headquarters 15 years ago, marks the first step in what city officials describe as a long review process.


The new headquarters would give the Internet company the room for an additional 10,000 employees, compared to the 20,000 Google staffers that currently work in the city, a Google spokeswoman said.


Google's blueprint for new headquarters in the city's North Bayshore district has gathered widespread attention because the design is seen as architecturally innovative.


In the San Francisco Bay Area, the plan also is closely watched due to concerns the technology industry's high salaries are pushing housing prices beyond levels affordable to most families.


"Today we’re submitting a plan to redevelop four sites - places where we already have offices but hope to significantly increase our square footage - to the Mountain View City Council," David Radcliffe, Google's vice president of real estate, said in a company blog post.


The design by architect Bjarke Ingels of the firm Bjarke Ingels Group and Thomas Heatherwick of architecture and design company Heatherwick Studio calls for block-like structures that Google says could be moved around to create space for teams to pursue different projects. It would add about 2.5 million square feet of space to the existing campus.


Vast, clear canopies over the buildings would allow light to filter into the futuristic campus. There would be places for trees, grass and bicycle paths, all of it nestled into different parts of the campus.


"They're very ambitious," Mountain View City Councilman Ken Rosenberg said of the blueprints. "They're taking what we know about building design and significantly advancing the concept."


The proposal by Google, which is the city's leading source of property taxes, would contribute to more local prosperity but also increased traffic, he said.


Rosenberg said he views the company's proposal within the plan to build 100 units of affordable housing as an acknowledgment to housing market problems.


The city could demand more housing units in the North Bayshore area, he said.


In 2013, Cupertino approved Apple Inc's plan for a spaceship-like campus, which is under construction.


White House releases draft bill to protect consumer data privacy

- The White House released draft legislation on Friday that would give consumers more control over how the trail of data they leave behind them on the internet is used, stored and sold.

The 24-page "discussion draft" on data privacy immediately sparked sharp reaction from the technology industry, which said the proposal would hurt innovation, and also from privacy advocacy groups that said it did not go far enough.


President Barack Obama has made cyber security a major focus in the wake of high-profile hacks at companies such as Sony Pictures Anthem Inc and Target Corp.


Obama has also proposed legislation to help the government and private sector more readily share cyber attack data, a new national standard requiring companies to tell consumers about data breaches within 30 days, and new protections for student data.


Obama has come under fire from privacy groups and technology companies alike after leaks from former contractor Edward Snowden revealed the extent of government surveillance online.


The data privacy bill would codify a voluntary "Consumer Privacy Bill of Rights" the White House created in 2012.


"Even though responsible companies provide us with tools to control privacy settings and decide how our personal information is used, too many Americans still feel they have lost control over their data," the White House said in a statement.


It would allow industries to develop codes of conduct, overseen by the Federal Trade Commission. The codes would provide "safe harbor" to companies abiding by them.


The Federal Trade Commission would have the authority to enforce the law, and could seek fines of up to $25 million or injunctions for infractions. State attorneys general also could enforce the law in some cases.


The Center for Digital Democracy, a consumer privacy organization, called the bill "a serious setback for privacy" because it relies on industry-created codes.


The Consumer Electronics Association, a lobby group for consumer technology companies, also panned the bill.


"The proposal's broad definitions, expanded bureaucratic authorities and steep penalties could burden the tech economy with uncertainty and stifle the development of the Internet of Things," the group said in a release.


A Commerce Department official said the draft tried to strike a balance between protecting privacy and giving businesses flexibility.


"We want to advance President Obama’s framework for protecting consumer privacy by bringing all parties to the table to further discuss how we effectively apply privacy protections in the digital age," said Lawrence Strickling, administrator of the National Telecommunications and Information Administration.


Cook says Apple Watch might replace the need for car keys: Telegraph

Apple CEO Tim Cook stands in front of a screen displaying apps available for the Apple Watch at a presentation at Apple headquarters in Cupertino, California in this file photo taken on October 16, 2014. REUTERS/Robert Galbraith



Apple CEO Tim Cook stands in front of a screen displaying apps available for the Apple Watch at a presentation at Apple headquarters in Cupertino, California in this file photo taken on October 16, 2014.


Credit: /Robert Galbraith






- Apple Inc's latest product, the Apple Watch, might replace the need for car keys, Chief Executive Tim Cook told the Telegraph in an interview.

The watch's battery will last the whole day, and will not take as long to charge as an iPhone, the Telegraph quoted Cook as saying.


Apple was not immediately available for comment.


The company has scheduled a special event on March 9, where it will showcase the Apple Watch and that will be launched in April, the report said. (bit.ly/1EUmh57)


Cook says Apple Watch might replace the need for car keys - Telegraph

Apple CEO Tim Cook stands in front of a screen displaying apps available for the Apple Watch at a presentation at Apple headquarters in Cupertino, California in this file photo taken on October 16, 2014. REUTERS/Robert Galbraith



Apple CEO Tim Cook stands in front of a screen displaying apps available for the Apple Watch at a presentation at Apple headquarters in Cupertino, California in this file photo taken on October 16, 2014.


Credit: /Robert Galbraith






- Apple Inc's (AAPL.O) latest product, the Apple Watch, might replace the need for car keys, Chief Executive Tim Cook told the Telegraph in an interview.

The watch's battery will last the whole day, and will not take as long to charge as an iPhone, the Telegraph quoted Cook as saying.


Apple was not immediately available for comment.


The company has scheduled a special event on March 9, where it will showcase the Apple Watch and that will be launched in April, the report said. (bit.ly/1EUmh57)


Google scraps plan to block porn on Blogger

A Google logo is seen at the garage where the company was founded on Google's 15th anniversary in Menlo Park, California September 26, 2013. REUTERS/Stephen Lam



A Google logo is seen at the garage where the company was founded on Google's 15th anniversary in Menlo Park, California September 26, 2013.


Credit: /Stephen Lam






- Google Inc has abandoned its plan to ban adult content on its blogging site Blogger after receiving negative feedback from users.

Google will instead "step up enforcement" of its existing policy prohibiting commercial porn, Jessica Pelegio, the company's social product support manager, wrote on Google Product Forums on Friday.


Bloggers can continue to tag any blog with sexually explicit content as "adult" that is placed behind a warning page.


Google said earlier this week that Blogger users would no longer be able to post sexually explicit pictures or videos on the platform starting on March 23.


Lenovo to offer free subscription to McAfee LiveSafe service

Lenovo tablets and mobile phones are displayed during a news conference on the company's annual results in Hong Kong May 23, 2013. REUTERS/Bobby Yip



Lenovo tablets and mobile phones are displayed during a news conference on the company's annual results in Hong Kong May 23, 2013.


Credit: /Bobby Yip






- Lenovo Group Ltd said it will offer users of its PCs pre-installed with "Superfish" software a free 6-month subscription to McAfee LiveSafe service to remove security concerns.

The Chinese computer and smartphone maker's announcement comes a week after the U.S. government advised Lenovo customers to remove "Superfish", saying it makes users vulnerable to cyberattacks.


Lenovo on Friday said it will henceforth "significantly reduce preloaded applications" on its PCs, and that current users of McAfee LiveSafe will get a six-month extension on their subscription.


Europe's big telecoms roar back to health, worrying rivals


- Europe's big telecom firms are back to rude financial health after years of poor results and regulatory pressure, drawing crowds of new investors and protests from rivals who worry the formerly state-owned companies may rebuild their monopolies.

Germany's Deutsche Telekom (DTEGn.DE) and Spain's Telefonica (TEF.MC) have predicted that revenues will grow this year, while France's Orange (ORAN.PA) and Norway's Telenor (TEL.OL) have promised higher future dividends, a major motivation for investors in the sector.


The renaissance is a marked shift from the past five years in which the sector's sales fell steadily because of regulation ending various types of mobile fees and tough competition from cable operators such as Liberty Global (LBTYA.O) and low-cost players like France's Iliad (ILD.PA).


Sector executives credit the improvement to new 4G technology that powers speedier mobile broadband, as well as a more relaxed attitude by regulators to mergers and acquisitions, and the fees the former state firms can charge to share their networks.


Deutsche Telekom Chief Executive Tim Hoettges attributed the rebirth of the firms often referred to as incumbents to the trend of selling multi-service packages comprising broadband, television, and fixed and mobile services.


"It is the convergence that makes the incumbents fly," he said on Thursday. "We are in a better position to tell that story with confidence."


Thus for the first time in eight years these incumbents gained broadband market share between January and July 2014, according to EU Commission figures, beating alternative players by emphasizing higher speeds.


All this has translated into a 15 percent rise in the European telecoms index .SXKP this year, after a 7.5 percent rise last year. (http://bit.ly/1AAPkev)


Consequently the once yawning valuation gap between U.S. and European telecoms has reversed, with the European sector now trading at 19.3 times forward price to earnings compared with 14 times for U.S. peers such as AT&T (T.N) and Verizon (VZ.N). (http://bit.ly/1AAPhzp)


SOFTER REGULATION


After recent years of recession, the new European Commission under President Jean-Claude Juncker wants to spur growth in part by encouraging telecoms firms to invest in faster broadband infrastructure, which underpins the modern economy.


By way of incentive, Brussels has decided that when telecoms companies build new high-speed fiber lines they may charge rivals commercial rates to use them, rather than the regulated rates that were introduced in the 1990s to inject competition into the markets.


The regulators are also taking a softer line on consolidation, prompting a wave of activity: since December 2012, antitrust authorities have approved mobile deals in Austria, Ireland and Germany, as well as Vodafone's (VOD.L) purchases of cable operators in Germany and Spain.


ECTA, the trade association for alternative operators such as Iliad (ILD.PA) and Talk Talk (TALK.L), warns however that such policies have tipped the balance too far to the big firms.


Its claim is given weight by a Citigroup report titled "The Rebirth of the telecom monopoly" last November that showed a decrease in competitiveness in 25 global mobile markets since late 2011, a shift from the prior decade when incumbents were losing clients.


The recent rapid re-making of the British market sums up the big players' rebirth.


BT Group (BT.L), the former state-owned entity that was focused on fixed telephony and broadband, has agreed to buy the country's biggest mobile provider EE. This recreates an integrated market leader in Britain just as Telefonica dominates in Spain or Orange in France, competition advocates warn.


BT's rivals, including heavyweight Vodafone - which grew by stealing mobile business from the former monopolies - are calling for closer monitoring of the new leader and a full separation of the Openreach unit that makes its network available to competitors.


"Some operators can use their networks as a fortress," Vodafone boss Vittorio Colao told an audience of lobbyists and policy makers at an event in Brussels on Thursday.


"We cannot afford to have remonopolization in Europe."


MORE DEALS COMING


It remains to be seen whether the big firms' stronger positions will result in higher prices for consumers.


Senior executives at major telecoms groups say raising prices across the board remains difficult so instead they must focus on high-end customers to sell bigger buckets of mobile data or faster broadband, both of which bring in more revenue.


Bankers and industry executives predict more mergers and acquisitions in Europe, perhaps eventually across borders.


"Some like Deutsche Telekom, Telenor, Teliasonera will eventually consolidate the markets outside their home country," said one banker.


But he added that so far the likes of Altice (ATCE.AS), Hutchison (0013.HK) and Iliad founder Xavier Niel were better placed to buy assets because they had billionaire founders behind them with big ambitions and were unafraid to load up on debt. The trio has done recent deals in Portugal, Britain and Switzerland respectively.


Ramon Fernandez, the chief financial officer of French incumbent Orange, said he was glad the tough times were over but added the company had emerged stronger.


As part of the sector shake-out, Orange had to slim down, cutting 1.6 billion euros in costs and prompting a 57 percent rise in its share price in 2014. That, says Fernandez, means it is now in a far better position to compete.


"When your valuation multiples are closer to your competitors, it gives you more flexibility in expansion opportunities because you can pay for deals in share and cash," he said.


Bruno Grandsard, an investor at Axa Investment Managers, said there was further upside in the European telecom sector especially because of the high dividend yields on offer in an environment of low interest rates.


"The continued decline in profitability is ending, you can start dreaming about future growth, and the M&A story is not complete," he said.


Sacked Sanofi boss joins PureTech board

Chris Viehbacher gestures as he addresses a news conference in Mumbai September 30, 2013. REUTERS/Stringer



Chris Viehbacher gestures as he addresses a news conference in Mumbai September 30, 2013.


Credit: /Stringer






- Chris Viehbacher, sacked as chief executive of French drugs firm Sanofi last year, is to join the board of PureTech, a privately owned healthcare science and technology R&D company.

Boston-based PureTech's co-founder and senior partner Robert Langer said in a statement he had known the German-Canadian Viehbacher for many years "and I am very excited that we will be working together more closely now".


Viehbacher, who moved to Boston last year while he was still running Sanofi, raised the French company's multinational profile during his six years in the job by completing over $30 billion of acquisitions including that of Boston-based Genzyme.


But he was fired last year after U.S. sales of the company's diabetes drug Lantus faltered and for what Chairman Serge Weinberg called poor communication with the board.


PureTech is a portfolio company that aims to commercialize breakthrough technologies and solve healthcare problems. It raised over $100 million in the past seven months and employs about 50 people.


Sanofi is one of the world's top five drugs firms by annual revenue. It employs 112,000 people and has a market value in excess of $130 million.


China censorship sweep deletes more than 60,000 Internet accounts


- Some of China's largest Internet companies deleted more than 60,000 online accounts because their names did not conform to regulations due to take effect on Sunday, the top Internet regulator said.

Alibaba Group Holding Ltd, Tencent Holdings Ltd, Baidu Inc, Sina Corp affiliate Weibo Corp and other companies deleted the accounts in a cull aimed at "rectifying" online names, the Cyberspace Administration of China (CAC) said.


The reasons for their removal included accusations of being misleading, rumor mongering, links to terrorism, or involving violence, pornography and other violations, the CAC said in a statement on its website late on Thursday.


The purge is notable as a step toward China's government locking down control over people's internet account names, an effort which censors have struggled with in the past, despite numerous efforts to introduce controls.


These failed attempts have included trying to force users to register for online services using their real names.


The new regulations, which take on effect March 1 and will also target real-name registration, were issued by the CAC, which was formed last year and given power over all online content, something previously divided between various state ministries.


"Previously, the real-name registration system hasn't really been enforced," said Rogier Creemers, a researcher on Chinese media law at the University of Oxford. "These rules essentially impose a uniform and consolidated system for all online services requiring accounts."


The measure also reflects China's tightening control of the Internet, which has accelerated since President Xi Jinping took power in early 2013.


Weibo, the country's biggest microblog platform, will comply with the regulations and had a dedicated team to handle illegal information, including account names, a spokesman told .


E-commerce giant Alibaba declined to comment beyond highlighting a section of the CAC's statement on Alibaba's efforts to set up a team to handle account name issues. Tencent, China's biggest social networking and gaming company, and search leader Baidu were not available for immediate comment.


Among the accounts removed were those purporting to belong to state agencies, state media organizations and the East Turkestan Islamic Movement, said the CAC. China has blamed ETIM for violent attacks, but experts and rights groups have cast doubt on its existence as a cohesive group.


China operates one of the world's most sophisticated online censorship mechanisms, known as the Great Firewall. Censors keep a grip on what can be published online, particularly content seen as potentially undermining the ruling Communist Party.


America Movil to install Ericsson man at Telekom Austria: sources

The Telekom Austria headquarters are pictured in Vienna August 13, 2014. REUTERS/Heinz-Peter Bader



The Telekom Austria headquarters are pictured in Vienna August 13, 2014.


Credit: /Heinz-Peter Bader






- Mexico's America Movil is set to install Ericsson manager Alejandro Plater as new operations chief at Telekom Austria, two sources with knowledge of the matter told on Friday.

Mexican billionaire Slim owns around 60 percent of Telekom Austria and has said he wants to use it as a base for further expansion into central and eastern Europe, where Telekom Austria has operations in six countries including Bulgaria and Croatia.


Plater, Vice President at Ericsson in Mexico and "Head of Customer Unit America Movil" according to his LinkedIn page, has worked with the Mexican company on building cutting edge mobile internet networks in Central America.


Current Chief Technology Officer, Günther Ottendorfer, may leave Telekom Austria as a result of Plater's possible arrival, one source said. Telekom Austria declined to comment on its ahead of its supervisory board meeting next Thursday.


"The most likely option is that Ottendorfer leaves, but nothing has been officially decided," one source said, adding that it was "relatively fixed" that Plater was coming.


Telekom Austria, partly state-owned, currently only has three top managers. After completing a 1-billion-euro cash call in November, it has said it is on the lookout for smaller acquisitions in its regional footprint in central and eastern Europe.


School math answers only a scan away with Croatian app


- Damir Sabol, Croatian computer expert and entrepreneur, was helping his son with his maths homework when he had an idea.

"I found it a bit tedious, all those additions and multiplications, so I reckoned, 'We already have intelligent software, why not make it deal with maths?'" Sabol said.


The result was PhotoMath, a free app that scans and solves equations, providing a step-by-step explanation. It has been downloaded more than 11 million times since its introduction in October, and it was just updated on Thursday to take it to high school level. An Android version is due in days.


The app is based on the same technology as an earlier app called PhotoPay that was introduced in 2012 by Sabol's company, which is also called Photo Pay. That app facilitates mobile banking, by scanning household bills and paying them instantly.


"Basically, what we do is teach mobile phones to read things from the real world," Sabol told in his sparsely decorated office in Zagreb, where a dozen young software engineers jot down ideas and algorithms.


He said the PhotoMath averages about 1.5 million users every month and he had received scores of emails from grateful students, parents -- and even teachers.


"Will I allow my pupils to use the app? Absolutely," a British maths teacher wrote on http://bit.ly/1wu2SZC, after a pupil proudly presented the app in class.


"As a means for them to check their work it’s unrivalled ... They are far more likely to 'listen' to an electronic device, rather than teacher, telling them that they are right or wrong," the teacher wrote.


Sabol says he has never regretted making the app available for free.


"Now, of course, we are looking for ways to be commercial," he said. "Without that, we cannot continue developing the app.


Nikon pushes into medtech with $400 million Optos acquisition

- Nikon (7731.T), the 98-year-old Japanese company best known for its cameras, has agreed to buy British retinal imaging firm Optos (OPTS.L) for 259.3 million pounds ($400 million) as it moves into the medical sector.

Nikon has previously said it intended to enter the medical sector to leverage its optical technologies and the Japanese group sees buying Optos as an important step in that long-term growth plan.


Kazuo Ushida, president of Nikon, said the company would expand the medical business further in the future.


The Japanese group will pay 340 pence a share in cash for Optos, a 30.5 percent premium to the closing price on Thursday, the two companies said in a statement.


News of the deal, which already has the backing of shareholders representing 13.2 percent of Optos shares, sent the stock to a all-time high of 339p in early trading on Friday. Back in 2009, the shares hit a low of just over 30p.


Optos is the market leader in retinal imaging and its ultra widefield technology produces images that cover more than 80 percent of the retina, which is greater than any other device.


Retinal imaging is a booming business due to aging populations, which puts more people at risk of developing age-related macular degeneration, a leading cause of blindness. Rising rates of diabetes and resulting eye complications have also increased demand for sophisticated retinal monitoring.


Optos is the market leader in retinal imaging by sales, with a share of just over 30 percent, but its business is currently heavy skewed to North America, where it generates 72 percent of its revenue.


"Nikon is strong globally, while our business is strong n North America, so there are good growth opportunities in both Europe and Asia," Optos Chief Executive Roy Davis told .


Optos generated revenue of around $170 million in the year to Sept. 30, 2014 and operating profit before exceptional items of approximately $16 million.


($1 = 0.6478 pounds)


Ericsson sues Apple for telecom patent infringement


- Swedish mobile telecom gear maker Ericsson is suing Apple Inc for patent infringement, Ericsson said on Friday.

Ericsson said it filed a complaint with the U.S. International Trade Commission (ITC) requesting an exclusion order against Apple's products for infringing Ericsson patents that are essential to the 2G and 4G/LTE standards.


It also filed a second ITC complaint seeking an exclusion order and multiple complaints in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Texas requesting damages and injunctions for infringement of patents "critical to many other aspects of Apple's devices".


Thursday, February 26, 2015

Apple faces second suit from victorious patent firm

People walk past the Apple logo near an Apple Store at a shopping area in central Beijing February 19, 2013. REUTERS/Petar Kujundzic



People walk past the Apple logo near an Apple Store at a shopping area in central Beijing February 19, 2013.


Credit: /Petar Kujundzic






- Fresh off a $532.9 million jury win against Apple Inc (AAPL.O), a Texas company is again suing the tech giant, this time over the same patents' use in devices introduced after the original case was underway.

Smartflash LLC aims to make Apple pay for using the patent licensing firm's technology without permission in devices not be included in the previous case, such as the iPhone 6 and 6 Plus and the iPad Air 2. The trial covered older Apple devices.


On Tuesday, a jury in federal court in Tyler, Texas found that Apple willfully violated three Smartflash patents with devices that use its iTunes software. The patents relate to accessing and storing downloaded songs, videos and games.


The new complaint was filed on Wednesday night in the same court in Tyler, where Smartflash is also based and which over the past decade has become a focus for patent litigation. Smartflash licenses its patents but does not make products itself.


"Smartflash filed the complaint to address products that came out too far into the last proceedings to have been included," Smartflash's attorney, Brad Caldwell, told on Thursday. "Apple cannot claim they don’t know about these patents or understand that they are infringing. A diligent jury has already rejected those arguments."


A representative from Apple could not immediately be reached for comment.


Apple said after Tuesday's verdict it would appeal and that the outcome was another reason reform was needed in the patent system to curb litigation by companies that make money off patent royalties instead of products.


The latest suit alleges Apple infringes the same patents at issue in the trial, and names four others. Three of those additional patents were part of its older complaint against Apple, which was later narrowed.


Both Smartflash lawuits say that around 2000, the co-inventor of its patents, Patrick Racz, met with executives of what is now European SIM card maker Gemalto SA (GTO.AS), including Augustin Farrugia, who is now a senior director at Apple.


Smartflash has also filed patent infringement lawsuits against Samsung Electronics Co Ltd (005930.KS), Google Inc (GOOGL.O) and Amazon.com Inc (AMZN.O) over the same patents.


The case is Smartflash LLC et al v. Apple Inc, in the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Texas, No. 15-cv-145.


Alibaba's online payment firm Ant Financial eyes 2017 IPO: state media

A sales assistant sits behind and under Alipay logos at a train station in Shanghai, February 9, 2015. REUTERS/Aly Song



A sales assistant sits behind and under Alipay logos at a train station in Shanghai, February 9, 2015.


Credit: /Aly Song






- Ant Financial Services Group, Alibaba's affiliate which runs online payment platform Alipay, is seeking to raise up to $4 billion in a private placement of shares and is looking at a domestic IPO in 2017, the state-run Shanghai Securities News reported.

Alipay, China's most widely used online payment platform, is seen as a crucial part of Alibaba Group Holding Ltd's business, which ranges from e-commerce to entertainment.


Ant Financial is currently valued at between $35 billion and $40 billion, the paper said. It added that the firm had selected China International Capital Corp (CICC) as its financial advisor, citing documents from private equity firm CDH Investments.


Ant Financial was not available for immediate comment. CDH, which is working with Ant Financial, declined to comment.


Around 10 percent of the company will be sold to strategic investors in the private placement, its first round of funding, with candidates limited to firms backed by the Chinese government, the newspaper said.


Last week, news magazine Caixin said China's state-backed social security fund, the Postal Savings Bank of China, and CDB Capital, an investment arm of China Development Bank, would be in discussions for stakes of 5 percent, 3 percent and 3 percent respectively.


Ant Financial is controlled by Alibaba's Executive Chairman Jack Ma and other senior Alibaba executives, after the company spun off Alipay in 2011 from the rest of the firm.


Ma has said on several occasions he plans to eventually list Ant Financial. Last week, he told reporters there was no timetable yet for the IPO and it was not determined where the listing would happen, although he has been looking at Asia as a location.


Ant Financial's revenue jumped 92 percent to 10.2 billion yuan in 2014, and it made 2.6 billion yuan in net profit, representing a margin of 26 percent, according to the paper.


Net profit is expected to have a compound annual growth rate of 64 percent from 2015 to 2017, it said.


($1 = 6.2687 Chinese yuan)


Exclusive: China drops leading tech brands for certain state purchases


(This February 25 report has been corrected to clarify that companies not included on procurement list can still bid for state public tenders)

By Paul Carsten


IBM targets $40 billion in cloud, other growth areas by 2018

A worker is pictured behind a logo at the IBM stand on the CeBIT computer fair in Hanover February 26, 2011. REUTERS/Tobias Schwarz



A worker is pictured behind a logo at the IBM stand on the CeBIT computer fair in Hanover February 26, 2011.


Credit: /Tobias Schwarz






- International Business Machines Corp (IBM.N), which ruled computing in the age of the mainframe, is targeting $40 billion in annual revenue from the cloud, big data, security and other growth areas by 2018.

The aggressive target, set by IBM executives at the company's annual investor meeting in New York on Thursday, is the latest step for the technology giant towards emerging, high-margin businesses, and away from its previous strongholds in hardware and servers.


The $40 billion will come from areas which IBM calls its "strategic imperatives," namely cloud, analytics, mobile, social and security software.


That would represent about 44 percent of $90 billion in total revenue that analysts expect from IBM in 2018.


Those businesses generated $25 billion in revenue for IBM last year, or 27 percent of its total $93 billion in sales.


The company said it would shift $4 billion in spending to its "strategic imperatives" this year.


Revenue at IBM has gradually shrunk over the past three years as it sold off its unprofitable units in businesses such as low-end servers, semiconductors and cash registers.


IBM Chief Executive Virginia Rometty has said she was happy to jettison revenue from such unprofitable businesses, which she dubs "empty calories."


IBM revenue has now fallen for the past 11 quarters, while earnings growth has been sporadic.


The company says its long-term plan is to hit "low single-digit" revenue growth and "high single-digit" growth in operating earnings per share. Last year IBM withdrew its long-term plan to hit $20 per share in operating earnings for 2015.


IBM stood by its January forecast of $15.75 to $16.50 in operating earnings per share for 2015. Analysts expect $16.02, on average, according to Thomson I/B/E/S.


But the company, which gets more than half its revenue from overseas, said the strong U.S. dollar would crimp sales by more than 6 percent this year. In January, it had expected a currency-exchange dent to revenue of 5 percent to 6 percent.


IBM shares were up 0.6 percent at $163.80 on the New York Stock Exchange.


Qualcomm preps technology to reduce burden on mobile networks

The sign hanging outside the Qualcomm booth is seen at the International Consumer Electronics show (CES) in Las Vegas, Nevada January 6, 2015. REUTERS/Rick Wilking



The sign hanging outside the Qualcomm booth is seen at the International Consumer Electronics show (CES) in Las Vegas, Nevada January 6, 2015.


Credit: /Rick Wilking






- Mobile chipmaker Qualcomm wants wireless carriers to set up new technology that would offer cellphone users better reception in places like subway tunnels and shopping malls.

The San Diego, California company said on Thursday it will start selling components this year featuring LTE technology adapted for a smaller scale than traditional cellphone base stations mounted on metal towers bristling with antennas and other electronics.


LTE, or Long-Term Evolution, is the increasingly common modem technology that cellphones use to communicate with carrier networks. The newer "LTE Unlicensed", or LTE-U, adapts that technology to be used over short distances by sharing radio spectrum that is used by WiFi.


Qualcomm sees the addition of new technologies like LTE-U to its smartphone chips as key to staying competitive and giving consumers reasons to upgrade their smartphones.


Thousands of LTE-U base stations, which look similar to a wifi router, could be set up in buildings and out-of-the-way places to alleviate poor phone reception and relieve strained carrier networks as people use smartphones to download more and more video and other media.


T-Mobile has said it plans to use LTE-U as the technology matures to improve its mobile network. Intel and other companies are working on their own LTE-U products.


"We have to explore all options to increase network capacity because we're running out of spectrum, and the amount of data we're transmitting is going through the roof," said Tirias Research analyst Jim McGregor.


Some carriers have already augmented their LTE networks by investing in routers installed around cities to make wifi available to their customers outside of their homes.


Qualcomm and other proponents argue that adopting LTE-U will provide much faster performance for phone users and save carriers money they would have had to spend on additional LTE cellphone towers.


“The performance is better. It's not a large cost adder and it also provides a lot of advantages flexibility to the operators,” said Qualcomm Chief Technology Officer Matt Grob.


He said Qualcomm has overcome trouble with LTE-U signals interfering with wifi signals, a problem that in the past has drawn criticism of the technology.


Using the 5 GHz band used by wifi and LTE-U does not require a regulatory license but it does require that certain standards be met.


Uber suspends operations in Boise, Idaho

- Ride service Uber said on Thursday it is suspending its operations in Boise, Idaho, after reaching an impasse in negotiations with city leaders over new regulations.

"Steep and growing costs that come from offering thousands of free rides combined with unworkable and onerous regulations being proposed by the City leave Uber no other choice than to suspend operations in Boise for the foreseeable future," the company said in a blog post.


Uber suspends operations in Boise, Idaho

- Ride service Uber said on Thursday it is suspending its operations in Boise, Idaho, after reaching an impasse in negotiations with city leaders over new regulations.

"Steep and growing costs that come from offering thousands of free rides combined with unworkable and onerous regulations being proposed by the City leave Uber no other choice than to suspend operations in Boise for the foreseeable future," the company said in a blog post.


Apple faces second suit from victorious patent firm

People walk past the Apple logo near an Apple Store at a shopping area in central Beijing February 19, 2013. REUTERS/Petar Kujundzic



People walk past the Apple logo near an Apple Store at a shopping area in central Beijing February 19, 2013.


Credit: /Petar Kujundzic






- Fresh off a $532.9 million jury win against Apple Inc, a Texas company is again suing the tech giant, this time over the same patents' use in devices introduced after the original case was underway.

Smartflash LLC aims to make Apple pay for using the patent licensing firm's technology without permission in devices not be included in the previous case, such as the iPhone 6 and 6 Plus and the iPad Air 2. The trial covered older Apple devices.


On Tuesday, a jury in federal court in Tyler, Texas found that Apple willfully violated three Smartflash patents with devices that use its iTunes software. The patents relate to accessing and storing downloaded songs, videos and games.


The new complaint was filed on Wednesday night in the same court in Tyler, where Smartflash is also based and which over the past decade has become a focus for patent litigation. Smartflash licenses its patents but does not make products itself.


"Smartflash filed the complaint to address products that came out too far into the last proceedings to have been included," Smartflash's attorney, Brad Caldwell, told on Thursday. "Apple cannot claim they don’t know about these patents or understand that they are infringing. A diligent jury has already rejected those arguments."


A representative from Apple could not immediately be reached for comment.


Apple said after Tuesday's verdict it would appeal and that the outcome was another reason reform was needed in the patent system to curb litigation by companies that make money off patent royalties instead of products.


The latest suit alleges Apple infringes the same patents at issue in the trial, and names four others. Three of those additional patents were part of its older complaint against Apple, which was later narrowed.


Both Smartflash lawuits say that around 2000, the co-inventor of its patents, Patrick Racz, met with executives of what is now European SIM card maker Gemalto SA, including Augustin Farrugia, who is now a senior director at Apple.


Smartflash has also filed patent infringement lawsuits against Samsung Electronics Co Ltd, Google Inc and Amazon.com Inc over the same patents.


The case is Smartflash LLC et al v. Apple Inc, in the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Texas, No. 15-cv-145.


Apple to hold event on March 9, as Watch launch nears

An Apple logo is seen during Black Friday in San Francisco, California November 29, 2013. REUTERS/Stephen Lam



An Apple logo is seen during Black Friday in San Francisco, California November 29, 2013.


Credit: /Stephen Lam






- Apple Inc (AAPL.O) sent out invitations for a media event in San Francisco on March 9, about one month before the much-anticipated launch of the new Apple Watch.

The world's largest technology company did not specify what the event will be about in the invitation which reads simply "Spring Forward," a word play on the resetting of watches for daylight saving time.


Chief Executive Tim Cook said last month that the company plans to launch the smartwatch in April. The watch, which will let consumers check their email, pay for goods at retail stores and monitor personal health information, represents Apple's first major new product introduction since the 2010 launch of the iPad.


Shares of Apple were up 88 cents at $129.67 on Thursday.


Google to show ads for apps on Google Play

A Google search page is reflected in sunglasses in this photo illustration taken in Brussels May 30, 2014. REUTERS/Francois Lenoir



A Google search page is reflected in sunglasses in this photo illustration taken in Brussels May 30, 2014.


Credit: /Francois Lenoir






- Google Inc said it will allow some Google Play users to see advertisements for apps in the coming weeks.

Users will see ads from a pilot group of app developers who are already running ads on Google search, the company said in a blog post.


Google's advertising revenue has come under pressure as more consumers access its services on smartphones and tablets, where ad rates are typically lower.


The growing popularity of mobile devices has made Facebook Inc a greater threat in the battle for advertisers. The social network reported in January that mobile ads on its network doubled in the fourth quarter.


Google's shares were up about 2 percent at $557.16 in afternoon trading.


Amazon hires former Obama press secretary Carney: Politico

White House Press Secretary Jay Carney waves goodbye after giving his final briefing at the White House in Washington June 18, 2014. REUTERS/Kevin Lamarque



White House Press Secretary Jay Carney waves goodbye after giving his final briefing at the White House in Washington June 18, 2014.


Credit: /Kevin Lamarque






- Amazon.com Inc has hired President Barack Obama's former spokesman Jay Carney as senior vice president for worldwide corporate affairs, Politico reported on Thursday.

Carney stepped down as Obama's press secretary in June after more than three years in the high-profile job. Since then, he has been a political commentator on CNN, a gig that he will give up now that he has joined Amazon, Politico said.


Carney, who will oversee the internet retailer's public relations and lobbying efforts, will report to Chief Executive Jeff Bezos, Politico said.


Google invests $300 million in U.S. residential solar projects


- SolarCity Corp on Thursday said it created a $750 million fund to finance about 25,000 residential solar projects, with Google Inc investing nearly half the funding.

The money will be used by SolarCity to put solar panels on homes. Homeowners then will pay a monthly fee to lease the panels from the company. The growth of such financing has made generating electric power from the sun an option for households who do not want to shell out the $20,000 to $30,000 upfront cost of a typical residential solar system.


The fund is the largest ever created for residential solar systems, SolarCity said, and Google's $300 million equity stake is the technology giant's biggest renewable energy investment to date. SolarCity is the top U.S. residential solar installer.


As a so-called "tax equity" investor in the fund, Google can claim federal tax credits worth 30 percent of a solar project's cost to reduce its tax burden. Tax equity investors typically enjoy returns of 8 to 10 percent.


The remaining $450 million of the fund comes primarily from debt financing, according to SolarCity spokesman Jonathan Bass.


The investment is Google's second with SolarCity. The company in 2011 established a $280 million fund with the installer, which is backed by Tesla Motors Inc founder Elon Musk. To date, Google has poured more than $1.5 billion into renewable energy projects.


IBM targets $40 billion in cloud, related revs in 2018

A worker is pictured behind a logo at the IBM stand on the CeBIT computer fair in Hanover February 26, 2011. REUTERS/Tobias Schwarz



A worker is pictured behind a logo at the IBM stand on the CeBIT computer fair in Hanover February 26, 2011.


Credit: /Tobias Schwarz






- International Business Machines Corp (IBM.N), which ruled computing in the age of the mainframe, is targeting $40 billion in annual revenue from the cloud, big data, security and other growth areas by 2018.

The aggressive target, set by IBM executives at the company's annual investor meeting in New York on Thursday, is the latest step for the technology giant towards emerging, high-margin businesses and away from its previous strongholds in hardware and servers.


The $40 billion will come from areas which IBM calls its "strategic imperatives", namely cloud, analytics, mobile, social and security software. That would represent about 44 percent of the $90 billion in total revenues that Wall Street expects from IBM in 2018.


Those businesses generated $25 billion in revenue for IBM last year, or about 27 percent of its total $93 billion in sales.


The company said it would shift $4 billion in spending to its "strategic imperatives" this year.


IBM has been gradually shrinking its revenue over the past three years, as it sells unprofitable units such as low-end servers, semiconductors and cash registers.


IBM Chief Executive Virginia Rometty has said she is happy to jettison revenue from unprofitable businesses, what she has called "empty calories". IBM revenue has now fallen for the last 11 quarters, while earnings growth has been sporadic.


IBM says its long-term plan is to hit "low single-digit" revenue growth and "high single-digit" growth in operating earnings per share. Last year IBM withdrew its long-term plan to hit $20 per share in operating earnings for 2015.


AMC Networks' quarterly revenue jumps 40 percent

- AMC Networks Inc (AMCX.O) reported a 40 percent rise in quarterly revenue as the cable TV network posted strong growth in its domestic and international businesses.

Net income attributable to AMC's shareholders rose to $77.6 million, or $1.06 per share, in the fourth quarter ended Dec. 31, from $35.4 million, or 49 cents per share, a year earlier.


AMC, known for hits such as "Breaking Bad" and "The Walking Dead," said net revenue rose to $609.4 million from $435.2 million.


3D Systems profit plunges about 86 percent

- 3D printer maker 3D Systems Corp's quarterly profit plunged 86.2 percent as the company invested heavily in research and development and acquisitions.

The net income attributable to the company fell to $1.6 million, or 1 cent per share, in the fourth quarter ended Dec. 31 from $11.2 million, or 11 cents per share, a year earlier.


Revenue rose 21 percent to $187.4 million.


In-flight internet provider Gogo's quarterly revenue jumps

A passenger uses a wireless tablet on an American Airlines airplane, which is equipped with Gogo Inflight Internet service, enroute from Miami to New York December 10, 2013. REUTERS/Carlo Allegri



A passenger uses a wireless tablet on an American Airlines airplane, which is equipped with Gogo Inflight Internet service, enroute from Miami to New York December 10, 2013.


Credit: /Carlo Allegri






- In-flight internet provider Gogo Inc (GOGO.O) posted an 18 percent rise in quarterly revenue as more flyers used its services.

The company, which has not reported a profit since going public in 2013, said its net loss widened to $24.1 million, or 28 cents per share, in the fourth quarter ended Dec. 31 from $22.1 million, or 26 cents per share, a year earlier.


Revenue rose to $109.2 million from $92.6 million.


Beset by regulation, Google merges European divisions: source

People are silhouetted as they pose with laptops in front of a screen projected with a Google logo, in this picture illustration taken in Zenica October 29, 2014. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic



People are silhouetted as they pose with laptops in front of a screen projected with a Google logo, in this picture illustration taken in Zenica October 29, 2014.


Credit: /Dado Ruvic






- Google Inc has combined its two European regional divisions as it seeks to meet the challenges of tougher regulation across the continent, a source close to the company said on Thursday.

The Internet giant is merging its northern and western European division with the unit covering southern and eastern Europe, Middle East and Africa, the source said.


The shake-up follows a year of setbacks for the company on political and regulatory fronts on issues ranging from antitrust to privacy to how much tax it pays in different European nations, as well as fraught relations with some European industries including media and telecom groups.


The decision was taken to simplify the organization, both for commercial reasons as well as to work more effectively with business partners and policy makers.


Google's regional headquarters will remain in Dublin, where it employs thousands of staff, and the reorganization will not result in job losses, the source said.


The U.S. company has become a lightning rod for criticism in Europe of aggressive Silicon Valley business practices, a role reversal from previous years when it was revered as a standard-bearer of innovation and new economic possibilities.


In response, Google has argued that for Europe to remain competitive in global markets, it needs to form a single digital market instead of relying on national regulations in its 28-member states that often act to protect local industries.


OLYMPIC ROWER


Matt Brittin, who previously led Google's northern and western European division, will head up the combined Europe, Middle East and Africa operation while Carlo d'Asaro Biondo, formerly head of the other regional unit, will take on a strategy role, the source said.


Brittin, a former Olympic rower for Great Britain, joined Google in 2007 to run its UK operations, leaving newspaper publishing group Trinity Mirror where he was director of strategy. He will remain based in London.


D'Asaro Biondo, previously an executive with media group Lagardère, AOL Europe and computer services company Unisys, will continue to work from Paris.


He will manage Google's strategic partnerships in the region, which include working to deepen ties with newspaper publishers, telecom operators and carmakers.


Brittin will appear in Brussels on Thursday to argue the company's case that it serves as a growth engine for European business, especially for small and medium-sized enterprises, because the Internet helps create a level playing field.


He will announce Google's plan to fund a digital job-training program for 1 million Europeans over the next two years, the source said.


News of the company's European reorganization was first reported in the Financial Times late on Thursday.


Wednesday, February 25, 2015

Tougher Internet rules to hit cable, telecoms companies

A pro-net neutrality Internet activist attends a rally in the neighborhood where U.S. President Barack Obama attended a fundraiser in Los Angeles, California July 23, 2014. REUTERS/Jonathan Alcorn



A pro-net neutrality Internet activist attends a rally in the neighborhood where U.S. President Barack Obama attended a fundraiser in Los Angeles, California July 23, 2014.


Credit: /Jonathan Alcorn






- U.S. regulators are poised to impose the toughest rules yet on Internet service providers, aiming to ensure fair treatment of all web traffic through their networks.

The Federal Communications Commission is expected Thursday to approve Chairman Tom Wheeler's proposed "net neutrality" rules, regulating broadband providers more heavily than in the past and restricting their power to control download speeds on the web, for instance by potentially giving preference to companies that can afford to pay more.


The vote, expected along party lines with Democrats in favor, comes after a year of jostling between cable and telecom companies and net neutrality advocates, which included web startups. It culminated in the FCC receiving a record 4 million comments and a call from President Barack Obama to adopt the strongest rules possible.


The vote also starts a countdown to lawsuits expected from the industry, which contends regulations will burden their investments and stifle innovation, potentially hurting consumers.


The FCC sought new net neutrality rules after a federal court rejected their previous version in January 2014. The ruling confirmed the agency's authority over broadband but said it had improperly regulated Internet providers as if they were similar to a public utility. That contradicted their official classification as "information services" providers, which are meant to be more lightly regulated.


The agency's new policy would reclassify broadband as more heavily regulated "telecommunications services," more like traditional telephone service.


The shift gives the FCC more authority to police various types of deals between providers such as Comcast Corp and content companies such as Netflix Inc to ensure they are just and reasonable for consumers and competitors.


Internet providers will be banned from blocking or slowing any traffic and from striking deals with content companies, known as paid prioritization, for smoother delivery of traffic to consumers.


The FCC is also expected to expand its authority over so-called interconnection deals, in which content companies such as Netflix Inc pay broadband providers to connect with their networks. The FCC would review complaints on a case-by-case basis.


Wheeler's original proposal pursued a legal path suggested by the court. It stopped short of reclassifying broadband and so had to allow paid prioritization, prompting a public outcry and later Obama's message.


With the latest draft, Wheeler sought to address some Internet providers' concerns, proposing no price regulations, tariffs or requirements to give competitors access to their networks.


Samsung Electronics to freeze salaries for first time since 2009

A man walks at the Samsung Electronics' headquarters in Seoul January 7, 2015. REUTERS/Kim Hong-Ji



A man walks at the Samsung Electronics' headquarters in Seoul January 7, 2015.


Credit: /Kim Hong-Ji






- Samsung Electronics (005930.KS) will freeze employee salaries this year for the first time since 2009, a spokeswoman for the South Korean company said on Thursday, without elaborating.

The move comes after the company's profit declined in 2014 for the first time in three years as its lead in smartphones was challenged by Apple Inc (AAPL.O).


Exclusive: China drops leading tech brands for state purchases


- China has dropped some of the world's leading technology brands from its approved state purchase lists, while approving thousands more locally made products, in what some say is a response to revelations of widespread Western cybersurveillance.

Others put the shift down to a protectionist impulse to shield China's domestic technology industry from competition.


Chief casualty is U.S. network equipment maker Cisco Systems Inc (CSCO.O), which in 2012 counted 60 products on the Central Government Procurement Center's (CGPC) list, but by late 2014 had none, a analysis of official data shows.


Smartphone and PC maker Apple Inc (AAPL.O) has also been dropped over the period, along with Intel Corp's (INTC.O) security software firm McAfee and network and server software firm Citrix Systems (CTXS.O).


The number of products on the list, which covers regular spending by central ministries, jumped by more than 2,000 in two years to just under 5,000, but the increase is almost entirely due to local makers.


The number of approved foreign tech brands fell by a third, while less than half of those with security-related products survived the cull.


An official at the procurement agency said there were many reasons why local makers might be preferred, including sheer weight of numbers and the fact that domestic security technology firms offered more product guarantees than overseas rivals.


China's change of tack coincided with leaks by former U.S. National Security Agency (NSA) contractor Edward Snowden in mid-2013 that exposed several global surveillance programs, many of them run by the NSA with the cooperation of telecom companies and European governments.


"The Snowden incident, it's become a real concern, especially for top leaders," said Tu Xinquan, Associate Director of the China Institute of WTO Studies at the University of International Business and Economics in Beijing. "In some sense the American government has some responsibility for that; (China's) concerns have some legitimacy."


Cybersecurity has been a significant irritant in U.S.-China ties, with both sides accusing the other of abuses.


A spokesperson for the U.S. State Department, when asked to comment on the Chinese state purchasing moves, said the United States was "very concerned that many aspects of China’s recent regulatory actions — touted as means to bolster cybersecurity —are neither effective cybersecurity measures nor consistent with the principles of free and open trade."


U.S. tech groups wrote last month to the Chinese administration complaining about some of its new cybersecurity regulations, some of which force technology vendors to Chinese banks to hand over secret source code and adopt Chinese encryption algorithms.


The CGPC list, which details products by brand and type, is approved by China's Ministry of Finance, the CGPC official said. The list does not detail what quantity of a product has been purchased, and does not bind local government or state-owned enterprises, nor the military, which runs its own system of procurement approval.


The Ministry of Finance declined immediate comment.


"We have previously acknowledged that geopolitical concerns have impacted our business in certain emerging markets," said a Cisco spokesman.


An Intel spokesman said the company had frequent conversations at various levels of the U.S. and Chinese governments, but did not provide further details.


Apple declined to comment, and Citrix was not immediately available to comment.


SECURITY PRETEXT?


Industry insiders also see in the changing profile of the CGPC list a wider strategic goal to help Chinese tech firms get a bigger slice of China's information and communications technology market, which is tipped to grow 11.4 percent to $465.6 billion in 2015, according to tech research firm IDC.


"There's no doubt that the SOE segment of the market has been favoring the local indigenous content," said an executive at a Western technology firm who declined to be identified.


The executive said the post-Snowden security concerns were a pretext. The real objective was to nurture China's domestic tech industry and subsequently support its expansion overseas.


China also wants to move to a more consumption-based economy, which would be helped by Chinese authorities and companies buying local technology, the executive said.


Policy measures supporting the broader strategy include making foreign companies form domestic partnerships, participate in technology transfers and hand over intellectual property in the name of information security.


Wang Zhihai, president and CEO of Beijing Wondersoft, which provides information security products to government, state banks and private companies, said the market in China was fair, especially compared with the United States, where China's Huawei Technologies [HWT.UL], the world's largest networking and telecoms equipment maker, was unable to do business due to U.S. security concerns.


Local companies were also bound by the same cybersecurity laws that U.S. companies were objecting to, he added.


The danger for China, say experts, is that it could leave itself dependent on domestic technology, which remains inferior to foreign market leaders and more vulnerable to cyber attack.


Some of those benefiting from policies encouraging domestic procurement accept that Chinese companies trail foreign competitors in the security sphere.


"In China, information security compared to international levels is still very far behind; the entire understanding of it is behind," said Wondersoft's Wang.


But Wang, like China, is taking the long view.


"In 10 or more years, that's when we should be there."


Australian researchers unveil world's first 3D printed jet engine

- Australian researchers unveiled the world's first 3D-printed jet engine on Thursday, a manufacturing breakthrough that could lead to cheaper, lighter and more fuel-efficient jets.

Engineers at Monash University and its commercial arm are making top-secret prototypes for Boeing Co, Airbus Group NV, Raytheon Co and Safran SA in a development that could be the savior of Australia's struggling manufacturing sector.


"This will allow aerospace companies to compress their development cycles because we are making these prototype engines three or four times faster than normal," said Simon Marriott, chief executive of Amaero Engineering, the private company set up by Monash to commercialize the product.


Marriott said Amaero plans to have printed engine components in flight tests within the next 12 months and certified for commercial use within the next two to three years.


Australia has the potential to corner the market. It has one of only three of the necessary large-format 3D metal printers in the world - France and Germany have the other two - and is the only place that makes the materials for use in the machine.


It is also the world leader in terms of intellectual property (IP) regarding 3D printing for manufacturing.


"We have personnel that have 10 years experience on this equipment and that gives us a huge advantage," Marriott told by phone from the Avalon Airshow outside Melbourne.


3D printing makes products by layering material until a three-dimensional object is created. Automotive and aerospace companies use it for producing prototypes as well as creating specialized tools, moldings and some end-use parts.


Marriott declined to comment in detail on Amaero's contracts with companies, including Boeing and Airbus, citing commercial confidentiality. Those contracts are expected to pay in part for the building of further large format printers, at a cost of around A$3.5 million ($2.75 million) each, to ramp up production of jet engine components.


3D printing can cut production times for components from three months to just six days.


Ian Smith, Monash University's vice-provost for research, said it was very different to the melting, molding and carving of the past.


"This way we can very quickly get a final product, so the advantages of this technology are, firstly, for rapid prototyping and making a large number of prototypes quickly," Smith said. "Secondly, for being able to make bespoke parts that you wouldn't be able to with classic engineering technologies."


Chinese rivals snap at Alibaba's heels in cross-border e-commerce race

The logo of Alibaba Group is seen inside the company's headquarters in Hangzhou, Zhejiang province early November 11, 2014. REUTERS/Aly Song



The logo of Alibaba Group is seen inside the company's headquarters in Hangzhou, Zhejiang province early November 11, 2014.


Credit: /Aly Song






- A Chinese government push to promote e-commerce has created a host of online retail rivals for Alibaba Group Holding Ltd and Amazon.com Inc catering to shoppers' fears about the quality and safety of local everyday goods.

Logistics firms have been encouraged by tax-relief programs and other policies that gained traction last year. Several, including SF Express and state-owned Sinotrans, have jumped into a field dominated by JD.com Inc, Alibaba's biggest rival, which boasts 118 warehouses and thousands of delivery stations.


They're all vying to grab a piece of the cross-border e-commerce market which the government estimates to be worth $1 trillion by 2016.


Smaller local internet firms like Netease Inc, which partnered last month with Sinotrans to set up an online bazaar, are also keen to gain from the sector known as "haitao", which roughly translates as "seeking treasures abroad".


"Local e-commerce businesses aren't able to meet the needs of China's consumers who are increasingly buying from abroad," said Masa Ren, vice president of international e-commerce services at SF Express, one of China's biggest logistics firms.


The company launched a portal in January selling lobster, milk powder and other items it sources from retailers in countries such as Canada and Japan.


JD.com Inc has carved out a chunk of China's e-commerce sector by marketing the authenticity of its products to Chinese consumers wary of low quality and fake goods.


It announced a food import program in January including California wines, Massachusetts lobsters and U.S.-grown fruit.


Since 2012, more than 2,000 firms have registered as cross-border e-commerce businesses, the customs bureau said.


While Beijing's policies, aimed at reducing smuggling, have helped, the sector is booming thanks to the growing number of affluent Chinese who prefer global brands and whose faith in local goods has been frayed by a slew of safety scandals, mainly involving food.


Advertising executive Fiona Chen says she buys most of her daily necessities from overseas, spending about $200 on items such as shoes and cosmetics online at least once a month.


"There are a lot of items that aren't available in China, and overseas products, particularly food, are safer," she said.


Data from consultants iResearch estimates the gross merchandise value of cross-border e-commerce grew to 14.8 percent of China's total foreign trade last year from 11.9 percent in 2013. By 2017, the sector is expected to contribute about a fifth of total foreign trade, the consultancy said.


Analysts say the smaller haitao players will find it difficult to grab business from giant Alibaba, which controls over 80 percent of all e-commerce in China and which is on a campaign to win U.S. business this year after launching Tmall Global in 2014.


U.S. online retailer Amazon.com is also pushing ahead with expansion in China after it set up shop in Shanghai's free trade zone in August


But as these big firms go head to head with the minnows, the biggest winner of all may be foreign brands that are being offered a new route into China, said Scott Williams, vice president of programs and services at the American Chamber of Commerce in Shanghai.


"The doors are open in China for U.S. businesses, this includes big brands as well as small-and-medium enterprises, as the demand for high quality goods and services has never been higher than now."


Lenovo website breached, hacker group Lizard Squad claims responsibility

People stand under a sign showing the Lenovo company at a computer market in Shanghai January 21, 2014. REUTERS/Aly Song



People stand under a sign showing the Lenovo company at a computer market in Shanghai January 21, 2014.


Credit: /Aly Song






- China's Lenovo Group Ltd website was hacked, the company said on Wednesday, days after the U.S. government advised Lenovo customers to remove a pre-installed virus-like software, "Superfish", on laptops that makes the devices more vulnerable to attacks.

Hacking group Lizard Squad claimed to be behind the attacks, according to its Twitter page.


Lizard Squad has taken credit for several high-profile outages, including attacks that took down Sony Corp's PlayStation Network and Microsoft Corp's Xbox Live network last month. Members of the group have not been identified.


"The domain name service server hosting Lenovo's website was hacked. We do not have any further information at this time to share. We'll update as soon as possible," Lenovo said in a statement to .


San Francisco-based security firm CloudFlare said hackers transferred the domain to CloudFlare in order to point it to a defacement site.


"As soon as we at CloudFlare noticed, we seized the account and worked with Lenovo to restore service while they worked to recover their domain," Marc Rogers, Principal Security Researcher at CloudFlare, said in an email to .


Starting 4 p.m. ET on Wednesday, visitors to the Lenovo website saw a slideshow of young people looking into webcams and the song "Breaking Free" playing in the background, according to The Verge, which first reported the breach.


"We're breaking free! Soarin', flyin', there's not a star in heaven that we can't reach!," Lizard Squad posted on its Twitter page, quoting the song from the movie "High School Musical".


The hackers also posted a couple of screenshots of an email between Lenovo employees regarding the "Superfish" software.


The Department of Homeland Security said in an alert on Friday that the "Superfish" program makes users vulnerable to a type of cyberattack known as SSL spoofing, in which remote attackers can read encrypted web traffic, redirect traffic from official websites to spoofs, and perform other attacks.


Rogers also said CloudFlare was able to restore service before Lenovo recovered the domain, suggesting that the outage was probably "quite small".


However, Lenovo's website was inaccessible at 7:54 p.m. ET. A message said the site was unavailable due to system maintenance.


Lenovo website breached, hacker group Lizard Squad claims responsibility

People stand under a sign showing the Lenovo company at a computer market in Shanghai January 21, 2014. REUTERS/Aly Song



People stand under a sign showing the Lenovo company at a computer market in Shanghai January 21, 2014.


Credit: /Aly Song






- China's Lenovo Group Ltd website was hacked, the company said on Wednesday, days after the U.S. government advised Lenovo customers to remove a pre-installed virus-like software, "Superfish", on laptops that makes the devices more vulnerable to attacks.

Hacking group Lizard Squad claimed to be behind the attacks, according to its Twitter page.


Lizard Squad has taken credit for several high-profile outages, including attacks that took down Sony Corp's PlayStation Network and Microsoft Corp's Xbox Live network last month. Members of the group have not been identified.


"The domain name service server hosting Lenovo's website was hacked. We do not have any further information at this time to share. We'll update as soon as possible," Lenovo said in a statement to .


San Francisco-based security firm CloudFlare said hackers transferred the domain to CloudFlare in order to point it to a defacement site.


"As soon as we at CloudFlare noticed, we seized the account and worked with Lenovo to restore service while they worked to recover their domain," Marc Rogers, Principal Security Researcher at CloudFlare, said in an email to .


Starting 4 p.m. ET on Wednesday, visitors to the Lenovo website saw a slideshow of young people looking into webcams and the song "Breaking Free" playing in the background, according to The Verge, which first reported the breach.


"We're breaking free! Soarin', flyin', there's not a star in heaven that we can't reach!," Lizard Squad posted on its Twitter page, quoting the song from the movie "High School Musical".


The hackers also posted a couple of screenshots of an email between Lenovo employees regarding the "Superfish" software.


The Department of Homeland Security said in an alert on Friday that the "Superfish" program makes users vulnerable to a type of cyberattack known as SSL spoofing, in which remote attackers can read encrypted web traffic, redirect traffic from official websites to spoofs, and perform other attacks.


Rogers also said CloudFlare was able to restore service before Lenovo recovered the domain, suggesting that the outage was probably "quite small".


However, Lenovo's website was inaccessible at 7:54 p.m. ET. A message said the site was unavailable due to system maintenance.


Google expands push into workplace with Android for Work effort

A Google search page is reflected in sunglasses in this photo illustration taken in Brussels in this file photo taken on May 30, 2014. REUTERS/Francois Lenoir



A Google search page is reflected in sunglasses in this photo illustration taken in Brussels in this file photo taken on May 30, 2014.


Credit: /Francois Lenoir






- Google Inc launched an initiative on Wednesday to make smartphones running its Android software more appealing to corporations, a move that could help extend the Internet company's reach into workplaces.

Google said on its official blog that its Android for Work program will provide improved security and management features for corporations that want to give their employees Android smartphones. Smartphones supported by the new initiative will be able to keep an employee's work and personal apps separate, and a special Android for Work app will allow businesses to oversee key tools such as email, calendar and contacts.


Google said it is partnering with more than two dozen companies including Blackberry Ltd, Citrix Systems Inc, Box Inc.


Google's Android software is the world's most popular mobile operating system, but many corporations, which have significant security and device management requirements, give their employees smartphones made by Blackberry or Apple Inc.


BlackBerry working with Google to secure Android devices

The Blackberry sign is pictured in Waterloo June 19, 2014. REUTERS/Mark Blinch



The Blackberry sign is pictured in Waterloo June 19, 2014.


Credit: /Mark Blinch






- BlackBerry Ltd said on Wednesday that it is working with Google Inc to enable its software to manage and secure some of Google's Android devices, a move that builds on BlackBerry's recent partnership with Samsung Electronics Co.

In November, BlackBerry announced partnerships with Samsung and other high-profile technology industry players, broadening the reach of its revamped mobile-device management and security platform.


BlackBerry said it is offering a "highly secure mobility solution" for Samsung's Android devices. The new system weds BlackBerry's security platform with the South Korean company's own security software for its line-up of Galaxy devices that are powered by Google's Android operating system.


On Wednesday, BlackBerry outlined a similar tie-up directly with Google, to manage devices equipped with Android for Work - Google's own solution to securely separate business and personal data and applications.


BlackBerry shares rose 4.3 percent to $10.71 on the Nasdaq following the announcement.


A New York agenda with Hootsuite's night owl

- Ryan Holmes, chief executive officer of Hootsuite, may have grown up on a farm without electricity, but this 40-year-old Canadian went on to found a social media management tool with over 11 million users.

When Holmes travels from his home base in Vancouver, it's New York City that captures his imagination. Forget the stuffy midtown mentality of the business world, though. Holmes prefers to do his work downtown while rubbing elbows with the hipster crowd.


If you have two days and want to make the most of your time in the Big Apple - both personally and professionally - here are his insider tips.


Best way to get to town from the airport: Uber or a cab is my way to go.


Where to stay: The Ace Hotel (20 West 29th St.) is a favorite. They have a mini suite with some furnishings like a turntable and guitar that makes you feel like you're at home. The Gansevoort (18 9th Ave.) and The Standard (848 Washington St.) are also fun and in the Meatpacking District. If I'm in early and my room isn't ready, I'll hang at the Ace.


Caffeinate: Stumptown Coffee Roasters (lobby of the Ace Hotel). It's like having a little piece of the west coast in New York City. I'm also a Blue Bottle fan - they have several digs now.


Where to have a productive business meeting: The Ace lobby is way too busy for a secret meeting. Standard Grill has these amazing booths that you can tuck away into to have a productive business meeting. The atmosphere is elegant, yet laid back - great for talking business or just building relationships over food and drink. Soho House (29-35 Ninth Ave.) is good if you're a member, and Gansevoort Rooftop is also fantastic for poolside meetings.


Ideal place for a team outing: Some of the best places in NYC are the hole-in-the-wall eats and hidden bars. I love taking my team out to the city's speakeasies in Alphabet City - they're great for catching up over unique cocktails and clever spaces. SPiN (48 East 23rd St.) is also pretty cool for some team ping pong.


Preferred power breakfast spot: The Breslin (16 West 29th St.) with some Stumptown is a pretty killer combo and really convenient if you're staying at the Ace.


Eat, drink and be fit: Don't-miss meals at Spice Market (403 West 13th St.) or Momofuku (207 Second Ave.), and, to burn it all off, hit a SoulCycle.


Tourist traps that are worth a visit, if you've got some time to spare: It's usually a (expletive) to navigate, but every so often, I like just sitting around Times Square and getting lost in the crowds. If you want something a bit more chill, the High Line at sunset is great.


Watering hole: The Top of the Standard has some gorgeous views. Sleep No More (532 West 27th St.) has a great bar, but it is a bit more of an investment in the night.


Opera offers new feature for free access to mobile Web apps

- Norway's Opera, whose browser software has helped mobile operators sign up millions of users for free or low-cost Internet access, said on Tuesday it was introducing features that let operators offer subscribers free access to selected apps.

For several years, Opera has been offering users of its Opera Mini browser access to free data on most mobile phones. This meant users could get access to an hour or a day of free time on Facebook or music on Spotify.


What's different with the new feature, called Opera Max with App Pass, is that it is no longer confined solely to Opera browser users. Instead, App Pass works with any browser or mobile app a user may choose to use. The service is only available on Android smartphones for now.


In addition, many of the top handset makers in emerging markets have agreed to pre-load the Opera Max free data feature on their latest phone models, Opera said.


These include Samsung Electronics, Micromax, Mobistel, Evercoss, and Tecno, it said.


"We really believe we can drive millions and millions of users through these pre-loaded deals," Opera Chief Executive Lars Boilesen said in a phone interview.


European and Asian operator Telenor will be the first partner with Opera and launch Opera Max with App Pass, testing it in some of the company’s Asian markets, starting with DiGi, Malaysia's No. 3 operator, Opera said.


Opera Max software takes advantage of the company's video and data compression technologies, which enable more than 20 mobile network operators mainly in emerging markets to offer subsidized App passes to their subscribers.


Opera, maker of a Web browser that is popular among mobile phone users in developing markets, also said the new App Pass feature would soon allow advertisers to offer phone users sponsored or paid passes for using mobile Web apps.


"A lot of advertising brands are looking do something for users rather than just sell ads," Boilesen said. "We basically allow brands to offer free data plans."


Consumers can use Opera Max to manage their data consumption on the Web and inside apps, helping to conserve 50 percent of the data they might otherwise use, the company said.


Because App Pass no longer requires that users be running in the Opera browser, the company sees the new feature as appealing to operators in developed markets as well, who are now free to offer it to all their users, Boilesen said.


New Osram CEO has no plans for further job cuts: paper

- The new boss of Germany's Osram Licht (OSRn.DE) has no plans at present to cut more jobs at the lighting products maker, he was quoted as saying by the Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung newspaper on Wednesday.

Osram, the world's second-biggest lighting firm after Dutch group Philips (PHG.AS), has cut thousands of jobs as it seeks to refocus its business on higher-margin LED lighting, where it is racing to stay ahead of Asian rivals.


"Staff cuts are not at stake, I am not at all thinking about that," Olaf Berlien, who became the company's chief executive last month, told the newspaper in an interview.


"We must try to find new business opportunities and to transfer employees from classic lighting operations to the new world," the newspaper quoted Berlien as saying.


The CEO pledged earlier this month to speed up restructuring at Osram where adjusted core earnings before interest, tax and amortization (EBITA) rose to a more-than-expected 151 million euros ($171 million) in the first quarter.


Cablevision loses video subscribers for 10th straight quarter

- Cablevision Systems Corp reported a drop in the number of video subscribers for the tenth quarter in a row, sending the cable TV provider's shares down more than 5 percent in early trading.

The company also posted a 3.4 percent fall in adjusted operating cash flow, a closely watched metric for the cable TV industry.


Cable and satellite distributors have been under pressure to stop consumers from dumping their cable subscriptions, or "cutting the cord", as subscribers increasingly shift to internet-based services.


Cablevision, which is controlled by New York's Dolan family, said the number of video customers fell 4.7 percent to 2.68 million in the fourth quarter ended Dec. 31.


Adjusted operating cash flow fell to $440.9 million.


The decline in subscribers overshadowed a better-than-expected profit, which was helped by a 9 percent increase in cable advertising revenue and a 5.3 percent increase in the average monthly cable revenue per customer.


Net revenue rose to $1.63 billion from $1.58 billion.


Net income attributable to Cablevision stockholders rose to $56 million, or 20 cents per share, from $51.8 million, or 19 cents per share, a year earlier.


Analysts were expecting a profit of 19 cents per share on revenue of $1.63 billion, according to Thomson I/B/E/S.


The company's shares were down 3.2 percent at $19.17 in early trading.


Car technology troublesome but important to buyers: J.D. Power

A Lexus F Sport is displayed on pedestals during the second press day of the North American International Auto Show in Detroit, Michigan, January 13, 2015. REUTERS/Mark Blinch



A Lexus F Sport is displayed on pedestals during the second press day of the North American International Auto Show in Detroit, Michigan, January 13, 2015.


Credit: /Mark Blinch






- Connecting a mobile phone and giving voice commands are still causing drivers problems, but new technology features will be highly desirable to buyers when they make their next new vehicle purchase, according to a study of auto dependability released on Wednesday.

Looks and exterior design are still the top reasons why people avoid buying a certain model, J.D. Power said. But if a car, truck of SUV does not have the latest technology, 15 percent said they would not buy it, up from only 4 percent last year.


The annual J.D. Power study is one of several that taken together show that certain brands -- Lexus, Toyota and of late, General Motors' Buick and Chevrolet brands -- are getting consistently high marks, while others consistently struggle to get above average despite quality control efforts


Lexus, the luxury brand from Toyota Motor Corp, scored the highest for the fourth straight year in the J.D. Power study.


On Tuesday, the influential Consumer Reports magazine rated Lexus the best brand in the U.S. market for the third straight year.


In both studies, General Motors Co’s Buick made big moves upward, finishing second in the J.D. Power survey and becoming the first U.S. brand to be in the top 10 of the Consumer Reports brand report card.


Joining Buick in the top 10 in J.D. Power study were GM’s Cadillac at fourth, with Chevrolet and GMC tied for 10th. There were 31 brands ranked.


“GM has improved relative to the industry average for seven straight years.” said Dave Sargent, vice president of Global Automotive Research at J.D. Power.


He said Buick still has a “relatively older owner profile” of buyers who look after their cars and are more apt to go to dealers, where they can be helped with adapting to new technologies.


Ford Motor Co has been more aggressive introducing technologies such as voice controls, and its namesake brand fell to 25th from 17th last year and 13th in 2013. Ford says its newer systems are easier to use.


The Toyota brand, Honda and Volkswagen AG’s (VOWG_p.DE) Porsche rounded out the top half-dozen brands.


Two consistently low-scoring brands were at the bottom of the J.D. Power study. Fiat Chrysler Automobiles' Fiat finished last while next-to-last was Land Rover, owned by Tata Motors of India.