Wayne Rosso, whose Global Gaming Factory X AB company is buying The Pirate Bay for 60 million Swedish SEK (£4.7 million, 7.8 million USD) in August. He is currently working with London music executives to create a viable legal version of the notorious torrent website. Pirate Bay four founders and hosts were jailed and fined for copyright infringement offences. (On 17 April 2009, Peter Sunde, Fredrik Neij, Gottfrid Svartholm and Carl Lundström were found guilty of assistance to copyright infringement and sentenced to one year in prison and payment of a fine of 30 million SEK (app. 3,620,000 USD; 2,385,000 GBP; or 2,684,000 EUR), after a trial of nine days.) The defendants have appealed against the verdict and the judge was accused of bias. Despite the trial the website has been unaffected.
The Pirate Bay is a Swedish website that indexes and tracks BitTorrent (.torrent) files. It bills itself as "the world's largest BitTorrent tracker. Launched in 21 November 2003 it has revenue from advertisements, fees, donations & merchandise.
On 31 May 2006, the website's servers, located in Stockholm, were raided by Swedish police, causing it to go offline for three days. According to the Los Angeles Times, The Pirate Bay is "one of the world's largest facilitators of illegal downloading", and "the most visible member of a burgeoning international anti-copyright—or pro-piracy—movement".
The Pirate Bay's new regime will offer fans unlimited legal music downloads for a small monthly fee, though a hierarchy uploading scheme could see users' fees lessened depending on how much they use the site. Under a "cloud" network system, users will be encouraged to dedicate their own hard drive space to the site. The more of your computer resources you contribute to the network, the less you pay down to zero. Majority of The Pirate Bay's income is to come from selling the computer power gained from the cloud scheme saving Internet Service Providers' (ISPs) resources. VIA
----------------------------------------------
"A penny for your thoughts"
Wednesday, July 22, 2009
[+/-] |
The Legitimate Future of New Pirate Bay |
Tuesday, July 21, 2009
[+/-] |
Asian employment at risk in prolonged downturn |
Asian reliance on exports and rising commodity prices is running a challenging rising unemployment but lower levels than in major economies for now. Many Asian economies rely on exports to the United States and Europe to drive growth. But if demand is falling and consumers are losing their jobs, there can be little upside for supplier. Nomura economists said in a report on Asian economies that Hong Kong, Korea, Malaysia, Singapore, Taiwan and Thailand are most exposed in Asia to the global crisis.
All are registering double-digit peak-to-trough declines in GDP growth and the impact on the region's economic activity as a whole is now worse than during the Asian crisis, it added. Spending power throughout Asia are eroded where exporters under pressure to cut costs as consumers in recession-hit economies cut spending. This vicious cycle is offset in Indonesia, China and India by their large domestic sectors to buffer their economies against the slump in world trade. Though these economies may avoid recession, growth will slow. Singapore's jobless rate is at a three-year high of 3.3 percent, South Korea's is at 3.9 percent, its highest in nearly four years, and in Japan unemployment has hit a 5-½ year high of 5 percent.
Cutting jobs in Asia can be difficult with the social stigma attached to cutting jobs, labour laws and a lack of a social security safety net make layoffs a difficult process. Take for example loss-making Jet Airways in India. It sacked 800 flight attendants but after protests and political pressure the workers were reinstated and the chief executive apologised to staff within days.
Beyond unemployment, there is also disguised unemployment, where more people are employed to do a job than are needed, and underemployment, where workers are not fully utilised.
Thailand, Malaysia and Japan are taking similar steps to South Korea's government who is giving tax benefits and other advantages to companies that keep or add jobs by "adjusting" wages and work hours.
Hitachi Ltd, Japan's biggest industrial electronics group, and Cathay Pacific Airways Ltd are trying to keep jobs by asking staff to take unpaid leave.
Unemployment can be a leading indicator of a prolonged slump when there is uncertainty about whether a recovery will be quick, slow of occur at all. Employers wait to see that the upturn is sustainable before making a commitment to hiring new staff in coming out of a downturn. People who have lost their jobs don't have the spending capacity they did while employed. Those still in jobs rein in their spending and increase their savings in case they are next.
The fall in commodity prices since last year had reduced business costs and improved profit margins for Asian firms, limiting the need to cut jobs but with the recent rise in oil prices raises the risk that firms in Asia face greater pressure to lay off workers. Profit margins would be squeezed as raw materials prices rise just as manufactured goods are under pressure to fall. China's growing demand for commodities may push up raw material prices globally and therefore undermine prospects for a global recovery, especially in developed markets. VIA
Read Managing the Global Workforce
Download-- Charles M. Vance, Yongsun Paik
"Managing a Global Workforce: Challenges And Opportunities in International Human Resources Management"
M.E. Sharpe | 2006-08-30 | ISBN: 0765610698 | 399 pages | PDF | 1,4 MB
Sunday, July 12, 2009
[+/-] |
Hundreds of cats rescued from being eaten in China |
More than 300 cats were rescued thanks to animal rights activists in Shanghai. All these cats were going to become food in prestigious Chinese restaurants in Guangdong province. Eating cat meat is a tradition in many parts of China, especially in southern regions, where some restaurants specialise in preparing the dishes.(local soup called ‘Tiger vs. Dragon’ which is made with snake and cat.
Restaurant owners pay about about 50 yuan/$8a cat.) 22 bamboo cages full of cats in a yard were found with some contained more than 20 cats. Two of these cats had been dead for a while at the rescue and some of those alive had broken legs. Most of the animals have been returned to their owners after the activists sent out a message on an internet forum. Some cats were adopted by animal lovers and others were released in areas where volunteers leave food for strays. Police detained the cat dealer, Yang Baoguo, went scot free after a few hours without charge because animal protection laws are non-existent in China. Unlike dogs, a licence is not required for owning a cat in Shanghai as such the cat dealer could not be charged him with possessing stolen property.
VIA
[+/-] |
Lancaster Man Allegedly Demands Sex To Return Lost Dog - |
Alfredo Demkey of Lancaster in the Los Angeles area found the 17-year-old girl's 2-year-old mutt Pineapple on 27th Friday June,2009, called the number listed on the collar and said the dog would suffer if she didn't give him $70 or sexual favors.
Hawthorne Police Lt. Mike Ishii said the girl hung up on Demkey, but he called back. She then agreed to meet him at an El Pollo Loco restaurant, where police and the girl's father were waiting for him. The dog, Pineapple was returned to its owner unharmed. Police also say Dempkey was arrested on suspicion of parole violation for violating his registration requirements and could face other charges.
VIA
[+/-] |
"Transformer"' hits $300 million at U.S. box office |
"Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen" on Tuesday Jul 7, 2009 became the first film of the year to gross more than $300 million at the domestic box office. That same day, the film's overseas box office topped $300 million givibg worldwide tally stands north of $600 million.
VIA
Download Transformers.Revenge.Of.The.Fallen.TS.XviD