Category: News

  • iPad Etiquette – Get Ready to Be Annoyed

    If the iPad has its way, might this be the future landscape of your favorite bar or restaurant?

    If the iPad has its way, might this be the future landscape of your favorite bar or restaurant?

    The past decade has demonstrated that the more dynamic our phones get, the more obnoxious people can be with their phones. Now that cell phones aren’t even primarily used for talking, the chatty Cathy has been replaced on the cultural shit list by those who check Facebook during first dates and text while nodding “uh-huh” while you discuss your day.

    Those were with wallet-sized microcomputers. With the iPad, it will get worse.

    Picture the person who “discreetly” checks their email under the dining table, creating a lull in the conversation. Annoying, right? Now imagine that same person reaching down to the ground, pulling out a tablet PC and perusing US Weekly or Harpers while you’re trying to discus whether or not you think you should get your yacht reupholstered. An action like that says something. What it says is “Fuck you. I’m more interested in this”. With cell phones, this announcement was somewhat mitigated by the fact that the action was discreet. When someone does toss a (relatively) unwieldy iPad on the table, they’re actually now using their action to say, “Fuck you. I’m more interested in this. And now you know. And I STILL don’t care.” Great.

    My only hope here is that things get so bad that people don’t tolerate the behavior and it gets better. Nonetheless, there is something daunting about the evolution here. If people get torn away from me for a text message or an email, I now that they’ll be back in a second. With books now available to iPad owners, the threat is two-fold. Fold one: if someone dumps you to start a book, they probably aren’t coming back for a while. Books are longer than texts. You might as well say goodbye then and there. Fold two: I’m more interesting than almost any text message, tweet, or status update. I’m LESS interesting than a lot of books. What’s my recourse when my driving companion digs into a digital copy of Catch-22? I’m charming, but not “Joseph Heller charming”. Game over.

    Another thing to consider: how are people going to carry these things around? They don’t fit in pockets. They might fit in cargo pants, but I try pretty hard not to hang out with people in cargo pants, so that’s not really an issue for me. Backpacks? Maybe. But those really aren’t professional, even to the unemployed. Briefcases? No way. People like Apple products because they are the anti-briefcase. Man purses? Yup. Those and messenger bags. Ugh. Can’t say I’m thrilled about the iPad’s impact on men’s fashion in the coming years.

    So what do we do? Probably not much. Wait and hope that the critics are right that iPads don’t become the game-changer that Apple hopes they will be. Other than that, when it comes to fighting Apple, you might as well fight the wind.

    Who knows? Maybe we can count on peoples’ sense of decency and manners to do the right thing. Eh. We probably should count on the iPad failing rather than manners succeeding.

    Related posts:

    1. Hitler Hates the iPad
    2. It’s Come to This: The iMaxi iPad Case
    3. Is Your Bachelor Pad Ready for the Ladies?

  • Avoid Financial Fraud

    a pile of US currency
    People are always asking us questions about scams and fraud. There are many types of financial fraud like mortgage scams that target the elderly, Ponzi schemes, tax fraud that steals money from our nation’s coffers, predatory lending that discriminates against vulnerable communities, and credit card fraud.

    A few years ago I was a victim of identity theft. The scary thing about identity theft is that so much of your personal information is in the hands of others – in medical offices, human resources, school records, and credit card applications. You’re really at the mercy of the people holding your records. I was lucky that the fraudsters didn’t do any financial harm to me, but the mountain of paperwork and follow-up was outrageous.  I hope it never happens to you.

    If you’re smart, and I know you are, you’ll protect yourself from fraud before the fraudsters get to you.  If you’re informed, you can take steps to keep yourself and your hard-earned money safe.

    If you or someone you know has been a victim of fraud, I know all too well that it’s hard to figure out how to report it. Today there’s the Financial Fraud Enforcement Task Force web site to help. The Financial Fraud Enforcement Task Force is made up of 20 federal agencies, 94 US Attorneys Offices and state and local partners that can help you report fraud.

  • AutoblogGreen for 04.27.10

    Chelsea Sexton: why the Volt’s engaged roll-out is vital, especially in the first few years
    GM is walking the fine walk this time around.
    Compared to Jay Leno’s Big Dog Garage, you park in a Superfund site
    This one got out of hand, in a good way.
    Video: Monoxitube puts exhaust and carbon monoxide emissions in your face
    Just a thought.
    Other news:

    AutoblogGreen for 04.27.10 originally appeared on Autoblog on Tue, 27 Apr 2010 05:59:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

    Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

  • Computerized Front Running and Financial Fraud




    The second story was sitting in my done box were I keep stories that I have not published yet when Ellen landed this story outlining just how gamed the actual trading system has become.  For what it is worth, everyone knows how to skim an order and traditionally floor governors were on the lookout for just such behavior as it worked directly against the client’s interest.
    In short it was a totally unaccepted behavior because it would have worked also against the interests of the firms themselves.  No one wants someone running a business in your business.  How we have the firms themselves doing exactly this because they no longer have to share too much with their employees.
    The bad news is that this article lays out a class action suit against Goldman Sachs that will strip the firm and its many co conspirators of every nickel they have.  The victims include every other firm on Wall street and every institution to say nothing of the odd investor.
    It also makes the SEC look like the donkeys they have proven to be.  Front running was well understood in 1933.  Have they lost their minds or are they hiring absolute neophytes or simply compromised insiders?  Every trading system must be automatically audited to recognize front running.  It is literally the very first thing that you would programm into your system after the completion components are put in place.
    Computerized Front Running and Financial Fraud
    How a Computer Program Designed to Save the Free Market Turned Into a Monster
    By Ellen Brown
    While the SEC is busy investigating Goldman Sachs, it might want to look into another Goldman-dominated fraud: computerized front running using high-frequency trading programs.
    Market commentators are fond of talking about “free market capitalism,” but according to Wall Street commentator Max Keiser, it is no more.  It has morphed into what his TV co-host Stacy Herbert calls “rigged market capitalism”: all markets today are subject to manipulation for private gain.
    Keiser isn’t just speculating about this.  He claims to have invented one of the most widely used programs for doing the rigging.  Not that that’s what he meant to invent.  His patented program was designed to take the manipulation out of markets.  It would do this by matching buyers with sellers automatically, eliminating “front running” – brokers buying or selling ahead of large orders coming in from their clients.  The computer program was intended to remove the conflict of interest that exists when brokers who match buyers with sellers are also selling from their own accounts.  But the program fell into the wrong hands and became the prototype for automated trading programs that actually facilitate front running. 
    Also called High Frequency Trading (HFT) or “black box trading,” automated program trading uses high-speed computers governed by complex algorithms (instructions to the computer) to analyze data and transact orders in massive quantities at very high speeds.  Like the poker player peeking in a mirror to see his opponent’s cards, HFT allows the program trader to peek at major incoming orders and jump in front of them to skim profits off the top.  Note that these large institutional orders are our money — our pension funds, mutual funds, and 401Ks.
    When “market making” (matching buyers with sellers) was done strictly by human brokers on the floor of the stock exchange, manipulations and front running were considered an acceptable (if morally dubious) price to pay for continuously “liquid” markets.  But front running by computer, using complex trading programs, is an entirely different species of fraud.  A minor flaw in the system has morphed into a monster.  
    Keiser maintains that computerized front running with HFT has become the principal business of Wall Street and the primary force driving most of the volume on exchanges, contributing not only to a large portion of trading profits but to the manipulation of markets for economic and political ends.
    The “Virtual Specialist”: the Prototype for High Frequency Trading 
    Until recently, most market making was done by brokers called “specialists,” those people you see on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange haggling over the price of stocks.  The job of the specialist originated over a century ago, when the need was recognized for a system for continuous trading.  That meant trading even when there was no “real” buyer or seller waiting to take the other side of the trade. 
    The specialist is a broker who deals in a specific stock and remains at one location on the floor holding an inventory of it.  He posts the “bid” and “ask” prices, manages “limit” orders, executes trades, and is responsible for managing the uninterrupted flow of orders.  If there is a large shift in demand on the “buy” side or the “sell” side, the specialist steps in and sells or buys out of his own inventory to meet the demand, until the gap has narrowed.  
    This gives him an opportunity to trade for himself, using his inside knowledge to book a profit.  That practice is frowned on by the Securities Exchange Commission (SEC), but it has never been seriously regulated, because it has been considered necessary to keep markets “liquid.”
    Keiser’s “Virtual Specialist Technology” (VST) was developed for the Hollywood Stock Exchange (HSX), a web-based, multiplayer simulation in which players use virtual money to buy and sell “shares” of actors, directors, upcoming films, and film-related options.  The program determines the true market price automatically, by comparing “bids” with “asks” and weighting the proportion of each.  Keiser and HSX co-founder Michael Burns applied for a patent for a “computer-implemented securities trading system with a virtual specialist function” in 1996, and U.S. patent no. 5960176 was awarded in 1999. 
    But things went awry after the dot.com crash, when Keiser’s company HSX Holdings sold the VST patent to investment firm Cantor Fitzgerald, over his objection.  Cantor Fitzgerald then put the part of the program that would have eliminated front-running on ice, just as drug companies buy up competing patents in order to take them off the market.  Instead of preventing front-running, the program was altered so that it actually enhanced that fraudulent practice.  Keiser (who is now based in Europe) notes that this sort of patent abuse is illegal under European Intellectual Property law.
    Meanwhile, the design of the VST program remained on display at the patent office, giving other inventors ideas.  To get a patent, applicants must list “prior art” and then prove that their patent is an improvement in some way.  The listing for Keiser’s patent shows that it has been referenced by 132 others involving automated program trading or HFT. 
    HFT has quickly come to dominate the exchanges.  High frequency trading firms now account for 73% of all U.S. equity trades, although they represent only 2% of the approximately 20,000 firms in operation. 
       
    In 1998, the SEC allowed online electronic communication networks, or alternative trading systems, to become full-fledged stock exchanges.  Alternative trading systems (ATS) are computer-automated order-matching systems that offer exchange-like trading opportunities at lower costs but are often subject to lower disclosure requirements and different trading rules.  Computer systems automatically match buy and sell orders that were themselves submitted through computers.  Market making that was once done with a “specialist’s book” — something that could be examined and audited — is now done by an unseen, unaudited “black box.” 
    For over a century, the stock market was a real market, with live traders hotly bidding against each other on the floor of the exchange.  In only a decade, floor trading has been eliminated in all but the largest exchanges, such as the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE); and even in those markets, it now co-exists with electronic trading.  
    Alternative trading systems allow just about any sizable trader to place orders directly in the market, rather than routing them through investment dealers on the NYSE.  They also allow any sizable trader with a sophisticated HFT program to front run trades. 
    Flash Trades: How the Game Is Rigged
       
    An integral component of computerized front running is a dubious practice called “flash trades.”  Flash orders are permitted by a regulatory loophole that allows exchanges to show orders to some traders ahead of others for a fee.  At one time, the NYSE allowed specialists to benefit from an advance look at incoming orders; but it has now replaced that practice with a “level playing field” policy that gives all investors equal access to all price quotes.  Some ATSs, however, which are hotly competing with the established exchanges for business, have adopted the use of flash trades to pull trading business away from the exchanges.  An incoming order is revealed (or flashed) to a trader for a fraction of a second before being sent to the national market system.  If the trader can match the best bid or offer in the system, he can then pick up that order before the rest of the market sees it. 
       
    The flash peek reveals the trade coming in but not the limit price – the maximum price at which the buyer or seller is willing to trade.  This is what the HFT program figures out, and it is what gives the high-frequency trader the same sort of inside information available to the traditional market maker: he now gets to peek at the other player’s cards.  That means high-frequency traders can do more than just skim hefty profits from other investors.  They can actually manipulate markets. 
    How this is done was explained by Karl Denninger in an insightful post on Seeking  Alpha in July 2009:
    “Let’s say that there is a buyer willing to buy 100,000 shares of BRCM with a limit price of $26.40. That is, the buyer will accept any price up to $26.40.  But the market at this particular moment in time is at $26.10, or thirty cents lower.
    “So the computers, having detected via their ‘flash orders’ (which ought to be illegal) that there is a desire for Broadcom shares, start to issue tiny (typically 100 share lots) ‘immediate or cancel’ orders – IOCs – to sell at $26.20.  If that order is ‘eaten’ the computer then issues an order at $26.25, then $26.30, then $26.35, then $26.40.  When it tries $26.45 it gets no bite and the order is immediately canceled.
    “Now the flush of supply comes at, big coincidence, $26.39, and the claim is made that the market has become ‘more efficient.’
    “Nonsense; there was no ‘real seller’ at any of these prices! This pattern of offering was intended to do one and only one thing — manipulate the market by discovering what is supposed to be a hidden piece of information — the other side’s limit price!
    “With normal order queues and flows the person with the limit order would see the offer at $26.20 and might drop his limit.  But the computers are so fast that unless you own one of the same speed you have no chance to do this — your order is immediately ‘raped’ at the full limit price! . . . [Y]ou got screwed for 29 cents per share which was quite literally stolen by the HFT firms that probed your book before you could detect the activity, determined your maximum price, and then sold to you as close to your maximum price as was possible.”
    The ostensible justification for high-frequency programs is that they “improve liquidity,” but Denninger says, “Hogwash.  They have turned the market into a rigged game where institutional orders (that’s you, Mr. and Mrs. Joe Public, when you buy or sell mutual funds!) are routinely screwed for the benefit of a few major international banks.”
    In fact, high-frequency traders may be removing liquidity from the market.  So argues John Daly in the U.K. Globe and Mail, citing Thomas Caldwell, CEO of Caldwell Securities Ltd.:
    “Large institutional investors know that if they start trying to push through a large block of shares at a certain price – even if the block is broken into many small trades on several ATSs and markets — they can trigger a flood of high-frequency orders that immediately move market prices to the institution’s disadvantage. . . . That’s why institutions have flocked to so-called dark pools operated by ATSs such as Instinet, and individual dealers like Goldman Sachs.  The pools allow traders to offer prices without publicly revealing their identities and tipping their hand.”
    Because these large, dark pools are opaque to other investors and to regulators, they inhibit the free and fair trade that depends on open and transparent auction markets to work. 
    The Notorious Market-Rigging Ringleader, Goldman Sachs
    Tyler Durden, writing on Zero Hedge, notes that the HFT game is dominated by Goldman Sachs, which he calls “a hedge fund in all but FDIC backing.”  Goldman was an investment bank until the fall of 2008, when it became a commercial bank overnight in order to capitalize on federal bailout benefits, including virtually interest-free money from the Fed that it can use to speculate on the opaque ATS exchanges where markets are manipulated and controlled. 
    Unlike the NYSE, which is open only from 10 am to 4 pm EST daily, ATSs trade around the clock; and they are particularly busy when the NYSE is closed, when stocks are thinly traded and easily manipulated.  Tyler Durden writes:
    “[A]s the market keeps going up day in and day out, regardless of the deteriorating economic conditions, it is just these HFT’s that determine the overall market direction, usually without fundamental or technical reason.  And based on a few lines of code, retail investors get suckered into a rising market that has nothing to do with green shoots or some Chinese firms buying a few hundred extra Intel servers: HFTs are merely perpetuating the same ponzi market mythology last seen in the Madoff case, but on a massively larger scale.”   
    HFT rigging helps explain how Goldman Sachs earned at least $100 million per day from its trading division, day after day, on 116 out of 194 trading days through the end of September 2009.  It’s like taking candy from a baby, when you can see the other players’ cards.
    Reviving the Free Market
    So what can be done to restore free and fair markets?  A step in the right direction would be to prohibit flash trades.  The SEC is proposing such rules, but they haven’t been effected yet. 
       
    Another proposed check on HFT is a Tobin tax – a very small tax on every financial trade.  Proposals for the tax range from .005% to 1%, so small that it would hardly be felt by legitimate “buy and hold” investors, but high enough to kill HFT, which skims a very tiny profit from a huge number of trades.
    That is what proponents contend, but a tiny tax might not actually be enough to kill HFT.  Consider Denninger’s example, in which the high-frequency trader was making not just a few pennies but a full 29 cents per trade and had an opportunity to make this sum on 99,500 shares (100,000 shares less 5 100-lot trades at lesser sums).  That’s a $28,855 profit on a $2.63 million trade, not bad for a few milliseconds of work.  Imposing a .1% Tobin tax on the $2.63 million would reduce the profit to $26,225, but that’s still a nice return for a trade that takes less time than blinking.      
    The ideal solution would fix the problem at its source — the price-setting mechanism itself.  Keiser says this could be done by banning HFT and installing his VST computer program in its original design in all the exchanges.  The true market price would then be established automatically, foreclosing both human and electronic manipulation.  He notes that the shareholders of his former firm have a good claim for voiding out the sale to Cantor Fitzgerald and retrieving the program, since the deal was never consummated and the investors in HSX Holdings have never received a penny for the sale. 
    There is just one problem with their legal claim: the paperwork proving it was shipped to Cantor Fitzgerald’s offices in the World Trade Center several months before September 2001.  Like free market capitalism itself, it seems, the evidence has gone up in smoke.
    Ellen Brown developed her research skills as an attorney practicing civil litigation in Los Angeles. In Web of Debt, her latest of eleven books, she turns those skills to an analysis of the Federal Reserve and “the money trust.” She shows how this private cartel has usurped the power to create money from the people themselves, and how we the people can get it back. Her websites arewww.webofdebt.comwww.ellenbrown.com, and www.public-banking.com.
    __________________________________________


    What is wrong with this tale is that they have eliminated client or broker control over one side of the transaction, allowing them to optimize the outcome for the other side.  If two human beings were engaged in the tradition of outcry on the floor then this nonsense would end.
    In fact this prevents other parties from reacting to the presence of a trade and to offer better prices or to even change their minds.
    The point is that preference is provided to allow one pool to front run and manipulate prices when it is profitable.  You will never see them accommodate a slight loss on sentiment or beneficial for the traffic.
    The only good thing here is that this is becoming way more visible.
    Open outcry blocked this sort of behavior to some degree by putting a sufficient lapse time to allow others to contribute.  These guys are trying to simply grab stuff off the table by simple speed.
    “High Frequency” Financial Trading, High-tech Highway Robbery on Wall Street
    By Mike Whitney
    2010-04-18
    The Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) knows that High-Frequency Trading (HFT) manipulates the market and bilks investors out of tens of billions of dollars every year. But SEC chairman Mary Schapiro refuses to step in and take action. Instead, she’s concocted an elaborate “information gathering” scheme, that does nothing to address the main problem. Schapiro’s plan–to track large blocks of trades by large institutional investors– is an attempt to placate congress while the big Wall Street HFT traders continue to rake in obscene profits. It achieves nothing, except provide the cover Schapiro needs to avoid doing her job.

    High-frequency trading (HFT) is algorithmic-computer trading that finds “statistical patterns and pricing anomalies” by scanning the variousstock exchanges. It’s high-speed robo-trading that oftentimes executes orders without human intervention. But don’t be confused by all the glitzy “state-of-the-art” hype. HFT is not a way of “allocating capital more efficiently”, but of ripping people off in broad daylight.


    It all boils down to this: HFT allows one group of investors to see the data on other people’s orders ahead of time and use their supercomputers to buy in front of them. It’s called front-loading, and it goes on every day right under Schapiros nose.

    In an interview on CNBC, HFT-expert Joe Saluzzi was asked if the big HFT players were able to see other investors orders (and execute trades) before them. Saluzzi said, “Yes. The answer is absolutely yes. The exchanges supply you with the data, giving you the flash order, and if your fixed connection goes into their lines first, you are disadvantaging the retail and institutional investor.”
    The brash way that this scam is carried off is beyond belief. The deep-pocket bank/brokerages actually pay the NYSE and the NASDAQto “colocate” their behemoth computers ON THE FLOOR OF THE EXCHANGES so they can shave off critical milliseconds after they’ve gotten a first-peak at incoming trades. It’s like parking the company forklift in front of the local bank vault to ease the transfer of purloined cash. Due to the impressive research of bloggers like Zero Hedge’s, Tyler Durden and Market Ticker’s, Karl Denniger, many people have a fairly good grasp of HFT and understand that the SEC needs to act. But Schapiro has continued to drag her feet while issuing endless proclamations about pursuing the wrongdoers. Baloney. She needs to stop yammering and shut these operations down. 

    In a recent posting, Market Ticker explained some of the finer-points of high-frequency trading, such as, how the banks/brokerages probe the exchanges with small orders in order to find out how much other investors are willing to pay for a particular stock. Here’s a clip:

    “Let’s say that there is a buyer willing to buy 100,000 shares of Broadcom with a limit price of $26.40. That is, the buyer will accept any price up to $26.40. But the market at this particular moment in time is at $26.10, or thirty cents lower.
    So the computers, having detected via their “flash orders” that there is a desire for Broadcom shares, start to issue tiny “immediate or cancel” orders – IOCs – to sell at $26.20. If that order is “eaten” the computer then issues an order at $26.25, then $26.30, then $26.35, then $26.40. When it tries $26.45 it gets no bite and the order is immediately canceled.

    Now the flush of supply comes at $26.39, and the claim is made that the market has become “more efficient.”


    Nonsense; there was no “real seller” at any of these prices! This pattern of offering was intended to do one and only one thing – manipulate the market by discovering what is supposed to be a hidden piece of information – the other side’s limit price!

    With normal order queues and flows the person with the limit order would see the offer at $26.20 and might drop his limit. But the computers are so fast that unless you own one of the same speed you have no chance to do this – your order is immediately “raped” at the full limit price! 

    The presence of these programs will guarantee huge profits to the banks running them and they also guarantee both that the retail buyers will get screwed as the market will move MUCH faster to the upside than it otherwise would.

    If you’re wondering how Goldman Sachs and other “big banks and hedge funds” made all their money this last quarter, now you know.” (“High-Frequency Trading is a Scam”, Market Ticker)
    The HFT uber-computers are able to find out the highest price that traders will pay in a millisecond and then extort that full amount millions of times to maximize profits. Clearly, this has nothing to do with efficiency or innovation. It’s high-tech highway robbery; institutional bid-rigging on a grand scale, tacitly sanctioned by industry lackeys operating from within the administration. Schapiro was picked by Team Obama for this very reason; because she was known as a regulator with a “light touch” when she headed Finra the financial industry’s self policing agency. As Finra’s chief, Schapiro managed to keep her head in the sand during the Madoff scandal and the auction-rate securities flap.
    She also issued far fewer fines and penalties than her predecessor. Here’s an excerpt from the Wall Street Journal which sums up Schapiro’s regulatory doctrine:

    “The Financial Services Institute, a trade group, was meeting, and Ms. Schapiro addressed the crowd about Finra’s efforts to fight frauds aimed at senior citizens. Frank Congemi, a financial adviser, asked what Finra was doing to regulate “packaged products” such as complex mortgage securities. Mr. Congemi says that Ms. Schapiro replied: “We have rating agencies that rate them.” The credit-rating agencies, by this time, were being heavily criticized for having given triple-A ratings to mortgage bonds that became unsalable as foreclosures rose.” (Wall Street Journal)

    If the financial crisis has taught us anything, it’s that the system is NOT self-correcting. And it takes more than just rules. It takes regulators who are willing to regulate.
  • TomTom GO LIVE 1000 Adds Capacitive Touchscreen and WebKit Browser [Satnavs]

    TomTom’s claiming the GO LIVE 1000 marks “the first in a whole new generation of navigation devices,” which just makes me think it’d be worth holding out to see what the second model does. Nonetheless, the capacitive touchscreen is big news. More »







  • Wait no longer to pay an arm and a leg for a Hermès Birkin bag

    Hermes-birkin

    Listen to this news and try not to get positively giddy: There’s no more waiting list for a Hermès Birkin bag. Yippee for celebrities (who probably didn’t have to wait for the grossly overpriced satchels anyway) and insanely rich folks (who have made this brand so coveted that people actually fight to spend upwards of $120,000. On. A. Purse!). Obviously, I’m not the demo, and I’ve never understood the appeal of an accessory like this, especially at jaw-dropping price points that start at more than $6,500. Waiting lists populated by those with money to burn were either legendary (if you were on one) or ridiculous (if you weren’t). New York magazine’s The Cut blog sums up the situation by saying that though the purse is "still crazily expensive, it’s not crazily exclusive." Mere mortals can have one, too! Never mind the house payment. Now, considering the carefully cultivated image of the "it" bag, is this good for the brand? Maybe the next move will be a surprise "shortage" before a lot of commoners find their way to Portero.

    —Posted by T.L. Stanley

  • Kelly Osbourne Tanning “Skinny” Comments Cause Controversy In UK

    Kelly Osbourne has landed herself in hot water after telling British consumers that the spray tan she uses — and endorses — for its ability to give her porcelain skin a bit of sass is also slimming to her waistline.

    The rock princess came under fire this week for saying that St. Tropez spray tan makes her look skinnier than she is.

    “I looked healthy, I looked like 10 lbs. skinnier, and it started to make me look at my body in a different way,’” she said in the controversial ad, which has since been banned. “It made me look at what looked better rather than what I didn’t like, and I kind of got addicted.”

    The campaign, supported by The Prince’s Trust — an organization that helps disadvantaged kids, of which Kelly is an ambassador — pulled the ad from the airwaves after complaints from parents flooded in following Kelly’s “skinny” statement. Parents argued the spray tan company’s message was inappropriate for the disadvantaged children the organisation seeks to help.

    “I was gobsmacked. Self-esteem should be about who you are and what you’ve achieved,” said mom Abi Moore of UK parenting group PinkSticks. “Telling impressionable young girls that having a spray tan and appearing on a reality TV show is the way to make yourself feel better is about as far off from my understanding of self-esteem as you can get.”


  • F5 Doesn’t Like A10’s Name — But Sues Over Patents, Not Trademarks

    johnjac points out that it’s a bit odd that, in the middle of a patent lawsuit, data center provider F5 Networks complains that competitor A10 Networks name itself is an attempt to copy F5. Who knows whether the patent questions are legitimate, but names have nothing to do with patents, and it seems like a pretty big stretch for F5 to claim that a company that combines a letter and a number is automatically doing so “as a play, or allusion to, F5’s corporate name.” And, even if it were true, how would that matter if the discussion is over patents, not trademarks?

    Permalink | Comments | Email This Story





  • Opera 10.52 for Mac Released: Features Cocoa Integration and Pinch to Zoom

    Yet another week and yet another major release from the folks at Opera Software. This time it’s the Mac users who have reason to celebrate. Opera 10.52 for Mac, which is the first stable build of the Opera 10.5x trunk for Mac, has been released.

    Opera 10.52 for Mac includes all the features of its Windows counterpart, including Opera Widgets for Desktop, Private Browsing, Non-modal notification messages, Opera Presto 2.5 rendering engine, Opera Carakan JavaScript engine and Opera Vega graphics library.

    Some of the highlights of this Mac release are:

      Opera-10.52-Mac

    • Improved UI: Opera 10.52 looks like a native Macintosh app and behaves like one, thanks to the Cocoa integration. The design has been overhauled to include a unified toolbar and other miscellaneous improvements.
    • Opera-10.52-Speed-Test
      Opera 10.52 for Mac: Peacekeeper Results

    • Speed: Opera 10.52 introduces the Carakan JavaScript engine, which is one of the fastest (if not the fastest) JavaScript engines in the market.

      Opera-10.52-Speed-Turbo
      Opera 10.52 for Mac: Impact of Turbo onf Page Load Time

      When coupled with Opera Turbo, which compresses webpages before routing them to your computer, Opera 10.52 can deliver blazing fast browsing speed.

    • Multi-touch Support: Opera 10.52 also introduces multi-touch support, which takes advantage of the multi-touch trackpads present in modern Macbooks. Pinch to zoom or use two fingers to scroll and three fingers to navigate back and forth in your browser history, all from your trackpad.

    The Windows build of Opera 10.52 mainly delivers bug fixes and performance improvements. Linux users have been left out for now. Nevertheless, Opera 10.5x for Linux has been making steady progress over the past few weeks and expect a final build within a few weeks.

    [ Download Opera 10.52 for Mac or Windows ]

    Opera 10.52 for Mac Released: Features Cocoa Integration and Pinch to Zoom originally appeared on Techie Buzz written by Pallab De on Tuesday 27th April 2010 06:32:35 AM. Please read the Terms of Use for fair usage guidance.

    Don’t miss these Related Posts:

    Join Techie Buzz on Your Favorite Social Networking Sites


  • Cash flow from shale plays equal on either side of border

    Energy companies operating in North American natural gas shale plays will have the same after-tax operating cash flow per share per thousand cubic feet (Mcf) at today’s strip prices regardless of whether they are operating in Canada or the United States, according to research done by Peters & Co.  

    The government’s take in the United States is 31%, compared to western Canada’s 19%, but the playing field is leveled after accounting for the higher average operating costs in Canada, the Calgary-based brokerage said.  

    If long-term gas prices climb to US$7 per thousand cubic feet, the average government take will be around 33% in the U.S. and 24% in Canada.  With respect to natural gas profitability and government take, Peters found that the Netherlands, Indonesia, and the United Kingdom have the highest average after-tax operating cash flow per Mcf.

    “While these countries rank the highest in profitability primarily due to higher realized pricing, they do not necessarily rank the lowest in government take,” the report said. When considering crude, the most favourable places turned out to be the United Kingdom, Tunisia, Peru, Columbia and Canada.  The least favourable are Albania, Yemen, Argentina, Egypt, Indonesia, and Trinidad, Peters said.

    Carrie Tait

  • Uh-Oh: Americans Beginning To Love Stocks Again (And Are Still Bizarrely Infatuated With Real Estate)

    A new Gallup poll confirms a few not very surprising things.

    One is that America is starting to believe in stocks again, which, given the S&P at 1200 is not altogether surprising. 22% think they’re the best long-term investment.

    Also, despite everything, Americans still hold a bizarre fixation with real estate, as a plurality, 29%, still consider it the best investment. (Though this is down from 50% at one point).

    And bonds — which most Americans have never seen in a bear market — continue to pull up the rear.

    Here’s the chart.

    chart

    Join the conversation about this story »

  • Nokia N8 Official, With 12MP Camera and 720p Video Recording [Nokia]

    Well now, this is awkward. Only yesterday Mobile-Review was calling the N8 an unpolished turd, and now Nokia’s gone and announced it to the world. As leaks foretold, it’s got a 12MP camera with Xenon flash, and runs Symbian^3. More »







  • “Kick-Ass” Star Aaron Johnson, 19, Expecting Baby With 43-Year-Old Sam Taylor-Wood

    By now we all know that we are living in the age of “The Cougar,” but we can’t help but wonder if some femme fetales aren’t taking their obsession with barely-legal penis a step too far. This is old news to celeb-watchers in the UK – but American Kick-Ass fans may not know that the movie’s 19-year-old star, Aaron Johnson, is expecting a child with his 43-year-old fiancée, director Sam Taylor-Wood.

    Their May-December romance — marked by an almost quarter century age difference — has been stirring up controversy across the pond for more than a year.

    “I’ve got a wonderful woman,” Aaron says. “She’s lovely and she’s a fantastic mother. I’m an old soul and she’s a young soul.”

    Aaron also insists he’s gonna be a Kick-Ass dad, despite his tender years.

    “It’s not scary. I’m already a stepdad to [Sam’s children Angelica, 13, and Jessie, 3] anyway. So the nerves have sort of gone.”


  • ADAC: Citroen Nemo fails the moose test

    ADAC: Citroen Nemo fails the moose test

  • Greek two year bonds keep routing, now at 14.23% yield according to Bloomberg. Ten year bonds are yielding 9.48%.

    Greek two-year bonds keep routing, now at 14.23% yield according to Bloomberg. Ten-year bonds are yielding 9.48%.

    Join the conversation about this story »

  • ResearchBlogCast #4 | Gene Expression

    It’s on reduced marine predator size and how it effects the distribution of biomass. Remember you can find it on iTunes under “ResearchBlogCast.” Next week I pick the paper….

  • Unsilence The Violence

    "Healing may not be so much about getting better, as about letting go of everything that isn't you – all of the expectations, all of the beliefs – and becoming who you are." ~ Rachel Naomi Remen

    Today I have a very special guest here (she's from Wisconsin – we could be neighbors…), discussing a topic that is all too often shoved under the covers.  Please help me welcome Maggie, who has created a wonderful resource for anyone out there suffering from the horrors of domestic violence, sexual abuse, and rape. 

    Maggie has a personal blog, Okay, Fine, Dammit, that she has had for some time.  About a year ago, after writing a local piece on domestic violence, Maggie felt the deeper need for creating a place where people could share their own personal stories – and to bring some peace and healing in the process.  From that, she created the Violence Unsilenced website.

    Violence Unsilenced (VU) is that place where people can share, in their own words – from their personal experiences from domestic violence, sexual abuse, and rape.  Please note: reading the VU site can be emotionally challenging and all the stories are very real. It's in these stories, though, that the violence, pain, and suffering can find some possibility of healing.  It's also a place where each of us, through the voices of those who have been there, can more deeply see how heinous these acts are.  And in that, perhaps we can all take a few more steps towards a healing and meaningful compassion for all our brothers and sisters in this world.  

    Please read along, as Maggie shares a more in depth look at who she is and what she has created.

    1.  What led to the creation of the Violence Unsilenced website?
    Back in 2008, I wrote an article profiling seven domestic violence survivors for a city magazine – and the experience changed me. Then one night, right around that same time my article ran, there was a domestic violence death in my community. In a fit of sadness, I vented on my personal blog (Okay, Fine, Dammit) – and the response was very intense. There were clearly a lot of people impacted by abuse. On top of that, I knew how cathartic the magazine experience had been for the survivors I profiled, and decided I wanted to keep that momentum going. I was well aware by then in the power of the blogging community, and I had a lot of confidence in my fellow bloggers. I knew we could do this together. In writing the article I learned that one in four women will be a victim of abuse in her lifetime. I thought about how small each of our blogging communities can be, and how well we think we know each other. The assumptions we make, the things we don't see. I thought, why don't we show the blogosphere just how prolific and encompassing abuse is?

    From the very start, VU was a collaborative process. My blog readers contributed their input, their stories, helped choose the name, and helped spread the word – so much so that on the very first day VU went live, there were several thousand visitors. That was over a year ago, and I believe it's still a very collective effort.  I’ve said this before, but I hope when people think of VU, they don't think of me – they think of the survivors and the supporters. It's a good day when I overhear someone talk about the "people over at VU," rather than the "person."

    Lance's Commentary:  Maggie, I find much hope in what you have created.  And for me, personally, I really believe it touches upon love and compassion…in the hearing of these stories. 

    I think about that figure, 1 in 4 women will be the victim of abuse.  And as I think of the women I know in my life, I really hope that it's way off (although reality tells me it's probably not).  Proof of that made it's appearance just yesterday – as I read the words of a blogger friend, Jill (who gave permission to link to this – thank you, Jill) who just happened to share her own story of sexual assault on her site.  Jill – know that I see you as a brave and courageous soul.

    2.  Maggie, I look at what you have created, and find such great hope in the message that you are creating.  As this has evolved over the last year, what has this whole project meant to you?
    Even though I knew there were a lot of people with these types of stories, I was still shocked by the sheer volume of responses. I’ve had a 4-6 month wait list from day one, and here it is a year later with no signs of slowing down. So many stories waiting to be told… it’s both terribly sad, and incredibly hopeful. I am bowled over every day, both by the strength of the survivors and the compassion of the readers. I feel blessed that I get to watch this humanity in action right here on my screen.

    Lance's Commentary:  Your community is such a supportive one, and what a gift that is to everyone. 

    3.   Tell us about these shared stories that you post  – and have they touched you personally?
    To be honest, it’s very difficult to be regularly exposed to so much trauma and suffering. I admit I have had to learn to limit my time with the project, and to take care of myself emotionally. But yes, every single one of them touches me personally, because these are not just auto-posted—there is a process I go through with each survivor to make sure he/she is absolutely certain he/she wants to be published, and is accordingly supported and aware of the risks. Afterward, I feel very bonded to each survivor. It’s a very personal and humbling experience, and it happens twice a week. Ultimately, despite the sad content of the posts, it’s always a positive thing for me. Speaking the truth out loud seems to make these survivors even stronger, and I get to bear witness to that miracle—which makes me a better person, I believe. I can’t even remember my life before VU.

    Lance's Commentary:  As sad as it can be to read these stories, I also find much hope in the sharing of them.  I very much get a sense that there is a healing in the sharing.  I also believe that I, myself, feel an even deeper level of compassion for the world around me after reading a story on VU.  So, as difficult as these stories are – the public sharing of them really is so good for everyone.

    4. Tell us one unexpected thing that has happened since creating Violence Unsilenced.
    I didn’t know that it would be so widely and unconditionally supported. I thought it might be a project inside my reading circle, but I didn’t expect the wide-reaching, consistent promotion that so many people (like you, for instance) feel compelled to do. I am so grateful to you, and to all of them. We are seriously doing this together.

    Lance's Commentary:  Maggie, know that I believe that you have created a wonderful gift in VU, and it's an honor to have you here.

    5. Outside of VU, what’s a typical day for Maggie look like?
    My daughters are 10 and five, so they go off to school now. I have a writing studio I rent to do my work, which is freelance writing—I write magazine articles for a living. My family and my personal time are the most important things to me, so I build my schedule around that. I do quite a lot of running around, but ultimately my favorite thing is to hold very still as often as I possibly can.

    Lance's Commentary:  I'm guessing that guy in the picture with you is the guy you call husband!  And it sounds like you have a wonderful family life – savor all the moments!  And in that stillness, much clarity….

    6. Anything new you have coming up?
    I’m speaking at BlogHer ’10 in New York City this year, on a panel about utilizing community for change. I really feel deeply that there’s a lot of power out there in the blogosphere to be harnessed for good, and I’m also very reverent of writing. I think something is lost in the chaos of the social ladder-climbing, popularity, and promotion in abundance in blogging today. It’s so different from the way it was when I first got started, and though there have been very positive changes, it can also be very discouraging. There’s a whole lot of little-known blogs out there where incredibly good writing is going down, and I guess I’d love for people to widen their viewfinders a bit.

    Lance's Commentary:  Your message is such an important one – so that's great about you getting out there and spreading the word.  You will touch many more lives, in amazing ways, and

    7.  Deep down, what makes you uniquely “you”? 
    This is probably a very tough question for anyone to answer about him/herself. I don’t know what makes me me, but I know what I value most in the people I care about—integrity and compassion. I may fall down a lot, but I try to emulate those traits as much as I can. I also love how different we all are, and personally I’m glad we’re not all trying to be like each other.

    Lance's Commentary:  I fall down a lot too.  And perhaps that is all part of the journey we are each on.  There will be moments when we are making great strides, and then others where we slip and fall.  And in those moments when we fall, the beautiful part is that we CAN get back up.  And that's not any more evident than in the VU website, and the people who share so openly their stories.  And in that unsilencing of the violence….they can get back up.  And perhaps we can get back up, too….touched by compassion and love.

    Closing Comments:  Maggie, it is an honor to have you here and sharing a bit more in-depth look at what Violence Unsilenced is all about and what is has come to mean to you.  I know you don't feel like this is just you out there creating this.  I still want you to know, though, that you shine your amazing and beautiful light into our world…and that does make it a better place.  You have given survivors of some really bad things a place to safely share and move further down that path of healing.  What a wonderful gift you are! 

    Thank you, once again, for being here.


    You can keep up with Maggie by visiting the Violence Unsilenced site or her personal blog, Okay, Fine, Dammit.  Keep up with her on Twitter, @maggiedammit .

    Note that I have also added a badge to my sidebar in support of what Maggie is doing.  If you are interested in joining in support of this, you can Take the Pledge right here.

  • Let’s Start The Clock Now For Greece Leaving The Euro

    watch clock stopwatch time

    And now top German leaders are practically begging to quit the damn euro.

    Reuters (via Alea):

    Greece might have to quit the euro zone for a time if the country failed to tighten its belt sufficiently to qualify for emergency aid, a budget expert with Germany’s junior coalition party said on Tuesday.

     A temporary exit from the single currency might benefit Athens if accompanied by a devaluation, the Free Democrats’ (FDP) Juergen Koppelin told Deutschlandfunk radio.

    This makes total sense except for the “temporary” part. You have to figure that once Greece is gone and goes back to Drachmas, we’re talking years and years before they’re back.

    But Koppelin’s motives go beyond merely not wanting to bail out Greece.

    Per the Eric Sprott piece we cited last night, there are fears of a run on Greek banks, and it may come to the point that savers in other marginal countries like Portugal and Spain also decide to pull their cash, and put it into other countries banks, or at least gold.

    And if that alone isn’t worrisome enough, read Felix Salmon’s piece with some anonymous plugged-in sources. He brings up several points, but the nut is this:

    Where would Greek debt trade in the event of a default? This is the scariest thing: my highly plugged-in companions both agreed that it wouldn’t just fall to 70 or even 60 cents on the dollar: they saw fair value closer to 40, and said that it would probably fall to 30 before people started buying.

    Needless to say, if Greek debt was trading at 30 cents on the dollar, it wouldn’t take long for the Portuguese domino to topple. After that, Spain — and then, it’s easy to imagine, Italy, Ireland, UK. And so the stakes are very high: it’s certainly cheaper to bail out Greece with virtually unlimited funds than it is to risk a fully-blown PIIGS default. But there does seem to be the hope or expectation that a line could get drawn in the Iberian sand, and that Italy and Ireland would not be allowed to default even if Portugal and/or Spain imploded.

    Good luck drawing that line in the sand. If there’s one thing we’ve learned, it’s that the best intentions of leaders are powerless to stop economic reality.

    Of course, if Greece won’t leave the euro, Germany just might.

    And don’t miss: The ugly math that shows why saving Greece is an impossible mission >

    Join the conversation about this story »

    See Also:

  • O2 HTC HD2 gets ROM update

    More good news for HTC HD2 owners, this time in UK.  O2 has released a ROM update for the smartphone which brings it up to version 1.72.206.3.

    As usual no change log is available, but expect the usual bug fixes and stability improvements.  As with most ROM updates all applications and user data will be deleted.

    Download the update at o2 here.

    Via Coolsmartphone.com


  • The new U.N. climate chief should have a strong understanding of women’s issues

    by Negash Teklu

    Photos: angela7dreams via FlickrWe have a critical opportunity right now to make sure
    the next U.N. climate chief will serve the needs of the global community of
    women, and we need to seize it.

    With Yvo de Boer stepping down as executive secretary
    of the U.N. Framework Convention on Climate Change, U.N. Secretary-General Ban
    Ki-moon will be appointing a replacement. 
    The role of the executive secretary is critical to achieving a fair,
    ambitious, and binding climate agreement, and a strong successor to de Boer is
    absolutely essential for Cancun and beyond.

    What will make for a strong UNFCCC executive secretary?
    The Climate Action Network has issued
    a letter
    articulating important qualifications, which include political
    leadership, experience with negotiations, commitment to civil society, and a
    thorough understanding of the challenges of development in the Global South.

    As leaders of organizations working at the forefront
    of environmental and women’s issues in the Global South, we’d like to add
    another qualification to that list: an understanding of the full range of
    gender issues, including access to reproductive health and family planning.

    Women make up half of the world’s population and 70
    percent of the world’s poor, produce up to 80 percent of agricultural products
    in places like sub-Saharan Africa, and stand to face the brunt of climate
    change.

    Three female candidates are rumored to be under consideration:  Maria Fernanda
    Espinoza
    from Ecuador, Elizabeth
    Thompson
    from Barbados, and Christiana
    Figueres
    from Costa Rica. These women occupy distinct and noteworthy
    positions within the larger environmental and climate diplomatic circles.  Espinoza has held the post of minister for foreign affairs, and
    is the current Ecuadorian representative to the U.N.  Thompson has a
    well-known reputation for excellence in diplomacy, having led the Barbados
    governmental delegation to Kyoto.  Figueres
    is a formidable negotiator on climate change and an expert on carbon
    markets.

    Certainly we all know from the U.S. experience with
    Sarah Palin that being a woman does not a feminist make. On the other hand,
    ensuring gender balance, tracking the number of female elected officials, and actively
    engaging women at all levels of policy making are all standard and
    well-accepted means of measuring an institution’s ability to bring a balanced perspective
    to its deliberations. Do we wish we lived in world free of such measures and
    quotas? Perhaps, but the reality is that marginalized perspectives tend to be,
    well, just that-marginalized-so our advocacy on this front is not yet finished
    business.

    With the UNFCCC soon to enter its third decade, it is long overdue for
    Ban Ki-moon to live up to his own challenge to world governments to give a “greater say to
    women in addressing the climate challenge
    .”  In selecting a leader who will be capable of
    crafting an effective and fair international agreement, the secretary-general
    must seek a candidate with a track record demonstrating a nuanced understanding
    of the gendered aspects of climate change challenges and solutions.  It is time that the U.N. pay more than lip
    service to the notion that women
    are the agents of change
    .

    ——————-

    Suzanne Ehlers
    is the interim president of Population
    Action International
    .

    Negash Teklu is executive
    director of Ethiopia’s Consortium
    for Integration of Population, Health, and Environment
    .

    Rosemarie
    Muganda-Onyando is the director of the Centre for the Study of
    Adolescence in Kenya
    .

    Wasim Zaman is the executive director of International Council on Management of
    Population Programme
    , Selangor, Malaysia.

    Related Links:

    Bolivia’s Morales slams capitalists for causing global warming

    U.N. climate talks in Bonn wrap up after fresh fights

    U.N. climate talks in Bonn are off to a rocky start