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  • Nokia Siemens invites Intel into the guts of the mobile network

    Intel has been angling to get its processors into the mobile network for years. Now thanks to partnership with Nokia Siemens Networks it’s finally getting its chance.

    At CTIA Wireless Thursday, NSN and Intel said they have begun jointly building a mobile edge computing architecture that would put applications servers at every cell site. The partnership is an extension of NSN’s Liquid Applications strategy, which it unveiled at Mobile World Congress with IBM.

    The idea is to transform the radio access network from a mere delivery network to one that hosts content and services. Such an architecture would not only put video and content closer to mobile subscribers, but it would make such Liquid Apps much more network-aware apps. Here’s how I described when NSN first partnered with IBM:

    Mobile applications and radio infrastructure have always been walled off from one another – applications just barrel ahead onto their radio on-ramps oblivious to the highway traffic conditions ahead. What NSN proposes to do with Liquid Apps is to make those disparate portions of the network work in unison.

    For example, mobile video today can be a precarious proposition. As video viewers rack up in a particular cell, the network will keep trying to cram those video streams into the same limited airwaves, The result is a backed-up network with no one getting a quality video stream – or any stream at all. By processing video at the cell site, though, the base station could make decisions how to deliver those individual video feeds based on the prevailing network conditions.

    If the cell is congested, then the base station downgrades the video quality of every stream, ensuring everyone sees a decent-quality picture. And as users gradually vacate the cell, the base station could gradually boost video quality for those that remain.

    At the heart of Liquid Apps is an application server utilizing Intel’s Crystal Forest platform for network infrastructure and a boatload of Xeon silicon. Those servers would perform the localized processing and content storage as well as maintain a constant collaborative link with the radio base station.

    Liquid Radio NSN

    This is some pretty cool technology, but there’s a scary aspect to it, too. Technically the Liquid Apps architecture could be used to optimize all content traversing the network by acting as a traffic cop that dictates the flow of different types of data before they enter the airwaves. But Intel and NSN are also proposing that carriers sell Liquid Apps as a service to developers and content providers.

    In such a scenario, a YouTube or a Netflix could pay to have their content not just hosted at then cell site but also prioritized as it leaves the tower. It’s a pay to play model that doesn’t exactly sit well with net neutrality principles — content providers that choose not to participate might see their customers’ experience suffer.

    U.S. carriers like Verizon and AT&T are already talking up two-sided revenue models in which content providers subsidize their customers’ data usage on the mobile internet. Liquid Apps could become another tool in that pay-to-play arsenal.

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  • How To Get Better at Spotting Opportunities

    To be a successful entrepreneur – or really, a successful anything – you need to be able to recognize an opportunity when you see one. Specifically, you need to be able to identify a problem or gap, and come up with an innovative solution. (Of course you also need to be able to execute that solution, but without spotting the opportunity in the first place, you aren’t going anywhere.)

    So how, exactly, does one become good at spotting opportunities?

    It’s probably innate — you’re either good at that sort of thing or you’re not, you say.

    Wrong. Try again.

    Well, then it’s probably a matter of practice — of getting experience.

    Probably not. (Hang on and I’ll explain why.)

    The suspense is no doubt killing you, so I’ll go ahead and tell you the secret to recognizing opportunities: promotion focus.

    As I’ve written about with Tory Higgins in HBR and in our new book, Focus, when you see your entrepreneurial venture (or your career, or your goals in general) as being about the potential for advancement, achievement and rewards, you have a promotion focus. You are promotion-focused when you think about what you might gain if you are successful — how you might end up better off.

    Alternatively, if you approach your venture focused on not losing everything you’ve worked so hard for, on avoiding danger and keeping things running smoothly, you have a prevention focus. Prevention focus is good for many things — careful planning, accuracy, reliability, and thoroughness, just to name a few. But it doesn’t lead to creativity, open-mindedness, and the confidence to take chances the way promotion focus does. And as new research by Andranik Tumasjan and Reiner Braun from Germany’s TUM School of Management shows, that’s the combination you need to be an opportunity-spotter.

    Tumasjan and Braun asked 254 U.K. entrepreneurs from a variety of industries to take an assessment to determine their dominant focus, and to then demonstrate their opportunity-recognition skills. They were provided with comments from real focus groups that dealt with five kinds of problems associated with footwear (durability, comfort, performance, style, and price.) After looking them over, the entrepreneurs were told to make a list of the underlying problems revealed by the comments, and to provide solutions for those problems.

    The results painted a very clear picture: Promotion-focused entrepreneurs were better able to detect opportunities — i.e., they generated more solutions to identified problems. In addition, those solutions were judged by independent raters to be more innovative than prevention-focused solutions.

    That’s not all. Being promotion-focused even compensated for low levels of creative and entrepreneurial confidence, which are usually considered to be essential ingredients for success. Equipped with the right focus, even low-confidence entrepreneurs were among the top performers.

    If you don’t have enough of it at the moment, there are many research-based techniques you can use to strengthen your promotion focus. Here are a few that work well:

    • Write down several goals you have for your venture (or for your career). For each goal, make a list of ways in which you will gain something if you are successful. Read through these goals and potential gains on a daily basis, or before undertaking any important task.
    • Picture yourself five or ten years down the road as you would ideally like to be. What are your aspirations? Your dreams? What do you hope to accomplish? Thinking about your ideal future self will put you in a promotion focus.
    • Reflect on your past. Think about a recent big win or accomplishment — a time when you felt really pumped up about what you were able to achieve. A time when you felt on top of the world. Thinking about our past gains puts us in a promotion focus.

    The more often you use any or all of these techniques, the more automatic the shift to promotion focus will become.

  • Pyle to EPA, Interior: More Time Needed for Public Comment

    WASHINGTON D.C. — IER President Thomas Pyle sent two letters today to Obama administration officials requesting more time for public comment on new regulations that potentially threaten the development of America’s energy resources, raise consumer costs and run afoul of …

  • The Yahoo Acquisition Train Keeps Rolling With PlayerScale

    While we don’t expect it to attract as much attention as the Tumblr acquisition, Yahoo announced that it has acquired gaming platform PlayerScale. That’s not to say it isn’t a big one.

    “The team has built an incredible gaming platform that is used by over 150 million players worldwide,” a Yahoo spokesperson tells WebProNews. “We intend to continue to support and grow PlayerScale’s technology, and we look forward to building great new experiences on Yahoo! using the PlayerScale platform.”

    PlayerScale’s Jesper Jensen had the following to say to customers, partners and friends (on its homepage):

    Today is a great day — both in our journey with PlayerScale and for users of our Player.IO product. We are happy to announce the next big step toward our goal of building the best possible gaming infrastructure platform: we have been acquired by Yahoo!. And don’t worry, we’re not going anywhere. Our platform will continue to support the same great games that you love playing today … and in fact, it will only get better from here!

    Our goal has always been to help developers build the best possible games, without having to worry about building and scaling the infrastructure required to operate today’s biggest successes. In working with the folks at Yahoo!, it has become clear that we share this passion.

    We have spent the past four years growing a three-person startup into a product that powers games played by over 150 million people worldwide and we are adding over 400,000 new users every day. In the last four months alone, we have increased our daily user growth rate by almost sixty percent. With Yahoo!’s backing, we can crank out awesome products and improvements to our platform faster than ever before. We will continue to support our existing product and deliver new services to help you grow and manage your success in cross-platform gaming — whether it’s casual, social or mobile.

    Today marks a milestone for PlayerScale and I want to sincerely thank the team, our developers and millions of users for the adventure so far and can promise there will be more to come.

    This would be, I believe, the twelfth acquisition (or announcement) for Yahoo since October. Terms of the deal were not disclosed.

    So, is Yahoo cool yet?

  • Future-proofing business continuity and disaster recovery

    While the goals of your business continuity (BC) and disaster recovery (DC) plans haven’t changed much, the tools available to support them have. On-premise storage has become cheaper and more manageable, while cloud-based solutions are faster, more secure and more reliable than ever before. From tape to disk to cloud to the software and appliances that ties them together, the BC/DR landscape is evolving at an unprecedented pace. Understanding the new value propositions of each type of tool will help businesses revamp their BC/DR infrastructure to build a more responsive, cost-effective, future-proof system and avoid costly surprises.

    In this webinar, our panel will address these questions:

    • What tools and technologies are leading-edge businesses using for BC/DR, and how are they using them?
    • What are the strengths and weaknesses of tape, disk, cloud and other BC/DR technologies?
    • What does the future look like for BC/DR technologies?
    • What balance of on-site and cloud-based technologies is appropriate for a modern, cost-effective BC/DR strategy?

    Our speakers include:

    Register here to join GigaOM Research and our sponsor Axcient for “Future-proofing business continuity and disaster recovery,” a free analyst webinar on June 6, 2013, at 10:00 a.m. PT.

        

  • Windows Phone and BlackBerry 10 still don’t offer apps people want

    Windows Phone BlackBerry 10 Apps
    If you purchase a Windows Phone or BlackBerry 10 smartphone, don’t expect to download the same applications your friends are using on their iPhones and Android devices. A new report from research firm Canalys has found that a majority of the top Android and iOS applications still aren’t available on Windows Phone or BlackBerry 10. When combined, the two operating systems were found to only support 34% of the top 50 free and top 50 paid applications in the App Store and Google Play in the United States.

    Continue reading…

  • NYC Ghetto Tours Stopped Due to Public Backlash

    Earlier this month, the New York Post published a story on a New York City tour company called Real Bronx Tours. One of the tours offered by the company took tourists on a trip through the poorer areas of the city, showing them housing projects, food banks, and dangerous parks. The so-called ghetto tours have now provoked a backlash from Bronx residents.

    Once word of the tour reached Bronx Borough President Ruben Diaz Jr., he and New York City Council member Melissa Mark-Viverito sent the tour company a letter, stating that they are “sickened” by the borough’s “despicable” portrayal in the tours. The letter urged Real Bronx Tours to modify the way the tour is marketed and presented. From the letter:

    We are more than happy to welcome tours to our community that celebrate the rich culture and history of our neighborhoods, treat Bronx residents with dignity and encourage visits to our wonderful landmarks and beautiful parks. However, using the Bronx to sell a so-called “ghetto” experience to tourists is completely unacceptable and the highest insult to the communities we represent.

    Now, Real Bronx Tours has caved to public pressure, and will no longer offer the ghetto tours. The company’s website has now disappeared, though the company has not issued a statement.

    “I am happy to hear that Real Bronx Tours has decided to end its inaccurate and disrespectful tours of our beautiful borough,” said Diaz. “The Bronx has come a long way in the past few years, and we will not accept such a despicable and irresponsible depiction of our borough.”

    (Image courtesy Gryffindor/Wikimedia Commons)

  • Need For Speed: Rivals Is EA’s Next-Gen Racing Game

    Both Sony and Microsoft will be launching their next-gen consoles with a racing game. EA will be joining them with its own racing franchise later this year.

    EA announced today that it’s new studio – Ghost Games – is knee-deep in development on the next Need for Speed title. The game – titled Need for Speed: Rivals – will be the first next-gen entry for the series. The game is also coming to current gen systems and the PC. Like other games from EA this year, there was no Wii U version announced.

    The above trailer indicates that the footage is all in-game. It’s also revealed that Criterion is helping out with development. With their racing game expertise, Rivals may just be the prettiest, and best playing, racing game this year.

    Need for Speed: Rivals will launch on November 19 for all current-gen consoles and PC. It will presumably be a launch title for the PS4 and Xbox One.

  • Jennifer Aniston: Stripper Movie Required 3 Bras

    Jennifer Aniston sat down a while back to talk about her upcoming movie, “We’re The Millers”, and in the interview she revealed that she doesn’t do full nudity in the movie despite some stripper scenes.

    Jenn said she wore three bras at the same time to cover herself on set, due to her unruly nipples. In the film, she plays a woman enlisted to help a friend smuggle weed over the Mexican border; the movie also stars “Saturday Night Live” alum Jason Sudeikis, Ed Helms, and Emma Roberts.

    Last year, it was rumored that Jennifer would be playing a prostitute in the movie; her rep shot that down, saying, “Jennifer is not playing a prostitute in We’re the Millers, she is playing a stripper — big difference.”

    “We’re The Millers” opens August 9th.

  • Morgan Freeman Falls Asleep During Live TV Interview

    Considering the fact that Morgan Freeman’s voice is one of the most soothing sounds that the human ear could ever perceive, it’s not too shocking that he may have put himself to sleep with his internal monologue on live TV.

    During an interview with Seattle’s FOX affiliate Q13 news, the 75-year-old actor seemed to have trouble staying awake, as he appeared to doze off a few times in the span of a few minutes.

    Freeman and Michael Caine, who had no problem picking up the slack, were there to promote their new film Now You See Me, set to release at the end of May. The crime thriller follows a group of illusionists who use their skills to pull off bank heists during their performances. The film also stars Isla Fisher, Mark Ruffalo, Jesse Eisenberg, and Woody Harrelson.

    Check out snoozin’ Morgan below:

  • Data Center Jobs: McKinstry Seeking Program Managers

    At the Data Center Jobs Board, we have two new job listings from McKinstry, which is seeking an Electrical Program Manager and a Mechanical Program Manager in Des Moines, Iowa.

    The Electrical Program Manager is responsible for the successful management and completion of projects, managing and completing the maintenance activities on the basic electrical systems to ensure system uptime and that the services are in compliance with best practices with the client and McKinstry standards/expectations, the successful and timely completion of assigned projects by utilizing appropriate resources effectively and balancing the customer requirements with the agreed upon strategies of the company, the definition of customer project requirements, and determining and facilitating the usages of resources, internal and external, required for the successful completion of the project. To view full details and apply, see job listing details.

    The Mechanical Program Manager is responsible for the successful management and completion of projects, managing and completing the maintenance activities on the basic mechanical systems to ensure system uptime, and that the services are in compliance with best practices with the client and McKinstry standards/expectations, the successful and timely completion of assigned projects by utilizing appropriate resources effectively and balancing the customer requirements with the agreed upon strategies of the company, regulating Critical Environment facility management services to prevent business impact and equipment downtime, and establishing objectives and processes required to maintain critical infrastructure at optimum performance. To view full details and apply, see job listing details.

    Are you hiring for your data center? You can list your company’s job openings on the Data Center Jobs Board, and also track new openings via our jobs RSS feed.

  • Google Glass: Not just for nerds

    Google Glass Adoption
    Google Glass is a big deal. It marks the beginning of the next paradigm in consumer electronics, where intelligent wearable gadgets will take the place of common accessories rather than compliment them. BGR has argued that Glass itself likely won’t sell terribly well because it is so unnatural, but it will instead evolve over time and serve as a jumping off point for wearable devices from Google and others that might appeal to a wider audience. Not everyone agrees, however, and Google’s Developer Advocate Tim Bray recently shared his thoughts on Google Glass publicly for the first time.

    Continue reading…

  • Twitter unveils new multi-screen deals with “Twitter Amplify”

    Twitter is teaming up with everyone from Bloomberg Television to Major League Baseball as the social media site expands its range of “multi-screen” partnerships. Other new partners, announced Thursday morning at an advertising event in New York City, include Conde Nast, New York magazine and Discovery.

    Twitter is framing the partnerships as a way for marketers to reinforce brand messages by reaching consumers on television and small screens at the same time. For consumers, this is likely to mean seeing more video content within their Twitter feeds and more hashtags on the shows they watch. In its news release, Twitter framed it this way:

    We think these types of two-screen sponsorships are a win-win-win. Users receive spectacular, timely content that rounds out their TV experience or reminds them to tune in. Powered by Promoted Tweets, broadcasters reach new audiences and open up new business lines. Brand advertisers get, for the first time, an integrated cross-platform tool for reaching the social conversation wherever it happens.

    The company is branding the deals as “Twitter Amplify” or, as one executive said on stage, simply “Twitter Amp.” Other partners, which join earlier participants like ESPN and the NFL, include A&E, Time Inc and Warner Music.

    The announcement is part of Twitter’s effort to strut its stuff before Madison Avenue and to show that it is now part of “the New York City community.” The company is engaged in a major push to raise revenue as it prepares for an IPO widely expected to take place later this year.

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  • Summit Partners Announces Three Promotions

    Summit Partners said on Thursday that it has promoted Adam Britt, Robert Hassell and Jack Le Roy to principals on the firm’s credit team. Prior to all three joining Summit’s Boston office in 2010, Britt, Hassell and Le Roy worked at Guggenheim Investment Management as part of the leveraged finance group. Summit Partners has offices in Boston, Menlo Park, London and Mumbai.

    PRESS RELEASE

    BOSTON, MA (May 23, 2013)—Summit Partners, an investor in growing companies, today announced the promotions of Adam Britt, Robert Hassell and Jack Le Roy to Principals on the firm’s Credit Team. All three individuals joined Summit’s Boston office in 2010.
    “Adam, Rob and Jack have each contributed significantly to Summit Partners’ success, and we are proud to recognize their efforts,” said Tom Roberts, a Managing Director of the firm. “Their hard work and significant contributions will continue to benefit our investors and portfolio companies in 2013 and beyond.”
    Prior to joining Summit Partners, Mr. Britt worked for Guggenheim Investment Management as a member of the leveraged finance group. He holds a BBA in finance from The College of William & Mary and a JD from Villanova University School of Law.
    Mr. Hassell previously worked for Guggenheim Investment Management as a member of the leveraged finance group in the United States and Ireland, and before that at Bear, Stearns & Co. He holds a BA in political science from Williams College, as well as the designation of Chartered Financial Analyst.
    Most recently, Mr. Le Roy worked for Guggenheim Investment Management as a member of the firm’s leveraged finance group in the United States. He holds a BBA in finance from The University of Texas.
    About Summit Partners
    Summit Partners (www.summitpartners.com) is a growth equity firm that invests in growing companies across North America, Europe and Asia. Founded in 1984, Summit has raised nearly $15 billion in capital and provides equity and credit for growth, recapitalizations, and management buyouts. Summit has invested in more than 365 companies globally in technology, healthcare and other growth industries. These companies have completed 130 public offerings, and more than 135 have been acquired through strategic mergers and sales. Summit Partners has offices in Boston, Menlo Park, London and Mumbai.

    The post Summit Partners Announces Three Promotions appeared first on peHUB.

  • Fake Abercrombie Ads Fire Back At CEO

    A woman from Tucson has a lot to say about the way Abercrombie & Fitch CEO Mike Jeffries runs his company, and she’s getting it across with several photos meant to look like ads.

    Jeffries ruffled a lot of feathers a few years back when he spoke about the reasons his company doesn’t offer XL sizes and above to women. The quote was repeated in a new book recently, which re-stoked the fire.

    “In every school there are the cool and popular kids, and then there are the not-so-cool kids. Candidly, we go after the cool kids. We go after the attractive all-American kid with a great attitude and a lot of friends. A lot of people don’t belong [in our clothes], and they can’t belong. Are we exclusionary? Absolutely….”That’s why we hire good-looking people in our stores. Because good-looking people attract other good-looking people, and we want to market to cool, good-looking people. We don’t market to anyone other than that,” Jeffries told Salon in 2006.

    Jeffries’ comments had a huge effect all over the country, with one filmmaker even making it his mission recently to buy up every piece of A&F clothing he could find at Goodwill stores and donate them to the homeless.

    Now, a Tucson blogger named Jes Baker is making it clear that she’s going to take his negativity and turn it into an opportunity to change social awareness.

    In an open letter to Jeffries, Baker writes:

    Hey Mike,
    I know you’ve been flooded with mail regarding your comments on sizeism, but I wanted to take a second to write you about a project I’ve been working on.
    As a preface: Your opinion isn’t shocking; millions share the same sentiment. You’ve used your wealth and public platform to echo what many already say. However, it’s important you know that regardless of the numbers on your tax forms, your comments don’t stop anyone from being who they are; the world is progressing in inclusive ways whether you deem it cool or not. The only thing you’ve done through your comments (about thin being beautiful and only offering XL and XXL in your stores for men) is reinforce the unoriginal concept that fat women are social failures, valueless, and undesirable. Your apology doesn’t change this.
    Well, actually, that’s not all you have done. You have also created an incredible opportunity for social change.
    Never in our culture do we see sexy photo shoots that pair short, fat, unconventional models with not short, not fat, professional models. To put it in your words: “unpopular kids” with “cool kids”. It’s socially acceptable for same to be paired with same, but never are contrasting bodies positively mixed in the world of advertisement. The juxtaposition of uncommonly paired bodies is visually jarring, and, even though I wish it didn’t, it causes viewers to feel uncomfortable. This is largely attributed to companies like yours that perpetuate the thought that fat women are not beautiful. This is inaccurate, but if someone were to look through your infamous catalog, they wouldn’t believe me.
    I’ve enclosed some images for your consideration. Please let me know what you think.
    A note: I didn’t take these pictures to show that the male model found me attractive, or that the photographer found me photogenic, or to prove that you’re an ostentatious dick. Rather, I was inspired by the opportunity to show that I am secure in my skin and to flaunt this by using the controversial platform that you created. I challenge the separation of attractive and fat, and I assert that they are compatible regardless of what you believe. Not only do I know that I’m sexy, but I also have the confidence to pose nude in ways you don’t dare. You are more than welcome to prove me wrong by posing shirtless with a hot fat chick; it would thrill me to see such a shoot.
    I’m sure you didn’t intend for this to be the outcome, but in many ways you’re kind of brilliant. Not only are you a marketing genius (brand exclusivity really is a profitable move) but you also accidentally created an opportunity to challenge our current social construct. My hope is that the combination of these contrasting bodies will someday be as ubiquitous as the socially accepted ideal.
    Ever so sincerely,
    Jes
    P.S. If you would like to offer me a “substantial amount” to stop wearing your brand so my association won’t “cause significant damage to your image”, don’t hesitate to email me. I respect you as a business man, and my agent and I would be happy to contribute in furthering your established success.
    P.P.S. You should know your Large t-shirt comfortably fits a size 22
    . You might want to work on that.

    Baker said recently that she’s not interested in Jeffries’ reaction; she didn’t do this for him, after all.

    “I don’t really care what Abercrombie really truly thinks about this, to be honest with you. I don’t have the energy to dislike Mike Jeffries,” she said. “There’s so much negativity in the world, it doesn’t need to be perpetuated.”

    You can check out more photos on Baker’s blog, The Militant Baker.

    Images: Liora K Photography

    fake abercrombie ads

  • Don’t Blame Apple for America’s Broken Tax Code

    On Tuesday, Apple CEO Tim Cook testified in front of the Congressional Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations as a part of their look into the company’s corporate tax practices — according to Sen. Carl Levin, the chairman of the committee, “Apple successfully sought the holy grail of tax avoidance. It has created offshore entities holding tens of billions of dollars while claiming to be tax resident nowhere.” I asked Mihir A. Desai, a professor and dean at Harvard Business School, a professor at Harvard Law School, and the author of a 2012 HBR article on taxing businesses, a few questions about how this investigation fits into a larger debate about the corporate tax code. Our edited conversation is below.

    How big of a deal is the investigation into Apple’s tax practices?

    These days, anything involving Apple is a big deal. But this particular investigation also touches upon a number of current issues. With a backdrop of economic anxiety and fiscal strain, claims that corporations are not paying their fair share can appeal to a wide audience. When those claims are made against what is likely the most admired corporation in the world, that makes for a powerful cocktail. And when the CEO of that company actually steps up to address those claims and offers a powerful defense, this really is a trifecta for a media sensation.

    What is of more lasting significance is the possibility that this spectacle of the CEO of the world’s most admired corporation being hauled up to Capital Hill will lead to a) significant reform of the tax system and b) corporate leaders becoming more vocal about policies and not remaining in the shadows at these junctures.

    Cook testified that the company paid “all the taxes we owe — every single dollar.” And yet legal scholar J. Richard Harvey, in earlier testimony, said that the company managed to avoid about $7.7 billion in taxes. Who is right?

    My sense is that a consensus emerged from the hearings that Apple was not doing anything illegal. Claims of avoidance are tricky. When someone takes their mortgage interest deduction, they have avoided paying taxes. We don’t quarrel with that and legitimate means of reducing taxes are quite acceptable.

    Claims of tax evasion are much more significant as they cross the line, and it appears that a consensus emerged that this was not the case with Apple. From what I can surmise, the vast majority of the taxes paid by Apple are to the U.S. government on the income earned in the U.S. and those payments approximate a significant tax rate. At the same time, they are earning more and more profits overseas and they have ensured that they pay a very low rate, and possibly a zero rate, on that foreign income.

    So the critical question is what is the appropriate policy stance to Apple paying a very low rate on foreign profits? That question hinges on three separable issues: a) should the U.S. tax the worldwide income of its corporations wherever that income is earned (a worldwide system) or should they restrict their taxing authority to income earned within their borders (a territorial system)? b) are the profits that are being reported as being foreign truly foreign or do they actually represent profits that should have been reported as U.S. profits? and c) If the mechanisms by which the foreign tax rate has been lowered involved depriving foreign governments of their tax revenues, should the U.S. care?

    The first question is a design issue — the U.S. is now nearly alone in having a worldwide system and we do it in a particularly poor way as we only ask corporations to pay that tax when they repatriate those profits. Unsurprisingly, American corporations have kept more than a trillion dollars overseas in cash in order to avoid paying that repatriation tax. This is the worst of all worlds as we have a burdensome system on American corporations that distorts their allocation of capital and it raises very little revenue because of the way it is designed. For several reasons, it makes sense to switch to a territorial system, which most comparable countries have figured out. Most importantly, territorial systems ensure that corporations from around the world are competing on the basis of their underlying performance attributes rather than their tax attributes.

    In addition, there is significant scope today for corporations to change their national identity via expatriations and corporate mergers, so if the U.S. is alone in using a worldwide system, our corporations have an incentive to leave. Finally, the typical logic for why taxing foreign income through a worldwide system is appropriate — that investment abroad represents lost investment at home — doesn’t appear to have much empirical traction. So my sense is that if we understand the virtues of a territorial system, we don’t necessarily really care what tax rate they face in foreign jurisdictions. And given that we permit deferral of tax until repatriation in the current worldwide system, we similarly don’t necessarily care about that low rate paid by them on foreign profits.

    The second and third questions raise enforcement and compliance issues — for the second question, things are clear. If corporations are stripping profits out of the U.S. in order to attribute them to low-tax jurisdictions, we should stop that and ensure that profits are not being reallocated away for the U.S. in inappropriate ways. Such activity undercuts the credibility of the tax system and violates many of our norms.

    The third question is tricky. If firms are avoiding paying taxes to foreign jurisdictions by stripping profits from, for example, Germany to Ireland, should we care? I’m not sure why we would. I think those governments can watch out for themselves.

    While the focus has been on Apple, how common is the type of overseas tax maneuvering? And how big of a problem is it, both for U.S. business and the lives of ordinary Americans?

    I think the perverse incentives of the current system, and the behaviors they give rise to, are a significant problem for Americans. These incentives reflect two features.

    First, the worldwide system with a repatriation tax alters the capital allocation process for our firms and locks capital out of the U.S. which hurts all of us. Second, the fact that the U.S. rate is now the highest rate amongst OECD countries means that investment in the U.S. is less attractive and that the incentives to engage in aggressive tax planning are high. Indeed, those tax planning incentives can then make it more attractive real activity abroad.

    So, yes, it is a significant problem — not so much because some tax revenue may be lost because of what looks like maneuvering but because the entire system is enormously complex and gives rise to significant distortions to investment (away from the U.S.) and the allocation of corporate talent and efforts (away from productive uses and toward rent-seeking). And, nothing could be more important to our economy than the efficient allocation of financial, real and human capital.

    Cook squarely placed the blame on a U.S. corporate tax code that “has not kept up with the digital age.” What does he mean when he says “digital,” and what would a digitally-appropriate tax code look like?

    I think he likely meant three things. First, today’s economy is characterized by incredible mobility. In an age of digitization, transport costs are trivial and activity can be relocated anywhere quickly. Consider the ratio of transport costs to product value for a steel bar, an automobile, a semiconductor chip and a piece of software. As digital goods become dominant, that ratio approaches zero and locational decisions are highly sensitive to various costs. In particular, tax rates and systems that are out of step with the rest of the world become increasingly problematic.

    Second, the rise of intangible assets, like patents and widgets, means that transfer pricing issues become central, and so high tax rates become more untenable as they increase the incentives to be aggressive.

    And finally, the importance of intangible assets means that we should be particularly focused on the incentives to undertake R&D in the U.S. Our regime of temporary and uncertain R&D tax benefits has been very disappointing and R&D incentives in a global world are more likely governed by the treatment of cost sharing arrangements than a temporary, expiring R&D tax credit. Countries have become very aggressive in trying to attract R&D activity through the use of patent boxes and otherwise and we are not in the same ballpark on these issues.

    In general, what would an ideal corporate tax code look like that would make the U.S. more competitive and capture more revenue?

    For starters, let me say that it’s hard to be a fan of a corporate tax. It’s a popular tax because of the misconception of who pays it. The usual political rhetoric of corporations paying their fair share is powerful but vacuous. The corporate tax is paid by either shareholders, workers, or consumers as all taxes are borne by people, not legal entities. And, in a world of highly mobile capital and products, the least mobile factor — labor — is the factor that will bear the corporate tax.

    And it is hard to rationalize a tax borne by labor implemented through corporations for either distributional or efficiency reasons. So the irony is that people using the corporate tax to beat up on corporations and extract something from them are likely hurting the people who they think they’re helping. Ultimately, we need to be thinking about consumption taxes much more seriously.

    Given the nature of Washington today, though, we should probably be more modest and consider how to modify the corporate tax rather than abandon it. In my piece in the HBR last year, I argued that a meaningful reform would need to be revenue neutral and could be if a) we cut the rate substantially down to below 20%, b) we moved to a territorial system that exempted foreign income, c) we strengthened enforcement of transfer pricing, d) we raised revenue by placing a small tax on the exploding set of pass-through entities that business income is increasingly organized into, and e) ensured that taxes were levied on the profits that were reported to capital markets according to GAAP, rather than the distinctive reported profits to tax authorities.

    I think I’ve explained a, b and c above, but d and e are really important as well.

    A majority of business income is now organized through pass-through entities which means that capital is being diverted from our public corporations organized as C-Corps and toward business that shoehorn their way into pass-through entities. See, for example, the ongoing REIT-ization and MLP-ization of firms and parts of our economy. A small tax on passthrough entities would level the playing field and smaller tax rates on a broader base of business income are always a good thing.

    FInally, the latitude afforded corporations in reporting profits distinctively to capital markets and tax authorities undercuts the credibility of the tax system and sows confusion and scope for opportunism for our managers. Both tax authorities and shareholders are interested in pretax profits and we should use our most advanced understanding of profitability for taxes and reporting to shareholders. This can raise revenue and, as I’ve argued with co-authors here, here, and here, be good for shareholders too.

    Is this news about Apple a turning point, or are we likely to continue doing business with a corporate tax code that hasn’t been updated since 1986?

    Fortunately, I’m not a political prognosticator. But there are many positive signs. Legislators on both sides of the aisle have advanced meaningful reform ideas. Both Rep. Charlie Rangel and Rep. Dave Camp have floated interesting ideas as there is agreement that the current system is broken. And there is interest worldwide on these issues given the power of sensational show trials such as Apple’s yesterday or Google and Starbucks in the UK.

    I just hope we don’t react to the sensationalism of these issues in an immoderate and wrong-headed way but rather in a way that addresses root causes. Then, again, one can never underestimate inertial tendencies in Washington today (see Columbia Law School fellow Andrew Stern’s comments at a panel beginning at 40:30).

  • HTC finally explains lack of microSD slots in US/UK versions of HTC One, no love for Big Red

    HTC-One_Verizon-MicroSD

    One of the best phones on the market right now, the HTC One, has done a pretty decent job in terms of sales, but possibly not as well as it could have done. Many questions remain about why the device isn’t coming to Verizon, and why there aren’t any microSD card slots in the US and UK models. HTC’s Senior Global Online Communications Manager, Jeff Gordon, finally gave us an answer to our questions.

    MicroSD Drama— Many consumers were confused at why Asia’s version of the HTC One included microSD slots and the US and UK models did not. Apparently, this decision came down to a factor of space. The Chinese version of the HTC One is designed specifically for the smaller Chinese radio bands, and therefore there was additional space in the device to add microSD slots. This was seemingly the case with the Japanese version as well. This space was not available in the global version, and therefore, the lack of microSD card slots.

    Why No Love for Big Red? — Gordon didn’t really give a full answer here as to why the HTC One isn’t offered on America’s most popular carrier. He said that “it’s always a great thing to have our phones on as many operators as possible, but we’ve got nothing to announce in terms of Verizon.”

    While this doesn’t mean the device will never come to Verizon, it certainly does put a dark cloud over rumors that the HTC One would be coming to Big Red. There are some rumors saying that perhaps Verizon wanted its own special version of the One but HTC wasn’t willing to comply. Only time will tell.

    Source: TechRadar

    Come comment on this article: HTC finally explains lack of microSD slots in US/UK versions of HTC One, no love for Big Red

  • Mayor Terry Buckle Rams Car Into Store

    According to a report from the East Anglian Daily Times, Bury St Edmunds Mayor Terry Buckle drove his car through the front of a Tesco Express on Tuesday. The 73-year-old Buckle had only been mayor of the town for five days when the incident occurred. Bury St Edmunds is a small town located in Suffolk, England.

    Buckle reportedly drove the care from a parking spot into the front door of a Tesco Express shop. Buckle was uninjured, but was taken to a nearby hospital as a precaution, and had X-rays taken of his neck. Though sore from the accident, he was then taken home to rest. No other serious injuries were reported.

    Despite the nature of the accident, the damage caused was reportedly minimal. The side mirrors on Buckle’s car were damaged, and the doors and security equipment near the entrance to the Tesco were also damaged.

  • The New Google Penguin Update Goes Much Deeper Into Your Site

    Google has been warning of a big and scary new version of the Penguin update for quite some time. When Google’s Matt Cutts released a video discussing the upcoming SEO menu earlier this month, he mentioned that Penguin 2.0 was getting closer. Now it’s here.

    Have you been affected by the new Penguin update? Is this update good or bad for Google results? Let us know what you think in the comments.

    In the aforementioned video (below), Cutts said this about the update: “We’re relatively close to deploying the next generation of Penguin. Internally we call it ‘Penguin 2.0,’ and again, Penguin is a webspam change that’s dedicated to try to find black hat webspam, and try to target and address that. So this one is a little more comprehensive than Penguin 1.0, and we expect it to go a little bit deeper, and have a little bit more of an impact than the original version of Penguin.”

    Even before that video, Cutts was discussing the update on Twitter. He pretty much said the same thing: it’s called Penguin 2.0, and it would be larger.

    Late on Wednesday, Cutts revealed that the update rolled out. He took to his personal blog to say, “We started rolling out the next generation of the Penguin webspam algorithm this afternoon (May 22, 2013), and the rollout is now complete. About 2.3% of English-US queries are affected to the degree that a regular user might notice. The change has also finished rolling out for other languages world-wide. The scope of Penguin varies by language, e.g. languages with more webspam will see more impact.”

    “This is the fourth Penguin-related launch Google has done, but because this is an updated algorithm (not just a data refresh), we’ve been referring to this change as Penguin 2.0 internally,” he noted. “For more information on what SEOs should expect in the coming months, see the video that we recently released.”

    This does not mean that this is the last we’ll see of Penguin, by any means. When a reader of Cutts’ blog noted that he still sees a lot of spam in results, Cutts responded, “We can adjust the impact but we wanted to start at one level and then we can modify things appropriately.”

    So, it sounds like they’ll still be working on Penguin-ifying results more beyond the update that has already rolled out. I presume this will come in the form of data refreshes, much like the last two version of Penguin we’ve seen.

    Penguin is all about webspam, and Cutts discussed other webspam initiatives in that video. Specifically, he talked about denying value upstream for link spammers.This is not part of the Penguin update that just rolled out, so expect more there too.

    “That comes later,” said Cutts.

    Another reader suggested in the comments of Cutts’ blog post that people are finding it riskier to spend the time buildling authoritative sites that Google supposedly likes, because there’s still a chance that an algo update will (even if unintentionally) knock it down for one reason or another. He makes the case that it’s easier to build a bunch of “throwaway affiliate spam sites” that could easily be replaced if Google shuts them down.

    Cutts’ response to that was, “We have some things coming later this summer that should help with the type of sites you mention, so I think you made the right choice to work on building authority.”

    Cutts briefly discussed the new Penguin update in a conversation with Leo Laporte on Wednesday right before it was getting ready to roll out. In that, he said, “It is a leap. It’s a brand new generation of algorithms. The previous iteration of Penguin would essentially only look at the homepage of a site. The newer generation of Penguin goes much deeper. It has a really big impact in certain small areas.”

    It will be interesting to see how long Google waits for a data refresh on Penguin again. Unlike Panda, which saw many refreshes, before ultimately transforming into a rolling update, Penguin, since originally launching in April, 2012, only saw two refreshes before this new update (May and October, 2012). If this one is even bigger, should we expect refreshes even less often? The less often they happen, the harder it is to recover, some webmasters have discovered. I’m guessing a lot of those impacted negatively by this new update will be looking at starting over with new sites.

    It remains to be seen just how big the impact of this update really is on webmasters. If you’ve been affected (either positively or negatively) let us know in the comments.

  • How to print out your own house

    Architect Alastair Parvin came to TED2013 with questions that challenge our preconceptions about building. How about we involve everyone in the architectural design process, not just professional architects building for the super-wealthy? What about a world in which cities are built by citizens?

    Alastair Parvin: Architecture for the people by the peopleAlastair Parvin: Architecture for the people by the peopleParvin isn’t merely being rhetorical, as he shares in today’s talk. He and his London-based team have come up with a way to democratize both the design and the manufacturing of buildings. It’s called WikiHouse.

    “The idea is to make it possible for anyone to go online and access a freely shared library of 3D models which they can download and adapt in Sketchup,” he says in today’s talk. “Almost at the click of a switch, they can generate a series of cutting files, which allow them in effect to print out the parts from a house using a CNC machine and a standard sheet material like plywood. The parts are all numbered, and basically what you end up with is a really big IKEA kit.”

    Sounds intriguing… so how does it really work? We got Parvin to break it down, visually:

    Howitworks-1-framed

    WikiHouse is an “open source construction kit.” It enables anyone with an Internet connection to access a shared library of structural designs.

    Howitworks2-framed

    Users simply choose a design. By clicking a button marked, “Make this house,” WikiHouse generates a set of cutting files for each of the parts that goes into that particular structure.

    Howitworks3-framed

    Using a CNC machine, the parts can be “printed” from a standard sheet material such as plywood.

    Howitworks4-framed

    All of the parts in the open source construction kit are numbered, and designed to minimize confusion. “The principles of openness go right to the mundane physical details,” Parvin says. “Don’t design a piece that can’t be picked up, and don’t design a piece that could be put in the wrong way around.”

    Howitworks5-framed

    The WikiHouse system is designed so that it slots together using wedges and pegs. Here’s another radical idea: even the tools used to make the house can be crafted using the WikiHouse technology. Design and manufacture your own mallet!

    Howitworks6-framed

    “People get confused between construction work and having fun,” jokes Parvin, who points out that before the Industrial Revolution, barn-raisings were a common occurrence. Why shouldn’t family and friends be involved in the construction of a modern house?

    Howitworks7-framed

    A building’s panels are screwed into place. A small team can complete a house structure in about a day. As Parvin lyrically describes, imagine “a future where the factory is everywhere, the design team is everyone.”

    Howitworks8-framed

    Mod cons might not be included in a WikiHouse, but they can certainly be incorporated. The frame of the house can easily be adapted to include the likes of cladding, insulation and windows as well as other amenities. Maybe one day, those will be downloadable files, too.

    It’s still early days for the WikiHouse project (buildings take time to make, after all.) But here’s an intriguing timelapse video, filmed at the OUI Share Fest in Paris, which shows wiki-building at work.















    Read much more about WikiHouse »