2012-02-04

Brazil's Embraer presents jet to envoy Jackie Chan

SAO JOSE DOS CAMPOS, February  3, 2012 (AFP) - Brazil's leading planemaker Embraer is eyeing the large Chinese market, and on Friday presented a Legacy 650 executive jet to martial arts star Jackie Chan to help build its brand there.

Embraer said in a statement that Chan would help the company promote "its entire line of executive aircraft, not only in the rapidly growing greater China market, but globally."

"This delivery is a moment of historical importance to Embraer because it solidifies an already long and successful relationship between China and Embraer," said Ernest Edwards, president of Embraer's Executive Jets unit.

By turning to Chan, a Hong Kong Chinese superstar with global appeal, Embraer hopes to translate his charisma and celebrity into increased recognition and sales for the Brazilian jets.

"I believe that Embraer is poised to become a major player in the Chinese executive jet market," said Chan, who described himself as a "brand ambassador" for the manufacturer.

The ebullient actor, singer and cultural icon toasted the company's executives as they stood together in front of the plane customized with Chinese colors of red and yellow and the name "Jackie" painted on the tail.

The Legacy 650 has a range of 3,900 nautical miles (7,223 kilometers) and can fly four passengers nonstop from Beijing to Dubai or from Hong Kong to Adelaide, Australia. It sells for about $30 million.

Hong Kong-born Chan, who has put his martial arts skills to use in several blockbuster films, is also respected for his commitment to world philanthropic causes and devotion to the promotion of Chinese culture.

Embraer, the world's third largest commercial aircraft maker behind American Boeing and Europe's Airbus, is the only manufacturer offering a full line of executive jets, from entry level to ultra-large aircraft.

Anonymous posts audio of FBI, Scotland Yard call

WASHINGTON, February  3, 2012 (AFP) - Hacker group Anonymous released a recording on Friday of what appears to be a conference call between the FBI and Scotland Yard held last month to discuss operations against the group.

The audio of the nearly 17-minute conference call was posted on YouTube along with an email invitation from a Federal Bureau of Investigation agent setting up the call for January 17.

The FBI did not immediately return phone calls or emails asking about the Anonymous claim while a spokesman for Scotland Yard told AFP: "We are looking into the reports."

The email invites members of European law enforcement agencies to take part in a conference call "to discuss the on-going investigations related to Anonymous, Lulzsec, Antisec, and other associated splinter groups."

The email with details for accessing the call was sent to law enforcement officials in Britain, France, the Netherlands and others but the only people who identify themselves on the call are from the FBI and Scotland Yard.

In a message on Twitter, Anonymous posted links to the audio recording and said the FBI "might be curious how we're able to continuously read their internal comms for some time now."

At various times during the call, the British and American participants mention Jake Davis and Ryan Cleary, two British teenagers who were arrested last year over hacking.

Davis is charged with hacking into websites, including that of Britain's Serious Organised Crime Agency (SOCA), which was out of service for several hours on June 20 after apparently being targeted.

Cleary was detained in connection with a month-long global rampage last year by the Anonymous splinter group Lulz Security.

2012-02-03

Chinese novelist to sue over ghost-writer claim

SHANGHAI, February  3, 2012 (AFP) - One of China's most famous young writers, Han Han, is planning to sue an academic fraud campaigner nicknamed "science cop" who accused him of using ghost-writers, state media said Friday.

Han, a 29-year-old blogger and novelist, has found fame through the Internet with his witty, scathing critiques of China's corrupt officials and social issues.

The accusations about his popular works have circulated on the Internet and were taken up by Fang Shimin, a self-proclaimed "science cop" who made a career out of attacking academic fraud under the online pen name Fang Zhouzi.

Han's lawyer on Friday filed a lawsuit with a local Shanghai court, the official Xinhua news agency said. The Putuo District People's Court has a week to review the materials before deciding whether to accept the case.

State media has previously said Han is seeking 100,000 yuan ($16,000) in damages for libel.

"The lawsuit is to let my manuscript and evidence offer ample, ironclad proof," Han said separately on his blog Friday.

"So the lawsuit will allow my readers and loved ones, when later asked by others, to give a simple answer: He has been treated unjustly."
Han could not be reached, while a court official declined comment.

Fang, who has carried on his campaign through postings on his microblog, said he was examining Han Han's early works, which he claims were written by his father, retired newspaper editor Han Renjun.

"Han Han has been portrayed as a literary genius for over 10 years, no one has dared expose the myth," Fang said in a posting on Wednesday.

The fight, which has received widespread media attention, has played out largely on the Internet in recent days with Han and Fang trading barbs.

Han has achieved huge fame in the country's tightly monitored cyberspace, accumulating more than 540 million hits on his blog.

A top-earning author with a dozen titles under his belt, Han was named by Time magazine as among the world's 100 most influential people in 2010.

He shot to fame in 2000 after he published his first novel "The Triple Gate", based on his own experience as a school drop-out in Shanghai, which mocked China's rigid education system.

Suu Kyi biopic hits Myanmar black market

YANGON, February  3, 2012 (AFP) - Pirate copies of a new film about Aung San Suu Kyi's private life have flooded the streets of Yangon as vendors push the boundaries of new-found freedoms under a new government.

Luc Besson's "The Lady", a two-hour biopic starring former Bond girl Michelle Yeoh, received mixed reviews, but that has not deterred viewers taking home blurred DVDs with the Nobel laureate's celluloid reincarnation.

"The quality is not good but people buy it," one roadside vendor told AFP. "People who have watched this film said the real lady is better than on the screen."

Until a new nominally civilian government took power last year, few in the army-dominated nation would have dared to openly sell such a DVD, but now Suu Kyi's face is also on the front pages of newspapers and posters for sale.

"In the past, we cannot sell things freely. As others are selling the DVD, we also started selling it," said the vendor. "If we are warned to stop sales of this movie, we will stop selling it."

Suu Kyi's struggle for her country came at a high personal cost. Her husband died in 1999 in Britain, and in the final stages of his battle with cancer the Myanmar junta denied him a visa to see his wife.

The film follows Suu Kyi's story upon her return to Myanmar in 1988, chronicling her non-violent fight for democracy as protests erupted against the ruling generals only to be brutally crushed.

Her popularity culminated in a 1990 election victory for her National League for Democracy (NLD) party, but the result was ignored by the junta and Suu Kyi spent most of the past two decades under house arrest until late 2010.

During filming, Malaysian-born Yeoh spent two days with Suu Kyi at her home in Yangon, but she was deported by Myanmar last June on a return visit to the country formerly known as Burma.

Besson shot the movie in Thailand near its border with Myanmar, as well as secretly in Myanmar itself, and used footage shot by pro-democracy activists.

A new government dominated by former generals came to power last year following November 2010 elections that were marred by widespread complaints of cheating and the absence of Suu Kyi, who was under house arrest at the time.

The regime has since surprised observers with reforms including welcoming the NLD back into the political mainstream, signing ceasefire deals with ethnic minority rebels and releasing hundreds of political prisoners.

Singapore to launch black pepper futures contract

SINGAPORE, February  3, 2012 (AFP) - The Singapore Mercantile Exchange (SMX) announced Friday that it will launch the world's first black pepper futures contract next week.

Trading for the contract, aimed at creating a new global benchmark for a commodity largely produced in Asia, will start February 10, SMX said in a statement.

Vietnam dominates the global market for black pepper and will be the delivery point for the futures contract, it said. Indonesia, Malaysia and India are also major exporters.

"We are confident that this first agri-commodity futures contract on the exchange will be well accepted by the physical trading community," said SMX chief executive V. Hariharan.

SMX expects to offer "more such Asia-centric products" in the future, he added.

Launched in August 2010, SMX offers a platform to trade an array of commodities, including options and futures contracts on precious metals, base metals, agriculture products, energy and currencies.

Megaupload boss' bail appeal rejected in N.Z: reports

WELLINGTON, February  3, 2012 (AFP) - Megaupload boss Kim Dotcom on Friday failed to overturn a ruling that he remain behind bars in New Zealand while US officials seek his extradition for alleged copyright piracy, reports said.

Dotcom appeared in the Auckland High Court to appeal a judge's refusal last week to grant bail because he had the wealth and connections to slip out of the country.

The appeal was rejected after lawyers representing US authorities told the court a man with a history of producing fraudulent travel documents unsuccessfully applied to visit Dotcom while in custody, TVNZ reported.

Dotcom denied any knowledge of the man and said he was not friends with him, Fairfax Media reported.

"If people were to approach me and to offer such a service, I would tell them to go to hell," the German businessman, who changed his name from Kim Schmitz, said. "I have no desire to run away."

The decision means Dotcom will remain in prison until at least February 22, when a US application to extradite him is scheduled to be lodged in court.

The founder of file-sharing website Megaupload.com has been detained since January 20 when New Zealand police, cooperating with a major US probe, raided his sprawling "Dotcom Mansion" in Auckland.

The US Justice Department and FBI allege Megaupload and related sites netted more than $175 million in criminal proceeds and cost copyright owners over $500 million by offering pirated copies of movies, TV shows and other content.

During his court appearance, Dotcom also complained that he had received unwanted attention from female inmates wanting to become penpals while in custody, the New Zealand Herald reported.

It said Dotcom accused police of punching him during his arrest and also claimed he was visited by a man claiming to be a prosecutor who offered to ensure he was granted bail for a fee.

The black-clad millionaire, who spent his 38th birthday in a cell, said he wanted to remain in New Zealand with his family and regain the fortune that was seized when he was arrested.

"What I want to do is stay here to fight and get my money back," said Dotcom, who earned an estimated $42 million in 2010 alone.

 The raid on Dotcom's home netted a 1959 pink Cadillac, numerous other luxury cars and valuable artworks -- all of which the US Justice Department and FBI allege was obtained through "massive worldwide online piracy".

Since his arrest, there has been a steady stream of media revelations about his extravagent lifestyle.

The Herald detailed claims he had a swimming pool filled with imported spring water, while a waitress who worked at the mansion told Women's Weekly magazine that fittings included gold toilet roll holders and silver plates.

And a documentary uploaded online shows Dotcom, surrounded by topless women, spraying champagne on board a superyacht during a "crazy weekend" in Monaco that reportedly cost $10 million.

"Fast cars, hot girls, superyachts and amazing parties. Decadence rules," said the blurb accompanying the documentary, which Dotcom dedicated to "all my fans".

The portly millionaire also reportedly had a butler in his mansion whose duties included retrieving stray ping pong balls when Dotcom was playing table tennis.

Dotcom paid for a NZ$500,000 (415,000) fireworks display in central Auckland on New Year's Eve 2010 and watched the extravaganza from a hovering helicopter, uploading the video on YouTube.

Prime Minister John Key said this week that since Dotcom's arrival in New Zealand in early 2010, his office had received complaints from the public about loud parties and cars speeding around the mansion, which is in his constituency.

Key said his staff had passed the complaints on to police.

Wen says China has no intention to 'buy Europe'

BEIJING, February  3, 2012 (AFP) - China's Premier Wen Jiabao said Friday the Asian giant had neither the ability nor the intention to "buy Europe", amid concerns over growing Chinese investment in debt-stricken eurozone economies.

China is "willing to cooperate with Europe to fight the current crisis. Some people say this means China wants to buy Europe", Wen told a German-China business forum in the southern city of Guangzhou.

"This a concern and doesn't fit reality. China doesn't have this intention and doesn't have this ability."

German Chancellor Angela Merkel, in China for a three-day visit to boost her host's confidence in Europe, also attended the forum along with executives from the energy, chemicals, engineering, banking and electronics sectors.

There are growing concerns in Europe that a recent wave of investment by Chinese companies and government-backed funds will give Beijing too much influence over struggling European economies.

In the latest deal, China State Grid has agreed to pay 387 million euros ($508.2 million) for a 25 percent stake in the national electricity grid of debt-stricken Portugal, Treasury Secretary Maria Albuquerque said Thursday.

European leaders have called on China, which has the world's largest foreign exchange reserves, to invest in a bailout fund to rescue debt-stricken countries.

China has so far made no firm commitment to provide financial assistance, although Wen said Thursday it was considering getting more involved in bailout funds through the International Monetary Fund.

Analysts say bargain-hunting is behind the recent acquisitions by Chinese companies seeking to expand overseas. The country's sovereign wealth fund has also sought to diversify away from US bonds.

Google loses appeal in Taiwan over app refund

TAIPEI, February  3, 2012 (AFP) - Taiwan said Friday it had rejected an appeal by Google against a fine imposed on the US Internet giant for refusing to grant customers a seven-day trial period on its mobile phone apps.

The Taipei City government, which levied the fine of Tw$1 million ($33,000) in mid-2011, said the economics ministry had ruled in its favour.

"We urge Google to respect Taiwan's laws and the rights of our consumers to resume sales of its Android Market paid apps," it said in a statement.

Taiwan's consumer protection law stipulates that consumers are entitled to a seven-day trial period after purchasing products online, including mobile phone software applications.

The capital city's government last year said that Google and Apple had violated the law and ordered them to amend its trading rules. Apple later complied with the law but Google did not, it said.

Under the terms of service for Google's Android Market, consumers are entitled to a refund only within 15 minutes of purchasing a product online.

Google has suspended the sale of its paid apps in Taiwan since the dispute.

Google Taiwan's officials were not immediately available for comment.

Abductions highlight danger to China's workers abroad

BEIJING, February  3, 2012 (AFP) - Abductions in Sudan and Egypt highlight the dangers facing China's workers abroad and led Beijing to reassess a long-stated policy of non-interference as its foreign interests grow, analysts say.

China has been sending workers to Africa since the 1950s to build roads and railways, but investment has surged in the past 15 years as the Asian powerhouse sought to secure the resources it needs to fuel its booming economy.

Trade between Africa and China topped $120 billion last year, a jump from less than $20 billion a decade earlier, and experts say China's interests on the continent are shifting to investing in institutions and governments.

Jonathan Holslag, a researcher at the Brussels Institute of Contemporary Chinese Studies, said the presence of Chinese workers in some of the world's most unstable areas was making them a target for criminals.

"Armed gangs increasingly consider Chinese labourers an easy target for ransom," said Holslag. "Especially in Africa, China's growing economic presence has stumbled into growing insecurity."

He made the comments after the abduction late last month of 29 Chinese workers by rebels in Sudan's South Kordofan state.

That was followed on Tuesday by the capture of 25 Chinese workers in Egypt by Bedouins demanding the release of relatives imprisoned by the fallen regime of Hosni Mubarak. The Chinese were soon freed.

Chinese workers have been killed in Sudan, Ethiopia, Kenya and Nigeria, while others have had to be evacuated when violence has broken out.

Last year, China conducted its biggest and most expensive rescue mission when it evacuated 36,000 of its nationals from Libya, where it has substantial oil interests, as the country descended into civil war.

The violence led to heavy losses for Chinese businesses, which had around $18.8 billion worth of contracts in Libya.

Even in times of peace, there are often tensions between Chinese companies and local people angered by the influx of Chinese workers and allegations that the firms mistreat locally hired staff.

In Zambia, such allegations of mistreatment became one of the campaign themes of Michael Sata, who was elected president in September.

Chinese workers have also been the victims of Beijing's support for regimes shunned by the rest of the international community.

Experts say rebel groups have sought to punish China, whose proclaimed policy of non-interference in the affairs of other countries has led to accusations it props up unsavoury governments.

But Christopher Alden, a specialist in Sino-African affairs at the London School of Economics, said Beijing had been increasingly willing to step in as it seeks to protect its overseas interests.

"They hold to the principle (of non-interference) rhetorically and they will continue to do so, but their actions for the last four or five years have indicated they are willing to bend the principle for a variety of reasons," he told AFP.

In the past, China has sometimes turned to international or regional organisations, working with the International Committee of the Red Cross in 2007 to negotiate the freeing of seven hostages held in Ethiopia.

It has also sought to limit risks by building alliances in the regions where it invests, for example cultivating good relations with the new government of oil-rich South Sudan as well as with Khartoum.

But if that fails, as it did in Libya, they must take on the task themselves, according to Jonas Parello-Plesner, researcher at the European Council on Foreign Relations.

After the latest abductions, many Chinese people took to microblogs to demand action and experts say the government needs to demonstrate that it is looking after China's interests abroad.

"A honeymoon decade of frictionless business expansion worldwide is over," Parello-Plesner wrote in the Financial Times.

Japan glass maker to cut jobs amid Europe crisis

TOKYO, February  3, 2012 (AFP) - Japan's number two glass maker, Nippon Sheet Glass (NSG), will lay off 3,500 workers worldwide, as it faces losses due to its significant exposure to Europe.

NSG, which acquired Britain's Pilkington in 2006 and relies on Europe for over 40 percent of its sales, has seen a sharp drop in demand for building and automotive glass products, along with a slowdown in solar cell applications.

The firm, led by American president and CEO Craig Naylor, is aiming to slash costs by 20 billion yen ($262.5 million) annually, it said Thursday.

The company did not specify where the axe would fall, but said it would be halting one of its three production lines in Britain.

The layoffs come after the firm cut 6,700 jobs in the year to March 2010, in the wake of the global financial crisis.

It is forecasting a three billion yen net loss for the year ending in March, down from a previous prediction of a 14 billion yen profit.

"The group has experienced a reduction in many of its core markets, including its significant European building products and automotive markets," NSG said in a statement.

"The global market for solar energy glass has also worsened significantly during the third quarter... the group does not expect to see a recovery during the remainder of the current financial year."

In the nine months to December, the company suffered a 86 percent fall in net profit on year to 1.29 billion yen.

Facebook's popularity also brings lawsuits

WASHINGTON, February  3, 2012 (AFP) - As Facebook readies for Wall Street's richest high-tech debut, it is wrangling with litigation and bracing for potential new suits.

The social network filed Wednesday for a $5 billion stock offering that could create one of America's largest publicly traded companies.

But even as Facebook reinvents the way people around the world communicate, it anticipates a mountain of legal challenges which will take armies of lawyers years to disentangle.

In its filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission, Facebook hinted at some of the legal tangles ahead, writing that it is already embroiled in litigation and anticipates "numerous" more lawsuits in coming years.

"We are currently, and expect to be in the future, party to patent lawsuits and other intellectual property rights claims that are expensive and time-consuming, and, if resolved adversely, could have a significant impact on our business, financial condition, or results of operations," Facebook said.

Legal experts said there is virtually no corner of public life where Facebook's impact is not felt.

"Social media drastically affects almost every aspect of how society communicates," said Brian Wassom, a partner at Honigman Miller Schwarz and Cohn law firm in Detroit.

Wassom said the numerous types of possible legal challenges reflect the unprecedented reach that Facebook has achieved in its few years of existence.

The company says it has over 845 million users including nearly half a billion who log in daily.

Ryan Calo, director for privacy at Stanford University's Center for Internet and Society, said the social network is "a real transformative communication platform."

"For better or for worse, this pattern is really accelerating," Calo said, speaking about Facebook's expanding reach.

Legal experts said the untold number of unresolved legal issues for users of Facebook, Twitter, Foursquare and other social networking sites cover every aspect of financial and personal transactions carried out between individuals.

For instance, can a prosecutor use elements gleaned from Facebook in making a legal case against a defendant? Is it possible to use Facebook to establish whether a loan applicant is a good credit risk?

Can law enforcement officials prosecute threats or intimidating statements posted on Facebook? How and when can an employer use information gathered on Facebook to discipline or terminate an employee?

Calo said the ubiquity of Facebook increases the urgency to update the legal roadmap governing how it can be accessed, and by whom.

"Facebook has become almost as indispensable as the telephone or radio," he said. "We need to make changes in laws or update our laws to reflect a new reality."

Pedram Tabibi, an attorney at the New York firm Melzer Lippe, said three businesses in four use some form of social media.

"The dependence on Facebook in people's personal lives is high, (and) the dependence on Facebook in business is increasing," Tabibi said, alluding to what he called the "intersection of two roads."

But slightly less than half of US companies have put in place ground rules on how their workers are to proceed in using social networking sites, Tabibi said, adding that firms that tarry are leaving themselves open to headaches.

Equally opaque are the conditions under which the US government can access  the information on an individual's Facebook account, legal experts said.

Nebulous rules have not stopped the government however from deporting migrants or conducting broader investigations based on tips gleaned from Facebook.

"People now put their lives on Facebook," said Tabibi, adding that they need to exercise caution because that information "might be used against them."

Assange in final countdown after UK top court hearing

LONDON, February  2, 2012 (AFP) - WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange made what could be his last appearance in any British court Thursday as Swedish authorities warned that opposing his extradition could turn European law on its head.

The Supreme Court in London heard two days of complex arguments from lawyers for both sides as the 40-year-old Australian seeks to avoid being sent to Sweden for questioning over allegations of rape and sexual assault.

The court is Assange's final avenue of appeal in British law, and his case rests on a single point -- that the Swedish prosecutor who issued a warrant for his arrest in December 2010 was not a valid judicial authority.

Clare Montgomery, the lawyer for the Swedish authorities, told the panel of seven judges on Thursday that it would "undermine" the fast-track European Arrest Warrant system if Assange's appeal was allowed.

Citing legal examples from France, Denmark, the Netherlands, Ireland and even Cambodia, she said victory for Assange could lead to at least eight European countries being barred from using the warrant system.

But in her closing argument, Assange's lawyer Dinah Rose said Montgomery's case was "untenable", and that a prosecutor was not an independent, impartial judicial authority.

The white-haired Assange did not comment as he left the grand court building, which is opposite the Houses of Parliament in central London.

He pushed his way through a hail of flashbulbs in the darkness before getting into a taxi, while dozens of supporters of his work on his anti-secrecy website shouted "Well done, Julian!"

The Supreme Court judgment is expected within a matter of weeks.

Court officials said it would likely be handed down in person by the judges to the lawyers in the case, but it was unclear whether Assange would be there for the verdict.

If the Supreme Court rejects his appeal, Assange will have exhausted all his options in Britain but he could still make a last-ditch appeal to the European Court of Human Rights in Strasbourg, France.

Another member of Assange's legal team, top human rights lawyer Gareth Peirce, refused to comment when asked if it was possible that, should he win, Sweden could simply file another warrant signed by a judge, not a prosecutor.

The legal saga began in August 2010 when Assange was accused of raping one woman by having sex with her while she was asleep, and of sexually assaulting another woman, in Sweden.

He insists the sex was consensual and says the allegations are politically motivated.

Assange shot to fame earlier that same year when WikiLeaks enraged Washington by leaking thousands of secret US documents on the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.

After he was arrested in London in December 2010 he spent more than a week in jail before being freed to live under strict bail conditions amounting to virtual house arrest at the mansion of a supporter in Norfolk, eastern England.

He recently moved out of the house.

A lower court in Britain initially approved Assange's extradition to Sweden in February 2011. An appeal to the High Court was rejected in November, but he subsequently won permission to appeal to the Supreme Court.

Assange has said he fears his extradition would eventually lead to his transfer to the United States, where US soldier Bradley Manning is facing a court-martial over accusations that he handed documents to WikiLeaks.

While the legal battle has dragged on, Assange's celebrity status has grown.

He is to host his own TV show -- although Russia's state-run RT is the only channel to confirm it will broadcast it -- and will also make an appearance as himself this month on the 500th episode of the US cartoon show "The Simpsons".

Facebook stocks up for Google fight

WASHINGTON, February  2, 2012 (AFP) - As Facebook and Google jockey for dominance of the Web, the social networking titan's $5 billion stock offering will give it a hefty warchest for the ongoing fight, analysts said.

"It gives Facebook the ability to roll out more services," Gartner technology analyst Michael Gartenberg said. "It's going to be harder for companies to compete with Facebook."

Facebook, in its filing for an initial public offering, cited Microsoft and Twitter as competitors but made it clear its chief rival is Google.

"We compete broadly with Google's social networking offerings, including Google+," Facebook said of the social network launched by Google which has attracted 90 million users to Facebook's more than 800 million.

"Some of our current and potential competitors have significantly greater resources and better competitive positions in certain markets than we do," Facebook said.

At first glance, Google would appear to have the upper hand.

Google sites, which include the popular YouTube in addition to the eponymous search engine, attracted 1.09 billion unique visitors in December, according to online tracking firm comScore.

Facebook saw 794.3 million unique visitors in December.

But users spent more time on Facebook -- a key metric for advertisers.

Visitors to Facebook spent an average of 377.3 minutes on the site in December compared to 207.2 minutes on Google sites.
Google, which launched six years before Facebook, is also flush with cash.

Facebook, opening its books for the first time in the filing with the US Securities and Exchange Commission, said it had net income last year of $668 million and revenue of $3.7 billion.

Google posted a net profit of $2.71 billion last quarter alone on revenue of $10.58 billion.

But Facebook may have more upside.

"What Facebook's management would like us to believe is that Facebook's growth potential is much greater than Google's," said Virginie Lazes of investment bank Bryan, Garnier & Co.

"Google is a cash machine but what more can they do in terms of growth?" Lazes asked. "Google's growth is a maximum of around 15 percent a year."

Facebook's revenue meanwhile went from $777 million in 2009 to $1.97 billion in 2010 to last year's $3.7 billion.

"That's what the market will try to put a value on, this future growth potential," Lazes said.

The battle between Facebook and Google comes down to a contest for eyeballs and online advertising dollars.

Google is the dominant player in online advertising with a 44.9 percent share of US online ad revenue last year to Facebook's 6.4 percent, according to eMarketer.

Most of Google's revenue comes from search advertising while Facebook is the top player in the rapidly growing display advertising space.

Facebook's share of total US display advertising revenue was 16.3 percent last year to Google's 12.3 percent and Yahoo!'s 12.5 percent, eMarketer said.

"What's not to 'like' about the Facebook IPO?" asked Kathleen Smith of IPO investment adviser Renaissance Capital. "The social networking king is an advertiser's dream, accessing the intimate social interactions of one in every 10 people in the world."

Gartenberg said that because Facebook has become such a dominant force in social networking it may be better positioned than Google in the long run.

Social networking is not a "passing fad," he said. "It also seems to be pretty profitable.

"Facebook is the dominant player here and it's become dominant in such a relatively short period of time," he said. "To the point where we talk about companies like Google being the underdog."

Google, however, "is not going to stand idly by and allow Facebook to become the center of gravity of the Web," Gartenberg said.

"The only type of company that could mount a challenge to Facebook is a company of the size and scale and with the resources of a Google," he said. "That makes for what could be a very interesting year going forward."

Lou Kerner, social media analyst at secondshares.com, said the struggle between Facebook and Google is "about how people discover the Web."

"We've been used to periods of one king: it was Yahoo!, then it was Google," Kerner said. "Now we're entering a period of two kings of the net.

"Google is not going away."

Bloomberg executive named to head Dow Jones

NEW YORK, February  2, 2012 (AFP) - News Corp. on Thursday named Lex Fenwick, a senior executive at the Bloomberg financial news service, to head Dow Jones, publisher of The Wall Street Journal.

Fenwick, who has worked at Bloomberg for the past 25 years, will start as chief executive of Dow Jones on February 13, News Corp. said in a statement.

"We are thrilled that Lex will be driving our plans to grow all our Dow Jones franchises into true innovative market leaders for today's digital world," News Corp. chief executive Rupert Murdoch said in a statement.

Fenwick took over as chief executive of Bloomberg in December 2001 when founder Michael Bloomberg stepped down to run for mayor of New York.

Fenwick was most recently chief executive of Bloomberg Ventures, a Bloomberg subsidiary.

He will be based in New York and report to News Corp. chief operating officer Chase Carey, who said Fenwick joins Dow Jones "at a time when digital technologies are making information ever more important."

He replaces long-time Murdoch aide Les Hinton, who resigned in July.

Hinton served as chairman of News International during the phone hacking scandal at the News of the World but has said he was not aware it was taking place.

US decries 'worsened' Myanmar violence

WASHINGTON, February  2, 2012 (AFP) - The United States on Thursday urged Myanmar to address what it called worsening ethnic violence and to accept international monitors to ensure the fairness of closely watched upcoming by-elections.

A US official reiterated that President Barack Obama's administration wanted better ties with the country formerly known as Burma and praised recent moves by the government including the release of hundreds of political prisoners.

"Yet at the same time violence in the Kachin state has worsened with reports of serious human rights abuses and violations of international humanitarian law," said Michael Posner, the assistant secretary of state for human rights.

"Ultimately the ethnic violence is rooted in political causes and it will require negotiated political solutions on both sides to address the underlying grievances," he said at the National Endowment for Democracy.

Myanmar's nominally civilian government, which took over last year, has reached ceasefires with Shan and Karen rebels in an effort to end ethnic bloodshed that has gripped parts of the country since independence in 1948.

But bloody battles have taken place since June in Kachin state in the far north. Human Rights Watch in a recent report said that Myanmar's army raped, tortured and killed civilians in ethnic minority conflict zones last year.

President Thein Sein has surprised even many critics by undertaking reforms including talks with minorities and the opposition. Democracy icon Aung San Suu Kyi is optimistic enough that she is seeking a seat in parliament in April 1 by-elections.

Posner said that the United States has spoken to Myanmar about letting in monitors to ensure an "open and fair election."

"We have had those discussions and very much hope that the process will be open both to local monitors and to those coming from outside," Posner said.

US senators who recently visited Myanmar including John McCain also said that they asked Thein Sein to accept monitors but had not received a commitment.

Suu Kyi's National League for Democracy swept elections in 1990 but a military regime ignored the results and the Nobel Peace Prize winner spent most of the ensuing two decades under house arrest.

Japanese American who defied WWII internment honored

WASHINGTON, February  2, 2012 (AFP) - Seventy years after the United States detained citizens of Japanese ancestry, the gallery that honors noteworthy Americans on Thursday dedicated a portrait of a man who defied the order.

The National Portrait Gallery put up two photographs of Fred Korematsu, a welder from Oakland, California, who refused to comply with President Franklin Roosevelt's directive to round up some 120,000 Japanese Americans.

After he was caught, Korematsu challenged the order all the way to the Supreme Court, which ruled that the detentions were justified after Japan's sneak attack on Pearl Harbor triggered US involvement in World War II.

Korematsu kept pursuing the case after his release, and a court cleared his name in 1983. The United States formally apologized in 1988 for incarcerating Japanese Americans due to suspicions over their loyalty.

"He believed for almost 40 years that we have the ability in this country to come to justice if we're given the opportunity and he never gave up hope," Karen Korematsu said of her father, who died in 2005.

"If we don't learn the lessons of history, we're doomed to repeat them," she told the dedication ceremony.

Asian American groups have been seeking greater recognition of Korematsu. California has made January 30, his birthday, Fred Korematsu Day with events around the state to highlight his story.

Korematsu becomes the first Asian American in a permanent collection at National Portrait Gallery called "The Struggle for Justice," which features Americans who worked on behalf of the disenfranchised.

Coincidentally, the photographs of Korematsu hang next to a portrait of Earl Warren, who organized the detention of Japanese Americans when he was California's attorney general.

Warren is better known for his later stint as the US chief justice under whom the Supreme Court reached landmark decisions including the 1954 ban on racial segregation in schools.

Zuckerberg has iron grip on Facebook

NEW YORK, February  2, 2012 (AFP) - Facebook co-founder Mark Zuckerberg will retain an iron grip over the social network even after it becomes a public company.

Facebook's filing for an initial public offering reveals that Zuckerberg, who launched the social network from his Harvard dormitory room when he was just 19, owns 28.2 percent of the shares in the company.

At a valuation of $100 billion for Facebook, Zuckerberg's stock would be worth $28 billion.

More importantly, the 27-year-old Zuckerberg, Facebook's chairman and chief executive, controls 57 percent of the voting shares after other shareholders granted their voting rights to him by "irrevocable proxy."

"Because Mr. Zuckerberg controls a majority of our outstanding voting power, we are a 'controlled company' under the corporate governance rules for publicly-listed companies," the Facebook filing said.

"Mr. Zuckerberg will be able to effectively control all matters submitted to our stockholders for a vote, as well as the overall management and direction of our company," Facebook said.

Specifically, Zuckerberg decides on "the election of directors and any merger, consolidation, or sale of all or substantially all of our assets," Facebook said.

Facebook is not required to have a majority of independent directors on its board, the company said, and Zuckerberg will even decide its fate if he dies.

"In the event that Mr. Zuckerberg controls our company at the time of his death, control may be transferred to a person or entity that he designates as his successor," Facebook said.

"Mr. Zuckerberg is entitled to vote his shares, and shares over which he has voting control as a result of voting agreements, in his own interests, which may not always be in the interests of our stockholders generally," it said.

Lou Kerner, social media analyst at secondshares.com, said potential shareholders need not be worried.

"Investors only want to have a say when things go wrong," Kerner said.

"The pace of innovation that's happening at Facebook is really unparalleled," Kerner said. "And that's because it's being driven by a 27-year-old who's never known any other speed.

"The smartest executives want to maintain control," he continued. "They surround themselves with brilliant people but they don't put themselves at risk by giving up voting control."

In 2008, Zuckerberg lured away a top executive from Google, Sheryl Sandberg, and named her Facebook's chief operating officer.

But Zuckerberg remains "firmly in charge," said Forrester Research analyst Josh Bernoff.

"I think it's pretty clear that Zuckerberg determines what the future is," Bernoff said. "He has delegated power but he has not ceded power to other people.

"It's pretty clear where decisions come from," he said. "Sheryl Sandberg's job is to execute the strategies that he comes up with."

Zuckerberg is also surrounded by allies on the seven-member Facebook board, including three he named himself: Netscape founder Marc Andreessen, Netflix chief executive Reed Hastings and Washington Post chairman and chief executive Donald Graham.

Huffington Post to launch streaming network

WASHINGTON, February  3, 2012 (AFP) - The Huffington Post on Thursday marked the first anniversary of its acquisition by AOL with an announcement that it plans to launch an online video streaming network.

The HuffPost Streaming Network will launch this summer with 12 hours a day of original programming, to be increased to 16 hours a day by the end of 2013, Huffington Post founder Arianna Huffington said in a blog post.

Huffington said the network will "live on every platform -- computer, smartphone, tablet, Over-the-Top TV -- with the goal of creating the most social video experience anywhere."

She said the network "will be built around segments spotlighting the biggest, hottest, most engaging stories HuffPost is covering at any given moment."

The Huffington Post was launched by Huffington, a Greek-American author and columnist, in May 2006 and sold to AOL last February for $315 million.

Huffington said that over the past year, the number of unique monthly visitors to the Post has increased by 47 percent to 36.2 million.

The Huffington Post also launched Canadian, British and French editions, she said, and has plans to launch Spanish and Italian versions.

VW eyes Malaysia to beef up SE Asia presence: report

FRANKFURT, February  2, 2012 (AFP) - Volkswagen is in talks with its Malaysian partner DRB-Hicom to expand cooperation and beef up the German car maker's presence in Southeast Asia, DowJones Newswires reported on Thursday.

Quoting sources familiar with the situation, the news agency said VW, the world's second-biggest car maker, has sent several top-level executives to Malaysia to enter direct talks about expanding the existing cooperation with DRB-Hicom.

DRB-Hicom has recently acquired a controlling stake in Malaysia's national automaker Proton.

One possibility would be for VW to take over production capacity at Proton's modern, but heavily underutilised plant in Tanjung Malim and make Malaysia a production hub for the entire region, the report said.

In return, Volkswagen could support DRB-Hicom's plan to make Proton more competitive by leveraging its global engineering network and long-standing experience operating in emerging markets such as China and Brazil.

Contacted by AFP, VW did not deny the report, but said it was "constantly looking for growth opportunities worldwide" and that Asia was of particular interest.

Sitting on a cash pile of 21 billion euros ($28 billion), VW has embarked on an expansion programme, buying luxury sportscar maker Porsche, truck giant MAN and a minority stake in Suzuki.

NY Times net profit declines in fourth quarter

NEW YORK, February  2, 2012 (AFP) - The New York Times Co. said Thursday that a print advertising revenue slide and weaker results at advice website About.com dragged down net profit in the fourth quarter.

The Times Co., which owns The Boston Globe, International Herald Tribune and About.com in addition to the flagship New York Times, said net profit fell 12 percent in the quarter to $58.9 million compared to a year ago.

Revenue declined 2.8 percent in the quarter to $643 million.

The Times Co. said it posted a net loss of $39.7 million for the full year compared to a net profit of $108 million the previous year, mostly because of a $161 million write-down in the value of its regional newspapers.

The Times Co. has since agreed to sell 16 regional newspapers for $143 million but the proceeds from the sale did not figure in the fourth-quarter results.

Earnings per share were 39 cents in the fourth quarter compared to 44 cents in the same quarter of 2010, slightly below the 42 cents per share forecast by Wall Street analysts.

The Times Co. said it ended 2011 with 390,000 digital subscribers to The New York Times and International Herald Tribune, up from 324,000 at the end of the third quarter, and 16,000 digital subscribers for the Boston Globe.

The Times began charging in March for full access to NYTimes.com and it launched a subscription-only website for the Boston Globe in October.

Like other US newspapers, The New York Times has been struggling with declining print advertising revenue, falling circulation and the migration of readers to free news online.

"In 2011 we made significant strides in our strategy to transform and rebalance our company," Times Co. chairman and chief executive Arthur Sulzberger said in a statement.

"Our fourth-quarter results demonstrate the continued focus on building The Times's digital subscription base and developing a new robust consumer revenue stream, while maintaining its significant digital advertising business."

Sulzberger announced that the Times Co. has reached an agreement to sell another part of its stake in the Fenway Sports Group, which includes the Boston Red Sox baseball team and their iconic stadium, Fenway Park, for $30 million.

Print advertising revenue fell 7.8 percent in the quarter and digital advertising revenue was down 4.9 percent, mostly because of a slide in ad revenue at About.com.

About Group revenue decreased 25.9 percent to $26.1 million.

"The About Group's fourth-quarter performance continued to reflect the competitive and cyclical challenges that it faced through much of 2011," Sulzberger said. "The Group has made progress in its efforts to grow its content and traffic and to roll out its new display advertising sales plan."

Times Co. shares were down 2.15 percent at $7.51 in early trading on Wall Street.

2012-02-02

Singapore Airlines 3Q net profit down 53 percent on-year

SINGAPORE, February  2, 2012 (AFP) - Singapore Airlines said Thursday its third-quarter net profit tumbled 53 percent from a year ago due to the impact of "persistently high" jet fuel prices.

Weak passenger and cargo demand from Europe -- grappling with a debt crisis -- also dragged profits lower.

The airline, considered a bellwether for the industry, said net profit in the three months to December fell to Sg$135.2 million ($108.5 million) from Sg$288.3 million.

"The persistently high jet fuel prices had adversely affected the group's performance," the airline said in a statement.

Revenue rose one percent to Sg$3.88 billion, but overall expenditure climbed at a faster pace of 12 percent to Sg$3.72 billion.

Fuel expenses alone increased 33 percent during the quarter. Fuel accounted for 40 percent of the company's expenditure, which was up seven percentage points from the year before, SIA said.

The airline painted a bleak outlook for the fourth quarter.

"Forward bookings continue to show signs of weakness in the final quarter of the financial year due to uncertainty in the global economy and the protracted eurozone debt crisis," it said.

The global air cargo market will also be weak as forward-looking trade indicators show waning consumer demand in major developed countries, the airline said.

"Passenger yields are expected to remain under pressure while cargo yields are expected to continue to decline," it said.

"As the price of jet fuel remains high and volatile, fuel costs continue to adversely impact the group's financial performance."

Brendan Sobie, a Singapore-based analyst with the consultancy Centre for Aviation, said the fall in SIA's net profit was in line with that of other carriers.

"Generally, the situation with airlines is that the profitability has been going down and the outlook for this year is not very good, so it's all in line (with) that," he told AFP.

"These results are not too surprising given the market situation," said Sobie, citing high fuel prices and a decline in demand from Europe and Japan as the chief reasons for SIA's lower profit.

Sobie however noted that SIA's regional wing, SilkAir, had a narrower decline in its operating profit which he said reflect the continued strength of Asian economies.

Unlike SIA, SilkAir operates only to destinations within Asia -- except Japan.

"The only part of Asia that's been weak in the last few quarters has been Japan, where again SIA has heavy exposure," Sobie said.

Japan's tourism industry was impacted by a major earthquake and tsunami that struck the country in March last year. The disasters also sparked a nuclear meltdown at a power plant, raising fears of a radiation leak.

SIA's profit slump mirrors dismal performances by other regional airlines such as Japan's All Nippon Airways, which saw its net profit for the nine months to December slashed 10 percent year-on-year.

Flag carrier Korean Air as well as India's largest private carrier Jet Airways recorded net losses in their full-year and quarterly earnings, respectively -- a reversal from net profits experienced a year earlier.

Malaysia urges robust action on people smugglers

KUALA LUMPUR, February  2, 2012 (AFP) - Malaysia urged regional governments on Thursday to raise their game in the fight against people smuggling to prevent more deaths following the drowning of nine migrants this week.

Deputy home minister Lee Chee Leong said the nine who drowned on Wednesday, were part of a group of 25 Afghans and Iraqis who were attempting to reach Indonesia illegally from Malaysia, before heading to Australia to seek asylum.

He said that unless countries implement a plan to tackle these syndicates, the region could expect further fatalities "since there is no credible deterrence to dissuade the people smuggling syndicates."

"Malaysia urgently calls for bilateral as well as trilateral cooperation between countries in the region to collectively and systematically deal with the rising problem of irregular migration," he said in a statement.

District police chief Che Mahazan Che Aik said his men found the bodies of eight men on a beach in southern Johor state early Wednesday with a ninth victim discovered on Thursday afternoon.

He said that 18 others rescued by police are being held pending further investigations. Che Mahazan said none of the men, believed to be between 20 and 35 years old, had travel documents.

Malaysia is a well-known transit point for people from war-torn or poor countries to embark on the perilous boat journey for Australia in the hope of forging a better life.

Last August, Australia's high court shot down its government's plan to send 800 boatpeople to Malaysia in exchange for 4,000 registered refugees in a bid to deter people smugglers.

As Malaysia is not a signatory to UN refugee conventions, the court ruled the government did not have the power to send asylum-seekers to third countries where it could not guarantee their rights.

British police probe The Times over email hacking

LONDON, February  2, 2012 (AFP) - British police are investigating The Times newspaper over claims that it hacked emails, it emerged Thursday, following the scandal over phone hacking at its sister paper the News of the World.

The revelation follows the admission by the editor of The Times, James Harding, to an inquiry into press ethics last month that one of his journalists had hacked the email account of a police blogger to try to expose his identity.

Tom Watson, a lawmaker from the opposition Labour party, wrote to London's Metropolitan Police to complain about the newspaper's behaviour and on Thursday published the letter he received in reply.

"Thank you for your letter dated 23 January 2012, and the subsequent letter clarifying the position around the evidence given by The Times to the Leveson Inquiry," Detective Superintendent John Levett wrote to Watson on January 25.

"I write to reassure you that the concerns raised within your letters are under investigation and officers from Operation Tuleta are dealing directly with the victim."

Operation Tuleta is the Met's investigation into computer hacking, which has so far made one arrest.

It runs alongside the probe into phone hacking at the Rupert Murdoch-owned News of the World tabloid, which was shut in July after it emerged it had hacked the voicemails of hundreds of people, including a murdered schoolgirl.

News International, Murdoch's newspaper division which also owns The Times, said it had no comment on Thursday on the police investigation.

The Metropolitan Police spokesman confirmed it had received a letter from Watson and said officers investigating computer hacking were in touch with him, but said it would not be giving a "running commentary" on the probe.

In his appearance before the Leveson Inquiry into press ethics last month, the editor of The Times said one of the newspaper's reporters had been disciplined after hacking an email account.

"There was an incident where the newsroom was concerned that a reporter had gained unauthorised access to an email account. When it was brought to my attention, the journalist faced disciplinary action," Harding said.

"The reporter believed he was seeking to gain information in the public interest but we took the view he had fallen short of what was expected of a Times journalist."

The reporter, named as Patrick Foster, was issued with a formal written warning for professional misconduct and was subsequently dismissed from the newspaper for an unrelated matter.

According to a Times story on the affair, Foster hacked the account of detective Richard Horton as part of an attempt to expose him as the author of NightJack, a popular blog that gave a behind-the-scenes view of police work.

The policeman tried to block the revelation but a High Court judge ruled in 2009 that the story naming him was in the public interest.

The Leveson inquiry was set up by Prime Minister David Cameron to look into the culture, ethics and practices of the British press after the phone hacking scandal.

'Urgent' need to solve Europe debt crisis: China

BEIJING, February  2, 2012 (AFP) - China's premier warned of an "urgent" need to solve the European debt crisis Thursday and said Beijing was looking at ways it could contribute to bailout funds, after talks with Germany's chancellor.

Angela Merkel is in China for a three-day trip aimed at boosting her hosts' confidence in Europe, where the sovereign debt crisis has seen a wave of credit-rating downgrades and brought Greece to the brink of bankruptcy.

Speaking at a press conference with Merkel in Beijing, Wen Jiabao said solving Europe's woes was "urgent" and called on the international community to work together on the embattled region, which is China's top export market.

"China is investigating and evaluating ways, through the International Monetary Fund, to be more deeply involved in solving the European debt problem via ESM/EFSF channels," Wen said.

He was referring to the European Financial Stability Facility, a temporary rescue fund that was established to help struggling economies in Europe, and the European Stability Mechanism -- a newer, permanent fund.

China, the world's second-biggest economy, has watched with increasing concern as the debt crisis has deepened, repeatedly urging European leaders to get a grip on the situation.

In a speech earlier Thursday at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences -- a leading government think-tank -- Merkel sought to assure Beijing that the situation was under control.

"The euro as our common currency has made Europe stronger," she said.

The leader of Europe's biggest economy said EU members were now "deeply convinced" that they were on the right track with a treaty agreed by most EU nations on Monday that aims to stop countries from overspending.

The treaty -- pushed by Germany and the European Central Bank -- will require governments to introduce laws on balanced budgets and impose near-automatic sanctions on countries that violate deficit rules.

It will come into force after at least 12 euro nations ratify it, and only those countries that sign up will be able to access bailout aid from the new rescue fund.

Merkel also broached the sensitive issue of human rights at a press briefing in China -- which censors information it deems a threat to its one-party rule -- saying free speech and Internet freedom were important.

She had reportedly asked to meet journalists working for the Nanfang group in China's south -- known for its cutting-edge reporting -- but authorities refused her request, a source from the German delegation told AFP.

On the diplomatic front, Merkel said in her earlier speech China "must use its influence to tell Iran that transparency is a must and its nuclear programme must be open".

A German government source said earlier the chancellor would also call on Beijing not to take advantage of Europe's ban on Iranian oil -- imposed on Tehran over its nuclear stance -- to boost its own imports of the resource.

The US, the European Union and others have ramped up sanctions to target Iran's oil industry and central bank since a UN atomic watchdog report in November raised suspicions Tehran had done work on developing nuclear weapons.

Iran insists its nuclear drive is for peaceful purposes and that the International Atomic Energy Agency report was based on "forgeries" provided by its enemies.

Merkel, who will meet President Hu Jintao on Friday, also touched on Syria, saying it was "important that the international community speak with one voice at the United Nations."

The German leader is expected to ask for Beijing's support for a UN Security Council resolution against Syria, where fighting between President Bashar al-Assad's security forces and rebels is escalating.

On bilateral trade between China and Germany -- which reached $169 billion in 2011, an 18.9-percent increase from the previous year -- Merkel called for a level playing field for German firms operating in China.

 Also Friday, Merkel will fly to the southern province of Guangdong -- where nearly 500 German companies are already present -- with Wen and executives from the energy, chemicals, engineering, banking and electronics sectors.

Her visit to the manufacturing hub will include a meeting with Gan Junqiu, the state-backed Catholic bishop of Guangzhou -- the provincial capital -- according to a German diplomatic source.

Hong Kong 'locust' ad angers mainland netizens

SHANGHAI, February  2, 2012 (AFP) - Chinese netizens voiced anger Thursday over a Hong Kong advert portraying mainlanders as "locusts", sparking a call for calm in a state newspaper after an increasingly bitter exchange of words.

The advert was published in Hong Kong's widely-read Apple Daily Wednesday by an anonymous group in retaliation for comments made by Chinese professor Kong Qingdong, who called locals of the former British colony "dogs" and "bastards".

"How dare Hong Kong people have the courage to say we are locusts. No one should go to Hong Kong," said Reneeshou on Sina's popular microblog service.

"This shows a limited sense of appreciation (towards China) and a lack of tolerance of an international city," another commented.

The full-page advert demanded action to stop mainland Chinese "infiltration" of the territory, showing a huge locust overlooking Hong Kong's skyline with the words "Hong Kongers have had enough!" and "This city is dying, you know?"

Mainlanders are a key source of revenue for Hong Kong, but there is growing discontent over the thousands of mainland women who come to give birth in the territory every year, taking up limited beds and pushing up costs.

Many Hong Kongers also dislike the shadowy role that Beijing plays in local politics and the flashy displays of wealth by mainland Chinese tourists.

Mainlanders, for their part, complain people from Hong Kong -- which is part of China but enjoys more economic and political freedom -- look down on them.

Kong made the comments in an online, broadcast interview last week after a video of Hong Kongers scolding a mainland woman for disregarding rules and eating on a train went viral on the Internet.

"Originally, I didn't agree with Kong Qingdong, but after seeing the Apple Daily ad, I just want to say that these people really are mad dogs," one outraged web user wrote.

However, others admitted the behaviour of mainland Chinese travellers in Hong Kong could be improved.

"I do not like the Apple newspaper ad, but I think people who have been to Hong Kong should reflect on what they did. The quality of behaviour should be improved," another comment read.

The recent, barbed exchanges have prompted the official Global Times newspaper to call for calm.

In an editorial Thursday, the newspaper said China and Hong Kong should grow closer on the basis of a "shared identity".

"The mixed mutual feelings are making things more complicated. More efforts are needed from both the mainland and Hong Kong," it said.

Death toll climbs as heavy snow grips Japan

TOKYO, February  2, 2012 (AFP) - Heavy snow that has blanketed northern Japan for weeks, triggering avalanches and affecting transport networks, has left at least 55 people dead, officials said Thursday.

In one of the country's coldest winters in recent years, 43 people have died as they removed snow from roofs or roads, while seven more were crushed by heavy loads of snow falling from buildings or other structures, the disaster management agency said.

Four people have died in avalanches, with the latest snow slide reported in northern Akita prefecture at a popular mountain resort known for therapeutic hot-spring baths, which left three holidaymakers dead.

The 40-metre-wide (130 feet) avalanche crushed three tents near a naturally heated rock site Wednesday.

Local police and rescuers continued their search Thursday "to confirm there are no others buried in the snow", a local police spokeswoman said.

The extreme weather, which has filled evening news reports for weeks, has also claimed one other life, the government agency said.

Heavy snow has covered the northernmost island of Hokkaido and much of the north of the main Japanese island of Honshu, particularly affecting the country's eastern side.

In Sukayu, in northern Aomori prefecture, where the temperature went down as low as minus 9.2 degrees Celsius (15.4 degrees Fahrenheit) on Thursday, 4.29 metres (14 feet) of snow is lying.

Yamagata and Niigata prefectures have more than three metres of snow, the weather agency said.

Atrocious conditions have led to the cancellation of flights and numerous train delays, including to parts of the shinkansen bullet train system.

In Aomori prefecture, a heavy snowstorm on Wednesday night stranded more than 100 cars on one road, forcing 250 people to seek shelter for the night in local schools, reports said.

Facebook hopes to re-friend China despite censors

BEIJING, February  2, 2012 (AFP) - As Facebook prepares to go public it has its sights on China, where the social media titan is blocked, but analysts say its chances of re-entering the market of half a billion Internet users are slim.

Facebook, which filed paperwork Wednesday seeking to raise $5 billion on Wall Street, said it continued to "evaluate entering China" -- the world's largest Internet market and a huge dark spot on Facebook's global map.

"There are more than two billion global Internet users and we aim to connect all of them," the California-based company said in the listing documents filed with the US Securities and Exchange Commission.

Facebook, which has more than 800 million users around the world, is the leading social network in all but six countries, notably Russia, where local rivals are preferred, and China, where it has been banned for years.

Beijing blocked Facebook along with micro-blogging site Twitter after blaming it for fanning social unrest in the northwestern region of Xinjiang in 2009, though many web users access the site via virtual proxy networks.

Prior to the ban, web users in China enjoyed uncensored access to Facebook.

In the run up to a major leadership transition later this year, experts said Facebook has next to no chance of being allowed to operate freely in China, unless it is willing to bow to the country's army of censors.

"Under the current political structure (it has) probably zero to nil" chance of operating in China again, said Bill Bishop, a Beijing-based Internet consultant and investor.

Anne-Marie Brady, an expert in Chinese politics at New Zealand's University of Canterbury, agreed, saying the only way Facebook could re-enter China was if it followed "the same censorship requirements as Chinese-based websites".

Despite the hurdles, Facebook Chief Executive Mark Zuckerberg is clearly keen to see his company crack the Chinese market, which has more than 500 million users, nearly half of whom use weibos, which are similar to Twitter.

Zuckerberg said previously that he was "spending a lot of time" studying Chinese and visited the country in December 2010 with his girlfriend Priscilla Chan, when he met with the head of the country's biggest search engine Baidu.

Analysts believe Zuckerberg and Baidu Chief Executive Robin Li were discussing a possible tie-up that could enable Facebook to enter China, but were forced to abandon the talks after the Arab Spring protests in early 2011.

Facebook was used heavily by protesters during the upheaval across North Africa and the Middle East, underscoring Communist leaders' fears that these sites posed as a "real threat to stability and the government", Bishop said.

"Ultimately it was realised by both parties that the Chinese government was not going to approve Facebook in China," he said.

"The government is very cognitive of the power of these networks and the potential threats to the government."

But caving in to Chinese censors did not make business sense either, Bishop said. Facebook would have no "competitive advantage" over home-grown social networking sites such as Sina's Weibo, Tencent's QQ and Renren.

Beijing attempts to block content it deems politically sensitive through a censorship system known as the "Great Firewall of China".

The next 12 months are particularly sensitive for Chinese leaders as they prepare for a once-in-a-decade transition of power that begins later this year, and Beijing is stepping up efforts to keep a lid on social unrest.

Internet and technology firms have been pressured to stop the "spread of harmful information", while Beijing, Shanghai and the southern province of Guangdong have ordered weibo users to register under their real names, making it easier for authorities to track them down.

But the explosion of social networking sites poses a huge challenge to official attempts at controlling information in the country of 1.3 billion, as users can re-post news and images as fast as censors take them down.

The number of weibo users more than trebled in 2011, jumping to 250 million from just 63 million at the end of 2010, official data shows, as more and more people went online to vent their anger at official corruption and scandals.

A weibo user is believed to have broken the news of a deadly high-speed train crash in July that provoked widespread condemnation of the government, while news of a rare revolt against Communist officials in the country's south in December first emerged on weibos.

Amid the growing influence and popularity of social networks, Facebook will struggle to convince authorities obsessed with maintaining stability to unblock its website, said Duncan Clark, chairman of Beijing Internet consultancy BDA.

"In terms of 2012 I would think it unlikely that the government would send a signal of liberalisation during a season of conservatism and control ahead of the leadership transition," he said.

"There isn't much upside in any bureaucrat advocating this."

Megaupload boss to appeal for bail in New Zealand

WELLINGTON, February  2, 2012 (AFP) - Megaupload boss Kim Dotcom will appeal Friday against a ruling that kept him behind bars in New Zealand while US officials seek his extradition for alleged copyright piracy, his lawyers said.

The German millionaire was refused bail last week when a judge ruled that he posed a serious flight risk because he had the money and shady connections to slip out of the country.

Dotcom was remanded in custody until February 22 but a spokeswoman for his lawyer Paul Davison told AFP on Thursday that an appeal would be heard in Auckland High Court on Friday.

She declined to give further details, although a High Court official confirmed the hearing was scheduled for Friday.

The founder of the file-sharing website Megaupload.com has been in detention since New Zealand police, cooperating with a major US probe, raided his sprawling "Dotcom Mansion" in Auckland on January 20.

Davison argued at his client's original bail hearing that Dotcom, who spent his 38th birthday behind bars, should be released to prepare his defence.

The US Justice Department and FBI allege Megaupload and related sites netted more than $175 million in criminal proceeds and cost copyright owners over $500 million by offering pirated copies of movies, TV shows and other content.

Davison also said Dotcom was on medication for diabetes and hypertension, adding that there was no danger he would flee because his assets had been frozen and his family remained in Auckland.

Refusing bail, Judge David McNaughton raised concerns that Dotcom had bank accounts and passports in different names and may try to escape to Germany, which does not extradite its citizens to the United States.

He also said an unlicensed, sawn-off shotgun found in a "panic room" to which Dotcom retreated when police swooped on his home raised the possibility that the Internet tycoon had criminal connections who could help him flee.

The raid on Dotcom's home netted a 1959 pink Cadillac, numerous other luxury cars and valuable artworks -- all of which the US Justice Department and FBI allege was obtained through "massive worldwide online piracy".

Dotcom, who legally changed his name from Kim Schmitz, has denied any wrongdoing.

Amnesty urges release of S. Korean Twitter user

SEOUL, February  2, 2012 (AFP) - Rights group Amnesty International Thursday urged the release of a South Korean activist accused of helping the "enemy" by re-tweeting messages from North Korea's official Twitter account.

Park Jeong-Geun, a Socialist Party activist, was arrested last month for re-tweeting messages such as "Long Live General Kim Jong-Il".
The 24-year-old says his re-tweets were meant to ridicule North Korea's leaders rather than support them.

He has been in custody since January 11 and could face up to seven years in jail under the strict National Security Law (NSL).

"This is not a national security case, it's a sad case of the South Korean authorities' complete failure to understand sarcasm," Sam Zarifi, Amnesty International's Asia-Pacific director, said in a statement.

"Imprisoning anyone for peaceful expression of their opinions violates international law but in this case, the charges against Park Jeong-Geun are simply ludicrous and should be dropped immediately," he said.

Amnesty said the party to which Park belongs has frequently criticised North Korea for exploiting its labour force and opposes its father-to-son succession.

Park has told journalists that his intention was to lampoon North Korea's leaders and its rigid Stalinist system.

Zarifi said the NSL has a "chilling effect" on freedom of expression.

"It is used not to address threats to national security, but instead to intimidate people and limit their rights to free speech. It should be reformed in line with human rights law, and if the government cannot do this, it must be abolished," he said.

Amnesty International said that despite the end of military rule in South Korea decades ago, "authorities have increasingly used the NSL to harass critics of the government's North Korea policies since 2008".

Facebook to test market hunger for IPOS

WASHINGTON, February  2, 2012 (AFP) - After a deep slump that soured many investors on tech stocks last year, Facebook is launching its IPO into a market that looks ready to greet the social networking giant with open arms.

The rebound in US stocks since their dark July-October quarter has put the key US indices just below their post-crash highs.

Although a number of tech stock debuts last year looked like flops within months, most are doing well and in the black since the turn of the year, signaling that the market will likely stomach Facebook's $5 billion capital raising with gusto.

"What's not to 'like' about the Facebook IPO? The social networking king is an advertiser's dream," said Kathleen Smith of IPO investment adviser Renaissance Capital.

Facebook filed the paperwork on Thursday to list its stocks on the market -- though which exchange, the tech-friendly Nasdaq or time-honored New York Stock Exchange, was not yet public.

Listed under the initials FB, the company will immediately become a huge presence. If its recently estimated value of $75-100 billion is reflected in its share price, it would count among the top 40 shares by market capitalization, equal to fast food king McDonalds.

That might not be hard to achieve, given the excitement that has built in advance of the move.

"Expectations are certainly running high," said Gartner technology analyst Michael Gartenberg.

"It's hard to think of an IPO in recent memory -- even going back to Google and before that maybe to the Netscape IPO or the Yahoo IPO -- to see this type of frenzy."

He said there was already a high valuation placed on the company in the few shares that had traded outside formal markets, like those sold by employees.

"People are starting to wonder, were those values justified? Were they low? Were they high?"

"We'll find out," he said. "What's clear is you're talking about a company that's going to be valued in the multi-billions."

The market was generous to some of the top tech firm IPOS in the last year.

Linked In, the social networking website for professionals, went public at $45 in May and on Wednesday its share price was $72.37, up 61 percent -- though well below the $110 peak it hit after listing.

Real estate listing site Zillow hit the market in July with a $20 dollar subscription price and was up 48 percent Thursday.

Discount marketer Groupon was 7.5 percent over its November IPO price of $20. And Zynga, which makes games like Farmville that are played on Facebook, was 6.0 percent above its December IPO.

But some tech IPOs, after initial bursts higher, sank well below their offering price. Popular music streamer Pandora was down more than 19 percent and Internet mass content provider Demand Media's shares sank to 62 percent below the IPO offering.

And Chinese social networking firm Renren plunged to 64 percent below its May IPO subscription price, while Russian social networking operation Yandex was down 17 percent.

Gartner said that if Facebook's listing goes well it could kick off a slew of new tech listings.

"There are a lot of other companies on the sidelines that are no doubt sitting and waiting to see just how well the market receives Facebook," he said.

Facebook founder's ode to 'The Hacker Way'

WASHINGTON, February  2, 2012 (AFP) - Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg scolded people for being down on hacking Wednesday as he heralded an often misunderstood skill that was central to his company's ethos and success.

As he sought to raise $5 billion on Wall Street in the largest flotation ever by an Internet company, the 27-year-old king of social media dedicated a quarter of his 2,100-word letter to investors to explaining "The Hacker Way."

"The word 'hacker' has an unfairly negative connotation from being portrayed in the media as people who break into computers," his ode began.

"In reality, hacking just means building something quickly or testing the boundaries of what can be done. Like most things, it can be used for good or bad, but the vast majority of hackers I've met tend to be idealistic people who want to have a positive impact on the world."

Zuckerberg defended hacking as a much-maligned profession, although he never mentioned the work of shadowy computer hacker groups like Anonymous, and it wasn't clear if his central point was more one of definition.

"Hackers believe that something can always be better, and that nothing is ever complete," he said. "They just have to go fix it -- often in the face of people who say it's impossible or are content with the status quo."

As well as the geeky message, the letter shone a fascinating light on some of the inner workings of the notoriously secretive Palo Alto, California-based company, laying bare a hacker culture where "code wins arguments."

"Hackers believe that the best idea and implementation should always win -- not the person who is best at lobbying for an idea or the person who manages the most people," he said, describing it as "extremely open and meritocratic.

"To encourage this approach, every few months we have a hackathon, where everyone builds prototypes for new ideas they have," Zuckerberg said.

"At the end, the whole team gets together and looks at everything that has been built. Many of our most successful products came out of hackathons, including Timeline, chat, video, our mobile development framework and some of our most important infrastructure like the HipHop compiler."

Zuckerberg said all managers, even those not required to write code, had to go through a program called "Bootcamp" to learn the Facebook codebase and how the system worked.

"There are a lot of folks in the industry who manage engineers and don't want to code themselves, but the type of hands-on people we're looking for are willing and able to go through Bootcamp."

Top Facebook executives surpassed Zuckerberg in pay

WASHINGTON, February  2, 2012 (AFP) - Facebook's chief operating officer made more than $30.5 million last year, more than 20 times what founder Mark Zuckerberg earned as the CEO of the social networking giant, company IPO filings Wednesday showed.

The filings with the Security and Exchange Commission give Zuckerberg's total compensation in 2011 as $1,487,362 dollars.

That includes $483,333 in salary, $220,500 in bonuses and $783,529 in "other compensation," which a footnote explained was mostly for chartered aircraft used to fly Zuckerberg's family and friends around.

On paper at least, Zuckerberg's top executives made far more.

Chief Operating Officer Sheryl Sandberg, a former top Google executive lured away by Facebook in 2008, earned $30,873,579 last year -- nearly $30.5 million of it in stock awards.

Her salary in 2011 was $295,833 and she received another $86,133 in bonuses.

Next highest on the compensation ladder was Facebook's vice president of engineering, Mark Schroepfer, who pulled in $24.7 in total compensation, almost all of it in stock awards. His salary: $270,833.

Facebook's chief financial officer, David Ebersman, received a higher salary than Schroepfer -- $295,833 -- but his total compensation including stock awards was less, about $18.7 million.

Theodore Ullyot, the company's vice president, general counsel and secretary, made $6.9 million. His salary was the same as Schroefer's, $270,833, but he made nearly $479,000 in bonuses and about $6.1 million in stock awards.

The filing said the bonuses reported did not include those from the second half of the fiscal year, which have not been determined yet.

Germany's Merkel due in China for eurozone talks

BEIJING, February  1, 2012 (AFP) - German Chancellor Angela Merkel arrives in China on Thursday for three days of talks that will focus on the eurozone crisis, Iran and Syria.

Merkel's visit comes at a difficult time for China, just days after deadly Tibetan unrest hit the Asian powerhouse, and the leader of Europe's biggest economy is also said to be keen to discuss human rights.

Germany and China, the world's top two exporters, enjoy vibrant trade relations and Merkel will meet investors and seek to boost confidence in Europe on her fifth trip to the world's second largest economy.

Accompanied by a trade delegation, she will hold talks with President Hu Jintao and Premier Wen Jiabao, make a key address on the current euro crisis and visit the wealthy, southern province of Guangdong -- a manufacturing hub.

Observers will also be watching her visit for any mention of last week's violence in Tibetan-inhabited areas of Sichuan province, which saw police fire on protesters in unrest that left at least two ethnic Tibetans dead.

A German government source said human rights would figure highly on the trip's agenda, with Merkel keen to talk about minority issues and social development in China.

The German leader will discuss the eurozone with her Chinese counterparts, who are keen to see a return to growth in Europe and a stable euro.

She will hold talks on possible increased Chinese involvement in the International Monetary Fund, access to Chinese markets and intellectual property rights, the source said.

Merkel will also urge China not to take advantage of Europe's ban on Iranian oil -- imposed on Tehran over its nuclear programme -- to boost its own imports of the resource, the source said.

And the German leader will ask for Beijing's support for a UN Security Council resolution against Syria, where fighting between President Bashar al-Assad's security forces and rebels is escalating.

On Friday, Merkel will fly to Guangdong -- where nearly 500 German companies are already present -- with Wen and executives from the energy, chemicals, engineering, banking and electronic sectors.

On the agenda of her discussions will also be rare earths -- valuable elements that are used in the production of high-tech products and which are of "very great importance for the German economy," the source said.

China has been accused of deliberately restricting exports of the elements to drive up prices and force manufacturers onto its shores, but Beijing says it limits them for environmental reasons as mining them is very polluting.