Showing posts with label industry. Show all posts
Showing posts with label industry. Show all posts

Thursday, March 20, 2014

Fidelity releases the ‘Investment Watch’ in wearable industry

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Fidelity releases the ‘Investment Watch’ in wearable industry

Most of What You Think You Know About Milk Is Probably Dairy Industry Lies



The powerful dairy lobby has been spreading dangerous health claims about milk for decades.








Got milk allergy? Many people including Native Americans and people of Asian, African and South American descent are lactose intolerant and can’t and don"t drink milk. That is the way nature made them over epochs and no one ever died of a dairy deficiency.



But there is money in dairy. That is why American fast food companies try to bring the love of dairy to cultures where it traditionally hasn"t existed. And that is why the National Dairy Promotion and Research Board and the National Fluid Milk Processor Promotion Board in the US disseminate “educational” materials that address “misconceptions about lactose intolerance” according to research in Born With a Junk Food Deficiency, How Flaks, Quacks, and Hacks Pimp the Public Health. The marketing groups bragged to Congress that they regularly assure people in such ethnic groups that their lactose intolerance “should not be a barrier to including milk in the diet,” in an ongoing effort to help US dairy farmers. Ka-ching.


Battling “misconceptions” about lactose intolerance is only one of many marketing campaigns by the dairy lobby. Since the 1990s, the National Dairy Promotion and Research Board and the National Fluid Milk Processor Promotion Board have partnered with the USDA to push milk drinking, which had been falling since the 1970s, especially among teens and tweens. The promotions even have included partnerships with fast-food restaurants like Wendy’s and McDonald’s, who would seem unlikely comrades for a government agency sworn to protect the public health.


The milk campaigns began in the early 1990s with the catchphrase “Milk: It Does a Body Good” and used top model Tyra Banks and musician Marc Anthony to push milk for strong bones. “One in five victims of osteoporosis is male,” said the Banks ads. “Don’t worry. Calcium can help prevent it.” “Shake it, don’t break it. Want strong bones?” said the Anthony ad.  “Drinking enough lowfat milk now can help prevent osteoporosis later.” The ads were targeted toward African Americans, Latinos and men though all of the groups are among the least likely to get osteoporosis!


Next, the dairy lobby promoted milk as a treatment for premenstrual syndrome or PMS. Television ads showed bumbling boyfriends and husbands rushing to the store for milk to detoxify their stricken women. The ads disappeared as it became evident the study on which the campaign was based credited calcium not milk with helping PMS. And calcium is found in many sources besides milk–including the calcium-fortified juices that the milk ads are designed to sell against. Oops.


Then milk marketers tried to portray milk as a diet food that would help people lose weight until the Federal Trade Commission’s (FTC) Bureau of Consumer Protection told them to cease “until further research provides stronger, more conclusive evidence of an association between dairy consumption and weight loss.”


Susan Ruland, spokesperson for the National Fluid Milk Processor Promotion Board, begged to differ. “There’s a strong body of scientific evidence that demonstrates a connection between dairy and weight loss,” she said, although she promised that future ads would comply. After the FTC clampdown, marketing materials claimed that low-fat dairy products do not necessarily add weight and may have “certain nutrients that can help consumers meet dietary requirements”–pretty much the definition of “food” when you think about. Soon the ads “went negative” and read, “Soft drinks and other sweetened beverages are now the leading source of calories in a teen’s diet and these nutrient-void beverages are increasingly taking the place of milk.” Take that!


The factually-challenged campaigns did not made a dent in posters of mustache-wearing actors, sports figures, musicians and models shipped to 60,000 US elementary schools and 45,000 middle schools in outrageous promotion of private industry by the government. In-school milk promotions have included  the “Healthiest Student Bodies,” which promised students they could win an iPod, Fender guitar and other prizes if they visited the milk marketing site. And students at three California high schools got a chance to create their own “Got Milk?” campaigns to sell milk to their peers and win a $ 2,000, an all-expense-paid trip to San Francisco to present their ideas to the milk advertising agency.


Needless to say, milk is hardly a health food that the government should be promoting to children. It is linked to obesity, cholesterol and other life-long health problems. Mega dairies are also notorious for environmental, worker and animal abuse and often called “environmental crack houses.”


Of course, in addition to its marketing efforts with the USDA, the dairy industry has rolled out products and supplements that help people with lactose intolerance “enjoy all the great taste of dairy and avoid the discomfort,” and drink more milk. Now, Big Pharma is joining in the dairy industry"s decades-long history of recruiting more milk drinkers with specious marketing.  Big Pharma now suggests that people can overcome their milk allergy by taking a genetically altered drug that is linked to cancers and deaths!


The drug Xolair, omalizumab, a member of an immune-suppressing class of drugs, reduced symptoms of milk allergies said researchers at the recent American Academy of Allergy, Asthma, and Immunology annual meeting. “I think the evidence is pretty strong that it does make a significant difference,” said a coauthor of the research, Hugh Sampson, MD of Mount Sinai Hospital who reports eight financial links to Big Pharma companies.


Xolair and other recombinant DNA-derived monoclonal antibody drugs like Cimzia, Enbrel, Humira and Remicade can make as much as $ 10,000 to $ 20,000 a year per patient for Big Pharma. In patients who actually need them, like those with autoimmune diseases, they are important drugs. But since the “MoAbs” debuted, it has been a race to the bottom for Big Pharma to find everyday conditions which could justify prescribing the expensive, injected drugs.


Remember how antipsychotic drugs like Seroquel, approved for schizophrenia, soon became drugs of choice for every day depression and the “blues”? That is the same marketing plan for MoAbs (called “indication creep”) which are now marketed for everyday asthma, skin conditions, indigestion and now, apparently food allergies. If private and government health insurers want to fork over millions for the bio-engineered Franken drugs which are “meddling with Mother Nature,” according to the People"s Pharmacy that merely loots tax dollars and raises insurance premiums. But the drugs also kill.


MoAbs cause TB, cancers and super infections according to their labels because they suppress the immune system. Xolair was investigated by the FDA for links to heart attack and stroke and 77 people who took Xolair had life-threatening allergic responses in a year and a half, according to FDA reports. This is a drug to treat milk allergies?


There is also a shadow over Xolair’s clinical trials. They were conducted at Vivra which was investigated twice by the FDA for procedural irregularities. Trials of Xolair and at least seven other drugs were corrupted by protocol violations and outright falsifications, according to a former clinical research subinvestigator who worked at the facility. San Mateo, Calif.-based Vivra Asthma & Allergy was the nation’s largest respiratory disease physician practices until a merger with Lakewood, Colo.-based Gambro in 1997 and with El Segundo, Calif.-based DaVita in 2005.


Once again Pharma has a dangerous, expensive drug that almost no one needs and is creating lame and contrived uses. And once again the dairy industry will sink as low as it needs to, to sell product. Does anyone believe someone should tamper with their immune system just to drink milk? Except, of course, Big Pharma and the dairy industry?




 

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Most of What You Think You Know About Milk Is Probably Dairy Industry Lies

Wednesday, March 19, 2014

Illinois Residents Fight Back Against The State’s Coal Industry

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Illinois Residents Fight Back Against The State’s Coal Industry

Saturday, March 8, 2014

13 Ways Foodies Are Changing The Food Industry

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13 Ways Foodies Are Changing The Food Industry

Tuesday, February 11, 2014

For the gun industry, women are the next big thing

For the gun industry, women are the next big thing
http://yarpp.org/pixels/c6bb0b5b7ce803685f4ea949415b8bfd


Aaron Smith
CNN
February 10, 2014


Guns with slim profiles, pink stocks and glittery grips are aimed at one of the industry’s fastest-growing clientele: women.


“Make it pretty and make it purple,” said Tori Nonaka, a purple-haired competitive shooter and “Glock Girl” at the SHOT Show.


Nonaka and her colleague Michelle Viscuzi, an Army veteran, were selected by the Austrian gun maker to demonstrate and sell Glock guns to distributors at the extravaganza hosted by the National Shooting Sports Foundation in Las Vegas last month.


Read more


Below, watch Second Amendment advocate and survivalist Bunny Hunter give Infowars’ LeeAnn McAdoo a lesson in real feminism.


This article was posted: Monday, February 10, 2014 at 7:53 pm










Infowars




Read more about For the gun industry, women are the next big thing and other interesting subjects concerning NSA at TheDailyNewsReport.com

Monday, January 27, 2014

Revised Statistics of Gross Domestic Product by Industry for 1997-2012


Widespread Growth Across Industries in 2012
Revised Statistics of Gross Domestic Product by Industry for 1997-2012


With this release, the Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA) has provided new and expanded detail on the industry sources of U.S. economic growth in 2012. These newly available data, which reflect the results of the 2014 comprehensive revision of the annual industry accounts, confirm the widespread growth in 2012. Overall, 20 of 22 industry groups contributed to the 2.8 percent increase in real GDP. Professional and business services; finance, insurance, real estate, rental, and leasing; mining; and manufacturing were the leading contributors to growth.


  • Professional, scientific, and technical services real value added—a measure of an industry’s contribution to GDP—increased 4.2 percent in 2012, continuing to reflect strong growth in computer systems design and related services.

  • Real estate and rental and leasing increased 2.2 percent in 2012, the third consecutive year of positive real value added growth.

  • Mining rose 14.0 percent in 2012, after increasing 9.9 percent in 2011, reflecting strong growth for oil and gas extraction.

Chart 1. Annual Growth in Real GDP


Prices:


Value added prices modestly decelerated in 2012, increasing 1.7 percent after increasing 2.0 percent in 2011. Mining and agriculture, forestry, fishing, and hunting were the largest contributors to the deceleration in the GDP price index for 2012. Value added prices measure changes in an industry’s unit costs of capital and labor inputs and reflect the productivity of capital and labor used by the industry.


  • Value added prices for the goods-producing sector decelerated in 2012, increasing 1.8 percent after increasing 6.0 percent in 2011. In contrast, value added prices for the services-producing sector accelerated, increasing 2.2 percent after increasing 1.2 percent in 2011.

  • Value added prices for mining turned down in 2012, decreasing 8.0 percent after increasing 11.8 percent in 2011.

  • Value added prices for agriculture, forestry, fishing, and hunting decelerated in 2012, increasing 1.4 percent after increasing 28.5 percent in 2011.

Chart 2. Annual Percent Changes in Value Added Price Indexes


Other highlights:


  • Real value added for manufacturing rose 1.9 percent in 2012, after increasing 0.7 percent in 2011.

  • Real value added for information increased 4.4 percent in 2012, after increasing 2.2 percent in 2011. This is the industry’s strongest growth since 2008.

  • Construction increased 4.0 percent, its first significant increase since 2004.

  • Information-communications-technology producing industries accelerated in 2012, increasing 7.2 percent after increasing 4.7 percent in 2011.

  • Manufacturing’s current-dollar share of GDP increased for the third consecutive year, to 12.5 percent, its highest share since 2007.


Comprehensive Revision of the Annual Industry Accounts


The estimates released today reflect the results of the comprehensive revision of the annual industry accounts for 1997-2012. The revision incorporates major changes in definitions, classifications, and statistical methods used to update the accounts to more accurately portray the evolving U.S. economy. Major changes introduced with this revision include:


  • Updated industry and commodity definitions consistent with the 2007 North American Industry Classification System (NAICS).

  • The results of the 2007 benchmark input-output (I-O) accounts, that incorporate U.S. Census Bureau data on shipments, receipts, and business expenses from the 2007 Economic Census, Business Expenses Supplement, and Service Annual Survey (SAS).

  • The results of the 2013 comprehensive revision of the national income and product accounts, including the recognition of research and development (R&D) expenditures as capital, the capitalization of entertainment, literary, and other artistic originals, the expansion of the capitalization of the ownership transfer costs of residential fixed assets, and the use of an improved accrual accounting treatment of transactions for defined benefit pension plans.

  • The incorporation of newly available and revised annual source data (e.g., Census’s Annual Survey of Manufactures and the Department of Treasury’s Statistics of Income).

  • Expanded use of both Census Bureau SAS data for measuring gross output and BLS producer price indexes (PPIs) to deflate both output and intermediate inputs.

More detailed Annual Industry Accounts statistics are available on BEA’s interactive website www.bea.gov/itable/index.cfm. Additional information on this revision will be available in an article in the February 2014 issue of the Survey of Current Business.



BEA’s national, international, regional, and industry estimates; the Survey of Current Business; and BEA news releases are available without charge on BEA’s Web site at www.bea.gov.  By visiting the site, you can also subscribe to receive free e-mail summaries of BEA releases and announcements.


* * *


Statistics of quarterly gross domestic product (GDP) by industry for 2005:Q1-2013:Q4 will be released on April 25, 2014 at 8:30 A.M. EDT.




U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis



Revised Statistics of Gross Domestic Product by Industry for 1997-2012

Thursday, January 23, 2014

Russia muscles into European nuclear industry





BERLIN, Germany — A leading Hungarian official has said an agreement last week to give Russia a foothold in his country’s nuclear future is Budapest’s best deal in 40 years.


Hungary granted Russia’s state energy company Rosatom a $ 14-billion contract to double the capacity of the country’s sole nuclear power plant, a 2000-megawatt reactor in the Danube River city of Paks.


The funds would be offered as a 30-year loan package to be extended at below-market rates.


“These new reactors will surely enhance Hungary’s energy independence and security,” Russian President Vladimir Putin told reporters.


But one person’s bargain is another’s Faustian deal — in this case at least. Critics say the sweetheart deal may as well have been written by Mephistopheles, the demon of German folklore.


They say the project was never tendered for competitive bids despite an earlier expression of interest from the French energy company Areva. Skeptics worry it represents an effort by Putin to add nuclear energy to the oil and gas monopoly he’s used so effectively to cement Russia’s influence in Central and Eastern Europe.


“What are Hungarians to make of the fact that Prime Minister Viktor Orban has committed them to invest [billions] building two new nuclear reactors without consulting his own cabinet let alone parliament, industry experts, or the Hungarian people?” asked a pointed editorial in the English-language Budapest Beacon.


Orban maintains that the deal meets European Union regulations. But the opposition has demanded an extraordinary session of parliament be convened to discuss its terms and implications.


The prime minister has already been forced to retract an earlier statement he made claiming that the European Commission had approved the deal, amending it to say that the regulatory body has made no objections to the pact.


“It is too early to say [whether the agreement meets EU regulations],” a spokeswoman for the commission told GlobalPost in an email. “We are looking at the issue now and will let you know when the legal analysis has been completed.”


The EU’s 2004 “Public Sector Directive” mandates that public works projects in the energy sector must be open to competitive bids, and Hungary’s own laws on government procurement require open tenders unless there are reasons why the project can only be carried out by a specific contractor.


However, Orban has suggested that as the expansion of an existing facility, rather than a new project, the Paks contract isn’t subject to the regulation. Moreover, Rosatom was said to be the only company to offer financing in discussions with companies ahead of the decision not to open a bid, Hungarian media reported.


The European Commission’s decision about the agreement’s compliance could have far-reaching implications.


In 2012, allegations of corruption surrounded the Russian bid to expand the Czech Republic’s Temelin nuclear reactor due to the involvement of a Czech firm under investigation for insider trading and breach of trust in connection with previous deals. Now it looks doubtful that project will go forward at all, according to Czech media.


Similarly, a Russian project to build a 2000-MW nuclear plant in Belene, Bulgaria, was excoriated as “a corrupt and completely illegitimate business project, aimed at producing abundant and expensive electricity in a country with excess capacity in a region of declining electricity demand,” in the words of Ognyan Minchev, a research fellow with the German Marshall Fund of the United States’ Balkan Trust for Democracy. The Bulgarian parliament voted to scrap plans for the reactor in February last year following a protracted debate over its environmental impact and a new investigation into the projected costs.


Specific allegations of corruption have yet to be leveled at the Rosatom deal, and a spokesman for anti-corruption watchdog Transparency International’s office in Hungary said his organization lacks sufficient information to make a judgment. However, corruption is a generalized concern in both countries: Hungary already ranks a mediocre 47 out of 176 countries on the watchdog’s Corruption Perception Index and Russia an abysmal 130.


Russia already enjoys a near-monopoly over Central European gas supplies, providing three-quarters of the gas used by Hungary and the Czech Republic and two-thirds of Ukraine’s.


Putin has made no bones about using that dominance for commercial leverage or as a weapon of foreign policy. In 2006 and 2009, for instance, Russia cut off gas supplies to the Ukraine in the middle of winter during disputes over prices, leaving customers across Europe to freeze until their countries coughed up more cash.


In March last year, critics argued that Russia purposefully drove up energy prices in Bulgaria to engineer the fall of Prime Minister Boyko Borisov’s government after he terminated the controversial Russian-run nuclear power plant in Belene.


And any possibility that Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovych may cave to the ongoing protests in his country for greater integration with Europe has been all but eliminated by Russia’s energy monopoly, says Jonathan Stern, an oil and gas expert at the Oxford Institute for Energy Studies.


“What Putin said, as far as I can see, was not ‘we’ll turn off the gas,’ but ‘if you want to align yourself to the EU, then you will be paying the price that the EU pays,’”he said.


“The reason Russia is able to do this is that these countries have not made sufficient efforts to diversify their imports.”


If history is any guide, Russia will make sure that nuclear power doesn’t change that.


http://www.globalpost.com/dispatch/news/regions/europe/140123/russia-nuclear-deal-hungary-power-influence




GlobalPost – Home



Russia muscles into European nuclear industry

Wednesday, January 22, 2014

Doctors “afraid to diagnose health conditions linked to the oil and gas industry”



tar sands - evacuationLater today hearings are scheduled to begin on emissions and vapours emanating for the tar sands, specifically around the Peace River area.


The hearings, which have been scheduled by the Albertan Energy Regulator, have come after years of complaints by local residents into the odours, which are so bad some families have been forced to move from their homes.


Local residents have been complaining of symptoms such as severe headaches, dizziness, sinus problems, vomiting, muscle spasms and fatigue, amongst others.


But we do not know how badly the tar sands are really impacting people’s health. This is because according to a report commissioned specifically for the hearings by a public health specialist, some local doctors are reluctant to treat patients who draw connections between the tar sands industry and their personal health problems.


The report, prepared by Dr Margaret Sears, concludes that: “There were reports from various sources that physicians would not diagnose a relationship between bitumen exposures and chronic symptoms.”


“Physicians are quite frankly afraid to diagnose health conditions linked to the oil and gas industry,” she adds.


And it gets worse. For those individuals who suggested there was a “connection” between their health problems and the tar sands, Sears records how “Physician care was refused … and that analytical services were refused by an Alberta laboratory when told that the proposed analysis was to investigate exposure to emissions related to bitumen extraction.”


Locals are arguing that the regulator must force the industry to capture the emissions: “The best result possible is that they make some regulations to get companies to capture their vapours,” believes Alain Labrecque, who has had to vacate his farm after suffering numerous symptoms including headaches, dizziness, fatigue and memory loss.


His family only started experiencing symptoms in 2011, after Baytex Energy purchased nearly 50 wells and in the area and started heating bitumen in above-ground tanks to extract the oil.


“There is definitely a regulatory gap,” Labrecque argues “We just want more accountability. We want the regulator to take on a greater role, and have regulations in place so they can enforce them, and just provide more accountability to industry.”


Baytex, for its part, predictably argues that “there are no human health impacts associated with the emissions from our projects.”


The Labrecques have also now filed an injunction against Baytex to force the company to stop operating. The hearing though won’t be heard until March.


Local residents will also have to wait until March for the report into the hearings to be published by the regulator.


http://priceofoil.org/2014/01/21/doctors-afraid-diagnose-health-conditions-linked-oil-gas-industry/





2012 The Awakening



Doctors “afraid to diagnose health conditions linked to the oil and gas industry”

Friday, December 20, 2013

Exclusive: Secret contract tied NSA and security industry pioneer




SAN FRANCISCO Fri Dec 20, 2013 7:17pm EST



A National Security Agency (NSA) data gathering facility is seen in Bluffdale, about 25 miles (40 km) south of Salt Lake City, Utah, December 16, 2013. Jim Urquhart/REUTERS

A National Security Agency (NSA) data gathering facility is seen in Bluffdale, about 25 miles (40 km) south of Salt Lake City, Utah, December 16, 2013. Jim Urquhart/


Credit: Reuters




SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) – As a key part of a campaign to embed encryption software that it could crack into widely used computer products, the U.S. National Security Agency arranged a secret $ 10 million contract with RSA, one of the most influential firms in the computer security industry, Reuters has learned.


Documents leaked by former NSA contractor Edward Snowden show that the NSA created and promulgated a flawed formula for generating random numbers to create a “back door” in encryption products, the New York Times reported in September. Reuters later reported that RSA became the most important distributor of that formula by rolling it into a software tool called Bsafe that is used to enhance security in personal computers and many other products.


Undisclosed until now was that RSA received $ 10 million in a deal that set the NSA formula as the preferred, or default, method for number generation in the BSafe software, according to two sources familiar with the contract. Although that sum might seem paltry, it represented more than a third of the revenue that the relevant division at RSA had taken in during the entire previous year, securities filings show.


The earlier disclosures of RSA’s entanglement with the NSA already had shocked some in the close-knit world of computer security experts. The company had a long history of championing privacy and security, and it played a leading role in blocking a 1990s effort by the NSA to require a special chip to enable spying on a wide range of computer and communications products.


RSA, now a subsidiary of computer storage giant EMC Corp, urged customers to stop using the NSA formula after the Snowden disclosures revealed its weakness.


RSA and EMC declined to answer questions for this story, but RSA said in a statement: “RSA always acts in the best interest of its customers and under no circumstances does RSA design or enable any back doors in our products. Decisions about the features and functionality of RSA products are our own.”


The NSA declined to comment.


The RSA deal shows one way the NSA carried out what Snowden’s documents describe as a key strategy for enhancing surveillance: the systematic erosion of security tools. NSA documents released in recent months called for using “commercial relationships” to advance that goal, but did not name any security companies as collaborators.


The NSA came under attack this week in a landmark report from a White House panel appointed to review U.S. surveillance policy. The panel noted that “encryption is an essential basis for trust on the Internet,” and called for a halt to any NSA efforts to undermine it.


Most of the dozen current and former RSA employees interviewed said that the company erred in agreeing to such a contract, and many cited RSA’s corporate evolution away from pure cryptography products as one of the reasons it occurred.


But several said that RSA also was misled by government officials, who portrayed the formula as a secure technological advance.


“They did not show their true hand,” one person briefed on the deal said of the NSA, asserting that government officials did not let on that they knew how to break the encryption.


STORIED HISTORY


Started by MIT professors in the 1970s and led for years by ex-Marine Jim Bidzos, RSA and its core algorithm were both named for the last initials of the three founders, who revolutionized cryptography. Little known to the public, RSA’s encryption tools have been licensed by most large technology companies, which in turn use them to protect computers used by hundreds of millions of people.


At the core of RSA’s products was a technology known as public key cryptography. Instead of using the same key for encoding and then decoding a message, there are two keys related to each other mathematically. The first, publicly available key is used to encode a message for someone, who then uses a second, private key to reveal it.


From RSA’s earliest days, the U.S. intelligence establishment worried it would not be able to crack well-engineered public key cryptography. Martin Hellman, a former Stanford researcher who led the team that first invented the technique, said NSA experts tried to talk him and others into believing that the keys did not have to be as large as they planned.


The stakes rose when more technology companies adopted RSA’s methods and Internet use began to soar. The Clinton administration embraced the Clipper Chip, envisioned as a mandatory component in phones and computers to enable officials to overcome encryption with a warrant.


RSA led a fierce public campaign against the effort, distributing posters with a foundering sailing ship and the words “Sink Clipper!”


A key argument against the chip was that overseas buyers would shun U.S. technology products if they were ready-made for spying. Some companies say that is just what has happened in the wake of the Snowden disclosures.


The White House abandoned the Clipper Chip and instead relied on export controls to prevent the best cryptography from crossing U.S. borders. RSA once again rallied the industry, and it set up an Australian division that could ship what it wanted.


“We became the tip of the spear, so to speak, in this fight against government efforts,” Bidzos recalled in an oral history.


RSA EVOLVES


RSA and others claimed victory when export restrictions relaxed.


But the NSA was determined to read what it wanted, and the quest gained urgency after the September 11, 2001 attacks.


RSA, meanwhile, was changing. Bidzos stepped down as CEO in 1999 to concentrate on VeriSign, a security certificate company that had been spun out of RSA. The elite lab Bidzos had founded in Silicon Valley moved east to Massachusetts, and many top engineers left the company, several former employees said.


And the BSafe toolkit was becoming a much smaller part of the company. By 2005, BSafe and other tools for developers brought in just $ 27.5 million of RSA’s revenue, less than 9% of the $ 310 million total.


“When I joined there were 10 people in the labs, and we were fighting the NSA,” said Victor Chan, who rose to lead engineering and the Australian operation before he left in 2005. “It became a very different company later on.”


By the first half of 2006, RSA was among the many technology companies seeing the U.S. government as a partner against overseas hackers.


New RSA Chief Executive Art Coviello and his team still wanted to be seen as part of the technological vanguard, former employees say, and the NSA had just the right pitch. Coviello declined an interview request.


An algorithm called Dual Elliptic Curve, developed inside the agency, was on the road to approval by the National Institutes of Standards and Technology as one of four acceptable methods for generating random numbers. NIST’s blessing is required for many products sold to the government and often sets a broader de facto standard.


RSA adopted the algorithm even before NIST approved it. The NSA then cited the early use of Dual Elliptic Curve inside the government to argue successfully for NIST approval, according to an official familiar with the proceedings.


RSA’s contract made Dual Elliptic Curve the default option for producing random numbers in the RSA toolkit. No alarms were raised, former employees said, because the deal was handled by business leaders rather than pure technologists.


“The labs group had played a very intricate role at BSafe, and they were basically gone,” said labs veteran Michael Wenocur, who left in 1999.


Within a year, major questions were raised about Dual Elliptic Curve. Cryptography authority Bruce Schneier wrote that the weaknesses in the formula “can only be described as a back door.”


After reports of the back door in September, RSA urged its customers to stop using the Dual Elliptic Curve number generator.


But unlike the Clipper Chip fight two decades ago, the company is saying little in public, and it declined to discuss how the NSA entanglements have affected its relationships with customers.


The White House, meanwhile, says it will consider this week’s panel recommendation that any efforts to subvert cryptography be abandoned.


(Reporting by Joseph Menn; Editing by Jonathan Weber and Grant McCool)





Reuters: Top News



Exclusive: Secret contract tied NSA and security industry pioneer

Exclusive: Secret contract tied NSA and security industry pioneer




SAN FRANCISCO Fri Dec 20, 2013 7:48pm EST



A National Security Agency (NSA) data gathering facility is seen in Bluffdale, about 25 miles (40 km) south of Salt Lake City, Utah, December 16, 2013. Jim Urquhart/REUTERS

A National Security Agency (NSA) data gathering facility is seen in Bluffdale, about 25 miles (40 km) south of Salt Lake City, Utah, December 16, 2013. Jim Urquhart/


Credit: Reuters




SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) – As a key part of a campaign to embed encryption software that it could crack into widely used computer products, the U.S. National Security Agency arranged a secret $ 10 million contract with RSA, one of the most influential firms in the computer security industry, Reuters has learned.


Documents leaked by former NSA contractor Edward Snowden show that the NSA created and promulgated a flawed formula for generating random numbers to create a “back door” in encryption products, the New York Times reported in September. Reuters later reported that RSA became the most important distributor of that formula by rolling it into a software tool called Bsafe that is used to enhance security in personal computers and many other products.


Undisclosed until now was that RSA received $ 10 million in a deal that set the NSA formula as the preferred, or default, method for number generation in the BSafe software, according to two sources familiar with the contract. Although that sum might seem paltry, it represented more than a third of the revenue that the relevant division at RSA had taken in during the entire previous year, securities filings show.


The earlier disclosures of RSA’s entanglement with the NSA already had shocked some in the close-knit world of computer security experts. The company had a long history of championing privacy and security, and it played a leading role in blocking a 1990s effort by the NSA to require a special chip to enable spying on a wide range of computer and communications products.


RSA, now a subsidiary of computer storage giant EMC Corp, urged customers to stop using the NSA formula after the Snowden disclosures revealed its weakness.


RSA and EMC declined to answer questions for this story, but RSA said in a statement: “RSA always acts in the best interest of its customers and under no circumstances does RSA design or enable any back doors in our products. Decisions about the features and functionality of RSA products are our own.”


The NSA declined to comment.


The RSA deal shows one way the NSA carried out what Snowden’s documents describe as a key strategy for enhancing surveillance: the systematic erosion of security tools. NSA documents released in recent months called for using “commercial relationships” to advance that goal, but did not name any security companies as collaborators.


The NSA came under attack this week in a landmark report from a White House panel appointed to review U.S. surveillance policy. The panel noted that “encryption is an essential basis for trust on the Internet,” and called for a halt to any NSA efforts to undermine it.


Most of the dozen current and former RSA employees interviewed said that the company erred in agreeing to such a contract, and many cited RSA’s corporate evolution away from pure cryptography products as one of the reasons it occurred.


But several said that RSA also was misled by government officials, who portrayed the formula as a secure technological advance.


“They did not show their true hand,” one person briefed on the deal said of the NSA, asserting that government officials did not let on that they knew how to break the encryption.


STORIED HISTORY


Started by MIT professors in the 1970s and led for years by ex-Marine Jim Bidzos, RSA and its core algorithm were both named for the last initials of the three founders, who revolutionized cryptography. Little known to the public, RSA’s encryption tools have been licensed by most large technology companies, which in turn use them to protect computers used by hundreds of millions of people.


At the core of RSA’s products was a technology known as public key cryptography. Instead of using the same key for encoding and then decoding a message, there are two keys related to each other mathematically. The first, publicly available key is used to encode a message for someone, who then uses a second, private key to reveal it.


From RSA’s earliest days, the U.S. intelligence establishment worried it would not be able to crack well-engineered public key cryptography. Martin Hellman, a former Stanford researcher who led the team that first invented the technique, said NSA experts tried to talk him and others into believing that the keys did not have to be as large as they planned.


The stakes rose when more technology companies adopted RSA’s methods and Internet use began to soar. The Clinton administration embraced the Clipper Chip, envisioned as a mandatory component in phones and computers to enable officials to overcome encryption with a warrant.


RSA led a fierce public campaign against the effort, distributing posters with a foundering sailing ship and the words “Sink Clipper!”


A key argument against the chip was that overseas buyers would shun U.S. technology products if they were ready-made for spying. Some companies say that is just what has happened in the wake of the Snowden disclosures.


The White House abandoned the Clipper Chip and instead relied on export controls to prevent the best cryptography from crossing U.S. borders. RSA once again rallied the industry, and it set up an Australian division that could ship what it wanted.


“We became the tip of the spear, so to speak, in this fight against government efforts,” Bidzos recalled in an oral history.


RSA EVOLVES


RSA and others claimed victory when export restrictions relaxed.


But the NSA was determined to read what it wanted, and the quest gained urgency after the September 11, 2001 attacks.


RSA, meanwhile, was changing. Bidzos stepped down as CEO in 1999 to concentrate on VeriSign, a security certificate company that had been spun out of RSA. The elite lab Bidzos had founded in Silicon Valley moved east to Massachusetts, and many top engineers left the company, several former employees said.


And the BSafe toolkit was becoming a much smaller part of the company. By 2005, BSafe and other tools for developers brought in just $ 27.5 million of RSA’s revenue, less than 9% of the $ 310 million total.


“When I joined there were 10 people in the labs, and we were fighting the NSA,” said Victor Chan, who rose to lead engineering and the Australian operation before he left in 2005. “It became a very different company later on.”


By the first half of 2006, RSA was among the many technology companies seeing the U.S. government as a partner against overseas hackers.


New RSA Chief Executive Art Coviello and his team still wanted to be seen as part of the technological vanguard, former employees say, and the NSA had just the right pitch. Coviello declined an interview request.


An algorithm called Dual Elliptic Curve, developed inside the agency, was on the road to approval by the National Institutes of Standards and Technology as one of four acceptable methods for generating random numbers. NIST’s blessing is required for many products sold to the government and often sets a broader de facto standard.


RSA adopted the algorithm even before NIST approved it. The NSA then cited the early use of Dual Elliptic Curve inside the government to argue successfully for NIST approval, according to an official familiar with the proceedings.


RSA’s contract made Dual Elliptic Curve the default option for producing random numbers in the RSA toolkit. No alarms were raised, former employees said, because the deal was handled by business leaders rather than pure technologists.


“The labs group had played a very intricate role at BSafe, and they were basically gone,” said labs veteran Michael Wenocur, who left in 1999.


Within a year, major questions were raised about Dual Elliptic Curve. Cryptography authority Bruce Schneier wrote that the weaknesses in the formula “can only be described as a back door.”


After reports of the back door in September, RSA urged its customers to stop using the Dual Elliptic Curve number generator.


But unlike the Clipper Chip fight two decades ago, the company is saying little in public, and it declined to discuss how the NSA entanglements have affected its relationships with customers.


The White House, meanwhile, says it will consider this week’s panel recommendation that any efforts to subvert cryptography be abandoned.


(Reporting by Joseph Menn; Editing by Jonathan Weber and Grant McCool)






Reuters: Politics



Exclusive: Secret contract tied NSA and security industry pioneer

Friday, December 13, 2013

Illuminati the Music Industry Mind Control

The Illuminati and Conspiracies that surround this mysterious organization:



Illuminati the Music Industry Mind Control

Illuminat ithe Music Industry Mind Control The “illuminati” : “what is zionism” : “freemasons” : “anti-christ” : “all seeing eye” : The “illuminati” “what is…



Illuminati the Music Industry Mind Control

Wednesday, December 4, 2013

"Our Industry Follows Poverty": Success Threatens A T-Shirt Business

"Our Industry Follows Poverty": Success Threatens A T-Shirt Business
http://media.npr.org/assets/img/2013/11/28/noreli_0201_wide-00e091294a21557096414c9fd89435dc1d3f22f1-s6-c30.jpg





Noreli Morales (right) works on the Planet Money women’s T-shirt at a factory in Medellin, Colombia.



Joshua Davis for NPR



Noreli Morales (right) works on the Planet Money women’s T-shirt at a factory in Medellin, Colombia.


Joshua Davis for NPR



The Planet Money men’s T-shirt was made in Bangladesh, by workers who make about $ 3 a day, with overtime. The Planet Money women’s T-shirt was made in Colombia, by workers who make roughly $ 13 a day, without overtime.


The wages in both places are remarkably low by U.S. standards. But the gap between them is huge. Workers in Colombia make more than four times what their counterparts make in Bangladesh. In our reporting, we saw that the workers in Colombia have a much higher standard of living than the workers in Bangladesh.


Noreli Morales, a Colombian worker who helped make our women’s T-shirt, lives with her mom and her daughter in an apartment that has a kitchen and a bathroom. Shumi and Minu, Bangladeshi sisters who worked on our men’s T-shirt, share a single room with Minu’s husband. There’s no running water, no kitchen. Noreli sends her daughter to daycare; Minu can’t afford daycare, so her daughter lives back in the village, with her parents.




PLANET MONEY MAKES A T-SHIRT: The world behind a simple shirt, in five chapters


NPR



The workers in both places are doing essentially the same thing: Sewing T-shirts together. So why the big difference in their wages?


With a long tradition of apparel manufacturing and better technology, the Colombians can make T-shirts much, much faster than the Bangladeshis. In Bangladesh, on one sewing line for our T-shirt, 32 people can make about 80 shirts per hour. One sewing line in Colombia has eight people and can make about 140 T-shirts per hour. The two lines aren’t perfectly parallel — the Bangladeshi workers are completing a few more details of the shirt than the Colombians. But the difference is striking nevertheless.


It’s not just the sewing machine operators who are more efficient in Colombia. The cotton for the men’s shirt was spun into yarn in Indonesia, then shipped to Bangladesh to be knit, cut and sewn. Crystal, the Colombian company that made the women’s shirts, does everything — from spinning the cotton into yarn to knitting the yarn into cloth to stitching sleeves on a shirt. That makes the process much faster and easier for Jockey, the company that coordinated the production of our T-shirt.


Colombia’s economy has been growing like crazy for the past decade, and wages have been rising. That’s good for the country as a whole, but it may wind up driving away the T-shirt industry.


“There is a saying that is going to sound horrible,” Crystal’s CEO, Luis Restrepo, told me. “Our industry follows poverty.” It’s an industry “on roller skates,” he said, rolling from Latin America to China, to Bangladesh — wherever costs are lowest.


No matter how good Crystal is, Restrepo said, the break-up call from a big client can come at any moment.




PLANET MONEY MAKES A T-SHIRT: The Lives Of The Workers Who Made Our Shirt


PLANET MONEY MAKES A T-SHIRT: The Lives Of The Workers Who Made Our Shirt



NPR



“You are one phone call away,” he told me.


When I visited the factory in Colombia, there was a rumor going around that Jockey, one of Crystal’s most important clients, was going to cut its ties with the company. People were really worried. “Who are they gonna let go first?” a worker named Lina Maria Tascón said. “The people who worked on Jockey, of course.”


When I got back to the U.S., I asked Marion Smith, a senior vice president at Jockey, about the rumors. He said they’re true: He decided to put a stop to orders from Crystal. “We both like each other a lot,” Smith said. “They’ve got great principles, they have great capabilities.” The companies are trying to negotiate some new kind of deal, he said.


But the growth of Colombia’s economy means it’s getting expensive to make simple products like T-shirts there. “Wages continue to go up, costs continue to go up,” Smith said. Jockey plans to move production to several other countries, where its cost per shirt will be 20 to 30 percent lower, according to Smith.


The loss of Jockey will be a blow to Crystal. But as Colombia’s economy has grown, Crystal has been transforming itself from a manufacturer of low-end clothes into a company that sells higher-end clothes under its own brands. The company has already opened 160 of its own stores across Latin America, and has plans for more.


“We decided we want to control our own destiny,” Restrepo said.




News




Read more about "Our Industry Follows Poverty": Success Threatens A T-Shirt Business and other interesting subjects concerning NSA at TheDailyNewsReport.com

Thursday, November 28, 2013

100% Evidence The Satanic Illuminati Indoctrinate Using the Music Industry

The Illuminati and Conspiracies that surround this mysterious organization:



video credit: wasmochtensietrinken Copyright Disclaimer Under Section 107 of the Copyright Act 1976, allowance is made for “fair use” for purposes such as cr…



100% Evidence The Satanic Illuminati Indoctrinate Using the Music Industry

Friday, November 22, 2013

Typhoon Unlikely to Have Long-Term Impact on Philippines Outsourcing Industry

Typhoon Unlikely to Have Long-Term Impact on Philippines Outsourcing Industry
http://isbigbrotherwatchingyou.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/11/c8433__p-89EKCgBk8MZdE.gif





CIO – As the total impact of Typhoon Haiyan on the Philippines becomes clear and rescue and aid work continues, it appears that
the country’s flourishing IT and business process outsourcing industry emerged largely unscathed.


“In the outsourcing industry, the main issues are not loss of life or property damage. The main issues are absenteeism due
to family issues or volunteer work and also intermittent power grid issues.” – Frances Karamouzis, Research Vice President, Gartner


Manila, which for around 65 percent of the nation’s $ 16 billion IT and customer management business, was largely unaffected
by the killer storm. The typhoon, which ripped across the country on November 8, killed more than 5,000 people, according
to the United Nations, and displaced more than three million.


“In some cases, recovery may never take place because they have been all but wiped out,” says Jerry Durant, a partner with
outsourcing consultancy NeoGroup based in Manila. “But this has zero impact on sourcing as it presently stands.”


The Impact on Outsourcing


“In the outsourcing industry, the main issues are not loss of life or property damage,” says Frances Karamouzis, research
vice president at Gartner. “The main issues are absenteeism due to family issues or volunteer work and also intermittent power
grid issues.”


Cebu, the second largest outsourcing hub accounting for around 15 percent of industry revenues, was closer to the path of
the storm, taking an indirect hit. The city and surrounding area employs 95,000 people in outsourcing, according to the Cebu
Investment Promotion Center with the 17 new outsourcing offices opened there in the last year generating 11,000 new jobs.


Some of the major providers, such as Teleperformance, Convergys, and Aegis have indicated that they have no damages to facilities and the large majority of employees are safe.


Cognizant, which also has a Cebu facility, said it had no loss of life or major issues. But “there [has been] employee absenteeism
as people are understandably checking on family and helping with relief efforts,” says Karamouzis.


In addition, employees are impacted on a psychological level as they have personal ties to affected areas, says Durant.


Accenture and Country’s Trade Group Need to Speak Up


The industry employs about 750,000 professionals in IT and business process outsourcing and is led by 10 to 15 very large
vendors (including IBM, Cognizant, Capgemini, Dell, HCL, Genpact, WNS, Infosy, and EXL) and dozens of mid-tier providers.
The biggest player is Accenture, which Gartner estimates employs around 35,000 people there.


But neither Accenture nor the country’s industry trade group, the Business Processing Association of the Philippines (BPAP), has issued a public statement or regular updates on the effects of the storm that has left clients in the dark.


“This is a sign of immature approach to the current realities of this world of information, social media, et cetera,” says
Karamouzis, who said officials at the BPAP indicated to her that they don’t feel the storm will have a long-term impact on
the industry.




Netflash




Read more about Typhoon Unlikely to Have Long-Term Impact on Philippines Outsourcing Industry and other interesting subjects concerning NSA at TheDailyNewsReport.com

Friday, October 25, 2013

Brain drain: Funding and industry leave America, followed by top minds



Patrick Henningsen is a writer, investigative journalist, and filmmaker and founder of the news website 21stCentury Wire.com.




Published time: October 25, 2013 15:58

Job seekers wait in front of the training offices of Local Union 46, the union representing metallic lathers and reinforcing ironworkers, in the Queens borough of New York (Reuters/Keith Bedford)


The US government spending crisis has caused visible pain for research and innovation in America. Already this year, billions of dollars in federal cuts due to sequestration has affected federal grants for scientific research.


But this problem is only the tip of a much bigger problem facing the redundant superpower.


Two fundamental building blocks for any modern technological, progressive economy are discovery research and scientific investigation. By their nature, these two pursuits carry a much slower return on the investment. In the past, the US could afford to be patient because its thriving industrial sector was a magnet for the word’s talent and investment – which is why successive governments have routinely placed their dollars there. That engine which used to power the US juggernaut has been disassembled and shipped overseas.


Politicians will certainly blame the current crisis in academia on sequestration and partisan feuds over federal budgets, but that’s only part of the story. Cuts are not only consigned to federal budgets. According to a report by the National Science Foundation, States have also cut funds for public research universities by 20 percent, in constant dollars, between 2002 and 2010. If money is cut back, that means researchers are laid off, programs are frozen, and labs are closed. As a result, talent will begin to look abroad for better opportunities.


According to a recent interview by RT with Benjamin Corb, a public affairs director for the American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology (ASBMB), indicators for a ‘brain drain’ from the US are already starting to manifest throughout higher education.


 “As a survey that we put together over the summer shows, one in five American scientists are considering leaving the country for better funding opportunities outside our borders,” he said.


The ASBMB survey also found that half the researchers had either laid off, or were expecting to lay off staff due to federal budget cuts. This includes letting go of technical staff, but more crucially it’s hurting the future crop of highly skilled experts – graduate, PhD, postdoctoral and resident trainees. It’s becoming a noticeable issue, even for some of the country’s, if not the world’s, perennially top higher education institutions like Harvard and the University of Chicago medical schools, as well as the New York State University system, to name only a few. 


A job seeker sleeps in a lawn chair as he waits in front of the training offices of Local Union 46, a union representing metallic lathers and reinforcing ironworkers, in the Queens borough of New York (Reuters/Keith Bedford)  


Holding on to the best and the brightest which make up this fundamental basis for maintaining a leading science and tech economy is not impossible without steady growth in funding and investment in research institutions. If you lose the edge in research, then it’s only a question of time before the corporate investment which funds the next stage – commercial research and development, begins to migrate off shore too.


In 2010, President Obama delivered a typical glorious speech on this topic stating, “Our future depends on reaffirming America’s role as the world’s engine of scientific discovery and technical innovation.”


The key word here was ‘reaffirm’, implying that the US has already been knocked off its perch. This is not a problem which any President can rightly claim to fix. Aggressive off-shoring policies over the last four US administrations has seen whole industries disappear from America, and so too will the graduates, following the work in an age of globalization. Why produce legions of engineering graduates in the US when there are no engineering jobs to fill?


But it’s not just across the board cuts in federal funding that are pushing this trend of a ‘brain drain’ from American shores. A larger picture reveals an almost perfect storm – other established economic and political trends which have made for optimum conditions for decline in scientific and technological eminence.


Falling prospects in a zero growth economy


Where America single-handedly dominated the global technology and innovation scene for the better part of a century, new competition has already begun mushrooming outside of the US. Unfortunately, investment and talent follows opportunity. So how did the US lose its edge?


Put aside for one moment, the delusional wisdom of Washington DC and the excesses of Wall Street. The rest of the world now refers to America as a “mature economy”, which you can translate as meaning: zero growth. In economic terms, zero growth = zero investment, which in turn means zero future in an economy dominated by rent seekers. Nearly two decades of breakneck federal spending, and bloated budgets, coupled with the feverish outsourcing of manufacturing in America to the Far East and Latin America, swelling ranks of illegal immigrants – has forced factors which are counterproductive to an advanced competitive economy – high unemployment, and high inflation. High costs of goods and services, high costs of education, high costs of fuel and a high cost of living means that America is no longer competitive.


The writing has been on the wall for a while. What politician didn’t know, or care to know during the naughty 1990s, is that you cannot support a vibrant scientific commercial research and development (R & D) sector without the actual industrial sector that’s meant to nurture it. Modern transnational corporations have no allegiance to flag anymore, only to shareholder dividends. The US Congress and Senate are no different, as most of them amass their personal fortunes while in office playing the stock market. As a result, a significant chunk of the productive US economy has long since been off-shored to China, India and elsewhere. No amount of government funded money pumped into R & D can replace whole missing industries.


Jobseekers stand in line to attend the Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. career fair held by the New York State department of Labor in New York (Reuters/Lucas Jackson)


Hyper-inflation in American higher education


American university and college costs are the highest in the world, bar none – and so is the level of student debt. Because of the extortionate costs involved in US higher education, most post graduate students are dependent on federal government funding for research and paid lab work in order to carry on up through the ranks of academia.


How did it get so expensive in recent years? One of the US government’s nice little profit centers is the student loan business. The amount of cheap money available in the form of lines of credit for education has exploded in the last decade. Universities and colleges, along with landlords and other suppliers, have taken full advantage by pushing prices up accordingly.


In addition to this, courting high paying overseas students has also become a number one priority for many private universities and colleges.


So what does it mean when a higher education is approaching the cost of a new home in America? Is a degree(s) really worth $ 150,000, or $ 200,000, plus interest? According to most statistical tables, there only one job available for every five higher education graduates in the United States today. Clearly, the only really winners here are the one profiting off the student loans. 


A job seeker meets with recruiters during the Job Hunters Boot Camp at the San Mateo Event Center in San Mateo, California. (Justin Sullivan/Getty Images/AFP)


Immigration politics


A 2009 study by the National Science Foundation showed that foreign students on temporary visas took home 33% of all science and engineering doctorates in the United States.  The numbers are even higher in some other scientific fields. Up to 90% of these doctorate earners end up having to leave the US because of strict immigration rules. Why is this a problem? Because highly skilled immigrants are one of the chief drivers of innovation and success in higher education and industry in the United States.


For politicians and bureaucrats in the Washington DC, these graduates are not a top priority. Presently, the top concern for partisan leaders are low skilled, and low educated immigrants – because they potentially will deliver more votes. Hence, amnesty for illegal immigrants is what dominates the policy debates today. Politicians remain out to lunch on this issue, ignoring the reality that highly skilled foreign postgraduate earners not only dominate the high tech start-up sector, creating over half a million jobs in the high tech sector alone, but have also delivered the likes of Sun Microsystems, eBay and Google – just a few entrepreneur success stories who were founded, or co-founded by these highly educated, and highly skilled immigrants.


India’s booming technology hub is centered around the region of Bangalore, and it’s now attracting talented top recruits, not only from India – but also from the US. Many believe that the real revolutionary innovations and upwardly mobile opportunities will be found in markets like India, and China – and not in the US.


Vivek Wadhwa immigrated from India, and is now a visiting scholar to leading US institutions including Stanford, Duke and University of California at Berkley.


“The next Google, or the next Intel may well be in India, and not in America – that’s how serious a thing this is,” he told RT. 


It’s no longer a question of ‘if’. The brain drain has already begun.


The statements, views and opinions expressed in this column are solely those of the author and do not necessarily represent those of RT.




RT – Op-EdgePost id = does not exist.



Brain drain: Funding and industry leave America, followed by top minds