Sunday, March 7, 2010

Thank Sex For Making The Internet Hot

Breaking news: Sex is popular online.
"Sex had played a major role in driving many technologies," says Jonathan Coopersmith, a technology historian at Texas A&M.

The example most people are familiar with, he says, is the VCR. Many early video cassettes were pornographic, and consumers' desire to view the material in their own homes fueled the early dissemination of the technology.

Coopersmith says, think back to the early days of the Internet. "You had to have the hookup, you had to have the computer, you had to have the willingness to experiment a fair amount. And the people who do this tend to be young men, especially in their 20s and 30s, and this also happens to be a prime audience for pornography."

According to Nielsen net ratings, more than a quarter of Internet users accessed an adult Web site in January 2010. The Web research company Hitwise says adult sites accounted for about 6 percent of all U.S. Internet hits that month — putting the adult category in eighth place, with social networking sites in first.

But Hitwise general manager Bill Tancer says in the not-too-distant past, adult sites used to get the most hits of anything on the Internet. "If I go back to when I started tracking this data in 2004, that was the highest of any category," he says.

Chatting Up Sex

Of course, that's only taking into account pornographic Web sites — the Internet's also provided a private venue for sexual discussion and education. Violet Blue is a sex columnist for the San Francisco Chronicle, writes for several online publications and blogs and hosts a popular podcast called "Open Source Sex."

"The Internet has been sexualized even before it was the Internet," she says. Back in the days of Bulletin Board Systems, some people would exchange what was known as "ASCII porn."

"This was essentially people, using characters by hand on their keyboard to create what look like explicit images, and then send them to each other through Bulletin Board Systems," she says.

Tech historian Jonathan Coopersmith says America Online's popularity was driven by its private chat features.

"One of the nicknames for AOL in the industry was ‘the house that sex chat built,'" he says.

And Violet Blue points out that before YouTube began better enforcing its community standards, "there was a lot of porn on there."

Porn Paved The Way

Adult sites also paved the way for the mainstream to adopt several technologies.

They were among the first to integrate e-commerce systems to process credit card transactions. "The first part of the Web to make money was pornography," Coopersmith says. Right now the adult industry is hurting — due to the same piracy other online content providers face — but in the early days "you have a lot of some of the tactics, concepts and business strategies pioneered by the cybersex world that then flowed into the regular online world. For instance, creating these Web sites where you join for a fee and you have different levels of membership."

More obnoxious practices were also readily embraced by some in the adult world, as many people's junk e-mail folders can easily demonstrate.

Video technology is a place where adult sites have been especially innovative, integrating live video streams into browser windows with early "jpeg push" video. They continue to be on the cutting edge; Peter Acworth, who founded the very NSFW site kink.com, remembers a few years ago when customers were demanding live HD streams, but he couldn't find an acceptable off-the-shelf solution.

"So we put together our own technology to be able to do so," Acworth says. "You know, you go to CNN or anywhere else on the Web, the video you see is going to be significantly lower bandwidth."

Microsoft Office 2010 Coming on May

Microsoft Office 2010 Coming on May 12? Micr TFTS – Techosoft Office 2010 Press Event to Take Place on May 12; Enterprises to Get it First, Regular Mortals Only in June] Read: Microsoft Office 2010 Coming on May 12? Microsoft Office 2010 Press Event to Take Place on May 12; Enterprises to Get it First, Regular Mortals Only in June]

While Google purchased DocVerse in an attempt to convince even more people to use its Google Docs app Microsoft is busy preparing for the official launch of Microsoft Office 2010. We have talked about the upcoming Office bundle before and we’re definitely interested to see the official version of it hit stores everywhere.

And it seems that Microsoft has scheduled an event on May 12 in which the new Office suite will be officially unveiled. Don’t expect to be able to buy it on the same date unless you happen to be an enterprise with volume license agreements. Simple mortals like you and I will be able to buy Office 2010 at some point in June which still sounds good.

Future Microsoft Office 2010 customers will be able to pay less for the new software should they choose to upgrade their current Microsoft Office 2007 suite. In fact, deciding to buy Office 2007 from March 5 to September 20 will get you a free copy of Office 2010. So the sooner you get Office 2007, the sooner you’ll be able to install Office 2010 on your computers. But here’s how the whole upgrade process works in more detail:

* Office Ultimate 2007 upgrades for free to Office Professional 2010
* Office Professional 2007 upgrades for free to Office Professional 2010
* Office Small Business 2007 upgrades for free to Office Professional 2010
* Office Standard 2007 upgrades for free to Office Home and Business 2010
* Office Home and Student 2007 upgrades for free to Office Home and Student 2010
* Office Basic 2007 upgrades for free to Office Home and Business 2010
* Word 2007 upgrades for free to Word 2010
* Excel 2007 upgrades for free to Excel 2010
* PowerPoint 2007 upgrades for free to PowerPoint 2010
* OneNote 2007 upgrades for free to OneNote 2010
* Access 2007 upgrades for free to Access 2010
* Outlook 2007 upgrades for free to Outlook 2010
* Outlook with Business Contact Manager 2007 upgrades for free to Outlook 2010
* Project Standard 2007 upgrades for free to Project Standard 2010
* Project Professional 2007 upgrades for free to Project Professional 2010
* Publisher 2007 upgrades for free to Publisher 2010
* Visio Standard 2007 upgrades for free to Visio Standard 2010
* Visio Professional 2007 upgrades for free to Visio Professional 2010

There’s a 25 free upgrades per person limit so make sure you take it into account before getting Office 2010 licenses for your small business.

Read: Microsoft Office 2010 Coming on May 12? Microsoft Office 2010 Press Event to Take Place on May 12; Enterprises to Get it First, Regular Mortals Only in June] » TFTS – Technology, Gadgets & Curiosities

Rival Google to benefit from IE9, says Microsoft

Microsoft's senior product manager for Internet Explorer, Pete LePage, says rival Google could be one of the companies that will benefit most from future improvements in Internet Explorer.
Mr LePage, on his first visit to New Zealand, says there are plenty of improvements yet to be made to the company's web browser – now on version 8 – and there is no danger of it running out of puff in the same way that word-processing programs ground to an innovation halt.
The next version of Internet Explorer, IE9, will for the first time use computers' graphics processors – usually used by computer games – to better render website graphics on screen.
"That is, hardware graphics acceleration is going to give you better reading experiences – better fonts and an improved ability to see images and scroll through them."
The difference should be noticeable when using online mapping services, such as Google Maps, that can be clunky to navigate.
"Because we are moving all of the graphics processing to the part of the computer that is designed for it, you will get a smooth, wonderful experience."
Risks to people's browsing experience include confusion over the 1000-page specification for page mark-up language html 5, which might be interpreted differently by browser-makers and result in problems for website owners, he says.
Internet Explorer was last week hit by another scare.
A "zero-day exploit" – malicious code for which there is as yet no defence – was circulating on the net and could be used to hack into computers running Windows XP and some other older versions of Windows.
The threat relies on duping web surfers into visiting compromised websites and pressing the F1 key on their keyboard to download malware.
Mr LePage says hackers will always try to attack browsers. Customers concerned by zero-day exploits are best advised to follow the advice given by the Microsoft Security Response Center, which "immediately swings into gear when we investigate the issue".
"It is a great place for information and resources and what to do in specific incidents."

Pakistan_Punjab Jialas demand end to coalition with PML-N PM Gilani advocates reconciliation

LAHORE: Apparently unmoved by the PPP Jialas’ demand for parting ways with the Pakistan Muslim League-N government in Punjab, Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani has urged the party workers to continue pursuing the policy of reconciliation with the ally parties at the Centre as well as in the provinces.

Chairing a meeting of the Pakistan People’s Party office-bearers, elected members, ticket-holders and workers from Lahore district here on Saturday, Gilani once again asked them to maintain cordial relations with the coalition partners.

However, he expressed strong resentment against the home ministry officials over “unjust distribution of arms licences” and assured the meeting participants that an impartial probe would be conducted into the matter.

The prime minister said: “The credit for the formation of the 1973 Constitution goes to the PPP, and now it will restore it to its original form.” He said 25 million new CNICs (Computerised National Identity Cards) would be issued to the applicants before the next elections.

Sources said the majority of the PPP members urged the prime minister at the meeting to part ways with the Pakistan Muslim League-N at the earliest and let the party play the role of a vibrant opposition in the Punjab Assembly.

Prominent among those who attended the meeting include PPP General Secretary Senator Jehangir Badr, Punjab PPP President Rana Aftab Ahmed Khan, Coordinator to President for Punjab Naveed Chaudhry, PPP Lahore President Chaudhry Asgher, etc.

The meeting, which soon after its inception, turned into an open court of the PPP workers, criticised the PML-N leadership and their own federal ministers for giving them a cold shoulder, the sources added.

The party members told Gilani that various corruption scandals of the PML-N ministers and parliamentarians were regularly coming to the fore, and causing embarrassment to the PPP, being an ally party in the Punjab government. They said the PPP should quit the provincial government and adopt an aggressive stance against the Nawaz-League provincial government.

The party insiders said PPP Lahore President Chaudhry Asgher also handed over a copy of an FIR, registered against over 250 PPP workers in the second week of February, when they took out a rally to express solidarity with party Co-chairperson Asif Ali Zardari. He said the PPP workers needed to be accommodated now and their problems, particularly relating to employment, should be addressed, the sources added.

PPP Punjab Finance Secretary Aurangzeb Burki, in his speech criticised the “unjust distribution of arms licences by the ministry concerned”. He said out of total 21,000 licences issued by the ministry, not a single was given to any of the PPP office-bearers from Lahore.

He also complained that neither any attention was being paid to the party workers nor any share was ever given to them in any Hajj, job or licence quota, which was giving a rise to disenchantment among them, the sources added.

The prime minister said he would hold an impartial inquiry into arms licences issues.

Ex-MPA and PPP Federal Council member Dr Zia Ullah Khan Bangash complained that the PML-N leadership in Punjab was not fulfilling its promises and it would be a better option if the party sits on the opposition benches in the Punjab Assembly.

The PPP offered all sacrifices for the restoration of the judges, but the PML-N hijacked the movement and solely claimed credit for it, he added.

The prime minister while responding to the complaints and demands said the leadership would make all-out efforts for the welfare of the party workers. He said he had asked the PPP co-chairperson to convene the party central executive committee (CEC) meetings regularly so that the message of the leadership could reach the workers. He admitted the PPP government’s achievements could not be highlighted properly in the past years.

Gilani said the Pakistan People’s Party should also be given credit for uniting the nation against terrorism and the world had already acknowledged this great achievement.

Agencies add: Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani reiterated to run the party in accordance with the vision and mission of Zulfikar Ali Bhutto and Benazir Bhutto Shaheed.

“The PPP is not just a party but a movement and it is open to talks,” he said and added it was the responsibility of workers to point out weaknesses of the leadership and guide it so that they could be overcome, if any.

Pakistan 'closing in on kidnappers'

Akila Naqqash, the mother of kidnapped boy Sahil Saeed, has appealed for his return

Police are closing in on the men who kidnapped a five-year-old British boy in central Pakistan last week, authorities have said.
Interior Minister Rehman Malik also said police have clues that indicate the crime was carried out by people close to the boy's family, which has Pakistani origins.
Speaking to reporters during a visit to Jhelum, the city where Sahil Saeed was snatched from his grandmother's house on Wednesday night after robbers held the family at gunpoint for several hours, Mr Malik said: "We have certain leads that I would not like to discuss."
The robbers also took some household possessions and demanded a large ransom to return the child, whose plight has received significant attention in both Pakistan and Britain.
"I am warning those abductors to release the boy because we are very near to you," Mr Malik said.
The boy's family has made several emotional appeals for his release, and his father, Raja Naqqash Saeed, said that he was satisfied with the Pakistani government's efforts after meeting with Mr Malik.
"My son will come back home safely, God willing," Mr Saeed said during a joint appearance with the interior minister.
Saeed earlier told Sky News the kidnappers demanded £100,000 in ransom.
The case is among a soaring number of kidnappings for ransom in Pakistan, where Taliban-led militancy and a struggling economy have fuelled crime, and most victims are Pakistani citizens.
A statement from the Foreign Office said: "Our thoughts are with Sahil and his family at this extremely distressing time. We call on whoever is holding Sahil to return him to his family."

Hafiz Saeed issue was strongly raised with Pakistan: India

Surprised over Islamabad's statement that Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT) chief Hafiz Saeed did not figure in the Feb 25 foreign secretary-level talks, India on Sunday said the "unhindered freedom" the terrorist chief enjoys in Pakistan was "strongly" raised during the parleys held in New Delhi.
"India has been demanding action against Saeed, one of the alleged masterminds of the Mumbai terrorist attack, since the barbaric and dastardly attack took place (on Nov 26, 2008)," the official spokesperson of the external affairs ministry said in a statement.
The statement came in response to media reports quoting Pakistan Foreign Minister Shah Mehmood Qureshi that India has not demanded the arrest of Hafiz Saeed and that the issue did not even figure in the foreign secretary-level talks with Pakistan.
Expressing "surprise", the spokesperson said: "A dossier containing a compilation of evidence on the involvement of Hafiz Saeed in the terrorist attack was handed over to Pakistan on Aug 21, 2009, and his name featured prominently in yet another dossier handed over to the Pakistan foreign secretary (Salman Bashir) during the talks on Feb 25, 2010."
"Saeed's activities, including his recent vitriolic and venomous statements aimed at fomenting further acts of terrorism against India and the unhindered public space and freedom he enjoys in Pakistan, were raised strongly by India during the foreign secretary-level talks," the spokesperson said.
Qureshi on Saturday claimed that India never demanded the arrest of the Saeed, who now heads the Jamaat-ud-Dawah, a frontal charity organisation of the Lashkar.
He said Indian Foreign Secretary Nirupama Rao never discussed the Saeed issue at the talks with her Pakistani counterpart.

Iran starts mass production of short-range missiles

Tehran - Iranian Defence Minister Ahmad Vahidi on Sunday inaugurated a new production line for short-range missiles designed to destroy targets at sea, state television reported.
Terming the Nasr (Victory) 1 missile as 'sophisticated,' the minister said the missile could be fired from coastal areas and ships.
The general added that, after some technical modifications, the new missile could also be launched from helicopters and submarines.
The missile, which can destroy targets weighing up to 3,000 tons and evade radar, was developed exclusively by Iranians, he stressed.
The missile will be delivered to the Iranian navy and the Revolutionary Guards' naval forces and will considerably increase Iran's defence capabilities at sea, Vahidi was quoted by the TV as saying.
Iran is strengthening its military capabilities due to mounting international pressure against its disputed nuclear program.
In February, Iran launched its first home-made destroyer, Jamaran. The 15,000-ton multi-mission warship is equipped with modern radars and electronic warfare capabilities.
Tehran has frequently warned that it would use its missiles to retaliate against strategic sites if Israel carries out threats to bomb Iranian nuclear sites.
The main Western - and especially Israeli - concern are the Iranian medium-range missiles Shahab and Sejil, as they would be able to hit any part of the Jewish state.

Iran faces Russia in Wrestling World Cup final

Iran has defeated Uzbekistan 6-1 to face hosts Russia in the final of the Freestyle Wrestling World Cup underway in Moscow.

The Iranian squad beat Uzbekistan in its third consecutive victory on Sunday morning.

Iran's Abbas Dabbaghi (55kg), Mostafa Hosseinkhani (60kg), Mehdi Taqavi (66kg), Saeed Riahi(74kg) and Mohammad-Reza Azarshakib (120kg) managed to beat their Uzbek rivals.

Iran must now meet Russia which gained a 6-1 win against Turkey this morning.

Iran overpowered Azerbaijan in its opening match on Saturday morning and achieved a 5-2 victory against the United States on Saturday afternoon.

Satellite Photos: North Korea Assisting Iran on Missile Site

Gantry tower, flame bucket Digital Globe via Jane's IHS

Gantry tower, flame bucket(IsraelNN.com) Iran's development of a missile launch facility in the northern province of Semnan and its Simorgh missile project both indicate that the militant Shiite theocracy is probably collaborating with North Korea on its missile program. The platforms seen on the Semnan launch pad's new gantry tower – a multi-level tower for servicing missiles before launch – resemble those seen on the gantry tower at North Korea’s new Tongchang launch pad. A drainage pit 170 meters directly in front of the pad also seems like a copy of one at Pyongyang’s new site.

In addition, the first stage of the Simorgh missile strongly resembles the North Korean Unha-2, with four clustered engines and near-identical dimensions.

Photographs and information about the likely collaboration between Iran and North Korea have appeared on security news sites Defense Update and Jane's IHS.

Defense Update also reported that east of the active site, “the Iranians are constructing a new facility that could be supporting the Iranian solid rocket propulsion development, associated with the Sejjil and Ashura missiles or even larger missiles” – and noted that “according to Jane's Intelligence analysts, the site could be associated with the next-generation Simorgh rocket.”

The Simorgh, unveiled in early February, is officially intended to be used as a space-launch vehicle, but it could be converted for launching long-range ballistic missiles for military purposes.

Satellite images indicate that the launch pad has “a fully constructed flame bucket” – the structure that diverts the missile's exhaust gases from the hillside. The launch site is linked through tubing to a nearby, sheltered underground facility. The gantry tower is approximately 18–20 meters tall, and the flame bucket is nearly as high as the tower. Jane's analysts assume the construction appears midway towards completion.

Missile Threat Growing
Brig.-Gen. (res.) Yossi Kuperwasser, Deputy Director General of the Ministry of Strategic Affairs, said at the recent Jerusalem Conference that "the main central military threat against Israel is the missile threat. Israel's security situation changes all the time. Threats of missiles are becoming more severe at an extremely quick pace."

"During the Second Lebanon War," he added, "Hamas had 13,000 missiles. Today, the number of rockets and missiles spread around Israel is in the tens of thousands. The reality has changed. Moreover, if in the past missiles and rockets were weapons possessed by states and were thought of as strategic tools, today they are used also by terror organizations, and the reality is much more severe. This is because these same states removed the obstacles that they imposed before and began transferring missiles to terror organizations they support under their authority."

China not involved in negotiations with Google: Chinese IT Minister

Chinese Industry and Information Technology Ministry has refuted that China has been involved in any negotiations with Google since the US search engine threatened to pull back from the country on January 21.

We have yet to have any direct contacts or negotiations with them on this topic, The China Daily quoted Miao Wei, Vice-Minister of the Ministry, as saying.

Wei also said that Google has never filed reports over alleged Internet regulation and cyber attacks to the ministry or requests for negotiations.

It had also never informed the ministry that it was planning to withdraw from China, he added.

He said China respects Google's right to decide whether to continue its business in the country.

If Google decides to continue its business in China and abides by China's laws, it's welcome to stay, Wei said.

If the company chooses to withdraw from the Chinese market, it must go through certain procedures according to the law and regulations and deal with customers' problems that may arise, he added.

Wei further said he didn't think the Google incident should affect relations between China and the United States.

It's not a huge problem that should impact the relationship of two countries, he said.

China Names Ambassador to S. Korea Zhang Xinsen By Kim Se-jeong

Zhang Xinsen, a director at the general office of the Chinese foreign ministry, has been named the new ambassador to Korea, according to diplomatic sources.

The move, if approved by South Korea, will likely be seen as a ``notch up'' from China's past practice since 1992, when the two former Cold War adversaries established full diplomatic relations.

China, a traditionally strong ally of North Korea, had been sending vice-ministerial level ambassadors to North Korea, and sending lower-ranked envoys to South Korea.

China's ``upgrade'' is seen as a positive response to South Korea's recent appointment of Yu Woo-ik, a former top aide to President Lee Myung-bak, as Korea's ambassador to China.

Zhang is to succeed Cheng Yonghua, who was named the Chinese ambassador to Japan.

He was born in 1953 in Shanghai and graduated from Beijing Foreign Studies University, a top school in China, well known for producing many top diplomats. He also previously served as the Chinese ambassador to Ireland in 2005-2007.

He is not known to have had any involvement with Korean affairs.

China Blames U.S. For Tensions

Chinese Foreign Minister Yang Jiechi

China is blaming the United States for raising tensions in the relationship between the two countries.

Foreign Minister Yang Jiechi, speaking today on the sidelines of China's Communist-dominated parliament session, said ties between Beijing and Washington had been "seriously disrupted" recently, and the responsibility for this does not rest with China.

The Chinese foreign minister called on the United States to respect China's positions and core interests.

Tensions in U.S.-Chinese ties have recently increased over disputes about U.S. arms sales to Taiwan, trade issues, Chinese censorship of the Internet, and U.S. President Barack Obama's meeting with the Dalai Lama, the exiled Tibetan leader.

China Says Missing Panchen Lama Is Living In Tibet

A boy who disappeared after being named Tibetan Buddhism's second-highest figure by the Dalai Lama is living with his family somewhere in Tibet, the Himalayan region's Chinese-appointed governor said Sunday.Speaking to reporters in Beijing, Padma Choling gave no other details about the boy, Gendun Choekyi Nyima, saying only that his siblings were studying at a university or working in regular jobs.
"As far as I know, his family and he are now living a very good life in Tibet," Padma Choling said at a news conference on the sidelines of China's annual legislative session. "He and his family are reluctant to be disturbed, they want to live an ordinary life."
Gendun Choekyi Nyima, 20, was named the reincarnation of the Panchen Lama in 1995 by the Dalai Lama, Tibetan Buddhism's highest figure whom Beijing reviles. He and his family, who are from a remote part of Chinese-controlled Tibet, have not been heard from since.
Instead, Chinese officials selected another boy, Gyaltsen Norbu, as the Panchen, but he is not generally recognized as such by many Tibetans.
Gyaltsen Norbu, who is also 20, is emerging as Beijing's choice to supplant the Dalai Lama as the public face of Tibetan Buddhism and has taken on an increasingly political role in recent years. He has made appearances with Communist Party leaders praising Chinese rule over Tibet and was recently appointed to the main government advisory body.
Padma Choling said the Chinese-appointed Panchen works out of his main temple in the western Tibetan city of Shigatse, and "enjoys popular support from people of all ethnic groups."
China's decision to overrule the Dalai Lama was seen as a move to diminish his influence over Tibetans and strengthen central government control over the deeply religious region that it says has been a part of China for centuries.
Communist troops occupied Tibet in 1950 and the Dalai Lama fled into exile nine years later amid a popular uprising against Chinese rule.
Beijing says China's government has had the historical right to appoint leading Tibetan lamas, and Padma Choling reiterated its insistence that Gendun Choekyi Nyima was not a valid Panchen.
"I believe that he himself is a victim of this practice," Padma Choling said.
4_China_Tibet.sff.jpg
Champa Phuntsok, Tibet's Director of the People's Congress, speaks during a press conference on the sidelines of the National People's Congress in Beijing, China, Sunday, March 7, 2010.


3_China_Tibet.sff.jpgPadma Choling, Tibet's China-appointed governor, speaks during a press conference on the sidelines of the National People's Congress in Beijing, China, Sunday, March 7, 2010.

Padma Choling said Gendun Choekyi Nyima, a boy who disappeared after being named Tibetan Buddhism's second-highest figure by the Dalai Lama, is living with his family somewhere in Tibet.
2_China_Tibet.sff.jpg

Padma Choling, Tibet's China-appointed governor, listens to questions during a press conference on the sidelines of the National People's Congress in Beijing, China, Sunday, March 7, 2010. Padma Choling said Gendun Choekyi Nyima, a boy who disappeared after being named Tibetan Buddhism's second-highest figure by the Dalai Lama, is living with his family somewhere in Tibet.
2_China_Tibet.sff.jpg
1_China_Tibet.sff.jpg
Padma Choling, Tibet's China-appointed governor, listens to questions during a press conference on the sidelines of the National People's Congress in Beijing, China, Sunday, March 7, 2010. Padma Choling said Gendun Choekyi Nyima, a boy who disappeared after being named Tibetan Buddhism's second-highest figure by the Dalai Lama, is living with his family somewhere in Tibet.


Padma Choling, Tibet's China-appointed governor, listens to questions during a press conference on the sidelines of the National People's Congress in Beijing, China, Sunday, March 7, 2010. Padma Choling said Gendun Choekyi Nyima, a boy who disappeared after being named Tibetan Buddhism's second-highest figure by the Dalai Lama, is living with his family somewhere in Tibet.

Property tax, hot topic at China's 2010 parliament session

BEIJING, Mar. 7, 2010 (Xinhua News Agency) -- Whether it is now the appropriate time to launch a property tax and curb skyrocketing housing prices in China has aroused hot debate at the annual sessions of the National People's Congress (NPC), China's top legislature, and the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference (CPPCC), the top advisory body.
--Property tax can stabilize home prices
Proposals for a levy of property tax mainly hold that it will increase the costs and risks of buying housing and thereby abate the speculative purchases of relatively wealthy individuals. Afterwards, housing supplies would become more rational, and move prices closer to a reasonable track.
Some also expect that a property tax would help de-couple local governments' fiscal revenues from land sales  which are a major source of revenue for local governments, especially when other sources disappeared with the global downturn, and which forcefully contribute to skyrocketing home prices.
The revenue from land transfers in China's 70 large and medium sized cities totaled 1.08 trillion yuan (about 158.82 billion US dollars) in 2009, up 140 percent from a year earlier, according to the China Index Academy, a real estate research institute.
"Land transfers bring only one-lump of income, but a property tax would provide lasting income," said Jia Kang, member of the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference (CPPCC) and director of the Financial Research Institute under the Ministry of Finance, who added that property tax will increase the ratio of taxes from land in local government's total revenue to 30 percent to 40 percent, well beyond the current 10 percent to 20 percent.
Another CPPCC member Guo Songhai, who works under the Ministry of Housing and Urban-Rural Development, proposed to levy different property tax ratios on primary and second purchases of houses
"For example, the first home purchased by a family requires a 0.2 percent property tax, and for their second, if under 120 square meters in area, would be taxed 0.5 and 1 percent; if over 120 square meters, 1 percent," said Guo.
--More harm than benefit?
The real estate sector in China contributes about 20 percent of fixed asset investment and about 10 percent to GDP, analysts say.
This has raised questions and sparked controversy: has the sector "kidnapped" China's economy, with the government unwilling to take tough measures to curb home prices out of fear it will pull down GDP growth?
Some deputies and advisors claim that it is still necessary for China to use real estate as reinforcement, especially when the global economy hasn't fully recovered from the financial crisis and hence the external demand is still weak.
They fear if property tax comes too early, it will harm China's macroeconomy.
Meanwhile, some say property tax serves as a kind of double tax to the existing land appreciation tax, land transfer fee, urban real estate tax, and others costs.
Gu Yunchang, vice chairman and secretary general of the China Real Estate Association, recommends faster development of the real economy and financial markets, so that there will be more alternatives for investment that can attract money away from the housing market. (By Zhang Yuenan, zhangyuenan@xinhua.org.

Antwerp Gang Holds Diamond Family Hostage, Makes Off With Millions

Karp Impex, an India-based diamond manufacturer with offices in Antwerp, fell victim to one of the biggest robberies in Belgium's illustrious diamond sector Friday. 

The family of Pankaj Maldar, a partner at Karp Impex NV, was held at gun point at their Antwerp residence by a gang demanding stock from the company’s office. The gang came with full knowledge of Karp Impex’s inventory and ordered that Maldar fetch the diamonds from the office, while they held the family hostage at their home.

Reports indicate that the robbers made away with diamonds valued up to $10 million after the 18 hour ordeal.

Confirming the incident, Vasant Mehta, chairman of India’s Gem & Jewellery Export Promotion Centre (GJEPC), told Rapaport News that while Antwerp has been privy to thefts in the past, this was the first such incident of such a large scale. “Antwerp used to be a safe place to do business but this should serve as a wakeup call for the city,” Mehta said. He added that the robbery was not aimed specifically at an Indian company adding that “it could have been anyone.”

Karp Impex is a Diamond Trading Company (DTC) sightholder headquartered in Mumbai, India. The company also has offices in Antwerp, Hong Kong, Surat, Geneva, and Dubai.

Rubber production in India keeps uptrend

Production of natural rubber in India is keeping an uptrend of an average four per cent with the cultivation base as well as productivity increasing, especially in Kerala, which accounts for 80 per cent of country's total output.
  
The fourth largest producer of natural rubber in the world, India's total output was 8.65 lakh ton in 2008-09 marking a 4.74 per cent growth from the previous year, according to the Economic Review of Kerala state Planning Board.
  
In production of natural rubber, India comes after Thailand, Indonesia and Malaysia and in consumption also it ranks fourth after China, USA and Japan, the Review, released last week, said.
  
The coverage of under rubber crop in Kerala in 2008-09 was 5.17 lakh hectares, which was higher by 5430 hectares over the previous year. The state produced 783,000 tonnes of rubber during the year, marking an increase of 4.03 per cent.
  
The state has been maintaining the uptrend in productivity from 1,190 Kg per hectare in 1998-99 to 1,514 Kg per hectare in 2008-09.
  
The increase in domestic production also helped reduce the rubber import to the country from  86394 tons to 77616 tons in 2008-09, the Review said.
  
The higher prices of rubber in the international market had its domestic reflection also. The average price of RSS-4 in Kottayam,the epicentre of rubber trade in the country, was Rs 101.12 a Kg in 2008-09.Average international price of RSS-3, the equivalent of RSS-4, was Rs 103.79 per Kg,the review said.

India expresses surprise on Pak's statement on Saeed

Pakistan Foreign Minister Shah Mahmood Qureshi had said on Saturday that India has not demanded the arrest of Hafiz Saeed.
Hafiz Saeed 
 India has expressed surprise on Pakistan's statement on Hafiz Saeed, saying it has been demanding action against him since the barbaric and dastardly attacks in Mumbai. A dossier was given to Pakistan on August 21, 2009 and yet another dossier containing Saeed's name prominently was handed over to Pakistan Foreign Secretary Salman Basheer during the February 25 Indo-Pak talks, says New Delhi.
Earlier Pakistan Foreign Minister Shah Mahmood Qureshi had said on Saturday that India has not demanded the arrest of Jamaat-ud-Dawa chief Hafiz Saeed and the issue did not even figure in the Foreign Secretary-level talks with Pakistan last month.
“You will be surprised that they made no demand (for the arrest of Saeed). They did not even mention Hafiz Saeed in the entire talks,” Qureshi told reporters in his hometown of Multan.
 

Pak media blames India for engineering recent terror acts in Afghanistan

Islamabad, Mar.7 (ANI): While links between the Kabul attack, in which 17 people, including six Indians were killed, and the ambush in Kandahar, in which four Pakistani labourers were killed, is yet to be established, the Pakistani media continues to blame India for creating trouble in Afghanistan.

According to The Nation, one of Pakistan's leading English dailies, Indian officials, with the possible involvement of their Afghan counterparts, had reached a covert agreement with 15 to 20 wanted Al-Qaeda militants, who are currently locked up at the Bagram airbase.

According to the newspaper, as per the deal the inmates would to be given thorough amnesty from severe punishments and torture they had undergone during interrogations besides lucrative bribes. In return, the detained militants would help India "regain its broken momentum in Afghanistan."

The report in the newspaper also said that Pakistan's recent action against Afghan Taliban leaders hiding inside its boundary has "not augur well for India, and both Afghanistan and India have started undermining Islamabad's successful operations against key Taliban leaders by blaming the Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT) for the February 26 terror attack in Kabul.

"Both Afghanistan and India had responded instantly to Kabul attack to accuse the same banned militant organisation. This response clearly indicates that it was pre-planned and well thought out," the report said.

Earlier, The News had also published a report quoting "some reliable sources" as saying that Indian Ambassador to Kabul Jayant Prasad and some top Indian diplomats had more than three meetings with the Afghan secret service Riyast-e-Amaniyat-i-Milly (RAM) chief Amarullah Saleh since the terror attack on a guest house in Kabul last month.

The newspaper also claimed that India's National Security Adviser (NSA), Shiv Shankar Menon, who visiting Kabul on Friday, has been in regular contact with the bosses of the secret service in Afghanistan.

It may be noted that RAM spokesman Saeed Ansari had told a western news agency that there was evidence that Urdu-speaking Pakistanis from the Lashkar-e-Taiba were involved in the Kabul attack and that the Afghan Taliban, which had claimed the responsibility soon after the terror raid on February 26,was not responsible for it. (ANI)

Indian military doctrine dangerous, ours defensive: Pakistan

TalibanIslamabad, March 7 (IANS) Pakistan has said its military doctrine was “purely defensive in nature” and termed India’s “massive militarisation as dangerous” for peace and stability of South Asia.
Brushing aside India’s criticism of Pakistan for acquiring modern weapons from the US, foreign office spokesperson Abdul Basit Saturday said: “Our military doctrine is purely defensive in nature”.
“It is India’s dangerous military doctrines and massive militarisation that are matters of huge concern for regional stability whereas Pakistan has always acted to protect its legitimate security interests,” The News quoted Basit as saying.
He was responding to Indian Defence Minister A.K. Antony’s remarks that New Delhi was not convinced with the US explanation that it was supplying sophisticated arms to Pakistan army to take on the Taliban and Al Qaeda.
Antony urged the US to ensure that these weapons were not used against India.
According to reports, the US has cleared the supply of sophisticated laser-guided bomb kits, 12 surveillance drones and 18 F-16 fighters to enhance Pakistan military’s capability against Taliban and Al Qaeda in restive tribal areas along the Pakistan-Afghanistan border.

Pakistan police hit wall in hunt for British boy


ISLAMABAD: Pakistani police said Sunday they were scrambling for clues to help recover a missing British boy, with no new contact from the kidnappers and few leads on the fate of the five-year-old.

Frustrated relatives waited in the town of Jhelum in central Pakistan for news of Sahil Saeed, who was snatched Thursday from his grandmother's house by robbers who also stole jewellery, cash and demanded a 120,000-dollar ransom.

"We are totally blind with no clue in hand so far about the kidnapped child, but our investigation continues," said senior police official Raja Mohammad Tahir Bashir. "We are concerned about the safety and security of the child."

The boy was kidnapped by men who stormed the house armed with guns and grenades, subjecting the family to a six-hour ordeal shortly before Sahil and his Pakistani father were preparing to take a taxi to the airport and fly home.

Police have detained the taxi driver who had been booked to take them to the airport and said on Saturday they were confident of recovering the child. A Pakistani diplomat also said police had made several arrests.

Pakistan's high commissioner to London suggested the kidnapping could have been an inside job, but family members have vigorously denied the claim.

Sahil's great uncle Raja Shahid said family members were getting increasingly frustrated with police efforts, adding that they had no fresh contact from the kidnappers since a telephone call to Sahil's father on Friday.

"We have not received any information from police about the kid. We are very upset and concerned about the health and security of Sahil," Shahid told AFP.

"We will now contact the police again to find out why they have not been able to recover the child so far. The kidnappers have also not contacted us again -- they had contacted us twice in the beginning."

In Oldham, northern England, Sahil's mother Akila Naqqash on Saturday made an emotional plea for her son's safe return, telling his captors: "I just want my son back. All is forgiven, I will forgive you."

Local police official Chaudhry Shahbaz Ahmad said he thought the widespread media coverage of the abduction may have caused the kidnappers to go underground and refrain from contacting the family.

"But we are hopeful we will safely recover the boy," he added.

Kidnappings of Westerners are rare in Pakistan, but criminal gangs -- some connected to Islamist militant networks -- often abduct locals for ransom.

Other kidnappings are blamed on family disputes.

MOTHER OF BOY KIDNAPPED IN PAKISTAN APPEALS TO HIS CAPTORS

The mother of a 5-year-old British boy kidnapped from a house in central Pakistan last week made an emotional appeal on Saturday for his safe return.

The plea came as British broadcaster Sky News reported that Sahil Saeed's father had apparently been contacted by the abductors on Friday who told him "the boy is with us and we will call you later."

"Have in your heart to please give my son back. I'll forgive you," Akila Naqqash said in an interview, speaking at the family's home in Oldham in the north of England.

Robbers kidnapped the boy and demanded a large ransom for his return, according to British officials and the boy's family.

The robbers entered the house late on Wednesday night in Jhelum city in Punjab province and terrorised the family for several hours before leaving with the boy, whose father is a Pakistani national, a spokesman at the British High Commission in Islamabad said.

The boy's father, Raja Naqqash Saeed, told Sky News that the kidnappers had demanded 100-thousand British pounds (150-thousand US dollars) for the boy's return.

British officials have been in touch with the boy's parents.

The father and son had been visiting the boy's grandmother and were scheduled to return to Britain on Thursday, the family said.

Relatives gathered at the family home in Jhelum to offer each other support and wait for news.

The local Police Chief in Jhelum said four men entered the home and stole a quantity of gold and 150-thousand Pakistan rupees (1,800 US dollars), snatching the boy as they were leaving.

The number of kidnappings in Pakistan has increased in recent years, driven by a struggling economy and the overall erosion of security as the country faces a violent insurgency.

The ransom sums demanded can run into the (m) millions of US dollars, though the captors often settle for less. AGENCIES