Tag Archive for Business

Detroit is Growth Leader in Tech Jobs

Detroit is Growth Leader in Tech JobsMost of the things I read in the Bach Seat about Detroit are negative at best, so good news about jobs in Detroit is always welcome. Detroit has seen a 66% growth in tech jobs which BussinessWeek says second-best in the U.S., behind Cleveland.

The article says that Detroit employers are looking for technology workers as automakers create cars with increasingly sophisticated Internet services (a trend I wrote about here) and lithium-ion batteries. Skills needed in Motor City are project management and experience with Oracle software. The tech top employers in Motown are Computer Sciences and General Electric.

Cities with tech job growth

Detroit3. Cincinnati

4. Jacksonville, FL

5. Salt Lake City

6. Richmond, VA

7. Miami

8. Tampa

9. Portland, OR

10. Pittsburgh

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I have hired a couple more techs to coordinate and am looking to hire a couple more, so maybe BuseinessWeek is right.

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Ralph Bach has been in IT long enough to know better and has blogged from his Bach Seat about IT, careers, and anything else that catches his attention since 2005. You can follow him on LinkedInFacebook, and Twitter. Email the Bach Seat here.

Tech Regulatory Capture

ATech Regulatory Captures I have noted from my Bach Seat, the revolving door or regulatory capture between the federal government and the tech titans isn’t new. The tech titans like Google (GOOG), Facebook, and Apple (AAPL) hire former feds to protect their turf while their web 2.0 applications attract attention from lawmakers and regulators concerned about issues like privacy, competition, pricing, and other aspects of the online economy.

Tech Firms Capture White House Staffers

Tech Firms Hiring White House Staffers“These companies are at the crosshairs of privacy and policy issues and they see people in the White House and federal government as protectors of their plans to expand into new markets,” Jeffrey Chester, an online privacy advocate and executive director of the Center for Digital Democracy told the Washington Post. “These are uber influence-makers they are hiring.”

Three examples of this in the Washington Post article are:

  • Google’s green energy initiative hired consultant Colin Crowell, who is both a former senior adviser to the FCC’s chairman and a former aide to Rep. Edward J. Markey (D-Mass.).
  • AT&T’s (T) lobbying leader James Cicconi, is a former staffer for George W. Bush. Mr. Cicconi has a long track record of regulatory success at the FCC and approval of several mergers for AT&T.
  • AT&T also hired Bill Clinton spokesman Mike McCurry heads Arts & Labs, a group that has lobbied against Internet access rules known as net neutrality, for AT&T, Verizon and cable companies.

Facebook Hires Former Clinton Spokesman

Facebook logoThe Washington Post reports that Facebook recently hired former Clinton White House spokesman Joe Lockhart to its communications team, as the company faces increased scrutiny caused by the company’s global expansion and treatment of data shared by the site’s more than 600 million users and its privacy practices. Mr. Lockhart, who served as press secretary for President Bill Clinton will be vice president of global communications. Mr. Lockhart will be located at the company’s Silicon Valley headquarters and report to Elliott Schrage, VP of global communications, marketing, and public policy.

Facebook has also hired former George W. Bush deputy chief of staff, Joel Kaplan, to head its D.C. federal lobbying and policy shop. The Facebook office had just one employee in 2007 and now has a dozen on staff.

Larry Summers to Join VC Firm

Andreesen Horowitz logoSilicon Valley venture fund Andreesen Horowitz has added former White House economic director Larry Summers as an exclusive “long-term” special adviser. The Washington Post reports. Marc Andreesen, a co-founder of the venture capital investment firm, said the appointment brings the former government official’s international economic expertise to a fast-changing high-tech industry where Internet companies are quickly expanding overseas and fundamentally changing the way business markets work. Summers doesn’t have experience in tech, but that’s not why the venture firm wants him, they said. As the former Treasury secretary and a noted economist, the venture firm wants his economic knowledge to help companies think more broadly about how they can break into new markets and bring their services to various industries.

Andreesen Horowitz, with investments in Facebook, Digg, and Zynga, said Mr.Summers will receive “long-term” compensation, which would probably include a stake in companies or the fund, but Andreesen declined to give more details on their arrangement.

AT&T Gave Cash to Merger Backers

ATT logoEliza Krigman at POLITICO.com reports that AT&T (T) is lining up support for its acquisition of T-Mobile from a slew of groups with no obvious interest in telecom deals, except that they’ve received big piles of AT&T’s cash.

AT&T says it supports nonprofit groups because it’s the right thing to do — and not because of any quid pro quo. “For decades, AT&T has proudly supported numerous diverse groups and organizations,” a company spokesperson told POLITICO.

But not everyone’s buying it according to the article, “The money that nonprofits receive from their corporate sponsors sticks not only in their bank accounts but in their minds,” Ellen Miller, executive director of the Sunlight Foundation, told POLITICO.com. “This is what I think of as deep lobbying — there is an expectation that when push comes to shove, these groups will come out in favor of their benefactors.”

Politico logoAT&T’s corporate giving arm, the AT&T Foundation, doled out $62 million in 2009 to support a variety of arts and education programs, charities, and organizations according to the article. Jim Cicconi, AT&T’s senior vice president and top lobbyist, chairs the foundation. some of the payments AT&T has made include

The NAACP received a $1 million contribution from AT&T in 2009 and has received funding in the six figures dating to 2006, according to the group’s annual reports. The NAACP was one of the first groups to announce public support of the T-Mobile acquisition. William Barber, head of the North Carolina chapter of the NAACP, told POLITICO that AT&T’s financial support did not influence his group’s decision to write to the FCC in support of the merger.

GLAAD which has received $50,000 from AT&T, recently backed the merger deal. Rich Ferraro, a GLAAD official, told POLITICO, “We do not make policy decisions based on what’s best for our corporate sponsors.”

The Columbia Urban League received a $25,000 grant from the AT&T Foundation in 2009 to offer “underserved populations with resources to help their children achieve academic success,” according to the foundation’s IRS Form 990. On May 27, the group’s president and CEO, James McLawhorn, wrote to urge the FCC to approve AT&T’s acquisition of T-Mobile.

Some public interest groups question whether AT&T is now cashing in on its status as one of the country’s biggest corporate donors. I wrote about AT&T’s habit of showering everyone with money here

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Ralph Bach has been in IT long enough to know better and has blogged from his Bach Seat about IT, careers, and anything else that catches his attention since 2005. You can follow him on LinkedInFacebook, and Twitter. Email the Bach Seat here.

Swiss Party Plans to Sink PowerPoint

Swiss Party Plans to Sink PowerPointThe newly formed Anti-PowerPoint Party (APPP), is a newly formed single interest party in Switzerland, dedicated to saving the world from the evils of Microsoft (MSFT) Powerpoint presentations reports TechEye. On its blog, the party claims that about 11 percent of more than 4.1 million Swiss employees have to waste their time assisting in the creation of PowerPoint presentations.

Microsoft PowerPoint logoCIO.com says the APPP, calculates the use of presentation software costs the Swiss economy 2.1 billion Swiss francs (US $2.5 billion) annually, while across Europe, presentation software causes an economic loss of €110 billion (US$160 billion). TechEye ironically points out that the amount is how much the Greek debt bail-out will cost. APPP bases its calculations on unverified assumptions about the number of employees attending presentations each week and supposes that 85 percent of those employees see no purpose in the presentations.

Microsoft logoAPPP is aiming high. It plans to become the fourth strongest political party in Switzerland. It has already had to adapt its strategy to emphasize that it is not just Microsoft’s Powerpoint software it wants to be banned but all makers of such software.

Still, it has a good chance of getting what it wants. In Switzerland, citizens can force a referendum on any subject. All it takes is 100,000 voters to sign a petition demanding one. It also looks like it has the backing of the U.S. Army.

Flip chartThe BusinessInsider reports that the APPP’s founder Matthias Poehm is a public speaking trainer. He has a particularly strong aversion to PowerPoint. Mr. Poehm has written a book called “The PowerPoint Fallacy” which just so happens to be featured on the APPP website. Mr. Poehm admitted to PC World that he’s using the party as a promotional tool to sell his book and he suggests the classic flip chart as the best option for presentations.

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What if Abraham Lincoln used PowerPoint at Gettysburg?

What do you think?

Would you vote to ban PPT in the US?

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Ralph Bach has been in IT long enough to know better and has blogged from his Bach Seat about IT, careers, and anything else that catches his attention since 2005. You can follow him on LinkedInFacebook, and Twitter. Email the Bach Seat here.

Richard Dreyfuss Reads the iTunes EULA

CNET asks why are end-user license agreements (EULA) and terms of service so long and convoluted. In order to find out, they asked Academy Award winner Richard Dreyfuss to help them understand by doing a dramatic reading of the Apple (AAPL) EULA.

Richard Dreyfuss Reads the iTunes EULA

 

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Ralph Bach has been in IT long enough to know better and has blogged from his Bach Seat about IT, careers, and anything else that catches his attention since 2005. You can follow him on LinkedInFacebook, and Twitter. Email the Bach Seat here.

Investigating Internet Liability Insurance

Investigating Internet Liability InsuranceEnterprises now face the question of determining the right kinds of cyber insurance to buy in addition to the other traditional insurance that covers the risk of doing business. Internet Evolution asks, “What would you pay to be insured against data loss or theft“? While cyber insurance of all kinds has been around for a while, more firms than ever are seriously considering it, as data breaches, Web fraud, and security breaches continue to make headlines.

chubb_logoTracey Vispoli, global financial fidelity manager for Chubb, told Internet Evolution, “Although I would still characterize business interest in cyber insurance as emerging, we saw a 40 percent growth in firms securing some form of Internet liability insurance in 2009.” Chubb provides Internet liability and other insurance coverage for businesses worldwide. “I’ve been talking with several insurance companies now about entering the cyber-insurance area,” says Paul Sop, CTO for computer security and consulting firm Prolexic Technologies Inc.

For insurers like Chubb, the Internet provides an opportunity to develop new products to meet emerging business needs. For potential business clients, Internet insurance plugs gaps in coverage that current business insurance policies don’t address. The article says the gaps include:

  • Website-related losses,
  • Website copyright infringements,
  • Cyber-attacks and
  • Unauthorized online access to customer information.

We encourage companies to think not only about their Web-based assets but also about their entire technology base when they consider insurance,” Ms. Vispoli told Internet Evolution. This includes not only cyber-attacks that directly target the Website from the Internet but also breaches of confidential corporate data such as customer and employee records. Ms. Vispoli explained that at least 45 states require a company whose data is compromised to send out official notifications to all those affected.

Someone from the outside can hack into your employee or customer information, and then there’s the financial pressure of not only fixing the breach and taking action, but also of notifying potentially hundreds of thousands of individuals whose information has been compromised.

The article says that the cost of notification alone can be worth insuring, but there are other costs as well. As recently as five years ago, companies were not required to send out notices nor did they spend the amount of money that it takes today to bring in a forensics team to analyze a cyber breach and find the hack.

The cost of Internet liability and other e-commerce-related insurance varies, depending on the risk factors a given organization presents. Internet Evolution says one of the variables is the amount of online sales it books each year. Common types of cyber-insurance that are available today include:

  • Technology professional liability,
  • Media errors and omissions,
  • Telecommunications professional liability and
  • Computer information and data security liability.

We are seeing an aggressive trend in businesses subscribing to cyber-insurance, especially in industry sectors like healthcare, financial services, retail, services companies like hotel chains and media,” Ms. Vispoli said in the article. “Depending on the size of the organization, we might be contacted for coverage information by a Chief Security Officer, or possibly by a CFO or CIO.” All of them see growing exposures from e-theft, e-fraud, compromise of critical data, loss of goodwill, e-threats, and vandalism, denial of service, copyright infringement, and regulatory compliance issues.

What do you think?

Does your organization have cyber insurance?

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Ralph Bach has been in IT long enough to know better and has blogged from his Bach Seat about IT, careers, and anything else that catches his attention since 2005. You can follow him on LinkedInFacebook, and Twitter. Email the Bach Seat here.