Tag Archive for China

UN Tries to Control the Internet Again

UN Tries to Control the Internet AgainInfoSecurity reports that even after much of the free world refused to sign the controversial new ITU WCIT-12 treaty in December 2012, U.S. Many argued this would give the UN control of the Internet. Federal Communications Commission (FCC) Commissioner Robert M. McDowell warned, ‘the worst is yet to come.’

ITU logoThe United States,” he said, “should immediately prepare for an even more treacherous ITU treaty negotiation that will take place in 2014 in Korea. Those talks could expand the ITU’s reach even further.” McDowell seems convinced that the ITU’s desire to control the internet is not a passing fancy, but a long-term intent. He may be right, and it may come before 2014.

Last week the ITU Secretary-General Hamadoun Touré released his draft report for the Fifth World Telecommunication/Information and Communication Technology Policy Forum 2013. “This draft report of the Secretary-General to the WTPF-2013,” it states, “aims to provide a basis for discussion at the Policy Forum, incorporating the contributions of ITU Member States and Sector Members, and serving as the sole working document of the Forum focusing on key issues on which it would be desirable to reach conclusions.

ITU’s takeover attemptSuggested themes for discussion include, “Global Principles for the governance and use of the Internet,” and “On the basis of reciprocity, to explore ways for greater collaboration and coördination between ITU and relevant organizations – including, but not limited to, the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN), the Regional Internet Registries (RIRs), the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF), the Internet Society (ISOC) and the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) – involved in the development of IP-based networks and the future internet, through cooperation agreements, as appropriate, to increase the role of ITU in Internet governance to ensure the largest benefits to the global community.”

This is exactly what caused disarray in December’s WCIT in Dubai the commissioner states.

Meanwhile, a ‘de-fund the ITU petition has appeared on the White HouseWe the People’ website. A supporting website gives full details. “Fighting on behalf of the Internet,” it states, The United States government and fifty-four other countries rejected the ITU’s takeover attempt, but this is a single battle in a war that the ITU will continue to fight. The ITU is spending more than $180M/year to oppose the Internet and is drawing from its reserves more heavily each year ($9M in 2010, up from $5.5M in 2009), as progressive countries withdraw their payments from the ITU’s war-chest.

The ten most oppressive countries in the Open Net Initiative’s ranking of online freedom all sided against the internet, and none of them are giving the ITU as much as the U.S. is. If all the countries that stood with the Internet against the ITU’s attack withdraw their funding, it claims, “the ITU’s membership revenue will be reduced by 74%.

The petition also calls for future U.S. delegations to be reduced “to no more than one USG representative, tasked primarily with communicating a U.S. position that the ITU’s only legitimate area of authority is radio communications.” The long-term danger from such entrenched views on both sides is that the worldwide nature of the internet might fracture into one internet under multi-stakeholder governance in the ‘free’ world, and a series of heavily government-regulated Internets elsewhere.

Freedom and prosperity are at stake,” warned Commissioner McDowell.

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I have warned about the United Nations’ attempt to take over the Internet since November.

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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.

Bach Seat Under Attack from China

Sean Buckley at FireceTelecom reports that China Telecom is setting its sites on the U.S. market. He is reporting that China Telecom announced plans to expand its global business unit. The move will drive $1.6 billion (CNY 10 billion) of sales in 2013.

Wang Xiaochu, China Telecom’s chairman, said in a China Daily report that the service provider saw the potential for its international business, after developing its China Telecom Global division. They plan to target including Asia-Pacific, Europe, and the Americas.  The article states that the service provider said it will aggressively purchase international assets to expand its presence in the U.S. “It is for sure that China Telecom will conduct M&As globally, and we are training talent to be more well-prepared,” said Wang.

China Telecom Americas

China Telecom Americas (CHA) is the largest international subsidiary of State-run China Telecom. CHA has launched its self-branded retail mobile service in Chicago. Donald Tan, president of CHA said the service will expand to Los Angeles and New York soon. In addition, the Chinese service provider has opened an office in Chicago.

However, one analyst says that given the recent government opposition to Chinese-based companies Huawei and ZTE (783), China Telecom could face similar challenges in serving the U.S. market in a significant way.

Given the failure of Huawei Technologies Co. Ltd. and ZTE Corp. in their attempts to gain a foothold in the U.S. market, I am not optimistic that China Telecom, a truly State-owned Chinese company, will do any better,” said Xiang Ligang, a Beijing-based telecommunications expert who also runs the industry information website cctime.com.

China Telecom, the State-owned Chinese service provider owns and operates CHINANET (China’s largest Internet network). This may be why U.S. regulators will try to squash CHA’s growth. My personal experience says that China Telecom does not control its networks very well.

For the last several months, this blog has seen a huge uptick in attacks. The attacks were primarily from China Telecom-controlled IP subnets. So far they have been defended off by the smart use of good software. For the past 10 weeks, there has been a peak of 87 attack attempts and an average of 27 attacks per day from China Telcom-controlled subnets. The attacks originated from the Anhui, Jiangsu, and Shanghai provinces. Over this time the most attacks came from China Telecom’s CHINANET locations ib:

 

Attacking IP addresses

Akami (AKAM) claims that China is the source of most cyber-attacks in its latest State of the Internet report. The Content Distribution Network (CDN) reports that about 33% of attack traffic originated in China between July and September 2012. Akamai also reports China has been the top source of attack activity since the end of 2011.

CHINANET claims to be the world’s largest Internet network

 

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.

Tablet Info

iPad thefts from Cleveland Heights-University Heights middle school students prompt community soul searching

iPad thefts from Cleveland Heights-University Heights middle school students prompt community soul searchingCleveland.com reports that iPad thefts from middle school students in the Cleveland Heights-University Heights school district is causing an iPad re-think.

The school district gave 1,300 Apple (AAPL) iPad tablets to middle school students at the start of the school year. The report says students were permitted to take the iPads home as a continuing educational tool.

The experiment lasted less than three weeks because the students became targets for thieves. Between Sept. 26 and Oct. 13, a dozen middle school students had their iPads stolen while on their way to and from school, Cleveland Heights police chief Jeff Richardson said.

Since mid-October, the district has collected the tablets at the end of the school day and students no longer could take them home.

More than 130 people attended a meeting seeking answers about how to go ahead and whether crime will win out over education. The reporter writes that the meeting was meant as an information-gathering session. Police, principals, and other officials wanted to decide if the district could safely revive the “Take home iPad Plan” sometime in the near future.  The crowd reaction was mixed about how to proceed.

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Superintendent John Deasy’s $17.5M request for computer tablet funds nixed

Superintendent John Deasy's $17.5M request for computer tablet funds nixed

The Los Angles Daily News reports that the panel that oversees the spending of Los Angeles Unified’s bond revenue refused Superintendent John Deasy’s request for nearly $17.5 million to jump-start the purchase of computer tablets for every student. The Bond Oversight Committee voted 7-3 for the plan, but that was one vote short of the eight needed for passage, officials said.

The $17.5 million would have funded the first phase of his long-range technology program. The plan included the tablet pilot project at 14 secondary schools. Mr. Deasy said the tablets are needed for the district to start the new curriculum known as Common Core State Standards taking effect in 2014.

Ultimately, he wants to buy tablets for all 650,000 LAUSD students, a project estimated to cost upwards of $400 million.

Related article
  • LAUSD Superintendent Warns Of Shorter School Year Due To Budget Crisis (losangeles.cbslocal.com)
IDC Figures Show Samsung and ASUS Challenging Apple’s Grip on the Tablet Computing Market

http://www.stripersonline.com/t/628984/check-out-what-im-doing-tonightMIT’s Technology Review pointed out new data from IDC suggest that Apple’s dominance of the global tablet computer market may be giving way. Competing tablet makers, led by Samsung (005930), gained substantial ground during the third quarter of 2012.

Apple‘s (AAPL) market share dropped from 65 percent in the second quarter to just over 50% in the third quarter. Meanwhile, Samsung’s share doubled to 18%, and Amazon (AMZN) and ASUS (2357) each saw their share rise from under five percent to around nine percent.

2012 3Q Worldwide tablet shipments

As is clear from the graph above, TR concludes that it’s too early to tell how quickly the market is diversifying. Apple’s lag was at least partly due to rumors about its plans to release the iPad Mini, which led some consumers to hold off on buying a new iPad, according to IDC. Now that the Mini is out, analysts expect Apple to have a strong fourth quarter.

The iPad Mini’s $329 starting price, however, is well above that of many Google (GOOG) Android tablets, which is why IDC’s analysts believe there is “plenty of room for Android vendors to build upon the success they achieved in the third quarter.”

Android-powered smartphones are already more popular than Apple’s iPhone in the U.S. as well as in other countries, like China

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Tablet Makers Pursue Public Schools

Tablet Makers Pursue Public SchoolsSchools are a large and growing market for Apple’s iPad. Teachers claim that tablets help students with lessons, improve memory and language skills, and cause them to act more independently. The excitement among tablet makers is almost as great. Tablet makers like Apple are pursuing public schools for more sales.

MIT’s Technology Review brings us data from IDC which says global shipments of tablets will reach 177 million this year, and 11 million of them were purchased by businesses or government of those, IDC analyst Tom Mainelli says, the “vast majority” were sold to schools.

Mr. Mainelli thinks that within a few years all U.S. students will have some access to a tablet at school. With 55 million students in the country’s schools, that’s a lot of potential sales. The article says it’s not just a one-time product push: beyond selling tablets to schools and districts, tablet makers see a chance to set up future sales by establishing brand loyalty with young users. “All these guys see huge opportunities here,” he says.

The most successful tablet maker in the education market is Apple (AAPL). In its July 2012 quarterly report, the company said it sold one million iPads to schools. TR notes that Apple hasn’t reported education numbers since then, but it did unveil a smaller, cheaper model that it expects will also appeal to students and educators: the $329 iPad Mini.

Amazon (AMZN) also highlighted its interest in the education market with the debut of Whispercast, a service to manage its Kindle e-readers en masse. Jay Marine, vice president of product management for the Kindle, the company sees the education market as “a meaningful business opportunity.

Smaller companies are making tablets aimed specifically at the education market. Two firms are CurriculumLoft, which makes the Kuno tablet, and Brainchild, which sells the Kineo.

Brainchild CEO Jeff Cameron claims his company’s $299 tablet, which runs on Google‘s (GOOG) Android software is better than mass-market devices because it was built for educational use. TR says that, unlike most tablets, the Kineo has a replaceable battery, resulting in a longer lifespan. Its touch screen is meant to withstand spills, and it has more physical buttons than an iPad.

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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.

SNL Slams Apple & Tech Press

NL Slam Apple & Tech PressRemember when Saturday Night Live was funny? Super Bass-O-Matic, Killer Bees, Hot Tub, Joe Cocker, Samurai Delicatessen, Coneheads, or Schweddy Balls. Well SNL hit another home run with it jab at Apple.

In the clip below, they take up the hypocrisy of tech journalism. They poke fun at the nit-picking they are famous for versus the real human toll that Foxconn (2038) and Apple (AAPL) take on Chinese workers that churn out the latest igadget.

Saturday Night Live Pokes Fun at iPhone 5 Tech Pundits from Ahmad Nazir Afiq on Vimeo.

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LOL at the classic Chinese satirical dance. Too bad nobody in China will ever see this.

 

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.

China’s Largest Automobile Company Comes to Motor City

China’s Largest Automobile Company Comes to Motor CityChina’s largest automobile company has opened a new outpost in the Motor City’s suburbs. TheDetroitBureau.com reports that Shanghai Automotive Industries Corporation USA Inc. (SAIC) located to metro Detroit to build closer ties with one of its principal partners, General Motors (GM), as well as some of the other North American automakers and suppliers.

Shanghai Automotive Industries Corporation USASAIC USA Inc. expects to have 100 employees in its new 30,000-square-foot operations center in the Motor City at 322 N. Old Woodward, Birmingham, MI. What that means in the long-term, especially with the Chinese expected to eventually target the American automobile market, remains an unanswered question according to the blog.

Cooperation between U.S. and Chinese automobile companies is increasingly important in the new global automotive marketplace, SAIC Motor Chairman Maoyuan Hu said in a statement. The article reports that Maoyuan said, “…the opening of the new North American Operations Center in Birmingham marks an important step in creating a stronger ties between the US and Chinese automotive industries. With the increasing importance of cooperation between the major global automotive markets, this move by SAIC to strengthen its US presence is significant.”

“I believe SAIC USA will enhance the operation of localization in the recruitment of professional, technical and management personnel and actively expand economic and trade activities,” Maoyuan said.

ChinaThe blog says SAIC USA’s decision to expand its Operation Center in Michigan was based on a number of critical factors, including access to a highly trained workforce, proximity to key global automotive partners, especially General Motors, proximity to world-class automobile parts suppliers, and the favorable business environment in Michigan. The CEO of China’s largest automaker said, “… we expect SAIC USA will continue healthy growth in this market and this will be a new chapter of mutually beneficial cooperation for China and the US, with the support of both countries.”

The Michigan SAIC USA facility will focus on three main areas of SAIC USA’s automotive business, including purchasing, logistics and technology, and engineering.

SAIC USA parent company, Shanghai, China-based SAIC Motor, is the largest automotive manufacturer in that booming country. It is also GM’s principal partner in China, involved in a variety of joint ventures, including the original Buick assembly plant in Shanghai. Among its various operations are Shanghai GM, Shanghai VW, SAIC Motor Commercial Vehicle Company, SAIC-GM Wuling Automobile Co. In total SAIC Motor sold over 4 million vehicles in 2011 in the China market alone.

Michigan Governor Rick Snyder said, “The company’s commitment to Michigan cements our standing as the automotive capital of North America.”

Most analysts eventually expect a Chinese presence in the US. Whether SAIC would come to the U.S. with products of its own remains to be seen, though that’s a possibility the maker isn’t ready to discuss right now.

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GM makes about $1 billion a year in China so it is little wonder SAIC moved into the Detroit Area. The move should also help stabilize the Detroit job market which has been up and down lately.

Related articles
  • China: Shanghai GM begins construction on $1.1bn car plant (inautonews.com)

 

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.