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US plans 'regulated' Bitcoin exchange

Written By Unknown on Minggu, 25 Januari 2015 | 23.22

23 January 2015 Last updated at 12:28

The Winklevoss twins, who clashed with Mark Zuckerberg over Facebook, are seeking approval for a Bitcoin exchange overseen by US regulators.

The pair plan to have the exchange, called Gemini, trading later this year, reports the New York Times.

Cameron and Tyler Winklevoss are known to have invested millions in the virtual currency.

Currently the value of each bitcoin is approaching $200 (£133) - far below the $1,200-high it hit in November 2013.

Lost money

Development work on software underpinning the exchange is being carried out at the Bitcoin start-up founded by the Winklevoss twins. In addition, they have been lobbying New York financial regulators to drum up support for the idea and have signed up banks to handle deposits and transfers.

Work on the exchange began after New York's financial services watchdog last year encouraged virtual currency entrepreneurs operating in the state to apply for formal recognition. This, said the watchdog, was the first step towards full regulation of such exchanges.

The twins won a $65m payout from Mark Zuckerberg after accusing him of stealing their idea for a college-based social network.

Bitcoin is a virtual currency built around a complicated cryptographic protocol and a global network of computers that oversees and verifies which coins have been spent by whom.

Exchanges, through which virtual money can be traded for real cash or to other owners, have been one of the weak points in the whole Bitcoin ecosystem. Some have gone bust leaving traders out of pocket, many have been robbed of all their deposits and now more and more nations are seeking to impose strict controls on how they operate.

The value of each bitcoin has fluctuated widely over the last few years but has been on a steady downward path since late 2013 even though many more online stores and companies accept them in exchange for goods and services.


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Drug drone crashes on Mexican border

22 January 2015 Last updated at 11:28

A drone carrying illegal drugs has crashed near a US border crossing in Mexico.

The quadcopter carrying 3kg (6.6lb) of methamphetamine was found in pieces in a supermarket car park near San Ysidro.

Mexican police said the drone had probably crashed because the drugs onboard had been too heavy for it.

They added that drones were increasingly being used to ferry illicit items across the border with the US.

Home-grown drones

In a statement, the Tijuana police said the drugs had been divided into six packets crudely taped to the body of the drone.

After receiving an anonymous call about the crashed craft, Tijuana police recovered the drone and are now examining it to see if they can trace who set it flying and where it began its journey.

The statement said the drone was a prototype that could be given GPS co-ordinates and would then travel to that location autonomously. No pilot was needed to guide it.

The Tijuana police said drones were just one of the many innovative ways drug-smugglers were using to ferry illicit substances across the border. Other methods included catapults, tunnels and ultra-light aircraft.

Last year, the US Drug Enforcement Agency (DEA) said drones were becoming so popular as a method of drug transport that some gangs were manufacturing their own.

Engineers were hired to make the devices for the drug cartels so they could carry more weight than those that were commercially available, it said.

The drones were making more than 150 trips a year, suggested figures from the DEA.


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Li Ka-shing set to buy O2 for £10bn

23 January 2015 Last updated at 18:12

Asia's richest person Li Ka-shing is in talks to buy Britain's second-largest mobile provider O2 for up to £10.25bn ($15.4bn) from Spain's Telefonica.

His firm, Hong Kong-based Hutchison Whampoa, already owns the Three mobile network, and combining it with O2 would create the UK's biggest mobile group.

However, the move could face tough scrutiny from competition regulators.

It would reduce the number of major operators in the UK from four to three, which might not benefit consumers.

Further consolidation within the telecommunications industry is already on the cards, with BT Group in talks to buy rival operator EE.

Competition issue

If a deal is agreed it would have to be approved by competition regulators in Brussels.

Currently the UK mobile market is dominated by O2, EE, Vodafone and Three.

However, Hutchison Whampoa group finance director, Frank Sixt, pointed to deals in other countries, including Ireland, which were given the green light and which also reduced the number of competitors in the market from four to three.

"The European Commission has taken a positive view of four-to-three consolidations of mobile in three cases now...and we believe that the precedents that they have set in those transactions will apply for this transaction," he said.

Mark Newman, chief research officer at telecoms consultancy, Ovum, thinks there may still be grounds for concern.

"The big question we should be asking ourselves is whether the consolidation will result in prices going up," he said.

"It's worth looking at the Austrian market which has gone from five operators a few years ago to three today. It appears as though prices have gone up in the Austrian market."

O2 said in a statement: "Three is known for campaigning on behalf of its customers, much like O2.

"We are confident that an agreement will mutually benefit the customers of both companies, as well as drive better value, quality and investment in one of the most digitally competitive countries in the world."

Analysis: Rory Cellan-Jones, BBC technology correspondent

These are turbulent times for the UK mobile phone industry - and for its customers.

Just a few years back, there were five operators - Orange, T-Mobile, Vodafone, O2 and the scrappy outsider, Three. Now Three owner Li-Ka Shing's move for O2 means it is likely there will be three giants in charge of our phones and the prices we pay to use them.

BT's move on EE, the merger of Orange and T-Mobile, appeared to raise few competition concerns because it won't cut the number of choices for consumers. Hutchison's plans are a different matter. Three has been a small player making a big impact by bold pricing moves such as offering free international roaming and unlimited data deals. But combined with O2 it would be the biggest operator, and might be keen to raise prices.

The competition authorities in Brussels and in London seem certain to want to have a look at the deal, though some might argue that consolidation in Europe's most competitive mobile market is inevitable and will lead to more investment in better networks.

One company which might be cheering the regulators on is Vodafone. It was already unhappy about the implications of any BT/EE deal - now what was the UK's global telecoms powerhouse faces being an also-ran in its home market.

Spending spree

Hutchison said in a statement that the exclusive negotiations with Telefonica will take a period of several weeks.

"Shareholders and potential investors of the company should note that such negotiations may or may not result in any transaction, and accordingly are advised to exercise caution when dealing in the shares of the company," it said in a filing to the Hong Kong stock exchange.

Hutchison shares jumped 4% on the announcement after they resumed trading in Hong Kong. They had been suspended on Friday morning pending the statement.

Mr Li has spent more than £20bn on overseas acquisitions in recent years. Earlier this week, he agreed to buy the UK's Eversholt Rail Group for £1.1bn.

The 86-year old is also undertaking a major reorganisation of his business empire, which has interests in property, energy, ports and telecoms.

The conglomerates Cheung Kong Holdings and Hutchison Whampoa are both controlled by Mr Li. He plans to merge them and spin off their property assets into a new company, also to be listed in Hong Kong.


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Reporter jailed for stolen data links

22 January 2015 Last updated at 23:55

A journalist with connections to the hacking collective Anonymous has been sentenced to five years in jail after posting online links to stolen data.

Barrett Brown originally faced charges punishable by more than 100 years in prison, but the sentence was reduced after he pleaded guilty last year.

He said he broke the law to reveal details of illegal government activity.

The case drew criticism from advocates of free speech and media rights organisations.

One of Mr Brown's supporters is Glenn Greenwald, a journalist who publicised the National Security Agency (NSA) spying programme revealed by whistle-blower Edward Snowden.

Brown, a 33-year-old US journalist, became an advocate for Anonymous and was often interviewed about the group.

He was arrested after posting a link to data hacked from defence intelligence firm Stratfor.

In April he pleaded guilty to three charges, including obstruction of a police search, making internet threats and a charge related to his involvement in the sharing of the Stratfor data.

But according to the AFP news agency, in a statement written before Thursday's hearing Mr Brown launched a staunch rebuttal of the case.

He said: "The government exposed me to decades of prison time for copying and pasting a link to a publicly available file that other journalists were also linking to without being prosecuted."

His defence was backed by the media rights groups who said he was being prosecuted for his journalistic work.


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India Uber resumes services in Delhi

23 January 2015 Last updated at 07:33

The web-based taxi firm Uber has restarted services in Delhi, weeks after it was banned over charges that one of its drivers raped a passenger.

Uber said in a statement it had applied for a radio taxi licence and would improve safety by introducing features such as an "in-app emergency button"

Driver Shiv Kumar Yadav is currently on trial on rape and kidnapping charges.

A 26-year-old woman alleges he drove her to a secluded area and raped her. He denies the charges.

Delhi banned Uber and several other web-based taxi firms for failing to carry out adequate driver checks in early December.

The company apologised for the incident and acknowledged that it "must do better".

But it has defended the way it checks drivers, and said it expected to have completed about two million background checks worldwide by the end of 2014.

Uber's troubles
  • In late 2014, taxi drivers allege Uber has an unfair advantage and stage road-block protests and strikes in cities across the world
  • Regulatory problems and legal challenges to its business model lead to national bans in Thailand and Spain, and local bans in India, Germany and the US
  • Two Uber drivers charged with sex assault in US city of Chicago in separate incidents

Rape has been in focus in India since a 23-year-old student was gang-raped and murdered on a bus in Delhi in December 2012, which prompted global outrage and a tightening of the laws on sexual violence.

Correspondents, however, say tougher laws have failed to bring down the number of rape cases and a series of high-profile crimes have taken place since then.


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Emergency patch fixes Flash flaw

23 January 2015 Last updated at 11:04

Adobe has released an emergency patch for a flaw in its Flash software that was being widely exploited by thieves.

The patch stops the flaw being exploited on some versions of Windows, Apple and Linux operating systems.

In addition, it is investigating reports that another previously unknown flaw is being used in a popular cybercrime kit sold online.

The kit is favoured by gangs who use malicious programs that demand a ransom after it encrypts important files.

Top target

Adobe's Flash player is used on many websites to show video and other multimedia content.

Although the flaw was present on older versions of Flash used on different operating systems, analysis suggests that it was being most widely abused through the Internet Explorer browser on Windows machines.

On these devices it was being used to get round separate security measures introduced by Microsoft that tried to stop malware working out where in a computer's memory it could find useful data.

The other new flaw Adobe is investigating has appeared in the Angler exploit kit that many cyber-thieves have adopted. Security researchers said this flaw was being widely used in booby-trapped adverts to compromise vulnerable computers.

Once the malware lands on a machine it then tries different tactics to help its creators cash in. It can scramble files and demand a ransom; seek out banking details or hijack ads on webpages as people browse.

Adobe said it hoped to produce a patch for this other flaw next week as the latest emergency patch did not fix it.

A report by networking giant Cisco said Angler was the most widely used exploit kit during 2014. It attributed its popularity to its use of a wide range of vulnerabilities found in Flash, Java, Internet Explorer and other Microsoft programs.

Figures gathered by security firm Trustwave suggest that three of the top four exploits abused by cybercrime groups take advantage of flaws in Adobe's Flash, Acrobat and Reader programs.


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Twitter battles Instagram links

It's either a helpful tip for people with a big following or the latest blow in the battle between two social networks.

Twitter has sent some high profile users a message, suggesting they stop posting photos from Instagram.

As reported by Mashable, the alert suggested posting photos directly to Twitter would ensure "your fans always see them".

Instagram photos have not been viewable within tweets since 2012.

twitter screen grab

The in-app alert featured a fake "superstar" account showing a link from Instagram and a photo posted directly to Twitter, appearing within the tweet itself.

Instagram's move to stop allowing its posts to be seen within tweets in December 2012 was seen as an attempt to drive more traffic to its own app.

At around the same time, Twitter began offering filters and photo editing features of its own.

The latest move by Twitter could suggest an attempt to draw celebrities away from its Facebook-owned rival.

Taylor swift tweet
Many celebrities choose to share photos from Instagram on Twitter, meaning users must click a link to see them.

Instagram announced in December 2014 that it now has 300 million active monthly users compared to Twitter's most recent count of 284m.

It is also a reminder of Twitter's growth as a multimedia platform.

Multiple photos can be posted within tweets and YouTube links appear as embedded video.

one direction tweet
Twitter would prefer all celebrities to post photos directly within tweets.

Twitter is also planning to allow users to post video from within its app alongside its short-form video sharing app Vine.

With many celebrities attracting a big following across social media, Twitter is clearly attempting to position itself as the first choice for their photos.

Follow @BBCNewsbeat on Twitter, BBCNewsbeat on Instagram, search BBC Newsbeat on Facebook and Radio1Newsbeat on YouTube


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