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THE STUDIO: ONE ROOM FITS ALL
Life
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ear God, inspire us to live love as we go on our journey on earth. Live love because it is giving with no thought of getting. Live love because it is tenderness enfolding with strength to protect. Live love because it is forgiveness without further thought of the thing forgiven. Live love because it is understanding of the thing forgiven. Live love because it is understanding of human weakness, with knowledge of the true man shining through; it is quiet in the midst of turmoil; it is trust in You with no thought of self. amen! LOVING QUOTES OAKLAND N.J. USA AND LOUIE M. LAcSON Word&Life Publications • teacherlouie1965@yahoo.com
‘Fury’ pushes ‘Gone Girl’ From top spot
BusinessMirror
Editor: Gerard S. Ramos • lifestylebusinessmirror@gmail.com
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Tuesday, October 21, 2014 Vol. 10 No. 13
P25.00 nationwide | 7 sections 32 pages | 7 days a week
B.S.P. MOVES TO ENSURE LENDERS GIRD THEMSELVES FOR tougher competition
INSIDE
live love
A broader look at today’s business
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Tuesday, October 21, 2014 D1
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Banks ordered to hike capital A By Bianca Cuaresma
The studio: One room fits all
By Samito Jalbuena | the.beast@zoho.com
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HAT’S better than a one-bedroom apartment? A twobedroom apartment, of course. But for the lives of some studio dwellers, they will never give up their “one room fits all” for anything bigger.
Style-wise, a studio apartment forces the homeowner to make gratifying, often startling juxtapositions in the small space. Where else can one find a kitchen right next to the bed? Or home office equipment incorporated with the living room? The studio, also known as the studio flat or bachelor apartment, is a small
apartment which combines living room, bedroom and kitchen in a single room. Studio apartments are generally for single occupancy as these spaces typically have no room to spare. if there’s one thing that gets a bad rap in interior design, it’s the studio apartment. often a rental with very little in the way of space,
studios must do it all in that limited space. While that is a tall order, it isn’t impossible. There are many examples of studios that have evolved into a room suitable for sleeping, living, working and entertaining. That said, getting creative with space proves that size isn’t everything. The hardest thing about setting up a studio apartment is figuring out the most effective layout. With so little available space, every decision influences others and makes a huge impact. Some studios make use of custom-made or pre-fab “pods” where a loft bed and the underlying bunk defines the space. inside and out, the pod contains shelving. inside, there’s a home office and closet. outside, the “pod” holds the media center, with the bed above. The rest of the space is arranged with storage flanking each side of the room, a sofa in the middle, and a couple of chairs for guests. other studios create divisions using curtains to separate private from the more public area. Lightweight chairs can be moved around and between divisions to create instant settees. Meanwhile, the entire space is kept uncluttered by choosing just a few furnishings like a bed, dresser, side tables and a set of other fixtures. Another variant in layout design can put a sleeper sofa in the center of the room. The sofa folds out into a bed. Behind that, a dining table
and bookshelves create a small study that, in turn, may be used for dining and entertaining. of course, other twists to the same story exist. A studio may also have the bed as the central hangout spot. During the day, it can double as a sofa with two armchairs facing it, creating a conversation area. A small dining space can separate the bed-and-living room from the kitchen. Vertical storage pieces can be positioned to flank either end of the room. The symmetry and order of the arrangement can be anchored with the use of playful prints and colors. But of all the examples we’ve encountered, perhaps nothing can beat one particular studio located in the Soho neighborhood of New York City, where living space is both expensive and limited. Here, a studio apartment has been gutted and remodeled with convertible walls and furniture that transform it into six different living spaces. “i wanted it all,” says project proponent Graham Hill in his TED talk from a while back. “Home office, sit-down dinner for 10, room for guests, and all my kite surfing gear.” indeed his studio design incorporates walls that unlock and flip open to reveal his many pursuits. Michael Hession ties it all up in a neat little paragraph in tech web site Gizmodo.com: “it is the project of Graham Hill, entrepreneur and treehugger.com founder, to come up with an ideal New York apartment—one with a small
footprint, both physically and environmentally, and one that offers just as much beauty and functionality as a pad multiple times its size.... When you walk in, you encounter what is, at first glance, a small studio apartment. Within that cube are actually eight functional spaces. The living room and office become the bedroom with a tug of a bookshelf. open one of the closets and you’ll find 10 stackable chairs that go around a telescopic dining table for large dinner parties. An entire guest room with bunk-beds and a closet is revealed behind a wall that slides out on tracks. And of course, a wellequipped kitchen and bathroom await.” in a studio, compact efficiency and effectiveness is all.
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A studio is an apartment where one finds it all—a bedroom, living room, kitchen, home office and storage space combined in a single room. Furnishings by iKEA
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some studios make use of custom-made or pre-fab “pods” where a loft bed and the underlying bunk defines the space.
Search for young Filipino design talents
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interior design judges idr. michael Pizarro (from left), founder of michael Pizarro interior design (mPid) and Acanthus Home Furniture and Furnishing; dr. Lilia de Jesus, president, Council of interior design educators; and idr. Vincent Louie tan, chairperson of the department of interior design of de La salle-College of saint Benilde
GLAdys GoH (from left), group general manager, nippon Paint malaysia Group; Architect rogelio Caringal, national president, Philippine institute of interior designers; and Architect Beth regala, national president, united Architects of the Philippines
ippoN paint (Coatings) philippines opens a new world of opportunities to Filipino architecture and interior design students with the prestigious Nippon paint Young Designer Award (NYpDA) in the philippines. The program, recently launched at the Shangri-La Hotel Makati, is a regional competition that began in 2008 and covers 10 Asiapacific countries that now includes the philippines. Among its prizes is a trip to osaka, Japan, for the Japan Learning program in March 2015, a priceless opportunity where students will be mentored by the region’s top architects and interior designers, as well as meet the fellow winners from other countries. No less than the group general manager of Nippon paint Malaysia Group, Gladys Goh, welcomed guests to
the whole-day event which began with a media launch in the morning and a briefing session with architecture and interior design associations, educators and students in the afternoon. “With the Nippon paint Young Designer Award, we want to utilize our resources and give young Filipino students one-of-a-kind opportunities that promote creativity and innovation which they can use to build their communities,” Goh said. The NpYDA is supported by highly respected architecture and interior design organizations in the country: philippine institute of interior Designers (piiD), Council of interior Design Educators, United Architects of the philippines (UAp), United Architects of the philippines Student Auxiliary, and Council of Deans and Heads in Architecture Schools in the philippines.
For their part, UAp National president Architect Beth Regala and piiD National president Architect Rogelio Caringal gave thanks to Nippon paint for launching the regional competition here. They were later joined by their peers and Nippon paint executives in a MoA signing. open to students who are at least on their third year, NYpDA dares them to design 800 square feet of living space for the interior design category; and 10 acres of land, focusing on one structure, for the architecture category. Gold awardees will win p50,000 cash prize, a six-month internship at Lor Calma & partners, plus a fully-paid trip to Japan for a learning program with world-class experts. For more information about the competition, visit www. youngdesigneraward.ph.
LIFE
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WIDODO INAUGURATED AS INDONESIAN PRESIDENT BusinessMirror
World The
B3-1 | Tuesday, October 21, 2014 • Editor: Lyn Resurreccion
IndonesIan President Joko Widodo (foreground) shouts “freedom” while raising his fist as he delivers his speech during his inauguration ceremony as the country’s seventh president at the parliament building in Jakarta, Indonesia, on Monday. AP/DitA AlAngkArA
Widodo inaugurated as Indonesian president
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AKARTA, Indonesia‑Joko Widodo was inaugurated as Indonesia’s new president on Monday, facing the challenges of rebooting a slowing economy and working with a potentially hostile opposition that has already landed some early blows against his administration.
Widodo, the first Indonesian president not to come from the ranks of the country’s established political, business and military elite, took the oath of office in a ceremony at parliament in the capital, Jakarta, attended by regional leaders and US Secretary of State John Kerry. “To the fishermen, the workers, the farmers, the merchants, the meatball soup sellers, the hawkers, the drivers, the academics, the la-
borers, the soldiers, the police, the entrepreneurs and the professionals, I say let us all work hard, together, shoulder to shoulder, because this is a historic moment,” Widodo, popularly known as “Jokowi,” said in his inauguration address. He ended his speech with a shout of “merdeka!” or “freedom,” the independence-era rallying cry associated with the country’s founding president, Sukarno.
A former furniture salesman, the 53-year-old Widodo rose from humble beginnings to become Jakarta’s governor before winning July’s presidential election with 53 percent of the vote. Polls showed most of his support came from lower-income, non-urban Indonesians attracted by his simple demeanor and record of honest, hard work. Indonesia is the biggest economy in Southeast Asia, and about 90 percent of its 250 million people are Muslims, more than any other nation. After years of dictatorship, the country was convulsed by political, ethnic and religious unrest in the late 1990s and early 2000s. Since then, it has consolidated its democratic transition. While most of the country remains poor, it is home to a rapidly expanding middle class. Outgoing President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono’s two terms in office saw democratic consolidation and a focused fight against Islamist militancy.
But economic growth on the back of a commodities boom has slowed, and a recovery is being hampered by weak infrastructure, rampant corruption and red tape. Economic growth is currently around 5 percent, barely allowing enough jobs to be created. Widodo is targeting 7 percent growth in the coming years. To get close to that, he will need bold reforms to attract foreign investment and favorable external conditions. A looming problem is expected hikes next year in what are record-low US interest rates, which could suck funds from the country, pressurizing the rupiah and spooking the markets. Economists say Widodo must soon make a decision on how much to cut subsidies on fuel that, unless trimmed, will cost the government a budget-busting $30 billion-plus this year. The move will likely stoke protests from political opponents and could trigger street demonstrations. AP
HK leader: ‘External forces’ involved in protests
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ONG KONG—Hong Kong’s leader has claimed that “external forces” are participating in student-led pro-democracy protests that have occupied parts of this financial capital for more than three weeks, but provided no evidence to back his accusation. Chief Executive Leung Chunying’s statement in a televised interview on Sunday was the first time he has alleged foreign involvement in the unrest, echoing accusations by China’s central government, which also has not backed them with any evidence. Leung’s statement comes just before his government is scheduled to hold talks with student leaders on Tuesday. When asked on the Newsline program about a Chinese official’s comments on outside involvement,
Leung said, “There is obviously participation by people, organizations from outside of Hong Kong.” Leung added that the foreign actors came from “different countries in different parts of the world,” but didn’t specify which countries. The Hong Kong Federation of Students immediately rejected the accusations, with Secretary General Alex Chow saying Leung was “just making it up.” “He’s the chief executive, he’s an accountable official,” Chow told reporters. “If he’s putting forward these accusations, then we hope he also puts forward the evidence. But he shouldn’t just say that foreign powers are meddling without evidence.” Protesters, mostly young college students, are pressing for a greater say in choosing the semiautonomous Chinese city’s leader in an inaugural direct election,
promised by Beijing for 2017. They oppose Beijing’s ruling that a committee stacked with pro-Beijing elites should screen candidates in the election. That effectively means that Beijing can vet candidates before they go to a public vote. In what has become a daily pattern, the police have driven away the students from some streets during the night, only to see them regroup and occupy the areas and resume their sit-ins. The protests stretched into their fourth week on Monday, with thousands of demonstrators camped out in downtown Hong Kong and two other sites in this city of 7.2 million. After two nights of violent clashes, protesters and police settled into an uneasy peace in the densely commercial Mong Kok district after two pro-democracy legislators, Fer-
nando Chiu and Claudia Mo, arrived late Sunday night and helped calm tensions. Earlier on Sunday, police spokesman Steve Hui said an unnamed 23-year-old was arrested on the charge of accessing a computer “with criminal or dishonest intent” and unlawful assembly. Hui said the suspect had “incited others on an online forum to join the unlawful assembly in Mong Kok, to charge at police and to paralyze the railways.” It was the first arrest for online protest activity since the demonstrations began. Police also said Sunday that 33 people had been arrested during the protests on common assault, criminal damage and other charges. Nearly 300 people have been taken to hospital emergency rooms with injuries related to the protests since September 28, the city’s Hospital Authority reported Monday. AP
China gives $6 million for food in Ebola countries
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EIJING—China has contributed $6 million to the World Food Program (WFP) to help stave off food shortages in countries worst affected by the Ebola virus. The WFP announced on Monday
that the money will go to Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone, where the Ebola outbreak has led to widespread transport disruptions and higher food prices and caused some farmers to abandon their crops and livestock.
The donation will provide emergency rations for 300,000 people for one month, mainly rice, lentils and yellow peas. It follows the dispatch of several planeloads of medical materials and aid teams from China to the three
countries. With the world’s secondlargest economy, China is beginning to make larger contributions to international aid efforts. Chinese companies are also among the largest investors in Africa. AP
ChrIstIne Wade, a registered nurse at the University of texas Medical Branch, greets Carnival Magic passengers disembarking in Galveston, texas, on sunday. AP/the gAlveston County DAily news, Jennifer reynolDs
Ebola fear, monitoring ease for some in Dallas
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ALLAS—Ebola fears began to ease for some in the US on Monday as a monitoring period passed for those who had close contact with a victim of the disease and after a cruise-ship scare ended with the boat returning to port and a lab worker on board testing negative for the virus. Federal officials meanwhile ramped up readiness to deal with future cases. A top government official said revised guidance instructs health workers treating Ebola patients to wear protective gear “with no skin showing.” The Pentagon said it is forming a team to support civilian medical staff in the US. In Dallas, Louise Troh and several friends and family members were set on Monday to leave a stranger’s home where they have been confined under armed guard for 21 days—the maximum incubation period for Ebola. They had close contact with Thomas Eric Duncan, a Liberian man who died of the disease at Texas Health Presbyterian Hospital on October 8. “I want to breathe, I want to really grieve, I want privacy with my family,” Troh told the Associated Press. The incubation period also has passed for about a dozen health workers who encountered Duncan when he went to the Dallas hospital for the first time, on September 25. Duncan was sent home but returned by ambulance on Sep-
tember 28 and was admitted. Two nurses who treated him during that second visit—Nina Pham and Amber Vinson—are now hospitalized with Ebola. Vinson’s family issued a statement on Sunday saying they have hired a lawyer and are troubled by comments and media coverage that “mischaracterize” Vinson, who is being treated at Emory University in Atlanta. Vinson “has not and would not knowingly expose herself or anyone else,” the statement says. Dallas County and federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention officials cleared her to fly last week to Dallas from Ohio, and “suggestions that she ignored any of the physician and government-provided protocols recommended to her are patently untrue and hurtful,” the family says. On Sunday, a Carnival Cruise Lines ship returned to Galveston, Texas, from a seven-day trip marred by worries over a health worker on board who was being monitored for Ebola. The lab supervisor had handled a specimen from Duncan and isolated herself on the ship as a precaution. About 4,000 passengers on the cruise had to miss a stop in Cozumel, Mexico, where the boat was not allowed to dock because of the scare. Carnival said it was informed by US health authorities on Sunday morning that the worker tested negative for Ebola. AP and MCT
World
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DATA BREACHES THREATEN TO SHAkE CONSUMER CONFIDENCE BusinessMirror
corp@businessmirror.com.ph
Hyundai sales up 34 percent in Sept
Tuesday, October 21, 2014 B4-3
By James Niedzinski | The Eagle-Tribune
ATA breaches are becoming commonplace, and banking and retail industry experts are at odds about how to deal with the threat while working with law-enforcement officials and regulators to try to protect consumers from predators. Consumers, banks and retail businesses all feel the hit each time personal banking, credit or other information is stolen. And no company or industry seems to be safe from data breaches. Earlier this month, JPMorgan Chase announced as many as 76 million households and 7 million small businesses were exposed in a data breach, according to Forbes.com, which tracks such breaches. And in August, about 400 Dairy Queen locations were hit by hackers. In 2012 a data breach at Women & Infants Hospital in Rhode Island affected some 12,000 Massachusetts patients, according to the state Attorney General’s Office.
Preying on consumers
WHEN an individual’s personal information is stolen from a bank, a retail store or even a hospital, it can be used in a variety of illicit ways, James Boffetti, the senior assistant attorney general for New Hampshire, said. “There is an international market for this kind of information,” said Boffetti, who is also the chief of the New Hampshire Consumer Protection Bureau under the Attorney General’s Office. Under a state law enacted in 2007, he said, businesses in New Hampshire must notify the AG’s office when there is a data breach. This year the AG’s office received 16 notifications from different businesses, according to the Attorney General’s web site. Massachusetts has a similar notification law. From 2008 to 2013 there
were 4,684 data breach notifications that affected more than 4.75 million people, according to the Massachusetts Attorney General’s web site. In the first half of 2014, another 674 notifications were reported in Massachusetts. Once personal information is stolen, it can be sold to another party to make purchases fraudulently Boffetti said that stolen data is also commonly used to obtain phone numbers, e-mail addresses and other contact information for phone or e-mail scams.
National problem
THERE have been 606 security breaches nationwide in 2014, with about 77.6 million records exposed, according to the Identity Theft Resource Center. In 2013 there were 614 breaches and nearly 92 million records exposed, according to the center. “It happens literally by the second around world,” said Jon Hurst, president of the Retailers Association of Massachusetts. “These are very sophisticated thieves.” When data is stolen, banks have to put time and money into correcting the problems for the account holder, he said. Credit-card companies recoup their losses by charging banks or retailers a fee for using the cards, Hurst said. Boffetti said credit cards offer more fraud protection than debit cards, which are directly tied to a checking account. When a card is lost, stolen, or data is compromised, a replacement credit card is the answer for the victim. “The other thing that they should be doing—that everyone should be
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PresIdenT Barack Obama smiles as he arrives to deliver remarks at the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau on October 17 in Washington. saying more must be done to stop data breaches affecting consumers, Obama announced on Friday a government plan to tighten security for the debit cards that transmit federal benefits like social security to millions of americans. AP
doing—is scrutinizing their statements,” Boffetti said. Tracking down hackers, Boffetti said is extraordinarily difficult. Many of these breaches originate overseas, so it’s even more difficult to trace them, “which is why we focus on educating people to protect themselves,” he said. Signing up for alerts from a bank or credit-card company and reviewing every statement are key security measures, according to Richard Arcand, a spokesman for the New Hampshire Banking Department. The department examines banks in the state about every 18 months, he said. Ensuring banks have the right security and are following regulations is apart of the process, he said. “I can say the banks and credit unions are actively updating their IT and security systems,” he said, Federal laws protect people who notify banks or credit-card companies when they notice a fraudulent charge, so the first step is spotting such a charge. “The important take away is to monitor your accounts of unauthorized charges, alert your bank if fraud is suspected and keep records,” he said.
Bankers vs retailers
ONCE discrepancies are reported, it
takes time and money for banks to replace cards and correct accounts, something that does not sit well with the banking industry, Bruce Spitzer, spokesman for the Massachusetts Bankers Association, said. Bankers are putting pressure on retailers and other industries to increase their security because banks have to pay out the losses related to data theft and fraudulent charges, he said. “The fact that retailers have no stake in the game makes our banking industry very angry,” he said. The association is pushing the Legislature in Massachusetts to make retailers more liable when breaches happen, he said. Banks have their own complex algorithms to help spot fraud or breaches, he said. “Does the industry catch it all? No. But we are trying to catch more of it all the time,” Spitzer said. It’s a never-ending battle.” The retail industry says it is taking steps to curb the problem. One big problem, Nancy Kyle, president and CEO of the New Hampshire Retail Association, said is oudated technology. “It’s 1960s technology that is on credit cards,” she said. One solution, she said, is adopting technology that puts microchips
in credit cards and links them to personal identification numbers, or PIN’s, rather than relying on magnetic swipe strips. The technology is nothing new, Kyle said—it’s used across the globe by many other countries. Hurst, her counterpart in Massachusetts, said chip and PIN equipment costs more, which is one reason the United States lags behind Europe in introducing it. From 2008 to 2011, chip and PIN technology cut credit-card fraud cases in half in the United Kingdom, she said. Advanced technology, like Apple Pay, is even more secure because it uses fingerprint technology to verify a purchaser’s identity, Kyle said. On Friday President Obama announced a plan to tighten security for the debit cards that transmit federal benefits like Social Security to millions of Americans by applying security chips and PIN’s to new cards. The government will also apply security chips to all government credit cards, Obama said. Payment terminals at federal government facilities will be equipped to handle cards with the new technology. The White House says the idea of the government program is to lead by example, to nudge the broader
financial industry and retailers toward more secure standards. Obama noted that Home Depot, Target, Walgreen and Wal-Mart stores plan to install payment terminals in their stores equipped to handle cards with digital security chips and personal identification numbers called PINS that replace signatures.
‘Huge issue’
DATA breaches ultimately result in higher consumer prices and affect buying habits. “It’s a huge issue,” said Peter Guffin, a partner with the firm Pierce Atwood who specializes in in security law and technology for the past 15 years. Payment innovations may be the answer. “You’re seeing more and more interest in innovation to come up with better, more secure methods of payment,” Guffin said. Data breaches erodes consumer confidence in the banking system and hurts the reputations of businesses as well. Eventually, Guffin said, this could impact the way people act and make many fearful of handing out any personal information. “I think if we lose confidence in the ability of institutions and being able to secure our information, that may ultimately lead to behavior we don’t want.”
Online drug deals flourish, protected by encryption DuNkiN’ DoNuts to go moBile By Kevin Deutsch Newsday
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NLINE marketplaces for illegal drugs are growing rapidly, with the amount of narcotics and illicit earnings up for grabs on the encrypted dark Web more than doubling over the past year, a Newsday examination has found. The number of for-sale listings for illegal drugs on 10 of the largest online drug markets has risen to more than 40,000, compared with fewer than 20,000 listings on drug marketplace sites in 2013, online records show. The number of those digital markets has also more than doubled over the past year, records show. The drug listings—similar to those found for legal products on eBay and Amazon—include photographs, descriptions, user reviews and asking prices for dozens of different narcotics, from heroin and cocaine to MDMA and anabolic steroids. As the markets have proliferated, so has the potential for illicit revenue. Newsday’s examination found current listings for more than $4 billion worth of illegal drugs on digital drug marketplaces, compared with nearly $2 billion worth of drugs listed for sale in October 2013. The growth of the sites shows that efforts by law enforcement to curb online drug dealing have failed to deter thousands of sellers, who tout their illegal wares using encryption technology on marketplace sites such as Agora, White Rabbit Anonymous Marketplace, Silk Road 2.0, Outlaw Market and Evolution, critics of the sites say.
‘We’ve really lost control’ “THE fact that the list of places to buy these drugs online is getting bigger, and the total amount of available drugs on
Federal Bureau of Investigation director James Comey speaks about the impact of technology on law enforcement, on October 16, at Brookings Institution in Washington. Comey gave a stark warning on Thursday against smartphone data encryption on homicide cases. a Newsday examination has found that online drug deals are flourishing on encrypted digital marketplace sites. AP the dark Web is also bigger, means we’ve really lost control of this problem,” said anti-drug activist Alex Rice, 39, of Massapequa, who routinely speaks to college students about the dangers of drugs sold on the dark Web and whose son, Aaron, narrowly survived an overdose in 2011 from heroin he had purchased from a user on the original Silk Road site, which was shut down by the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) in October. “I really thought the takedown of Silk Road was kind of a death knell for this industry, but it keeps getting worse.” The ability of local and federal law enforcement to track and identify users of drug marketplaces is made difficult by those sites’ inclusion in the dark Web —a collection of web sites that are neither indexed nor accessible through regular browsers and search engines, authorities say. Law-enforcement officials have said those sites, some of them offering illegal products such as unlicensed guns in addition to drugs, are accessed using encryption software called Tor, which hides computers’
IP addresses and allows users to surf the Web anonymously. Tor’s administrators did not respond to a message for comment. Before its closure, the original Silk Road site was the largest of the Internet’s digital drug markets. It facilitated $1.2 billion in sales during a two and a half-year period using the digital currency Bitcoin, which is difficult to trace back to its users. Officials at the time said the site’s closure and the arrest of its alleged founder, Ross Ulbricht, who has pleaded not guilty to charges that include narcotics trafficking conspiracy and money-laundering conspiracy, would serve as a message to people selling illegal drugs online.
online narcotics to stay
knowledge of encryption methods used by criminal networks. The sites, he said, are frequented by tech-savvy drug buyers looking for highquality narcotics from reliable sellers— rather than seeking out street dealers for a product whose quality is unknown. “They figure the risks inherent in buying drugs on the street is greater than the risk of law enforcement figuring out they’re buying drugs online,” said the official, who spoke anonymously because he was not authorized to publicly discuss the issue. “A dealer can’t pull a gun on you on the Internet.” Some digital drug buyers and sellers are believed to be living on Long Island and in New York City, the official said. Those local users are thought to be sending and receiving drugs in the region, often at post office boxes, the source said. The growth of online drug markets has caused alarm among anti-drug-abuse activists and local law-enforcement agencies, who say authorities need a way to better track dark Web drug sales in order to prevent overdose deaths and drug-related crimes. Heroin alone killed a record-high 144 people on Long Island in 2013, according to government records. Suffolk Police Deputy Chief of Detectives Mark Griffiths has said the department’s cybercrime and drug investigators keep tabs on drug-trafficking sites, and Nassau police say they have an entire intelligence operation devoted to identifying criminals who try to stay anonymous—often with the aid of technology. The issue of encryption—and the obstacle it poses to authorities pursuing criminals—was brought to the forefront on Thursday when FBI Director James Comey gave a speech on the controversial technology in Washington.
By Donna Goodison Boston Herald
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UNKIN’ Donuts customers will be able to skip the lines when the Canton coffee-and-doughnut chain starts piloting mobile ordering by year’s end, in advance of a planned United States rollout next year. “We are planning to test mobile ordering in the fourth quarter, and we anticipate adding the ordering feature to our existing mobile app in 2015,” Scott Hudler, vice president of global consumer engagement, said in a statement. “For the consumer, there is a huge benefit to skip the line, and improve order accuracy and speed.” Dunkin’ would not provide details on test locations for mobile ordering. Its rival, Seattle’s Starbucks, this week announced that it would debut its own mobile ordering application in Portland,
Oregon, this year, with a US rollout also planned for 2015. Dunkin’ customers likely will have to place their mobile orders once they get to a Dunkin’ location or close to one, rather than an hour before pickup, for example —at least for the initial rollout— to ensure items such as coffees and breakfast sandwiches remain hot. “Our products are amazing, but they don’t age particularly well if they’re sitting in a bag,” Hudler said at a Dunkin’ investor and analyst conference in Dallas last month. “We want to crawl before we run in this area, so it’ll be more of the guests will let us know that they’re on the premises, and then we’ll trigger the order, because we think our speed-of-service is so fast that that’s probably the best way to deliver a great product.” The Dunkin’ mobile app for payments and gifting was launched in August 2012, and has had more than 8.5 million downloads.
moBile aPP Detects Wells, maNHoles
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EDDAH—The tragic death of a 6-yearold girl who fell into an open artesian well in Tabuk almost a year ago has inspired innovation of a different kind. A new, up and coming company has come up with an app that detects open wells in an unprecedented bid to avert tragedy and create awareness. Users can then capture a snapshot of the open well and add it to the app’s database for other users and authorities to take note of. The app was “aptly” named after little Lama Al-Rouqi, who had been out picnicking with her family when she fell more than 30 meters into the 100-meter-deep and half-a-meterwide well. The dream team behind the app
has even upgraded systems to include sewage tanks after a young boy and his father perished as the latter tried to rescue his son, who had fallen into an open manhole. With the new addition, the number of users has increased by over 1,000 within merely a week. The company behind the invention, which is just shy of its first anniversary, was created through the support of a technological entrepreneurship program under the King Abdulaziz City for Science and Technology. A team of four highly skilled employees at Waqood Tech will manage the mobile app, available for download on both the iOS and Android systems. MCT
DIGITAL LIFE
BUT the fact that dark Web drug listings —coupled with encryption on new devices such as the iPhone 6— have only increased suggests the multibillion-dollar online narcotics industry is unlikely to fade anytime soon, authorities say. “This, unfortunately, is where the more sophisticated drug dealers seem to be headed,” said a federal official with
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finding the right combination
Sports FINDING THE RIGHT BusinessMirror
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| Tuesday, OCTOber 21, 2014 mirror_sports@yahoo.com.ph sports@businessmirror.com.ph Editor: Jun Lomibao
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By Jonathan Feigen Houston Chronicle
HROUGH much of the playing time in the Houston Rockets’ remaining preseason games will be to help get starters sharp and determine who takes the final rotation and roster spots, Coach Kevin McHale said beginning with Sunday’s 90-83 win over the Warriors, he planned to use players in combinations that seemed most likely in the regular season. “These last four games, we are going to try to get some of our combinations in, try to look at that,” McHale said. “We’ve got, for the most part, everybody healthy. So we get a chance to look at everybody together a little bit.” In a possible glimpse of where the rotation stood midway through the preseason schedule, Tarik Black was the backup center, and Ish Smith continued to work as the backup point guard. Small forward Kostas Papanikolaou received his longest stretch as a four late in the first half, returning to the court each time Dwight Howard checked in. Jason Terry received his first playing time of the preseason, working as a backup shooting guard. Kerr advocatesp reseason twist AS with all coaches managing the preseason schedule, Warriors first-year Coach Steve Kerr gave key players the night off with a mind on the games ahead. With the Warriors’ first home game of the preseason on Tuesday, guards Stephen Curry and Klay Thompson sat out Sunday’s 90-83 loss to the Rockets, with Kerr joining the coaches who say that while they can make use of the four weeks of preseason, they do not need eight games. “Probably six (preseason games)
COMBINATION
tHe Memphis Grizzlies’ Zach randolph (left) tries to slow down the Houston rockets’ james Harden as jeff adrien looks on in a recent exhibition game in Houston. AP
would make more sense,” Kerr said. “Probably 60 (regular-season games) would make more sense than 82. But then everybody would be taking a big pay cut, too. I understand how it all works. It’s a machine that has to operate. We just do what they tell us to do. “The ideal schedule would be two weeks with no [preseason] games and then play six games in the two weeks before the opener. It’s hard to get in and play a game with six days of practice. Everybody does the same thing, but the off days, the non-game days, you get a lot more in for sure.” The Rockets went with their usual rotation, though for fewer minutes than it would play in the regular season. Injuries had kept Dwight Howard out of three games and James Harden out of the previous two.
warriors enjoy early road trips AFTER playing two games in Staples Center, the Warriors have spent their preseason removed from National Basketball Association (NBA) cities, playing preseason games in Ontario, California, Kansas City, Des Moines and Hidalgo. They had no complaints. “We were in LA [Los Angeles] for three games,” Coach Steve Kerr said of a week of games and practices while the team stayed in Santa Monica. “A lot of guys enjoyed that. I know I did. But this is all part of it. You go everywhere, and it helps promote the game. People in a town like here, Hidalgo, or Des Moines, they’re excited, really excited to see the players. It helps promote the NBA.” aMBitioUs Goals For Mavs’ deFense ON a quick trip that took the Dallas Mavericks to one of the Eastern Conference’s best teams, and another one in a state of flux, Coach Rick Carlisle unveiled this year’s version of the zone defense. It didn’t look all that much different from the zones the Mavericks have employed in past seasons. What was different, at least against Cleveland on Friday night when the Mavericks treated the game like a dress rehearsal for the regular season, was that the Mavericks used the zone for virtually the entire game. It was met with good reviews from none other than LeBron James. It also was what Dirk Nowitzki wanted to see out of the Mavericks. “That’s been a good weapon for us over the years, so it’s a great game-changer,” he told reporters after the game in Cleveland. “We made some mistakes, especially when we threw our smaller lineup out there. LeBron picked us apart a bit. But overall, it was a game where it felt like we played hard, competed and tried to get better.” The Mavericks don’t want to rely exclusively on the zone, but it’s something they use in every game to some extent. It was a necessity the last couple of seasons when their defense was not good enough in man-to-man mode. “We know, to be as good a team as we want to be, we’ve got to get into the top 10 in defense,” Coach Rick Carlisle said. “And that’s going to be challenging. On paper right now, we’re somewhere in the middle of the pack if you go on individual analytics. I don’t see it happening overnight, but I believe we can do it. We got pieces that fit.” James gave the Mavericks some credit for disrupting the Cavaliers’ offensive flow. But he wasn’t sure it was good defense as much as it was Cleveland’s inability to adjust to the scheme. “It makes you stagnant and it gets you out of rhythm,” James said of the zone. “It slows down dribble penetration and makes you shoot a lot of contested jump shots. I’ve seen a lot of it. When you’re not ready, it is definitely challenging. But we found a way to kind of break it down, we got shots we wanted and it was great to get some work against it in a preseason game.” While the Mavericks’ starters played extensively against the Cavaliers, they sat against Indiana, which won against the secondand third-unit Mavs on Saturday.
GolovKin’s rise »toGennady popularity in the United states has only been stalled by his lack of fights in the country. AP
Kevin McHale is experimenting with player pairings. AP
BABY-FACED ASSASIN FROM KAZAKHSTAN By Bill Dwyre
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Los Angeles Times
ISING star Gennady Golovkin, the baby-faced assassin from Kazakhstan, continued his tour to boxing super-stardom on Saturday night at StubHub Center. Golovkin is the middleweight champion of the world and his opponent, probably showing a decent degree of intelligence, lasted for one round and one minute 19 seconds of another. Marco Antonio Rubio of Mexico took a huge uppercut, then a left-handed overhand shot. He went down, appeared to consider getting up and then appeared to say, ah, the heck with it. He did get up just before the 10-count ended, but the referee waved him out. Rubio, who lost any title aspirations on Friday when he weighed in at 161.8 pounds, or 1.68 over the limit, said on Saturday that “he’s a great champion. He hit me hard, but not the hardest I’ve been hit. I got up, but the referee decided to stop it.” It might have been the first time that a referee, in this case Jack Reiss, stopped a fight based more on perceived lack of interest by the downed fighter than on degree of injury. Golovkin is 32 and his rise to popularity in the US has only been stalled by his lack of fights in the country. He is
31-0, with 28 of those victories coming by knockout. The last 18 times he has stepped into the ring, he has knocked out his opponent. Now, he has a plan to showcase his skills in the lucrative US market. His first effort west of the Mississippi drew a sold-out 9,323. After the fight, he thanked his California fans and called Los Angeles his home. That’s only slightly premature. He plans to buy a home here, his first choice is the Santa Monica area. He and his wife and 5-year-old son would spend the bulk of their time here, as well as some in their current residence in Germany. “My son starts school next year,” Golovkin said. “I want him here.” This victory, as light as it was on the competitive side, set up Golovkin perfectly for his first huge fight and huge payday. That would likely come in late spring or summer. He will fight once before that, probably in February in Europe. The US biggie after that could pit him against Miguel Cotto or Saul “Canelo” Alvarez. Golovkin’s victory over Rubio positioned him as a mandatory opponent after the expected Cotto-Alvarez match in May. Pressed immediately afterward for indications of his future, Golovkin said what he always does. Only unlike most boxers, he means it. “I will fight anybody,” Golovkin said.
He entered the ring to chants of “Triple G,” his nickname. He was clearly the fan favorite, even though he was fighting a Mexican in Los Angeles. He was also clearly the subject of fan curiosity, which is exactly what his promoters, K2, wanted. Right now, like the venue in which he fought Saturday night, there appears to be no ceiling to Golovkin’s future. Just in case Golovkin and Rubio didn’t provide enough excitement in the main event, the semi-main between Nonito Donaire and Nicholas Walters had plenty. Donaire, a veteran from the Philippines and as popular a boxer as there is today, took an overhand right to the back of his head in the last second of the sixth round and was finished. Donaire, already down once in the third round, tried to get up this time, but wobbled and was called out by the referee when he started to collapse against the ropes. These were featherweights—a World Boxing Association super-featherweight title match—who fought like 160-pounders. Afterward, it was a surprising love-in. Donaire, who is 31 and been fighting pro fights since age 17, and who refused to confirm afterward that he will continue fighting, called Walters “an amazing fighter, an amazing champion.” Donaire (33-3) said he had never tried harder. “I was at my best, but he was too big, too strong,”
SPORTS
Donaire said, “and he beat the...out of me.” Walters, 27, is 25-0 with 21 knockouts. He is from Jamaica and carries the nickname “Axe Man,” because that is the weapon he is appearing to use on his opponents as they fall to the canvas. All he needs now is a deep-throated “Timber.”
He called Donaire a great champion—”a super, super fighter”—and thanked him for the fight. He added later, “I took a really bad shot in the second round. But I’m bigger, stronger, faster and more intelligent. That’s why I won the fight.”
The new regulatory capital schedule requires the big universal lenders with minimum capital of only P4.95 billion at present to observe a tiered capital schedule based on the number of branches, starting with P6 billion for unibanks with up to 10 branches; P15 billion for those with 11 up to 100 branches; and P20 billion for lending networks exceeding 100 branches. The expanded capital schedule applies to all types of banks and recognizes the expanded risk attendant to an environment marked by growing complexity and asset holdings, heightened competition from within and without, as well as a recognition of the opportunities and risks the local lenders face as financial See “Banks,” A2
Data breaches threaten to shake consumer confidence
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new mandate is out, increasing the banks’ regulatory capital up to four times where they are at present and comes on the heels of a capital buildup scheme, where the size of any lender’s capital is linked to the type and volume of risk it is taking.
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yundai Asia Resources Inc. (Hari), the official distributor of South Korean auto brand Hyundai, reported a 34-percent surge in sales in September on the back of the continued solid performance of its passenger cars. “Just for September, we have sold 2,017 units, a 34-percent increase over last year. But year-to-date, the sales, so far, of 17,694 units, that’s a 9-percent growth,” Hari President and CEO Ma. Fe PerezAgudo said in an interview at the launch of the Grand Starex variants under its Gold series, the Gold Premium and Platinum. Hari’s sales of 2,017 units in September made it the third top-selling auto brand in the country, behind Mitsubishi, which sold 4,155 units, and Toyota, with 9,572 units. Hari’s passenger-car segment led the growth, selling 1,490 units in September for a 45-percent year-onyear growth. Pushing the growth of the segment are the Eon, i-10 and the Accent, which remained Hari’s top-selling models. Year-to-date, Hari sold 12,323 units of passenger cars, a 25-percent increase from the same period last year. Hari’s light commercial vehicles (LCV) posted a 10-percent growth in September, with 507 units sold led by the Grand Starex, whose sales jumped 38 percent compared to the same month in 2013. Total LCV sales as of September, however, is 15 percent below its performance in the comparable period last year, due Continued on A2
PESO exchange rates n US 44.9270
President Aquino, joined by Leyte Gov. Leopoldo Dominico Petilla (second from left), Palo, Leyte Municipal Mayor Remedios Petilla (left) and US Ambassador to the Philippines Philip Goldberg, for a snapshot during the 70th Anniversary of the Leyte Gulf Landing at the MacArthur Landing Memorial National Park in Candahug, Palo, Leyte, on Monday. With the theme “Leyte 1944, Leyte 2014: Yesterday’s Heroes, Today’s Inspiration on the Road to Recovery.” Malacañang Photo
JAPAN TRADE, JUSTICE MINISTERS QUIT AMID CAMPAIGN-FUND MESS
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apan’s trade and justice ministers resigned on Monday, after accusations they misused campaign funds in the biggest setback so far for Prime Minister Shinzo Abe’s conservative administration. The two ministers were among the five women Abe named to his Cabinet in a reshuffle early last month, part of an effort to promote women in politics and business that is a key pillar of his government’s economic-revival policies. Yuko Obuchi, daughter of a former prime minister and a rising star in the ruling Liberal Democratic Party (LDP), resigned early Monday as trade minister, saying she needed to focus on an investigation into discrepancies in accounting for election funds. She did not acknowledge any wrongdoing. Justice Minister Midori Matsushima resigned after the opposition Democratic Party of Japan (DPJ) filed a criminal complaint against her over the distribution of handheld fans, or uchiwa. Matsushima is also facing complaints over using parliament-provided housing, while keeping security guards at her private residence in downtown Tokyo. Speaking with reporters shortly after he accepted Matsushima’s resignation, a somber Abe told reporters he also was responsible because he appointed the two women to his Cabinet. “I deeply apologize to the public,” Abe said. Political funding scandals are a chronic problem in Japan, where gifts to constituents were banned to prevent vote-buying. AP
US, PHL alliance stronger 70 years after ‘I shall return’ vow
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By Recto Mercene
eventy years after Gen. Douglas MacArthur waded ashore in Leyte to fulfill his “I shall return” promise to the Filipino people, the alliance between the Philippines and the US continues to go stronger, Ambassador Jose L. Cuisia Jr. said. “The commitment shown by the United States through the actions of General MacArthur in 1944 still remains up to the present,”Cuisia said during the ceremonies commemorating the 70th anniversary of the Americans’ landing in Leyte at the MacArthur Memorial. “The shared Filipino-American experience in the Philippines during the Second World War continues to permeate Philippine-US bilateral relations and to nurture the alliance,” Cuisia told Filipinos and Americans, who attended the commemoration of the landings that signaled the start of the liberation of the Philippines after three years of Japanese occupation. MacArthur, feeling the pressure of advancing Japanese forces in 1942, left Corregidor island on a patrol torpedo boat and reached Mindanao after two days, evading Japanese warships and traveling in stormy seas.
From Mindanao, MacArthur’s party flew to Australia, arriving in Melbourne on March 21, 1942, where he made his famous speech, in which he declared, “I came through and I shall return.” Cuisia said American commitment to the Philippines was concretely manifested during the return of US forces to Leyte in November last year, 69 years after the return of MacArthur. “This time, however, they came to help liberate the people of Leyte from an emerging humanitarian crisis caused by one of the most devastating storms in human history—Typhoon Haiyan [local code name Yolanda].” Cuisia said US troops were among the first on the ground, helped clear the way for the massive US-led international relief effort that preempted what could have been a major humanitarian disaster. At the height of the international response, the US committed, more than a thousand troops and 50 aircraft and ships, including the USS George Washington, as part of Operation Damayan. US forces assisted in search and rescue operations and provided close to 2,500 tons of relief supplies to affected communities and evacuated over 21,000 people. See “I shall return,” A8
n japan 0.4204 n UK 72.3010 n HK 5.7908 n CHINA 7.3362 n singapore 35.2507 n australia 39.3096 n EU 57.3358 n SAUDI arabia 11.9770 Source: BSP (20 October 2014)