Monday, 31 January 2011

BBC News - Man dies in fire at Bilston Glen protest camp

31 January 2011 Last updated at 10:00

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Man dies in fire at Bilston Glen protest camp

bilston glen scene An inquiry has been launched in to the cause of the fire

A man has died in a fire at a protest camp in Midlothian.

The blaze broke out at Bilston Glen, where environmentalists are camping in protest at the proposed construction of a bypass, at about 0330 GMT.

Lothian and Borders Police said the dead man was in his 20s. A woman is also being treated in hospital.

It is understood the man who died and the injured woman were part of the camp which has been based there since 2002. An inquiry into the cause has begun.

The protest group objects to the proposed A701 bypass.

It claims the plans, by Midlothian Council, would lead to the destruction of the Bilston Glen, which is a Site of Special Scientific Interest (SSSI).

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BBC News - Bond composer John Barry dies aged 77

31 January 2011 Last updated at 08:57

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Bond composer John Barry dies aged 77

Composer John Barry, famous for his work on Born Free, Out of Africa and the James Bond films, has died in New York of a heart attack aged 77.

Born John Barry Prendergast in 1933, the York-born musician first found fame as leader of the John Barry Seven.

His arrangement of Monty Norman's James Bond theme led to him composing scores for 11 films in the series, among them Goldfinger and You Only Live Twice.

His work saw him win five Oscars, while he received a Bafta fellowship in 2005.

His most recent film score featured in the 2001 war thriller Enigma, while a musical version of Brighton Rock, created with lyricist Don Black, had its London premiere in 2004.

Black, who worked with the composer on his Born Free, Thunderball and Diamonds are Forever theme songs, said Barry remained unaffected by his international success.

"The thing about John that I will always remember was he never changed," he said.

"He was very much the Yorkshireman, whether he was in Beverly Hills or Manhattan."

Continue reading the main story

CLASSIC JOHN BARRY SCORES

  • From Russia With Love
  • Goldfinger
  • Zulu
  • Born Free
  • You Only Live Twice
  • The Lion in Winter
  • Midnight Cowboy
  • Diamonds are Forever
  • Somewhere in Time
  • Out of Africa
  • Dances with Wolves
  • Chaplin

Awarded an OBE in 1999 for his services to music, Barry was renowned for his lush strings, orchestral swells and elegant melodies.

His work found a new audience when Robbie Williams featured music from You Only Live Twice on his 1998 hit single Millennium.

Current Bond film composer David Arnold paid tribute to his predecessor via Twitter.

"I am profoundly saddened by the news but profoundly thankful for everything he did for music and for me personally," he said.

Barry's son-in-law, BBC business reporter Simon Jack, said he "truly loved writing music as much as people enjoyed listening to it".

"He saw himself as much a dramatist as a composer and his music was inextricably linked to the stories told on the screen."

Jack also remembered him as "a wickedly funny man" whose "passion, genius and sense of humour will be terribly missed by his family and friends".

Speaking on BBC Breakfast, Born Free star Virginia McKenna said Barry was "a wonderful musician and composer".

Close friend Michael Crawford, meanwhile, said he had written "some of the most memorable and beautiful film scores we could ever wish to hear".

Barry's first Oscars came in 1967 for his Born Free score and its iconic title theme.

John Barry, pictured in 1967 He won Oscars for Born Free, The Lion in Winter, Out of Africa and Dances with Wolves

More Academy Awards followed for the soundtracks he wrote for The Lion in Winter, Out of Africa and Dances with Wolves.

Barry also won four Grammys, a Bafta for The Lion in Winter and a Golden Globe for Out of Africa.

His work for TV included the themes for Juke Box Jury and The Persuaders, while his non-soundtrack work included the albums Eternal Echoes and The Beyondness of Things.

In 2002 he was named an Honorary Freeman of the City of York, an honour he received at a venue in the city where he once used to play trumpet in the 1950s.

Barry, who lived in Oyster Bay, Long Island, is survived by Laurie, his wife of 33 years, his four children and five grandchildren.

His family said funeral arrangements would be private and that a memorial service would be held in the UK later this year.



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  • 22. Crystal Ball
    59 Minutes Ago

    A giant among modern composers! Out of Africa and Midnight Cowboy showcase the variable depth and beauty of his work.
    A genius that will be sadly missed.

  • 21. Michael Gordon
    1 Hour Ago

    When I was 5 years old, I had a little plastic toy gun, that if you blew down the barrel end, made a sound a little bit like a kazoo. I'd march up and down the street parping out the theme to 'On Her Majesty's Secret Service'. 35 years later I am a composer and in my spare time have re-recorded OHMSS and other Barry classics. Thank you John for profoundly influencing the course of my life. xx

  • 18. Gautam De
    1 Hour Ago

    His compositions are immortal. Who can ever forget the melodies of Born Free, Dances With Wolves and Out Of Africa? A great musician whose work used to mix as flesh and blood with the movies he worked for. I salute you Mr. Barry, for your great works and thank you, for presenting us so many beautiful music to accompany us whole life.

  • 17. David Werrett
    1 Hour Ago

    John Barry's music was instantly recognisable. He used lush strings to create the emotional atmosphere so necessary to accompany the films for which he was writing. His music will never be forgotten.

  • 15. Mark
    1 Hour Ago

    I grew up with John Barry's music and am saddened to learn of his death. What marked him out was not only an innate gift for writing melodies but his abilty, through his soundtracks, to penetrate to the heart of the story and thereby add an additional dimension to the film. His soundtrack to 'Ouf of Africa' exemplifies this best of all. He was unique in this regard and will be greatly missed.

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Egypt protests - live updates | News | guardian.co.uk

Mubarak, Suleiman and Enan From left, Hosni Mubarak, Omar Suleiman and Sami Enan at Egypt's military HQ in Cairo. Photograph: -/AFP/Getty Images

10.51am:CloseLink to this update: There were rumours that Mubarak's son Gamal, who was being lined up to succeed him as president, had fled to London.

The Guardian's Sam Jones has the thankless task of trying to track him down. There was no sign of Gamal in his town house in Wilton Place, this morning, Sam says. Neighbours confirmed that Gamal used to live in the house, on the Belgravia borders, but he hasn't been there for some time.

The Egyptian embassy denied that Gamal had fled to London, but they wouldn't say if he is still in Egypt.

Al-Jazeera is also on Gamal's trail.

10.44am:CloseLink to this update: About 1,000 people have gathered for a protest in the Cairo district of Shubra, about 2km from Tahrir Square, an al-Jazeera correspondent reports from the demo.

The protest began after mid day prayers, he said. Loud chanting could be heard as he spoke.

10.37am:CloseLink to this update: Activists have created a list of missing persons linked to the protests, writes Haroon Siddique.

So far it has 13 names on it but they are asking for help in updating it. Contact @samerkaram or @tinkeyeh on Twitter.

These are the details of the list as it stands.

Wael Ghonim, Cairo
Mohamed Abdelfattah, Alexandria
Shahd Essam, Nasr City
Mohamed Omar, Alexandria
Ziad Bakir, Cairo
Mohamed Aboulazm, Tanta
Kareem Mokhtar, Cairo
Marwan Imam, Cairo
Navine Zaki, Cairo
Ahmed Fouad, Ras Gharid
Mohammad Ghafari, Cairo
The blogger Sandmonkey

10.29am:CloseLink to this update: My colleague Graeme Wearden has more on falling confidence in the Egyptian economy.

Graeme Wearden

Moody's decision to downgrade Egypt's credit rating (see 8.26am) is another reminder of the fragile nature of the country's economy. The protests and the uncertainty over its political future directly threaten tourism, its key revenue stream, and even raise questions
about the Suez Canal.

Reading between the lines of today's statement, Moody's is concerned that the Egyptian authorities will react to the protests by raising wages and subsidies. It argues that Egypt's "weak" public finances, simply couldn't take the strain. Egypt currently runs a large trade
deficit - mainly caused by imports of food and oil, whose prices are subsidised on the streets.

Or as Moody's put it: "Egypt suffers from deep-seated political and socio-economic challenges. These include a chronic high rate of unemployment, elevated inflation and widespread poverty. These, together with a desire for political change, have fueled popular
frustrations. In Moody's opinion, there is a strong possibility that fiscal policy will be loosened as part of the government's efforts to contain discontent."

Egypt's revenues are driven by tourism - thought to bring in around £7bn per year to the Egyptian economy - and taxes on ships using the Suez Canal to avoid the long trip around Africa. The Canal generated almost £6bn of 'remittances' in the last financial year. But Egypt still ran a current account deficit of $802m (£505m) in the third quarter of 2010 - and had to rely on government borrowing to cover the difference.

The Suez Canal is still open today, and authorities point to the "armed guards" that patrol the area to ward against attacks. But the Egypt stock market remained suspended, having fallen by over 16% last week. Officials have just announced that it will be closed tomorrow
too, to prevent investors pulling their money out. Most financial institutions have also been closed in recent days, amid speculation that there could be a major run on Egypt's banks.

10.23am:CloseLink to this update: Harriet Sherwood said there was little sign of the police being deployed back on the streets (see the audio interview earlier). This is confirmed by a new Audioboo clip by al-Jazeera. The reporter also says that a curfew will be imposed an hour earlier today at 3pm (1pm GMT), and that it will be more strictly enforced. But as he says there have been similar claims about enforcement in the last few days.

To listen to the full audio, turn off auto-refresh at the top of the page

10.15am:CloseLink to this update: Below the line in the comments section, archamis translates some of the graffiti that features in that slide show earlier.

Starting from the first:

-Fall Mubarak
-Alaa' (mubarak oldest son) tell your papa lets flee with the mob
-An ass would have understood
-Revolution people... revolution
-NO mubarak, NO Nazeef, NO Soroor
-LEAVE
-The People want the System to fall
-Fall Mubarak, Fall Gamal
-No Mubarak, 30 years of theft.

9.48am:CloseLink to this update: Syria's president Bashar Assad says the protests in Tunisia and Egypt are ushering in a "new era" in the Arab world, but he claimed his country was immune.

In a rare interview Assad told the Wall Street Journal that Syria is stable despite having more "difficult circumstances" than the rest of the Arab world.

arab-leaders-liberation

Assad's regime is considered vulnerable to the same kind of unrest that has gripped Tunisia and Egypt. After the fall of president Ben Ali in Tunisi, Assad appeared earlier this month on a memorable front page of the French newspaper Liberation. It asked Who's next? Mubarak appears next to Ben Ali.

But Assad insisted that Syria was different. In a sometimes rambling interview Assad told the WSJ:

If you want to make a comparison between what is happening in Egypt and Syria, you have to look from a different point: why is Syria stable, although we have more difficult conditions? Egypt has been supported financially by the United States, while we are under embargo by most countries of the world. We have growth although we do not have many of the basic needs for the people. Despite all that, the people do not go into an uprising. So it is not only about the needs and not only about the reform. It is about the ideology, the beliefs and the cause that you have. There is a difference between having a cause and having a vacuum. So, as I said, we have many things in common but at the same time we have some different things.

9.46am:CloseLink to this update: The scenes at Cairo airport are "fairly chaotic", according to the Guardian's Jerusalem correspondent Harriet Sherwood who flew in last night. "Crowds of people in the lobbies, every room was booked out, piles of luggage everywhere. We ended up sleeping on the floor with 100 other people," she said.

British passengers told her they were disappointed by the lack of action from the British government.

On the streets of Cairo, vigilante groups continue to control their local neighbourhoods, Harriet said.

To listen to the full audio, turn off auto refresh at the top of the page

9.13am:CloseLink to this update: Human Rights Watch has appealed directly to the head of Egyptian military to help ensure a smooth transition to democracy in Egypt.

Here's the letter:

Dear Field Marshal Mohamed Hussein Tantawi,

At this critical moment in the history of Egypt and the Middle East, a heavy burden of responsibility falls on the leaders of the Egyptian Armed Forces to ensure a smooth transition from an era of political repression characterised by severe abuse to one in which fundamental human rights are respected.

In the midst of anxious days of popular protest and revolt against police brutality, torture and corruption, and with protesters calling for a new constitutional order in Egypt, the Egyptian Armed Forces now stand as the only security organs of the Egyptian state that retain the trust of the Egyptian people.

The legitimacy of the Egyptian police and other internal security organs have long been tarnished by a record of human rights abuses, including the systematic use of torture. Furthermore the role of the internal security forces in the attempted suppression of protests in recent days, in which Human Rights Watch and the international media have witnessed countless examples of excessive use of force and other egregious abuses, has further undermined their credibility. Human Rights Watch is already calling for accountability for these abuses and the prosecution of those responsible.

In contrast, the Egyptian military, which was called onto the streets on Friday 28 January, has so far shown commendable restraint and has been welcomed by the majority of protesters. Human Rights Watch is therefore now calling on you and your fellow chiefs of the Egyptian military to maintain this commendable posture of trust and restraint and to remind you of the legal obligations, under international law, of the Egyptian Armed Forces, given their current involvement in policing activities.

First, the Egyptian Armed Forces must respect the rights of the Egyptian people to freedom of assembly and peaceful protest against a government that has ruled through repression and dictatorial whim for decades.

Second, to the extent that the Armed Forces are engaged in protecting public security, they are obliged to abide by the United Nations Basic Principles on the Use of Force and Firearms by Law Enforcement Officials. Under these principles, law enforcement officials may use reasonable and proportionate force to prevent crimes, but firearms should only be used in situations of grave and imminent threats of death or serious injury.

Third, Human Rights Watch draws your attention to the real possibility that failure to abide by these international standards would open individual soldiers, officers and their superiors to investigation and prosecution.

We urge you to reflect on the fact that the current crisis in Egypt and the rest of the region is in great part the result of years of corrupt and abusive government and unlawful torture and repression by its security forces, against which the people are now in open revolt. The solution to this crisis is not further repression, but a swift and orderly transition to a new democratic order in which the basic rights and freedoms of the people of the region are respected. We urge you to shoulder your historic responsibility and to assist in bringing about this transition.

Kenneth Roth (Executive director Human Rights Watch)

Live blog: Twitter

9.04am:CloseLink to this update: There's a heavy military presence in central Cairo today, but there are signs of good relations between the army and the protesters, according to a Twitter update from CNN's Ivan Watson.

Far more soldiers and tanks in the streets today. Military was distributing bread to poor people from a truck off Tahrir square.

Cairo blogger, Wael Abbas gives the protester's perspective:

people spent the night in tahrir square and woke up in high spirits determined to continue

8.26am:CloseLink to this update: David Cameron has just appeared on the BBC 1 breakfast sofa, to call for a reform. Egypt must go down path of reform, not repression, he said according to BBC tweet.

Once again news is coming thick and fast on Egypt.

Protesters have called for a million people to take to the streets of Cairo tomorrow, al-Jazeera reports.

• The rating agency Moody's has downgraded Egypt to Ba2 status reflect growing anxiety among investors about the continuing unrest. "Moody's decision to downgrade Egypt's government bond ratings is driven by increased event risk," Moody's said in an emailed statement, according to the Wall Street Journal. "This has resulted from escalating political tensions in the country following the recent uprising in Tunisia, with large-scale antigovernment protests taking place."

Israel has urged the world to temper the criticism of Mubarak, according to the Israeli parper Ha'aretz. "The Americans and the Europeans are being pulled along by public opinion and aren't considering their genuine interests," one senior Israeli official told the paper. "Even if they are critical of Mubarak they have to make their friends feel that they're not alone. Jordan and Saudi Arabia see the reactions in the West, how everyone is abandoning Mubarak, and this will have very serious implications." A columnist in the Jerusalem Post describes the unrest in Egypt as "worst disaster since Iran's revolution".

8.09am:CloseLink to this update: Mubarak appeared to blame the Muslim Brotherhood for "infiltrating" the protest, in his statement read out on state TV last night.

"The citizens and the young people of Egypt have gone out to the streets in peaceful demonstration asking for their right for the freedom of speech," he said according to a transcript reported on CNN.

"However, their demonstrations have been infiltrated by a group of people who use the name of religion who don't take into consideration the constitution rights and citizenship values."

This is a "desperate ploy" according to the Middle East analyst Juan Cole.

He [Mubarak] contrasted the hooliganism of the Brotherhood with the peaceful aspirations of most Egyptians, and pledged to work for economic and social reform (while giving the pledge no content). Mubarak is attempting to split the movement against him by sowing seeds of doubt among its constituents.

These include Coptic Christians, educated middle and upper middle class Muslims, and non-ideological youth, as well as the Muslim Brotherhood. By suggesting that the MB is taking advantage of the protests to conduct a campaign of sabotage behind the scenes, with the goal of establishing a theocratic dictatorship, Mubarak hopes to terrify the other groups into breaking with the Muslim fundamentalists. Since middle class movements such as Kefaya (Enough!) are small and not very well organized, Mubarak may believe that he can easily later crush them if he can detach them from the more formidable Brotherhood.

It is a desperate ploy and unlikely to work. Mainstream Muslim Egyptians and Copts do have some fear of the Muslim Brotherhood as a sectarian and fundamentalist tendency, but their dislike of the Mubarak government for the moment seems to overcome their anxieties about a theocracy.

7.49am:CloseLink to this update: What will happen next?

Writing on his own blog al-Bab, the Guardian's Middle East expert Brian Whitaker, assesses the current stand off and the prospects for the next few days.

Brian Whitaker byline photo

Today, in an effort to restore a semblance of normality, the police will be back on the streets – reportedly with instructions not to confront the protesters. They had been withdrawn over the weekend, apparently to facilitate looting by the regime's thugs and provide the excuse for a crackdown. That move was thwarted by the public, who organised their own unofficial policing.

One of the most striking things about the uprising so far has been the resourcefulness of the protesters and their determination. At the same time though, on the other side, we have President Mubarak – equally implacable and determined to stay put.

The result, for now, is deadlock. But the deadlock is not going to be broken on the streets by the army or the police. At some point there will have to be movement on the political front – and that is not going to happen instantly. (It's worth repeating that the removal of Ben Ali in Tunisia took four weeks; the Mubarak regime is a tougher nut to crack and the uprising began less than a week ago.)

There seems to be widespread recognition, even by some of the regime stalwarts, that Egypt is moving towards "transition". The argument, basically, is whether it will be a transition supervised by Mubarak or not. The protesters' fear is that a transition under Mubarak will merely bring a change of faces without real change in the system they are protesting about. As far as the protesters are concerned, that is a deal-breaker.

Mohamed ElBaradei offered the regime a carrot yesterday by putting himself forward as "leader" of the opposition. Like him or not, this means a channel is now open for dialogue if and when the regime is ready to talk – though on the protesters' side that can't happen until Mubarak goes.

7.44am:CloseLink to this update: Egyptian protesters have called for general strike today after another night of demonstrations in defiance of a curfew.

"The army has to choose between Egypt and Mubarak," one banner read. Cairo blogger Sarah Carr has put together a Flickr slide show of anti Mubarak graffiti (Thanks to the New York Times's Lede blog for the find).

Protester Amr Shalakany conveys the mood in Tahrir Square.

This has nothing to do with any political party. It is truly a popular movement. There is concern about what is going to happen next. We need to continue to experience this with joy. We have to remain peaceful until we get our demands. Look, there are more and more people walking into Tahrir Square.

In a statement read out on state TV last night, Mubarak promised reforms. He is also due to name his cabinet.

You can read how yesterday's events unfolded in Sunday's live blog, but here's a round up of the overnight's news:

• Egyptian opposition leader, Mohamed ElBaradei, addressed the protest in Tahrir Square to predict change will come in "the next few days". The Nobel peace laureate announced that he had been delegated by opposition groups to discuss the formation of a national salvation government.

Mubarak was shown on state TV conferring with his newly appointed vice-president, the intelligence chief Omar Suleiman, and senior generals in an attempt to demonstrate that he enjoys the solid support of the armed forces.

Al-Jazeera TV was ordered to close because of its coverage of the protests.

Thousands of prisoners, including Muslim Brotherhood activists, escaped from four jails.

• Large-scale protests erupted in Alexandria, Egypt's second city, after the funerals of victims of the unrest. The death toll over the past six days was reported to have risen to 102.

British nationals in Cairo, Alexandria and Suez were told to leave if it was safe. The US said it was organising flights to evacuate its citizens and urged all Americans in Egypt to consider leaving.

• There has been International alarm about the political and security implications of continuing unrest. China, Saudi Arabia, and Israel have also expressed anxiety.

Hamas has closed Gaza's southern border as Israel warns of increase in weapons smuggling during unrest in Egypt.

David Cameron and Barack Obama discussed Egypt in telephone discussions and called last night for an "orderly transition" to a democratic government.

MPs on all sides back Lake District forest protest | Environment | guardian.co.uk

Grizedale protests (Left to right) John Woodcock MP, Lord Clark of Windermere and Tim Farron MP tear up a copy of the Public Bodies bill. Photograph: Kim Pilling/PA

The Liberal Democrats' president Tim Farron publicly ripped apart a copy of the government's controversial bill to sell of England's forests at a rally in the heart of the Lake District today.

The MP for Westmorland and Lonsdale joined Labour and Conservative opponents in denouncing the plan as some 1,500 protesters cheered amid gently falling snow in Grizedale forest.

He promised to vote against the proposal in the Commons on Wednesday and nodded when John Woodcock, Labour MP for Barrow and Furness, called on ministers to "wake up and see how badly they have misjudged the issue".

Protesters jammed narrow country lanes in the remote valley to the reach the latest of the spreading wave of demonstrations against the sale or leasing of 258,000 hectares (638,000 acres) of wild land. In spite of grey and chilly weather, familiar in the winter fells, they chanted "save our trees" and roared approval as the MPs tore up the Public Bodies bill.

Children with placards reading "Save our Roots" and "Free the trees" joined the throng in the former gardens of Grizedale Hall, a Liverpool manufacturer's Victorian mansion, demolished in 1957. Its last role in political controversy was during the second world war, when its 40 rooms were denounced as too cushy and costly for their role as a Nazi officers' prisoner of war camp.

Lord Clark of Windermere, a schoolboy during the war whose first job was as a Forestry Commission labourer, told the rally: "This land is ours and we need to keep it as ours. I am so pleased that so many of you have taken time out today to come and tell the the government what you think of their proposals to give away and to sell our birthright."

Lord Clark, who served as a Labour cabinet minister before heading the Forestry Commission for a decade, said that access would be threatened by a plan which would not even save money for the hard-pressed Treasury. Even the quarter or so of the estate earmarked for charitable owners would require a subsidy approaching £55m a year, he said.

The broadcaster Eric Robson, who chairs Cumbria Tourism, warned that the potential effects on the Lake District's lifeblood of visitors were dire.

Some 40 forests in the national park, including the huge estates of Grizedale and Whinlatter, were "absolutely crucial" to the area's economy, he said.

"I knew we had a problem when I heard a forestry minister last week describe the place where we are today as 'Greezedale'," he said, to roars of approval. "This is one of the shoddiest pieces of work to come out of Whitehall for a very long time.

"It completely ignores the importance of forestry and the forestry estate for the heritage of the nation's wellbeing. It is also a sham. It is a sham that I believe working together we can put a stop to."

Before his speech, Woodcock sent out a quick post on Twitter: "Privilege to speak at the Grizedale rally today. Fantastic turnout. Tory-Lib Dem government have seriously misjudged this." He then told the rally: "Governments have to govern with the consent of the people, and on this issue you are making it very clear that they simply do not have that consent."

Protesters included Edwina Freeman from Bolton, who said: "We have two seats and a glade of trees here in memory of members of our family. The trees were planted with the idea that our future family could come and enjoy this area – but obviously if someone else takes over it's not ours anymore."

Martin Smyth, 41, from Barrow-in-Furness, said: "This is just the first step – things are only just getting started. They've got another thing coming if they think we're going to go away."

Mike Morton, from the new pressure group Save Lakeland Forests, which organised the rally, said: "Everyone's here, from sports people, farmers, bird-watchers, 'right-to-roam' activists, families – all united behind the same cause."

Starbucks, Mazda and Argos sign up for Facebook Deals - Brand Republic News

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Starbucks, Mazda and Argos sign up for Facebook Deals

By Ed Owen, marketingmagazine.co.uk, 31 January 2011, 09:40AM

The UK version of Facebook Deals launches today (31 January), offering Facebook users who "check in" using the Facebook Places feature on their mobile app, access to special offers and other deals.

Facebook Deals: UK version launches today

Facebook Deals: UK version launches today

People using the Facebook app already have the opportunity to check in to show friends where they are, and restaurants and shops are already popular check-in spots.

Once checked in, users will now gain access to deals offered by third parties.

Starbucks will give away 30,000 cups of coffee to people who check-in today.

Debenhams will give away 1,000 sets of mascara and makeovers.

Mazda will give away five cars, every month for five months. Those who check-in will get a 20% discount on certain models.

Argos and Benetton will have deals linked to charitable donations. Yo! Sushi will give away 1,000 free plates and O2 have also signed-up and will offer PlayStations on Saturday.

Theme park Alton Towers will be offering free entry to all users who check-in on Friday 18th February. There will also be free rooms for the first 100 people to check in at one of the park's two themed hotels.

Joanna Shields, vice-president of Facebook for Europe, the Middle East and Africa said: "For the first time in history we can make these deals at scale, at real time and for free."

Gap, Starbucks, McDonald's and H&M are some of the brands to have partnered with Facebook for the US launch of Facebook Deals, each offering something to users who check in at their stores.

The Facebook Deals service initially launched in November in the US, but for iPhone users only. Facebook released an update for Android users on Friday.

The service will roll out in the UK, France, Italy, Spain and Germany today.

Facebook Deals combines the mass-buying potential of Groupon with the location-based gaming of Foursquare. Facebook's launch should prove a major challenge to both services.

Facebook has yet to announce whether it will enter into mobile payments services. Redemptions of Facebook offers will only be able to be fully tracked once mobile payments systems launch through Orange and O2 later this year.

Deals and loyalty schemes have been highlighted as effective ways to drive the use of mobile payments.

Apple is believed to be moving into mobile payments with the launches of both the iPhone 5 and iPad 2.

Last week, Dan Rose, vice-president of platforms and product marketing for Facebook, said the company is investing equally in both its own digital space and developing tools for third parties.

This article was first published on marketingmagazine.co.uk

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Exclusive: U.S. Spies Buy Stake in Firm That Monitors Blogs, Tweets | Danger Room

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America’s spy agencies want to read your blog posts, keep track of your Twitter updates — even check out your book reviews on Amazon.

In-Q-Tel, the investment arm of the CIA and the wider intelligence community, is putting cash into Visible Technologies, a software firm that specializes in monitoring social media. It’s part of a larger movement within the spy services to get better at using ”open source intelligence” — information that’s publicly available, but often hidden in the flood of TV shows, newspaper articles, blog posts, online videos and radio reports generated every day.

Visible crawls over half a million web 2.0 sites a day, scraping more than a million posts and conversations taking place on blogs, online forums, Flickr, YouTube, Twitter and Amazon. (It doesn’t touch closed social networks, like Facebook, at the moment.) Customers get customized, real-time feeds of what’s being said on these sites, based on a series of keywords.

“That’s kind of the basic step — get in and monitor,” says company senior vice president Blake Cahill.

Then Visible “scores” each post, labeling it as positive or negative, mixed or neutral. It examines how influential a conversation or an author is. (“Trying to determine who really matters,” as Cahill puts it.) Finally, Visible gives users a chance to tag posts, forward them to colleagues and allow them to response through a web interface.

In-Q-Tel says it wants Visible to keep track of foreign social media, and give spooks “early-warning detection on how issues are playing internationally,” spokesperson Donald Tighe tells Danger Room.

Of course, such a tool can also be pointed inward, at domestic bloggers or tweeters. Visible already keeps tabs on web 2.0 sites for Dell, AT&T and Verizon. For Microsoft, the company is monitoring the buzz on its Windows 7 rollout. For Spam-maker Hormel, Visible is tracking animal-right activists’ online campaigns against the company.

“Anything that is out in the open is fair game for collection,” says Steven Aftergood, who tracks intelligence issues at the Federation of American Scientists. But “even if information is openly gathered by intelligence agencies it would still be problematic if it were used for unauthorized domestic investigations or operations. Intelligence agencies or employees might be tempted to use the tools at their disposal to compile information on political figures, critics, journalists or others, and to exploit such information for political advantage. That is not permissible even if all of the information in question is technically ‘open source.’”

truvoice-dashboard_overview1

Visible chief executive officer Dan Vetras says the CIA is now an “end customer,” thanks to the In-Q-Tel investment. And more government clients are now on the horizon. “We just got awarded another one in the last few days,” Vetras adds.

Tighe disputes this — sort of. “This contract, this deal, this investment has nothing to do with any agency of government and this company,” he says. But Tighe quickly notes that In-Q-Tel does have “an interested end customer” in the intelligence community for Visibile. And if all goes well, the company’s software will be used in pilot programs at that agency. “In pilots, we use real data. And during the adoption phase, we use it real missions.”

Neither party would disclose the size of In-Q-Tel’s investment in Visible, a 90-person company with expected revenues of about $20 million in 2010. But a source familiar with the deal says the In-Q-Tel cash will be used to boost Visible’s foreign languages capabilities, which already include Arabic, French, Spanish and nine other languages.

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Visible has been trying for nearly a year to break into the government field. In late 2008, the company teamed up with the Washington, DC, consulting firm Concepts & Strategies, which has handled media monitoring and translation services for U.S. Strategic Command and the Joint Chiefs of Staff, among others. On its website, Concepts & Strategies is recruiting “social media engagement specialists” with Defense Department experience and a high proficiency in Arabic, Farsi, French, Urdu or Russian. The company is also looking for an “information system security engineer” who already has a “Top Secret SCI [Sensitive Compartmentalized Information] with NSA Full Scope Polygraph” security clearance.

The intelligence community has been interested in social media for years. In-Q-Tel has sunk money into companies like Attensity, which recently announced its own web 2.0-monitoring service. The agencies have their own, password-protected blogs and wikis — even a MySpace for spooks. The Office of the Director of National Intelligence maintains an Open Source Center, which combs publicly available information, including web 2.0 sites. Doug Naquin, the Center’s Director, told an audience of intelligence professionals in October 2007 that “we’re looking now at YouTube, which carries some unique and honest-to-goodness intelligence…. We have groups looking at what they call ‘citizens media’: people taking pictures with their cell phones and posting them on the internet. Then there’s social media, phenomena like MySpace and blogs.”

But, “the CIA specifically needs the help of innovative tech firms to keep up with the pace of innovation in social media. Experienced IC [intelligence community] analysts may not be the best at detecting the incessant shift in popularity of social-networking sites. They need help in following young international internet user-herds as they move their allegiance from one site to another,” Lewis Shepherd, the former senior technology officer at the Defense Intelligence Agency, says in an e-mail. “Facebook says that more than 70 percent of its users are outside the U.S., in more than 180 countries. There are more than 200 non-U.S., non-English-language microblogging Twitter-clone sites today. If the intelligence community ignored that tsunami of real-time information, we’d call them incompetent.”

ALSO:

A Conference on Privacy - TERI, Southern Regional Centre, Bangalore Domlur Bangalore, India

A Conference on Privacy

Time
05 February · 10:30 - 16:30

Location TERI, Southern Regional Centre, Bangalore
Domlur
Bangalore, India

Created by:

More info
"Privacy matters"

Privacy India invites individuals to attend the second "Privacy matters" conference, a one-day event on the 5th February 2011 at the TERI Southern Regional Centre, Bangalore. Privacy India, Society in Action Group, and the Centre for Internet & Society have joined hands to organize the event.

The “Privacy matters” conference will focus on discussing the challenges to privacy that India is currently facing. The right to privacy in India has been a neglected area of study and engagement. Although sectoral legislation deals with privacy issues, e.g., the TRAI Act for telephony or RBI guidelines for banking, India does not as yet have a horizontal legislation that deals comprehensively with privacy across all contexts. This lack of uniformity has led to ironically imbalanced results. In India today one has a stronger right to privacy over telephone records than over one’s own medical records. The absence of a minimum guarantee of privacy is felt most heavily by marginalized communities, including HIV patients, children, women, sexuality minorities, prisoners, etc. – people who most need to know that sensitive information is protected.

The emergence of information and communications technologies over the past two decades has radically transformed the speed and costs of access to information. However, this enhanced climate of access to information has been a mixed blessing. Whilst augmenting our access to knowledge, this new networked information economy has also now made it much easier, quicker, and cheaper to gain access to intimate personal information about individuals than ever before. As people expose more and more of their lives to others through the use of social networks, reliance on mobile phones, global trade, etc., there has emerged a heightened risk of privacy violations in India. As privacy continues to be a growing concern for individuals, nations, and the international community, it is critical that India understands and addresses the questions, challenges, implications and dilemmas that violations of privacy pose.

Who We Are

Privacy India was set up in collaboration with The Centre for Internet and Society (CIS), Bangalore and Society in Action Group (SAG), under the auspices of the international organization ‘Privacy International.’ Privacy International is a non-profit group that provides assistance to civil society groups, governments, international and regional bodies, the media and the public in a number of countries (see www.privacyinternational.o rg). Its Advisory Board is made up of distinguished intellectuals, academicians, thinkers and activists such as Noam Chomsky, the late Harold Pinter, and others, and it has collaborated with organizations such as the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU).

RSVP:

prashant@privacyindia.org
elonnai@privacyindia.org