Friday, 6 December 2013

Barça and Bayern to battle Real for Iñigo Martínez

Barça and Bayern to battle Real for Iñigo Martínez
MIGUEL SERRANO. MADRID 12/06/2013
Real Madrid is by no means the only side interested in making off with Iñigo Martínez. Fellow big-hitters Barcelona and Pep Guardiola's Bayern Munich also have the Real Sociedad centre-back starlet high on their wishlist.
The 'Azulgranas' tried to sign the youngster at the beginning of the last campaign, when Tito Vilanova urged Sandro Rosell to strengthen at the heart of defence. However, the Catalan club was unwilling to meet the defender's €30 million release clause and Sociedad played hardball, refusing to lower its asking price.
Bayern's interest, meanwhile, stems from the fact that centre-back is one of the few positions where the club doesn't have an embarrassment of riches. While Dante and Boateng get the job done, they are not as comfortable bringing the ball out as Guardiola would ideally like, hence the coach's occasional use of Javi Martínez in defence and full-back Philipp Lahm in central midfield.
The Bavarian giant would likely not balk at shelling out €30 million for the defender, considering it smashed the Bundesliga transfer record when stumping up €45 million for Martínez two summers ago.

Zidane: "It's breathtaking what Ronaldo does"

Zidane: It's breathtaking what Ronaldo does
RUBÉN JIMÉNEZ 12/05/2013
Zinedine Zidane is in Brazil for the World Cup draw but that does not allow him to rest from his duties at Real Madrid.
The Frenchman took time out to praise Cristiano Ronaldo who is expected to be one of the stars of the event next summer. "What he does on the pitch is breathtaking, absolutely marvellous", were the words used by Carlo Ancelotti's assistant to describe the player.
Zidane was referring to the exhibition the Portuguese forward gave in the World Cup play-off match against Sweden. "The way he led Portugal against the Swedes when many people thought his side was going out shows what an excellent player he is", the former French World Cup winner said.
To sum up the player, Zidane relied on what he sees on a day-to-day basis in training at Real Madrid: "He is an example for all those who train with him. A great professional".
On the subject of the World Cup draw, the Frenchman does not hope for an easy group for his national side: "We want France to face the best sides and get as far as possible, I'm not worried about them having to play against the more difficult teams".
Zidane also remembered the final in 1998 that France won thanks to two goals from him over Brazil: "It is one of the sweetest moments of my life, but I do not think the Brazilians hate me for it. Whenever I come here I am always well received".

Gündogan looks bound for Real Madrid

Gündogan looks bound for Real Madrid










12/05/2013
The German sports media believe that Ilkay Gündogan is edging ever closer to a move to Real Madrid, given that Borussia Dortmund's creative midfielder remains steadfast in his refusal to renew his contract with the German outfit. His current contract expires in 2015.
Gündogan's decision not to extend his stay at the Westphalia club is considered a sign that the player is close to a deal which will relocate him to Real Madrid, with Real having secured a purchase option on the player as part of the deal which saw Nuri Sahin return to Jurgen Klopp's side. If Gündogan does not renew his contract, Dortmund will be forced to sell him in the 2014 summer transfer window if it is to receive a decent sum for the transfer.

Brazil World Cup to introduce timeouts

Brazil World Cup to introduce timeouts
12/05/2013
The secretary general of FIFA, Jerôme Valcke, has said that in cases of extreme heat, play in some matches at the 2014 Brazil World Cup could be stopped once or more times to allow players to rest and rehydrate.
"Every match will have a coordinator, a doctor and the match referee. These three people will take the necessary measures to ensure acceptable conditions and will authorise breaks during games", said Valcke, who admitted two days ago that Brazil 2014 will be a World Cup of extreme temperatures.
Of the 64 matches scheduled during the tournament, four will be played at 13:00 in regions in the north of the country, which are prone to intense heat: two in Natal, one in Arrecife and another in Salvador.
FIFA has completely ruled out the possibility of changing the kick-off times of these matches, arguing that medical research guarantees there will be no health risks to players.
With regards to the welfare of fans watching these matches under the intense sun of north-eastern Brazil, Valcke admitted he has not commissioned any studies, although he said he is sure there will not be any problems.
"I would say it is easier for fans, who can drink water if they need to. It is more difficult for the players, who run kilometres on the pitch", said the secretary general. "Our medical research focussed on the players' health, not the fans'"

Thursday, 5 December 2013

India expands nuclear weapons site: US think tank

Think tank says new facility could increase India's ability to produce enriched uranium for military purposes. PHOTO: FILE.
WASHINGTON: India has expanded a secretive site that could be used to enrich more uranium for nuclear weapons, a US think tank said Wednesday, citing satellite imagery.
The Institute for Science and International Security, a private group opposed to nuclear proliferation, said that India appeared to be finishing a second gas centrifuge facility at its Rare Materials Plant near the southern city of Mysore.
“This new facility could significantly increase India’s ability to produce highly enriched uranium for military purposes, including more powerful nuclear weapons,” the institute said in a report that analyzed an image taken in April.
The institute said that India started building a second centrifuge plant near Mysore in 2010, but it was unclear whether it was a replacement for the first facility at the site or a supplement.
If it is a new facility, “India could have more than doubled its enrichment capacity, if the original building continues to function as an enrichment plant,” it said.
India closely guards its nuclear sites and says little about them publicly. In the past, India has complained about footage of sensitive infrastructure taken by commercial satellite services such as Google Earth.
Indian officials have reportedly said that highly enriched uranium from Mysore would fuel its new nuclear-powered submarines. India’s nuclear weapons program has traditionally been based on plutonium, not uranium.
India carried out nuclear tests in 1998, and historic rival Pakistan quickly followed suit. India’s program is not subject to international restrictions or inspections as it is one of the few nations, along with Israel, North Korea and Pakistan, to reject the Non-Proliferation Treaty, which New Delhi says is discriminatory.
However, India’s international isolation ended through a 2008 cooperation deal with the United States, where both President George W Bush and his successor Barack Obama have agreed that the world’s largest democracy is a responsible nuclear power.

Online game teaches risks of personal data exposure

A man points out an icon in the "Data Dealer" game, on a laptop screen in Vienna on November 21, 2013. PHOTO: AFP
Sexual orientation, private debt, medical records, even your favourite ice cream flavour: do you know much of this personal information is out there and available for sale?
And what if it could affect your job applications, whether you can rent a house or how high your insurance premium will be?
A new Austrian-designed online game titled “Data Dealer”, set for launch this week, hopes to make people a little more aware of their exposure to these risks, even if at a minimum it prompts them to switch off the GPS application on their smartphones.
“(Companies) are collecting more and more personal data,” designer Wolfie Christl told AFP. “At the same time, people are bored with thinking about this… so we had the idea to make a game out of it.”
A colourful demo was released last year, and “Data Dealer” — a browser game in the same style as Facebook’s popular “FarmVille” — won the Games for Change “most significant impact” award in New York in June.
“Here’s the most amusing way to learn the depressing news about your vanishing privacy,” Forbes magazine commented.
Some 80,000 players have already tested the game, which received funding from the Austrian government and the City of Vienna and will be available online for free.
“I don’t think most people can really imagine what it means not only to collect but also to collate and to combine all these massive amounts of personal data,” said Christl, one of the game’s four core designers.
Even “really boring” information can be a goldmine, the cheerful young designer added.
That is the premise of “Data Dealer”.
Players get to collect thousands of profiles at the click of a mouse, using shady characters such as a Bernie Madoff-lookalike and a disgruntled nurse who has no qualms about selling patients’ records to supplement her meagre salary.
The characters are colourful and amusing. But the scary bit is the message behind the game.
For a few hundred euros (dollars), the manager of a tanning salon will hand over his client list, including names, birthdates and email addresses. Loyalty cards reveal diets and buying habits. A dating site profile turns up a person’s relationship status and even the age when they had their first sexual encounter.
The player can then sell this information to a major employer, a rental authority or a security agency to make a quick buck and expand his or her virtual empire.
Regaining control
“Data Dealer” is just a game, but what if fitness-monitoring systems such as Nike+ sold information to your health insurance provider: would your premium go up if you failed to run a required distance per day?
“People don’t know about the value of this personal data and they also don’t control it,” Christl said, adding: “If we want to have a positive future digital society then we really need to enable people to make the self-determined use of personal data and get back control of it.”
The City of Vienna’s creative agency Departure praised “Data Dealer” as “the most innovative international approach to… data protection and online media competence”.
“A game will probably not make a big difference, but it is a building block,” Tassilo Pellegrini, communications expert at St. Poelten technical college, told AFP.
“Data Dealer can boost people’s awareness, and with more awareness they might then act differently.”
Mass surveillance and privacy concerns became a major issue this year after US whistleblower Edward Snowden revealed the extent of the US National Security Agency’s spying on civilians.
Last week, the UN General Assembly’s rights committee passed a “right to privacy” resolution, which found that surveillance and data interception by governments and companies “may violate or abuse human rights”.
For Christl, who has been working on this not-for-profit project with a small team for two years, the Internet is still a great communication and innovation tool.
But he hopes “Data Dealer” will make people pay more attention to their privacy settings.
The team is now planning an educational version of the game and is working with schools and digital literacy programmes.
Developments in the news will be regularly inserted into the game and a later version will even allow players to hack into each other’s accounts for an even more realistic effect.
As Christl put it: “It should also be entertaining; it’s not about preaching

Twitter to be available on mobile phones without Internet

More than 11 million people use U2opia's Fonetwish service, which helps access Facebook and Google Talk on mobile without a data connection. PHOTO: REUTERS/FILE
Twitter Inc is tying up with a Singapore-based startup to make its 140-character messaging service available to users in emerging markets who have entry-level mobile phones that cannot access the Internet.
U2opia Mobile, which has a similar tie-up with Facebook Inc, will launch its Twitter service in the first quarter of next year, Chief Executive and Co-founder Sumesh Menon told Reuters.
Users will need to dial a simple code to get a feed of the popular trending topics on Twitter, he said.
More than 11 million people use U2opia’s Fonetwish service, which helps access Facebook and Google Talk on mobile without a data connection.
Twitter, which boasts of about 230 million users, held a successful initial public offering last month that valued the company at around $25 billion.
U2opia uses a telecom protocol named USSD, or Unstructured Supplementary Service Data, which does not allow viewing of pictures, videos or other graphics.
“USSD as a vehicle for Twitter is almost hand in glove because Twitter has by design a character limit, it’s a very text-driven social network,” Menon said.
Eight out of 10 people in emerging markets are still not accessing data on their phone, he said.
U2opia, which is present in 30 countries in seven international languages, will localise the Twitter feed according to the location of the user.
“So somebody in Paraguay would definitely get content that would be very very localised to that market vis a vis somebody sitting in Mumbai or Bangalore,” he said.
The company, whose biggest markets are Africa and South America, partners with telecom carriers such as Telenor (TEL.OL), Vodafone (VOD.L) and Bharti Airtel Ltd (BRTI.NS). U2opia usually gets 30 to 40 percent of what users pay its telecom partners to access Fonetwish.
“For a lot of end users in the emerging markets, it’s going to be their first Twitter experience,” Menon said.