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Saturday, April 24, 2010

College Students 'Addicted' to Social Media, Study Finds

American college students are "addicted" to the instant connections and information afforded by social media, a new study suggests.


According to researchers, students describe their feelings when they have to abstain from using media in literally the same terms associated with drug and alcohol addictions: in withdrawal, frantically craving, very anxious, extremely antsy, miserable, jittery, and crazy.

In the study, University of Maryland researchers conclude that most college students are not just unwilling, but functionally unable to be without their media links to the world. However, the study was based upon self-report by students engaging in a set of unnatural and largely unrealistic behaviors.

"I clearly am addicted and the dependency is sickening," said one person in the study.

"I feel like most people these days are in a similar situation, for between having a Blackberry, a laptop, a television, and an iPod, people have become unable to shed their media skin."

In the new study, "24 Hours: Unplugged," 200 students at the College Park campus were asked to give up all media for 24 hours. After their 24 hours of abstinence, the students were then asked to blog on private class websites about their experiences, report their successes and admit to any failures.


The 200 students wrote more than 110,000 words: in aggregate, about the same number of words as a 400-page novel.

"We were surprised by how many students admitted that they were 'incredibly addicted' to media," noted project director Susan D. Moeller, a journalism professor at the University of Maryland and the director of the International Center for Media and the Public Agenda which conducted the study.

"But we noticed that what they wrote at length about was how they hated losing their personal connections. Going without media meant, in their world, going without their friends and family."

Building upon that observation, an alternative explanation is that the students may have identified the "media" as what they were craving, but were actually missing the social connections afforded by the media. In other words, the students were "addicted" to the social ties — friendships and relationships — with others.

"The students did complain about how boring it was go anywhere and do anything without being plugged into music on their MP3 players," said Moeller.

"And many commented that it was almost impossible to avoid the TVs on in the background at all times in their friends' rooms. But what they spoke about in the strongest terms was how their lack of access to text messaging, phone calling, instant messaging, e-mail and Facebook, meant that they couldn't connect with friends who lived close by, much less those far away."

"Texting and IM-ing my friends gives me a constant feeling of comfort," wrote one student. "When I did not have those two luxuries, I felt quite alone and secluded from my life. Although I go to a school with thousands of students, the fact that I was not able to communicate with anyone via technology was almost unbearable."

The student responses to the assignment showed not just that 18-21 year old college students are constantly texting and on Facebook — with calling and e-mail distant seconds as ways of staying in touch, especially with friends — but that students’ lives are wired together in such ways that opting out of that communication pattern would be tantamount to renouncing a social life.

Very few students in the study reported that they regularly watched news on television or read a local or national newspaper (although a few said they regularly read The Diamondback, the University of Maryland student newspaper).

They also didn't mention checking mainstream media news sites or listening to radio news while commuting in their cars. Yet student after student demonstrated knowledge of specific news stories.

How did they get the information? In a disaggregated way, and not typically from the news outlet that broke or committed resources to a story. "To be entirely honest I am glad I failed the assignment," wrote one student, "because if I hadn’t opened my computer when I did I would not have known about the violent earthquake in Chile from an informal blog post on Tumblr."

"Students expressed tremendous anxiety about being cut-off from information,” observed Ph.D. student Raymond McCaffrey, a former writer and editor at The Washington Post, and a current researcher on the study.

“One student said he realized that he suddenly ‘had less information than everyone else, whether it be news, class information, scores, or what happened on Family Guy.”

"They care about what is going on among their friends and families and even in the world at large," McCaffrey said. "But most of all they care about being cut off from that instantaneous flow of information that comes from all sides and does not seem tied to any single device or application or news outlet."

That's the real takeaway of this study for journalists: students showed no significant loyalty to a news program, news personality or even news platform. Students have only a casual relationship to the originators of news, and in fact rarely distinguished between news and more general information.

While many in the journalism profession are committing significant resources to deliver content across media platforms – print, broadcast, online, mobile — the young adults in this study appeared to be generally oblivious to branded news and information.

For most of the students reporting in the study, information of all kinds comes in an undifferentiated wave to them via social media. If a bit of information rises to a level of interest, the student will pursue it — but often by following the story via "unconventional" outlets, such as through text messages, their e-mail accounts, Facebook and Twitter.

Students said that only the most specific or significant news events — for example, a medal event at the Olympics — merited their tuning into to a mainstream outlet. Even news events that students cared about were often accessed via their personal interactions.

To learn about the Maryland vs. Virginia Tech basketball game, for example, one student told of "listening to someone narrate the game from a conversation they were having on their own phone" (although he would have preferred watching it on TV), and another student told of calling her father to learn more about the earthquake in Chile.

By Rick Nauert, PhD, Senior News Editor, PsychCentral.com

Source: http://newscri.be/link/1081802

Friday, April 23, 2010

Boom Times For Chinese Internet Start-Ups




China's vast and growing number of web users is driving demand for tech services.



image

HONG KONG -- In a crowded office in suburban Beijing, a dozen young computer programmers are busy trying to make their first million with an Internet startup.

An Ran founded website design and develop company Alltosun two years ago. He formerly was R&D supervisor at Sina SINA ( SINA - news - people ), one of China’s most-visited online portals, and the project director at UUSee, one of China’s largest live TV broadcasting websites. “Most of our clients are young start-ups," said An, whose clients include Chinese, British and German companies.

An’s Alltosun is a snapshot of what is taking place in China’s Internet business landscape.

The IT design and development sector alone reaped 7.27 billion yuan ($1.1 billion) in revenue in January and February, with an annual growth of 24.5%, according to the latest government data. Alltosun’s revenue last year reached nearly 400,000 yuan ($58,000) is expected to exceed one million yuan ($146,000his year. Urbanites in China’s 60 biggest cities spent over 70% of their spare time on the Internet, according to a March survey by McKinsey & Co.

China’s expanding internet users’ guarantee potential success for the country’s internet start-ups. Official statistics showed that China’s internet users have reached 384 million by the end of 2009, more than the total population of the United States.

American International Data Group saw an investment opportunity in China’s Internet industry back in 1992, when Patrick McGovern decided to set up IDG Venture Capital and invested in start-ups like Tencent QQ and Baidu.com, ( BIDU - news - people ) which have since grown into China’s leading internet services portal and search engine, respectively.

DG VC now manages a $2.5 billion fund in China with a large proportion in the IT sector. Of the 200 companies it has backed, fifty have gone public or been bought by other companies.

Another Chinese start-up is Nanjing-based china-tomb.cn, an online mourning website.

“I saw people discussing where they could sweep their ancestors’ tombs without going back home on an overseas online forum four years ago, and that’s how I got the idea of setting up an online tomb-sweeping website.” said Yuan Jun.

For 10 yuan ($1.40), mourners can set up online memorials and tombs for their late relatives, upload photos and videos of them and burn virtual incense and offerings of money. Page views per day reached over 10,000 during the Qingming festival, when Chinese families traditionally visit their relatives' gravesites and practice rituals such as kowtow and money offering.

“Our customers are primarily from Japan, U.S., and Chinese coastal cities like Fujian, who cannot get back home during China’s tomb-sweeping festival,” said Yuan. “They are happy to pay for online mourning as they find it convenient and easy to use.”

Jennifer Po-ying Chueng, 04.23.10, 12:30 AM EDT

Source: http://newscri.be/link/1080471
Related articles: 


Mobile propping up enterprise IT

Commentary
Despite Gartner projecting a 5.3 percent increase in IT spending in 2010 over 2009, and IT vendors reporting rosy earnings, venture capitalists have been moving away from investing as much in enterprise IT in the past several years. As The Wall Street Journal reports, IT represented 53 percent of VC deals in 2001 but it has plummeted to 33 percent in 2009.

It's not as if those VCs are holding their money. They're actively investing in health care, green tech, and other sectors...
...like mobile.

The irony with mobile is that while it's siphoning away VC dollars from IT, it may actually be fueling enterprise IT spending. Mary Meeker suggests that with the mobile Web we're entering the fifth major technology cycle, eclipsing the desktop Internet era, an era of personal computers driven by enterprise IT.

But mobile is very much a heavy hitter in enterprise IT, even if it didn't start there.

For a variety of reasons, enterprise IT is rapidly co-opting mobile. It has to: employees are demanding that IT support their device preferences.

Hence, while companies may have been relatively quick to adopt the BlackBerry ("Hey, I can keep my employees working 24/7, constantly tethered to e-mail!"), even the "toy" iPhone has won over the enterprise, and employees are already inventing arguments why the iPad should be next.

Why? It's the apps.

E-mail was the initial killer app for mobile, but we've moved well beyond that. From Foursquare to mobile search to Facebook Mobile, the enterprise is increasingly running through consumer-esque applications that connect employees to business partners, fellow employees, and vendors of essential services.

Even traditional IT increasingly will run on consumer-driven mobile technology. MeeGo, the amalgamation of Intel's Moblin and Nokia's Maemo mobile Linux initiatives, is making its way onto enterprise-friendly laptops. The same holds true for Google Android.

In other words, even as VCs shift their investments to mobile, their money is likely helping to drive enterprise IT. It's not a direct investment, to be sure, but no less effective. Enterprise IT is alive and well. It just looks more mobile now, and less tied to the desktop.

(Credit: Dow Jones VentureSource)
Matt Asay is chief operating officer at Canonical, the company behind the Ubuntu Linux operating system. Prior to Canonical, Matt was general manager of the Americas division and vice president of business development at Alfresco, an open-source applications company. Matt brings a decade of in-the-trenches open-source business and legal experience to The Open Road, with an emphasis on emerging open-source business strategies and opportunities. He is a member of the CNET Blog Network and is not an employee of CNET. You can follow Matt on Twitter @mjasay
 Source: http://newscri.be/link/1080275



Concern over rising prices of houses

Speculators believed may be taking advantage of easy financing

PETALING JAYA: The jump in home prices lately has raised concern that speculators may be taking advantage of the easy home financing scheme.

Since the introduction of the scheme early last year, property sales have improved considerably while prices in some locations in the Klang Valley and Penang have edged up by between 10% and 20%.

Under the housing facility, buyers only need to fork out a small deposit of 5% or 10% of the property price and do not need to make any further payment until after their property has been delivered to them.

Developers are absorbing the stamp duty, legal fees and interest cost during the construction stage.

While some industry players agree that there is cause for concern, most feel the housing facility is still needed at least over the next 12 months until the market is back on a stronger footing.


Ireka Development Management Sdn Bhd chief operating officer Lim Ech Chan said easy-payment schemes had its pros and cons.

With the low entry cost, such schemes enabled those who have difficulties buying a house to put down the initial 5% or 10% downpayment and have their own roof over their heads two to three years later.

“When SP Setia first came out with the scheme, it helped the mass market a great deal,” Lim said.

He said the drawback was that since buyers did not have to pay anything for the next two to three years, they may sell their units when the project was completed.

“If the project is handed to them during a boom, they can sell it. But if the project is handed to them during a weak economic environment, they will have to pay for the mortgages.”

ECM Libra head of research Bernard Ching said the recent 25 basis point increase in overnight policy rate had prompted more buyers to buy and lock in at the current interest rates as they might expect the cost of fund to rise further.

“This is the best time to buy a property for own occupancy as entry cost is at an all time low. As seen in the high buying interest in the past six months, many buyers are buying to hedge against rising inflation down the road,” Ching told StarBiz.

According to Association of Valuers, Property Managers, Estate Agents and Property Consultants in the Private Sector president James Wong, developers need to catch up with “lost time” when launches had to be deferred for more than a year as a result of the global financial crisis.

“Buyers were facing cashflow problems then and needed to watch their spending. Buying big-ticket items like a house is the last thing on their mind. There are merits in the scheme as it has lowered the entry cost and make house purchase more affordable for buyers.

“Such financing schemes require a lot of resources and only the big developers with strong financial resources can afford to adopt them. In a way, it is a variant of the build-then-sell concept,” Wong said.

He said there was still no risk of overheating in the market as the double-digit rise in property prices was registered only for very niche projects in very-sought-after locations where demand far surpassed supply.

“Property prices on the whole are still much lower compared with those in other countries. While there is still upside potential, prices will not spiral out of control,” Wong said.

Since buying interest recovered in the past few months, developers are no longer offering the housing facility across the board but only for selective projects.

“Besides, Bank Negara is very stringent and only eligible buyers who have the required minimum income level will be able to sign up for the housing packages,” Wong added.

On its downside, he said while the scheme might had drummed up sales, it could give the wrong indication of the real or effective demand for houses.

Admitting that there would always be speculators in the market, SP Setia Bhd president and chief executive officer Tan Sri Liew Kee Sin said as long as speculation was not rampant, it was actually good for the market as it demonstrated confidence and would improve market liquidity.

“The key is for banks to be vigilant in their credit assessment to determine the borrowers’ ability to service the loan. They should also be selective in terms of the projects and developers to whom they extend the scheme.”

Liew said the higher prices reflected insufficient supply to meet the strong demand for projects in good locations and there was ample room for further price appreciation for good landed residential property.

Since the scheme was launched early last year, SP Setia’s monthly sales averaged more than RM190mil between January and July 2009, which was a new sales benchmark for the company.

Mah Sing Group Bhd president Tan Sri Leong Hoy Kum said of the company’s RM727mil sales recorded last year, 51% of the buyers signed up for the easy financing facility. The sales was much higher than its target of RM453mil.

By ANGIE NG and THEAN LEE CHENG starbiz@thestar.com.my

For latest Bursa Malaysia indices, charts and other information click here

Thursday, April 22, 2010

A server for the home

EASY ACCESS: The Home Server Console will allow you to manage the operating system remotely from any other machine.
 
ONE OF the most overlooked versions of Windows is Home Server and it also happens to be one of Microsoft’s best.

It is not uncommon for a home to have more than one computer, which is why having a dedicated machine with Home Server is so vital.

Firstly, Home Server will make backups of up to 10 machines in your house — we would prefer that there wasn’t a limit but 10 sounds reasonable for now.

Besides maintaining backups it can also stream movies and music, and share files across the network.
At the moment, you can’t get your hands on just a copy of the OS but instead have to buy a Home Server PC.

Acer is the only one offering such a machine here and it is called the Acer Aspire Easy Store.
Though custom building your own computer and installing Home Server would be the best option, the Acer Easy Store gets quite a number of things right.
Acer Aspire Easy Store
 
It has an Intel Atom 230 processor (1.6GHz /512K cache/ 533MHz FSB), Intel 945GC Express chipset, 2GB RAM and 1TB hard drive (upgradable to 8TB over four bays). It costs RM1,299.

Also, more Home Server PCs are expected to be available starting from the third quarter of this year. If you don’t wish to wait, you can download a trial copy at bit.ly/q85Fb and start fooling with it.

Remote access
Because the Home Server is best controlled remotely, you will have to install a client called a WHS Connector on each machine.

Even though the software is included with the Home Server disc, there is a better way to install the client over the network. Open up a browser window and type in http://servername:55000 where the server name is the name of your Home Network PC.

This should bring up the Windows Home Server Connector page which will prompt you to download the client. Once you download and install the client you’ll be prompted to input the admin password for the Home Server machine.

After that you will be presented with the Console window from which you can fully control the functions of the Home Server and how it’ll interact with the other machines.

The first tab – Computers and Backup – will show all the other computers connected to the Home Server. You can use it to schedule backups or start an instant backup.

Also, should you need to retrieve any of the backed up files, you can access the read-only virtual partition that the Home Server will create for you on your local machine.

Streaming media
The Home Server will automatically create a few standard folders for file sharing. To be able to stream to other devices, go to the Console setting and click on Media Sharing on the left pane.

You will then be able to turn on media streaming for all your shared folders.

However, the Home Server can only stream to devices that support the Windows Media Connect protocol such as a PC with Media Player and Xbox 360.

More add-ins
It’s also a good idea to update Home Server with the latest patches and security fixes. Click on the Setting button on the top right corner. Look for the Update Now button under the General tab and click it.

This will download the latest patches and security fixes. There are also a number of community developed add-ins that you should consider installing. Here are a few of our favourites.

Advanced Admin Console (home-server-addins.com)
For even better control of your Home Server, you can install the Advanced Admin Console which will create an additional tab in the Console window.

The handy tab will give you quick access to the server’s Command Prompt, Registry Editor, Start Menu, Recycle Bin, Administrative Tools and Task manager.

Disk Management (bit.ly/cCnGAX)
As good as Home Server is at managing the multiple hard disks but you’ll still want to be able to see every possible information of your storage.

With Disk Management, you’ll be able to see detailed information about each disk including its capacity, real-time temperature and activity and a 3D wireframe representation of the server.

The 3D wireframe is not only cool looking but it also makes it easy to select any part of the hard disk that you wish to monitor.

Armed with this info, you’ll know exactly which drive to upgrade or replace before it’s too late.

LightsOut (bit.ly/8mBCS5)
Home Server is meant to run 24/7 so that it is always available but you still should do your part for the planet by saving as much power as possible.

You can do this with the LightsOut add-in which can put the server in Suspended or Hibernation mode until a particular event triggers it awake such as a scheduled backup.

However, LightsOut comes in two flavours — a free but limited version and a full version which costs US22.90 (RM75).

My Movies (www.mymovies.dk)
With so many movies and songs on your hard disk you’ll want a convenient way to sort them. Enter the My Movies add-in.

This nifty add-in retrieves community generated metadata for tagging movies with info such as movie summary, director and cast information, running time, genres and more.

You’ll even get high quality movie covers so you don’t have to browse your movies by text alone.

This feature is only supported if you access the Home Server using Windows Media Centre from any other computer.

The add-in also features extra functions such as DVD ripping but this has to be unlocked with a donation to the forum.

Source: The Star TechCentral


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Media everywhere
Network connected player

Surprise! The banks want to make money, Goldman Sachs

Goldman Sachs, one of the most prestigious banks in the world, has
 issued a detailed rebuttal of the SEC's accusation of fraud
Goldman Sachs, one of the most prestigious banks in the world, has issued a detailed rebuttal of the SEC's accusation of fraud
 
Gordon Brown is "shocked". The notion that Goldman Sachs might have been playing off one set of clients against another to its own advantage, as alleged in a civil lawsuit filed by US regulators last week, had apparently never occurred to him, and he has called for a special investigation into the US investment bank's activities.

Give me a break. Until last week, I had never heard of the transaction in question – an unpleasant-sounding structure involving dodgy mortgages, a clever hedge fund manager and some less savvy investors – and I have no idea if the charges will stick.

I am, though, familiar with the concept that bankers in the middle of such transactions tread a fine line in order to remain on the right side of propriety. This issue is so widely understood that it has a special name: managing conflicts of interest.
It is also obvious that in the run-up to the financial crisis banks sold sub-prime mortgage products that were not, let us say, as safe as they were cracked up to be. Last year, the Securities and Exchange Commission subpoenaed Bank of America, Merrill Lynch, Barclays, Citigroup, Credit Suisse, Deutsche Bank, Morgan Stanley and UBS, for information about the marketing of mortgage products.

This is par for the course: whenever there is a financial boom, bankers peddle hot products with enthusiasm that verges on the excessive, and after the inevitable crash, investors – rightly or wrongly – seek to pin the blame for their bad decisions on these middlemen. The difference this time is the scale of the crisis and the resulting economic downturn. As a result, a restructuring of the financial system, rather than some rule tweaks, is now on the cards.

Goldman in the line of fire

Given that Goldman has been at the centre of post-crisis controversy on several counts, it is not surprising that it is in the line of fire. Wall Street's most prestigious bank has always conceded that its business model involves managing complex conflicts of interest – not only between different sets of clients, but also between itself and its clients. This is true of all investment banks, since trading inevitably creates losers as well as winners.

Of course, banks which advise companies and execute big trades for clients have an edge: they are in possession of superior information. There are rules in place to prevent abuse, but let's not pretend that doing the right thing – or even defining what is the right thing to do – is always easy.

In recent years, grey areas have become even greyer, partly as a result of the proliferation of derivative instruments, which have many useful functions, including obfuscating what is really going on.

At Goldman, the web of conflicts became increasingly tangled as the bank built its own private equity business – allowing it to invest in companies directly – and developed strong relationships with hedge funds.

How effectively Goldman was "managing" these conflicts was an issue long before the crisis. Four years ago, Hank Paulson, its then boss, rebuked his London colleagues for a controversial attempt to bid for BAA, the British airports group it was supposed to be defending against a takeover approach.

Goldman's reputation, he feared, was at risk. That risk is now acute, particularly given Mr Paulson's subsequent role as US Treasury secretary during the financial crisis, when he allowed Lehman Brothers to fail but helped Goldman and Morgan Stanley to avert disaster.

Goldman has rebutted the SEC charges, and notes that the complaint involves "disclosure on a single transaction involving professional investors in a market in which they had extensive experience". The bank also points out that it subsequently lost money on the transaction.

I don't find this to be compelling evidence either way. Most banks lost money in the sub-prime market, but it doesn't mean that their actions were misguided, rather than ill-intentioned. The individuals who structured transactions may have been awarded big bonuses on the back of deals which, at least initially, allowed banks to book profits. This represents yet another potential conflict of interests.

The widely advocated separation of retail and investment banks would do nothing to solve this long-standing problem, since some of the worst conflicts are to be found within standalone investment banks. To strip down activities sufficiently to remove all conflicts would involve reducing the financial industry to uneconomic fragments.

Furthermore, the crackdown after the dotcom crash on analysts who privately denigrated stocks they publicly recommended showed that it is possible to end such abuse, if lines are clearly drawn then policed.

The big surprise, as far as I am concerned, is that anyone was naive enough to believe banks' "clients-first" rhetoric. Clever, financially motivated employees were given powerful incentives to prioritise short-term profits.

The email reflections of a Goldman banker, which form part of the SEC's case, describe "these complex, highly leveraged, exotic trades… created without necessarily understanding all of the implications of those monstruosities [sic]". Whatever the legal conclusion, that is a vivid indictment of how the industry operates.

 By Tracy Corrigan, Telegraph

Wednesday, April 21, 2010

Accountants’ input crucial for NEM, Sheng

Financial adviser calls for accountants to lead the way to K-economy

KUALA LUMPUR: Feedback from accountants is imperative for the successful implementation of the New Economic Model (NEM) and for Malaysia to transform into a knowledge economy (K-economy), said China Banking Regulatory Commission chief adviser Datuk Seri Panglima Andrew Sheng.

“Accountants play a major role in the development of the K-economy from data classification, verification, data analysis as well as business risk investment,” he told reporters yesterday at the 51st Anniversary commemorative lecture and luncheon of the Malaysian Insitutue of Certified Public Accountants (MICPA).

MICPA’s anniversary theme this year was “NEM and the Role of Accountants.”

Sheng said Malaysian accountants must continually upgrade themselves and lead the nation in the process to transform the economy.

He said accountants in the services sector play a significant role in the development of the knowledge economy and could trasform the human resources landscape.

He reckoned that the old economic model of relying on “cheap clerks” and smart partners were over, as the structure did not provide encouragement and incentives to middle managers.

“We are exporting our talent abroad due to higher overseas pay,” he noted, adding the country should instead invest in clusters of accounting talent to do high value outsourcing accounting work in Malaysia.

Sheng said there was a need to do more research in value-added accounting services, such as database management and the conversion of accounting data into business data.

“The conversion of raw accounting data into business and user-friendly language is a major business (opportunity),” he said, citing eXtensible Business Reporting Language (XBRL) as an example.

XBRL is the language used for electronic communication of information between businesses and other users of financial information for the purpose of business reporting.

“We need to develop Malaysia as a centre of excellence in accounting and information upgrading,” he said.

Sheng said servicing the financial cetres of Hong Kong and Singapore in data conversion/outsourcing alone was sufficiently viable, what more capturing new businesses in the Middle East, China and India.

To capitalise on this business opportunity, Malaysia needs to develop and promote strong research and development in accounting, he said.

By DANNY YAP, danny@thestar.com.my

Tuesday, April 20, 2010

Cyberattack lifted Google password system code, says report

'Chinese' hack nabbed single-sign-on source

When alleged Chinese hackers infiltrated Google's internal systems in December, they lifted source code for a password system that controls access to almost all of the company's web services, according to a report citing a person with direct knowledge of Google's investigation into the matter.

The New York Times reports that the December attack nabbed code for the system that controls single-sign-on for millions of users across myriad Google services, including Gmail and the company's online business applications. Originally codenamed Gaia - a nod to the Greek godess of the earth - it is now known simply as Single Sign-On.

According to The Times, the attack began when an instant message was sent to a Google employee in China who was running Microsoft's Messenger client. When the employee clicked on a weblink in the IM, attackers gained access to the employee's PC, and from there, they tapped machines used by "a critical group of software developers" at the company's Mountain View headquarters. Eventually, they also gained access to a software repository where source code for the Gaia system was stored.

Code was moved to machines housed by the Texas-based webhost Rackspace, The Times says, before it was transferred to some other, unknown destination.

At some point, according to The Times, the attackers gained access to an internal Google directory called Moma, which houses info on the "work activities" of company employees. This may have been used to locate specific individuals inside the company. The attackers "seemed to have precise intelligence" about the names of the Gaia software developers.

However, The Times says, the attackers "do not appear" to have lifted the passwords of individual Gmail users.

On January 12, Google told the world that Chinese hackers had stolen unspecified intellectual property from the company's internal system, and it said evidence indicated that "a primary motive" of the attacks was to gain access to the Gmail accounts of Chinese human rights activists. In light of the attack - and what it described as other, routine attacks on the Gmail accounts of such activists - Google said it had resolved to stop censoring search results in the country.

A little more than two months later, after talks with Chinese government, Google shut down its Chinese search engine, Google.cn, and redirected visitors to its Hong Kong-based engine, Google.com.hk, where it now provides uncensored search results in simplified Chinese.

According to The Times, Google continues to use the Gaia system, and the paper questions whether the attackers may use the course code to locate security weaknesses n the system itself. ®

By Cade Metz in San Francisco

Source: http://newscri.be/link/1077234