Diberdayakan oleh Blogger.

Popular Posts Today

Pastebin overcomes Anonymous spat

Written By Unknown on Rabu, 31 Oktober 2012 | 23.58

31 October 2012 Last updated at 12:34 ET By Leo Kelion Technology reporter

Pastebin - a site where users can post text-based files for others to see - appears to have put a backlash from users behind it.

It had proved popular with Anonymous hacktivists, but many turned against it when its owner said he was considering removing "sensitive information".

The hackers even created a rival service.

Despite this, Pastebin said it had managed to achieve a new "milestone" of 25 million active "pastes".

"All those pastes together contain more than 1250 gigabytes of raw data," owner Jeroen Vader told the BBC.

"The last two years have been extremely hard work, but it seems to be paying off.

"On 27 October 2011 we reached the 10 million active pastes milestone; less than a year later on 4 July 2012 that doubled to 20 million, and now just over three months later we are celebrating 25 million pastes."

Anonymous anger

Pastebin became a popular tool for Anonymous since it allows posts by unnamed users to run up to 0.5 megabytes in size.

Members of the collective would often post a short Twitter message after a successful hack attack, providing a link to a Pastebin post which in turn contained details of the data they had copied from the target's computer servers.

These sometimes contained names, telephone numbers and addresses of people related to the organisations they had attacked.

As a consequence Mr Vader told the BBC earlier this year: "I am looking to hire some extra people soon to monitor more of the website's content, not just the items that are reported. Hopefully this will increase the speed in which we can remove sensitive information."

The news prompted some members of Anonymous to issue a press release, saying: "Pastebin has been in the news lately for making some rather shady claims as to what they are willing to censor, and when they are willing to give up IP addresses to the authorities."

It said a sub-group calling itself the Peoples Liberation Front [sic] had set up an alternative service called AnonPaste.

However, Pastebin's search tool and Trending Pastes feature - which the new site lacked - appear to have helped it overcome the backlash.

Among its most popular current pastes are:

  • A user identifying themselves with Anonymous highlighting an operation dubbed OpFraudeTeleton planned for December.
  • Another Anonymous post flagging Operation You've Been Owned, which aims to publicise a US court case that might make it illegal to sell copyrighted goods.
  • A post by Nullcrew - a group thought to be sympathetic to, but separate from, Anonymous - revealing details taken from a hack attack on Ford Motors.

One security consultant said it was no surprise that Pastebin had emerged unscathed.

"For all the big words people are still able to have anonymous accounts on Pastebin so they are effectively untraceable," said Prof Alan Woodward, a visiting professor at the University of Surrey's computing department.

"Everyone knows where Pastebin is and it has a reputation for being where such things are lodged - so it's simply where everyone goes to have a look."

Abuse team

Pastebin confirmed that action was being taken to take down the most sensitive information, and to warn concerned parties if their details had been revealed.

"Pastebin now has an abuse report team that deals with abuse reports much quicker than before," said Mr Vader.

"Anything that is reported gets looked at within six hours by our team.

"Pastebin now also has the Pastebin Alerts service which is being used by a lot of people. It is basically a free service for members where they can enter various keywords into their alerts profile.

"Whenever anyone creates a public paste which contains those keywords, they will get an automatic email alert about it."


23.58 | 0 komentar | Read More

Google offers Siri-like voice app

31 October 2012 Last updated at 08:21 ET

Google has released an update to its search app that includes voice recognition, putting it in competition with Apple's digital assistant Siri.

Early reviews suggest that the software is fast and accurate.

The release comes in the same week that Apple ousted its senior vice president of iOS software Scott Forstall, who was in charge of Siri.

Siri has not been without controversy and some critics believe that it was overhyped.

In a blog post Google said of the new app: "When you ask a question, finding the answer should be effortless."

"The new Google search app for iPhone and iPad helps you to do just that with enhanced voice search that answer any question with the comprehensive Google search results you know."

Users of the app need to tap on a microphone icon and ask a question to see weblinks and pictures that might answer it.

It also makes use of Google's Knowledge Graph, which offers answers to a range of questions.

Siri bias

Although Apple is credited with popularising voice-activated digital assistants, when Siri launched many critics said that it had been overhyped by Mr Forstall and his team.

It has had its share of controversy, with some accusing Apple of altering the software if it did not like the answers.

The most high profile case of this was when Siri recommended rival Nokia's handset over the iPhone.

When asked to recommend the best smartphone, Siri answered: "Nokia's Lumia 900" but it was changed within days to: "Wait...there are other smartphones?"

Mr Forstall was also responsible for Apple's much-criticised mapping software, which was introduced in the iPhone 5 as an alternative to Google Maps.


23.58 | 0 komentar | Read More

'Siri U-turn' on prostitute tips

30 October 2012 Last updated at 12:44 ET

Apple appears to have altered a service which was finding prostitutes for users in China.

State-run China Daily reported that, when asked, the voice-activated assistant Siri directed users to brothels, despite prostitution being banned in the country.

It prompted millions of comments from users, becoming a hot topic on Sina Weibo, the Chinese version of Twitter.

Now Siri has changed its responses, offering no advice.

Nearly nine million users of Sina Weibo have commented on the function since the Mandarin version of Siri was launched in the summer.

Chinese lawyers questioned whether the escort services and brothels provided by Siri were "endangering social stability".

China is the second biggest market for Apple after the US.

One user of Sina Weibo pointed out that Siri seemed to be more efficient at finding brothels than restaurants that serve typically Chinese dishes.

"When I ask Siri about beef noodle soup or hotpot, she has no idea," the user wrote.

Another commented: "A mobile phone can know all this while the police do not?"

According to China Daily, the police have not been able to assess whether the answers given by Siri were accurate.

Best smartphone?

By the beginning of the week, Apple appeared to have acted and now, when asked about brothels, Siri replies with more diplomatic responses such as "There seems to have been a mistake" or "I didn't find anybody by that name".

At the time of publishing Apple had not responded to requests for a comment.

It is not the first time that Apple has intervened over its digital assistant Siri.

Last year it was forced to deny claims that Siri was anti-abortion, following reports that it failed to located nearby abortion clinics in the US and, in some cases, suggest pregnancy advice centres as an alternative.

And in the summer Apple became embroiled in a row with Nokia when Siri appeared briefly to favour the Finnish smartphone over the iPhone.

When asked "what is the best smartphone ever", Siri replied that it was the Nokia Lumia 900.

But the response was shortlived, changing to the more jokey: "Wait - there are other smartphones?"

The change prompted Nokia to accuse Apple of overriding the software, something that the iPhone maker would not confirm.


23.58 | 0 komentar | Read More

Fund site Kickstarter UK launch

30 October 2012 Last updated at 20:41 ET By Dave Lee Technology reporter, BBC News

Crowdsourced funding website Kickstarter has launched in the UK.

The site, on which users seek money for creative or product-based ideas, has so far raised more than $340m (£211m) - with 5% of each successful pledge going to Kickstarter.

Until now, new businesses using the site to raise cash for projects had to set up an account in the US.

Co-founder Yancey Strickler told the BBC that there are plans to expand the site to other countries soon.

"The request to expand internationally has long been one of our most requested features," Mr Strickler, who is the site's head of community, said.

"We certainly are interested. We're going to see how the UK launch goes and figure out the next moves from there. There's a lot of places that will be interesting."

Perks

Since launching in 2009, more than 70,000 projects have been pitched on Kickstarter - with a success rate of just over 40%.

Businesses or individuals pitching on the site typically offer a range of perks in return for money. Pledges can be anything from £1 to thousands of pounds.

While launched originally as a site for mainly artistic projects, such as plays or film-making, the site has become known for attracting a large number of products aimed at the technology community.

Among the most successful has been video games console Ouya, which raised $8,596,474 after initially asking for $950,000. Another, the Pebble Watch, raised $10,266,845 from a pitch aiming to realise $100,000.

However, some industry figures are concerned that Kickstarter's early excitement may suffer if big projects do not deliver what was intended.

One video game project, Haunts, recently stopped production after its development team quit.

Mob Rules Games, the company behind the project, apologised to backers in a blog post.

"I am still determined to get the game out," wrote Mod Rules Games boss Rick Dakan. "But I no longer have any way of knowing when and how that will happen."

Altruistic investors

Unlike traditional methods of backing new companies, investors on Kickstarter do not gain a share of the company, nor do they have any say in its future operation.

"I think the key thing is that backers need to be confident that the projects they're backing will raise enough money to complete the project they're envisaging," said Ben Holmes, a partner at London-based venture capital firm Index Ventures.

"What people are getting from Kickstarter is not equity. They're getting early access, or signed t-shirts and so on.

Continue reading the main story

What people are getting from Kickstarter is not equity"

End Quote Ben Holmes Index Ventures

"The investors in Kickstarter projects are doing it largely altruistically, it's not really a financial investment for them."

Similar websites, such as IndieGoGo and PleaseFund.Us, also offer crowdfunding to UK businesses - but they are yet to gain the same widespread appeal as the American site.

"Although there are lots of other sites in the UK, none of them quite have the same credibility as Kickstarter," said Emilie Holmes, an entrepreneur who is launching her takeaway tea business using Kickstarter on Wednesday.

"I think it's because it's the cool factor. Kickstarter was the original - they're the classic tech start-up. They're cool young guys who had a great idea.

"Most importantly, I think what the UK sites have missed a trick with is that Kickstarter is very strict on what they accept."

The UK government has backed alternative funding models, saying that it is important small businesses have access to finance sources beyond "conventional bank lending".

A spokesman for the Department for Business, Innovation and Skills said: "The Government is working with industry to support a range of new ways of lending, and the growth of innovative financing models like crowd funding is an exciting development."


23.58 | 0 komentar | Read More

Not so fast - testing 4G

31 October 2012 Last updated at 04:54 ET
Rory Cellan-Jones

Please turn on JavaScript. Media requires JavaScript to play.

Rory Cellan-Jones speed tests the new 4G service in Manchester

For 36 hours, I have been trying out 4G in two cities where it has been launched by the EE network. Everywhere I've gone in London and Manchester, outside, indoors, on trains and in cars, I've used a speed testing application. And while I've seen some breathtakingly fast results, there has also been some worrying evidence that the speed and extent of the 4G network is being oversold.

Here is a selection of my results:

Picking up the 4G phone that I was borrowing from the EE store on Oxford Street, I gave it my first test - and it was very very fast. A 53Mbps download is better than the vast majority of UK broadband users could achieve at home right now - but obviously at EE's flagship central London store, the company had made sure the network delivered.

Oh dear - inside the BBC's new headquarters, things slowed right down. But then again, for some reason most mobile phone networks don't work at all inside the state-of-the-art building so this was better than many colleagues were getting.

Deep inside a chaotic Euston Station, more problems. The Speedtest app could not detect any data signal at all.

But once we took our seats on the Manchester train, 4G leaped back into life. The upload speeds looked startlingly good as we waited for the train to leave. As we headed out through North London, however, the 4G network seemed to disappear even before we had breached the North Circular Road.

Once we had arrived in Manchester, one of the 11 cities that were to go live with EE 4G on Tuesday morning, I was relieved to see that things were working.

At the cafe which kindly opened at the crack of dawn so that we could broadcast into BBC Breakfast and numerous radio stations, another pretty good result. That kind of speed might not look too startling - but if there is plenty of capacity it would make 4G a very attractive option to small businesses looking for an alternative to fixed broadband.

We headed north out of Manchester to see how far the 4G network stretched. As expected it melted away as we crossed the M60, but EE's 3G network proved surprisingly robust. This result from a village on the road to Rochdale looks excellent - but if you can get this on 3G why would you pay more for 4G?

Live from outside the BBC North base at Salford, we were back on 4G at a pretty respectable if unspectacular speed. Note the upload figure though - for anyone trying to send data rather than receive that will look very attractive. Mind you, inside the BBC building the 4G disappeared again. Vodafone has suggested that EE's brand of 4G won't be effective indoors - does that charge stick?

As our train headed out of Manchester, the 4G network seemed to stretch as far as Stockport. Taking advantage of some impressive upload speeds, I uploaded a video to YouTube in under a minute.

But there was a disappointing end to my 4G testing marathon. Arriving at my home in the remote wastelands of west London, I found that EE's network did not stretch this far. True - this 3G result is a lot better than my usual network gives me at home. But if 4G really is supposed to deliver a superfast future, indoors and outside, to 98% of the UK's population, wouldn't you expect it to work right across the nation's capital? Maybe the change of brand to EE is a tacit admission that the network just cannot deliver Everything Everywhere.


23.58 | 0 komentar | Read More

Panasonic forecasts $9.6bn loss

31 October 2012 Last updated at 05:17 ET

Panasonic has projected that it will make a loss in the current financial year because of falling sales and a jump in restructuring expenses.

It has forecast a net loss of 765bn yen ($9.6bn; £5.9bn). It had earlier projected a 50bn-yen profit.

The firm has been trying to restructure its business and said costs relating to that were expected to be almost 11 times more than previously estimated.

Its sales have been hit by slowing demand for TVs and a strong yen.

Panasonic also reported that it made a loss of 698bn yen in the July-to-September quarter.

The firm said that continued uncertainty in the global economy over the eurozone debt crisis and the slowdown in Asian economies, including China, had hurt demand for electronics goods.

At the same time, domestic consumption in Japan continues to remain subdued. The electronics giant said its sales in Japan fell 11% in the three months to the end of September, as compared with the same period last year, while overseas sales dropped by 14%.

Manufacturers of TVs have also seen their profits margins squeezed as slowing demand and rising competition have led to a fall in retail prices.


23.58 | 0 komentar | Read More

Google loses defamation lawsuit

31 October 2012 Last updated at 08:45 ET

A jury in Australia has found Google liable for damages after a complaint that its search results had linked a local man to gangland crime.

Milorad Trkulja had alleged that the US firm's image and web results had caused harm to his reputation.

The 62-year-old had said the site had refused to remove the material when asked. He had previously won a related case against Yahoo.

Google has not commented on the verdict and might still appeal.

The judge is expected to set the level of damages owed within a fortnight.

'False innuendos'

Mr Trkulja moved to Australia in the early 1970s after leaving Yugoslavia. He subsequently became a prominent member of the migrant community, hosting the Yugoslav-themed "Micky's Folkfest" television show in the 1990s.

In 2004 he was shot in the back by a man wearing a balaclava while at a restaurant. The crime was never solved, but a report by the Herald Sun newspaper later said that police did not link the attack to Melbourne's underworld.

As a result of the attack Mr Trkulja said that entering his name into Google Images brought up images of other people beneath which his name appeared.

He said some of these figures were allegedly murderers and one a drug trafficker. In addition the caption "Melbourne Crime" appeared beneath several of the photos, including one of Mr Trkulja himself, which he had alleged might lead users to believe he was a criminal.

"Melbourne Crime", in fact, referred to the source of the images - a now defunct website going by that name.

Mr Trkulja had also complained that the first result brought up by a web search of his name showed the words "Michael Trkulja - Melbourne Crime - Underworld - Ganglands", beneath which appeared the sentence: "Former music promoter Michael Trkulja was shot in the back by a hitman wearing a balaclava while dining at a St Albans restaurant in June 2004."

He said this created a "false innuendo" suggesting he had been involved in crime and his rivals had hired a hitman to murder him.

He added that couples had refused to sit at the same table as him at a wedding as a consequence, and that others had deliberately avoided him in public.

Continue reading the main story

"This case is not about the money, it's about protecting my family"

End Quote Milorad Trkulja
'Automated results'

In 2009 Mr Trkulja's lawyers contacted Google to ask it to amend its results, and subsequently filed a lawsuit.

Google argued that its results had been based on automated software processes and that, since it was not a publisher itself, put forward the defence of "innocent dissemination".

The jury at the Supreme Court of Victoria agreed that this was a reasonable argument, but only up to the point that Google had received the complaint about its picture results.

It indicated that the content should have been removed at that point, and as a result the search firm was liable for defamation.

However, the jury found that Google was not liable for the web search results since Mr Trkulja had incorrectly filled out a complaint form, missing out the web address of the content to which he had objected.

Mr Trkulja later told journalists he felt vindicated by the ruling.

"I've lived in Australia 41 years," he told News Limited Network. "This case is not about the money, it's about protecting my family, my children and my reputation."

Search complaints

Mr Trkulja had previously won a lawsuit against Yahoo after its Yahoo7 news service had also linked to a defamatory content on the Melbourne Crime site.

Yahoo's lawyers acknowledged that this amounted to "publishing" the content and was subsequently ordered to pay more than A$241,000 ($250,000; £155,000) in damages.

The verdicts follow another ruling in Japan in which the Google was ordered to disable part of its auto-complete function after allegations it linked a local man to crimes he was not involved in.

The firm also faces legal action by Bettina Wulff, wife of the former German president, over complaints that typing her name into its engine brings up the suggested search terms "prostitute" and "red light district".


23.58 | 0 komentar | Read More

Telecoms storm damage assessed

31 October 2012 Last updated at 10:27 ET

As Americans assess the aftermath of storm Sandy, regulators warn that the situation for communication networks could get worse before it gets better.

The storm knocked out 25% of mobile phone towers across 10 states, forcing them to move to generator power.

Flooding in Manhattan has also left many data centres reliant on generators.

There are concerns that they could run out of fuel before normal power is restored.

The US Federal Communications Commission is monitoring the status of communication equipment and has asked all providers to inform them if they need access to more fuel.

Manhattan is a major transit point for telecommunications.

The flood damage knocked out websites and forced telecoms carriers to reroute international traffic.

Verizon Communications, one of the US's biggest phone companies, said some of its buildings in Manhattan were flooded, shutting down phone and internet services.

Fake stories

Renesys Corp, which monitors the pathways of the internet, said the storm caused major outages in New Jersey and New York.

While some websites were offline, the internet fared quite well and millions of those affected by the storm turned to Twitter, both to get help and to keep up to date with news.

But not all of the reports carried by the social network proved accurate, with the crisis spawning a flurry of fake stories.

These included tweets claiming that the New York stock exchange was under water and photoshopped images sharks in the streets.

The tweet about the stock exchange was widely circulated and reported on air by CNN.

Government bodies used Twitter to issue evacuation orders and updates.

As the New York fire department's phone lines jammed, local people turned to its Twitter account @fdny to ask for help.

Meanwhile, the Red Cross of America used updates from Twitter to create a heat map of where most help was needed.


23.58 | 0 komentar | Read More

Acer delays Windows RT tablets

31 October 2012 Last updated at 10:35 ET

Taiwanese computer maker Acer has put back the launch of its Windows RT tablets following mixed reviews for Microsoft's own Surface device which is powered by the new operating system.

Acer said it was now unlikely to distribute the product before April.

Windows RT appears similar to the full Windows 8 system and is designed to run on ARM-based processors.

However, it lacks some of the functionality of its sibling, resulting in a paucity of compatible software.

Unlike Windows 8, Microsoft only allows Windows RT to install third-party software from its own online store, and the apps can only run via the system's touch interface and not in the traditional desktop mode.

However, in return for this trade-off Windows RT computers are likely to offer longer battery life and cheaper prices.

Acer is the world's fourth biggest PC maker based on the number of computers shipped.

Less aggressive

Microsoft decided to launch its own Windows RT-powered Surface tablet to help promote the new software. Early reviews of the machine praised the hardware but noted there were far fewer apps available for it than for Windows 8 PCs powered by x86-based chips, or on other rival tablet or PC systems.

In addition several writers complained about glitches in the software that was available, and there were claims that it stuttered when playing some high-definition 1080p video.

Updates and new releases may solve these issues over time, but they appear to have given Acer cause for concern.

"Originally we had a very aggressive plan to come out very early next year, but because of Surface, our R&D development doesn't stop, but we are much more cautious," Acer's president Jim Wong told Reuters.

"Originally our plan was Q1 [January to March], but now I don't think it will be earlier than Q2 [April to June]."

Mr Wong indicated his concerns were also linked to the price of Surface.

Microsoft is charging £399 for its entry-level device with 32 gigabytes of storage, which does not include a keyboard cover.

That is the same price as an iPad featuring half the amount of storage, albeit with less space taken up by Apple's operating system.

Mr Wong noted that other firms, including Lenovo and Asus, had detailed plans for more expensive Windows RT tablets before Microsoft's Surface announcement caught them by surprise.

Acer also told reporters that it believed Windows 8 would only boost its fourth-quarter sales by 5%-to-10% because the software had been launched so late in the year.

It is not the first time that Acer has appeared critical of Microsoft's tactics. In August Acer's chief executive told the Financial Times that the release of Surface would have "a huge negative impact for the [Windows] ecosystem and other brands".

Gartner - a tech consultancy - said the fact Windows RT offered Microsoft's Office software suite, would act in its favour, but might not be enough to compensate for other "missing" software.

"With regards to RT we have also been a bit sceptical about the initial uptake because the app ecosystem is still weak compared to Apple's iOS and Google's Android," analyst Roberta Cozza told the BBC.

"That limits what you can do with it as regards to entertainment apps, which is an issue bearing in mind Microsoft is pushing Surface as a consumer device."

Coupon compensation

For the time being a more pressing issue for Microsoft appears to be coping with the existing demand for the tablet.

Its website now says it will take up to three weeks for any model of Surface to be delivered. It is also offering compensation of differing amounts to UK and Canada-based customers who had pre-ordered the tablet before its 26 October launch expecting to receive it on Friday, only to be disappointed.

"We apologise for any confusion caused by emails stating an earlier or later arrival date," the firm said in a statement.

"To make up for this inconvenience, we are giving impacted customers a single-use coupon for up to £50 (or $50 Canadian dollars) toward their next purchase from the Microsoft Online Store."

Despite the setback Microsoft's chief executive, Steve Ballmer appeared satisfied with the various Windows 8 launches when he appeared at a developers conference in Redmond, Washington, on Tuesday.

"In just the last three days, we have sold four million Windows 8 upgrades," he said. "The level of embrace from enthusiasts is very, very high."


23.58 | 0 komentar | Read More

May defends web monitoring plans

31 October 2012 Last updated at 12:42 ET

Plans to monitor all Britons' online activity are needed to help society fight crime and "save lives", Home Secretary Theresa May has said.

Under draft plans, service providers will have to store details of all internet use in the UK for a year.

But Mrs May said the police would only see the details if they had a "clear case" and investigative justification.

It was a myth it would allow the government "to read everyone's e-mails", she added.

Mrs May is defending the proposals as she appears before a special committee of MPs and peers which is scrutinising the plans.

The proposals would require firms to retain the basic details of people's activity on websites, social networking sites, webmail, internet phone calls and online gaming for a year and release it if required.

She said "a number of myths" had arisen about the proposals "such as it was going to enable the government to read everyone's e-mails which it plainly, obviously, is not".

'Who, when where and how'

The authorities would not gain routine access to the content of people's conversations as the scope of the proposed powers would be limited to the "who, when, where and how" of communications.

Continue reading the main story
  • The Bill extends the range of data telecoms firms will have to store for up to 12 months
  • It will include for the first time details of messages sent on social media, webmail, voice calls over the internet and gaming in addition to emails and phone calls
  • The data includes the time, duration, originator and recipient of a communication and the location of the device from which it is made
  • It does not include the content of messages - what is being said. Officers will need a warrant to see that
  • But they will not need the permission of a judge to see details of the time and place of messages provided they are investigating a crime or protecting national security
  • Four bodies will have access to data: police, the Serious and Organised Crime Agency, the intelligence agencies and HM Revenue and Customs
  • Local authorities will face restrictions on the kinds of data they can access

"There is no intention of going beyond that into content," she added. "There is a limited scope for the data we want to have access to. We have been very clear about that at every stage."

The police would have to make a "clear case" for requesting access to data when there was an investigation that required it.

Pressed by MPs and peers about the range of data channels that would be covered, she said there had to be a "degree of flexibility" to ensure any new law was not outdated by the time it was passed.

She said the authorities' ability to keep track of suspects was being increasingly "degradated" by the use of new technology such as social media and encrypted messaging services.

And she added: "The aim of this is to ensure our law enforcement agencies can carry on having access to the data they find so necessary operationally in terms of investigation, catching criminals and saving lives."

'Genuine concerns'

But Lib Dem MP Julian Huppert said the government had failed to adequately persuade the public of the need for new powers or make clear for what purpose they would be used.

"There is a lot of genuine concern about this bill and the effect of intrusion into private lives, given the breadth of it."

Labour MP Nick Brown said that many of his constituents were concerned that they would be "spied on" and that information could be "illegally obtained" and find itself in the public domain.

And Lord Blencathra, the Conservative chair of the committee, urged ministers to restrict the number of organisations that could have designated access to the information to the intelligence services, the police and the Financial Services Authority and a handful of others.

"You seem to be edging closer to saying... let's have the big important national bodies dealing with crime, national security, terrorism and then make all the rest go through additional hoops that are much stricter than at the moment."

In response, Mrs May said the public was "justifiably" concerned about who had access to the data and they should be a second stage of "extra scrutiny" by Parliament for other public bodies.

"There is a necessity in order to show that people can have confidence that these are bodies that are appropriate to have access...that there is an extra rung in the ladder that they have to get up."


23.58 | 0 komentar | Read More
techieblogger.com Techie Blogger Techie Blogger