September 2010 Archives

Awards to honor marketing leaders in ten diverse categories, from CMOs to SEO experts

 

ATLANTA (August 9, 2010) -- TAG Marketing, a society of the Technology Association of Georgia (TAG) and Georgia's premier organization for technology marketing events  announced today that nominations are now open for the first annual Tech Marketing Awards. The Tech Marketing Awards, which recognize Georgia's most innovative marketing leaders, will be presented on Thursday, November 18, 2010 at the J. B. Fuqua rooftop pavilion atop the Metro Atlanta Chamber of Commerce in downtown Atlanta.   

 

Representing Georgia's "best of the best" in the fusion of marketing and technology, the 2010 Tech Marketing Awards will honor individual excellence and achievements in ten categories:   

 

  • Chief Marketing Officer of the Year (CMO) for both small business (under $10M annual revenue) and big business (over $10M annual revenue)
  • Corporate Marketer of the Year for both small business (under $10M annual revenue) and big business (over $10 annual revenue)
  • Search Engine Marketer of the Year
  • Email Marketer of the Year
  • Mobile Marketer of the Year
  • Social Media Marketer of the Year
  • Up & Coming Marketer of the Year (under 30 years old)
  • Lifetime Achievement Award

 

Georgia-based technology marketers are encouraged to nominate themselves, their peers, and their colleagues for recognition in the only technology marketing awards show focused solely on people, not campaigns. 

 

Nominations can be submitted at the Tech Marketing Awards website, http://www.techmarketingawards.com. All entries are due no later than September 26, 2010. Finalists will be announced on October 4, 2010 and the winners will be announced at the Tech Marketing Awards Gala on November 18. The awards are open to all Georgia-based technology marketers. It is not necessary to be TAG member to participate. Current sponsors for the event include Mailchimp, NeboWeb, Cbeyond, and Primus Software.  TAG Marketing's 2010 sponsors include Arketi Group, NeboWeb and Lassiter & Associates. 

 

Sponsorship opportunities for the 2010 Tech Marketing Awards are also available. For details, visit http://www.techmarketingawards.com or contact Ms. Amanda Shook at tma@tagonline.org.

 

ABOUT TECHNOLOGY ASSOCIATION OF GEORGIA 

The Technology Association of Georgia (TAG) is a non-profit organization whose mission is to support its members by generating opportunities for personal, professional and business growth. By forging strategic alliances, TAG serves as a primary catalyst to foster a rich environment for economic development in Georgia's technology community. TAG is made up of over 10,500 members representing technology leaders from over 1,400 Georgia-based companies, affiliated technology and business organizations. For more information on TAG, visit http://www.tagonline.org

OTHER INFORMATION

 

Tech Marketing Awards

http://www.techmarketingawards.com

 

Technology Association of Georgia

http://www.tagonline.org/

 

 

MEDIA CONTACT :

 

Shana Keith

678-384-8304

shana.keith@cbeyond.net

Atlanta - August 30, 2010 - Technology Association of Georgia (TAG) has awarded the research contract for its next "State of the Industry Report" to Internet Decisions of Atlanta and CSM Research of Marietta.

Internet Decisions and CSM Research submitted a joint response to TAG's "request for proposal," and the firms were selected following a competitive bidding process. The State of the Industry Report, published annually by TAG, includes comprehensive statistics about technology in Georgia and insights from industry thought leaders from around the state.  The report is published in March with its findings presented at the Georgia Technology Summit.

"Internet Decisions and CSM Research have a proven record of expertise in conducting and managing research projects, but they also were chosen for this important initiative because of their expertise in working in the technology sector and a longstanding commitment to serving the technology community in Georgia," said Tino J. Mantella, President of TAG.

Internet Decisions will be responsible for secondary research, while CSM Research will conduct the primary research.  Keith Herndon, president of Internet Decisions, will serve as the project manager for the overall engagement.  "CSM Research has partnered with Internet Decisions on numerous projects in recent years and we look forward to bringing this successful collaboration model to our work with TAG," said Frank Sanders, president of CSM Research. As part of the primary research, surveys will target key technology decision makers to determine the outlook for important aspects of the technology sector such as infrastructure needs and employment growth.

Mr. Mantella emphasized that the purpose of the report is to support growth in technology sectors throughout the state, including both economic development activities and organic growth initiatives. "To accomplish our goals we must have insights that quality research provides," he said. "The report is a record of the technology accomplishments in Georgia, but the data is also a powerful benchmarking tool that will allow industry and government leaders to know where a call to action is needed."

About The Technology Association of Georgia (TAG)

TAG is a leading technology industry association dedicated to the promotion and economic advancement of the state's technology industry. TAG provides leadership in driving initiatives in the areas of policy, capital, education and giving, and also brings the technology community together through events, initiative programs and networking opportunities. TAG serves as an umbrella organization for 27 special interest groups, or societies, including Women in Technology (WIT). Additionally, TAG's charitable arm, the TAG Education Collaborative, is focused on helping science, technology, engineering and math (STEM) education initiatives thrive. For more information visit the TAG website at www.tagonline.org or TAG's community website at www.TAGthink.com.

CSM Research

CSM Research, founded in 1991, provides clients worldwide with the most comprehensive, creative and accurate research available. The firm has distinguished itself as a premier strategic research firm that has consistently served a diverse variety of industries and companies, from heavy equipment manufacturing and commercial software to healthcare and five star hotels. In conducting primary research, CSM specializes in customer, market and competitive information. The company maintains a research call center in Marietta with expert primary researchers capable of interviewing in 10 different languages. Since its inception, CSM Research has conducted more than 1 million customer interviews and maintains an extensive database of historical industry data that allows for robust benchmarking. CSM Research also maintains a state-of-the-art infrastructure for creating and executing online surveys. (www.csmresearch.com)

Internet Decisions

Internet Decisions is a research services and strategic planning firm. It assists companies and organizations of all sizes with a variety of services including competitive intelligence, vendor analysis and various types of market research. Created in 2005, the Atlanta-based firm specializes in several vertical markets including high technology, media and entertainment and healthcare. Internet Decisions works independently and in partnership with Marietta-based CSM Research and New Jersey-based SWOT Management Group. Aside from producing and interpreting research information for its clients, Internet Decisions also produces industry white papers and training material and conducts strategic presentations at the executive level. (www.internetdecisions.com)

Have you seen some of the guerrilla tactics and extreme stunts people are deploying to reboot their careers? Believe us, singing telegrams or renting a hot air balloon are not your only answers! We can help you create a unique, engaging, and thought provoking impression that will generate buzz without all of the hype. For example, a subtle smile makeover can do a lot to give you a more youthful pick-me-up, and give you the confidence and positive attention that you deserve. Dr. Bernee Dunson, the best cosmetic dentist in Atlanta , can help improve your smile in less time than you may have thought.

 

Many cosmetic dentistry techniques involve only a visit or two...

 

Dental Veneers crafted from translucent porcelains, ceramics, and other bonding materials can be applied to the surface of your teeth to disguise deep stains or other flaws like chips or irregular spacing. In fact, the veneering technique has been called instant orthodontics.

 

Esthetic gum re-proportioning can create balance and symmetry for your smile with techniques like lip repositioning and gum recountouring. You can re-proportion a too gummy smile, teeth that look too short, or teet that appear to have different lengths because their crowns are hidden beneath differing amounts of gum tissue.... Or a combination of all three.

 

We understand that sometimes, in today's world, finding success means getting yourself noticed. Stunt-free cosmetic dentistry is a very reliable and worthwhile investment that will let you make an impact on your terms. For the best cosmetic dentist in Atlanta , Come in and visit Atlanta Cosmetic Dentist Expert, Dr. Dunson. Dunson Dental Design, Where Great Smiles Happen By Design.

 

Phone: 404-897-1699

1100 Peachtree St. Suite 680
Atlanta, GA  30309

www.DunsonDental.com

It's true that in most cases a denture or bridge,  bring back much of the form and function of missing teeth. But a natural tooth does a lot more than help you cut and grind food and make for nice smiles. It also plays an important role under the gumline where you can't see it.... Something a denture simply does not do.

 

Natural teeth need the support of the bone in your jaw. When you lose a tooth, the bone has no more use and it shrinks and weakens. For most people, the amount of bone lost isn't too serious- there is still enough to make a good solid foundation for a denture. But unfortunately, for some patients, shrinking bone can trigger a number of problems. It can cause dentures to fit more loosely, making it hard to bite and chew. Underlying gum becomes sore and painful, and speech is sometimes impaired, and along with it, self image.

 

Dental Implants are the closest cousin to natural teeth. They are permanent false teeth anchored right into your jawbone, just like your natural teeth. They're more stable than dentures, and eating is done with ease and comfort. Many patients find that implants give them a more positive self image and more confidence.

 

Dental implant treatment does require a greater investment of time and money, but in the long run it is well worth it.

Come in and visit Atlanta Dental Implants Expert, Dr. Dunson, located in Midtown. Dunson Dental Design, Where Great Smiles Happen By Design.

 

 

 

Phone: 404-897-1699

1100 Peachtree St. Suite 680
Atlanta, GA  30309

www.DunsonDental.com

Atlanta GA - By now I hope that most of you know how committed Dr Dunson, Atlanta dental implant specialist, is to investing in the latest technology to provide the highest standard of dentistry. The most recent tool that Dr. Dunson' office has acquired is the Kodak 9500 Cone Beam 3-D System, which will make your 3-D x-ray experiences quicker, safer, and more accurate.  Please allow Dr. Dunson to tell you more about it.

It's fast! Taking your panoramic  dental x-rays quickly, so that you don't have to hold still in one position for a long time- adding to your comfort.

It's incredibly accurate! This technology produces images with excellent resolution and quality, giving the Dr. Dunson better information on which he can base more precise diagnosis.

It's safe! Since it is digital, this panoramic system reduces your exposure to radiation. Plus, with how quick it works, your chances of needing re-takes, due to blurring from movement, are greatly decreased.

It's beneficial for you! It is non invasive, can identify infections and tumors, and can distinguish between different tissue types.

It's versatile! It can be used for oral surgery, orthodontic and implant planning, sleep apnea, TMJ, endodontic anomalies, periodontal disease, and a variety of other dental treatments.

Its record keeping is easy! The digital images can easily be stored in your electronic patient chart, so there is no risk of misplaced information.

The leading edge, patient friendly Kodak 9500 Cone Beam 3-D System will ensure that you receive continued excellence in care and maximized personal comfort at Dr. Dunson' office located in Midtown Atlanta. Where Great Smiles Happen By Design!

Phone: 404-897-1699

1100 Peachtree St. Suite 680
Atlanta, GA  30309

www.dunsondental.com

Katie Sewell is Named as TAG'S Associate Director of Business Services

ATLANTA - July 29, 2010 - The Technology Association of Georgia (TAG) has announced today that Katie Sewell has been hired as the Associate Director of Business Services for the organization. In this role, Sewell will assist TAG Chief Executive Officer, Chief Operating Officer and Directors in the overall effective operations of TAG. The Associate Director of Business Services will also have responsibilities for working with the Director of Professional Development to implement TAG's training program and manage effective communications by providing communications support for various events and initiatives.

 

"We are extremely pleased to have Katie on the growing TAG team. With nearly 11,000 members, The strategic addition of staff is critical to our ability to provide quality customer service," says Tino Mantella, President of TAG. "Katie is a fine addition to our strong team. Ultimately, TAG is striving to make Georgia one of the top 5 technology states in the USA. Georgia, with the help of TAG and our many partners, is well-positioned for this goal."

 

Sewell's most recent experience includes working on a Georgia Congressional campaign where she served as the Press Secretary. In this role, she helped facilitate communication between the media and the campaign staff by developing and updating the campaign website and social media sites, developing press releases and assisting in fundraising and event planning efforts.

 

Sewell has a Bachelor's Degree in Communication with a focus in Media Studies from Kennesaw State University.
 

About The Technology Association of Georgia (TAG)

TAG is a leading technology industry association dedicated to the promotion and economic advancement of the state's technology industry. TAG provides leadership in driving initiatives in the areas of policy, capital, education and giving, and also brings the technology community together through events, initiative programs and networking opportunities. TAG serves as an umbrella organization for 27 special interest groups, or societies, including Women in Technology (WIT). Additionally, TAG's charitable arm, the TAG Education Collaborative, is focused on helping science, technology, engineering and math (STEM) education initiatives thrive. For more information visit the TAG website at http://www.tagonline.org or at http://www.TAGthink.com, the community technology network of our nonprofit networking organization.

Georgia Gwinnett College (GGC) unites with Technology Association of Georgia (TAG) to offer TAG memberships to students



ATLANTA - August 5, 2010 - Georgia Gwinnett College (GGC) and the Technology Association of Georgia (TAG) have formed a strategic alliance to greatly enhance the educational experience for the college's students through access to TAG's technology-focused programming, resources and networking opportunities.

The alliance is the first of its kind in Georgia, and thought to be the first in the nation.  It will create a wide variety of opportunities for students seeking a technology-based career in a broad spectrum of industries. This partnership supports efforts to develop and retain a qualified workforce to meet high demands for Georgia's fastest-growing and most dynamic range of disciplines, impacting virtually all industries.

"By partnering with TAG, our students will have access to a rich resource that will add tremendous value to their educational program, expand their exposure to professional  environments, and give them a jump start on their careers," said Lonnie Harvel, GGC's vice president of educational technology. "TAG's programming will extend our students' learning opportunities beyond the classroom, and increase the marketability of their degrees."

TAG is a 10,000-member industry advancement organization dedicated to educating, uniting, and informing the Georgia technology community. With nearly 30 profession-specific societies and special interest groups, as well as large award programs like the Georgia Technology Summit and the Excalibur Awards, TAG recognizes and works with companies using innovation to gain a competitive advantage.  It also has technology-focused initiatives in government relations, and K-12 education.

"We are very excited to join GGC in this unique partnership," said Melanie Brandt, TAG's chief operating officer. "Georgia Gwinnett College is an inspirational institution with an energizing mission and truly visionary leaders. Expanding our programs and services to GGC's students, along with their faculty and staff, gives us an opportunity to be innovative with how we continue to define and approach achieving our mission, as well as help GGC achieve its mission."

Key to the partnership is the automatic membership in TAG for all GGC students and employees.  With membership comes access to all TAG meetings and members-only events, and discounts on all TAG training programs.

TAG has roughly 150 meetings and educational programs each year, and its societies represent industries ranging from manufacturing and health care to software and entertainment, and functions ranging from finance and international business to product management and information security.  As part of the partnership, some of TAG's programs will be held on the GGC campus. 

In addition to the educational value of TAG's programs, GGC students and faculty will have multiple opportunities to network and connect with leaders and executives representing various technology-based fields and industries.

While the program is primarily intended for students majoring in technical fields, all students can benefit from the TAG partnership. By extending TAG membership to GGC faculty, the alliance enables them to bring real-world applications of technology into the classroom, enriching the curriculum for all students. 

"At GGC, the innovative use of technology is a fundamental part of what, and how, we teach," said Harvel.  "Technological competence is fundamental to future success. It is an integral part of every profession. Our alliance with TAG will provide our students access to an incredible spectrum of arenas where their technological skills may be challenged and grow."

# # #

 

About Georgia Gwinnett College

Georgia Gwinnett College is a four-year, accredited liberal arts college that provides access to targeted baccalaureate level degrees that meet the economic development needs of the growing and diverse population of Gwinnett County and the northeast Atlanta metropolitan region. GGC opened its doors in August 2006 as the nation's first four-year public college founded in the 21st century, and the first four-year public college founded in Georgia in more than 100 years. Georgia Gwinnett produces contributing citizens and future leaders for Georgia and the nation. Its graduates are inspired to contribute to their local, state, national and international communities and are prepared to anticipate and respond effectively to an uncertain and changing world. Visit Georgia Gwinnett College's Web site at www.ggc.edu

 

About The Technology Association of Georgia (TAG)

TAG is a leading technology industry association dedicated to the promotion and economic advancement of the state's technology industry. TAG provides leadership in driving initiatives in the areas of policy, capital, education and giving, and also brings the technology community together through events, initiative programs and networking opportunities. TAG serves as an umbrella organization for 27 special interest groups, or societies, including Women in Technology (WIT). Additionally, TAG's charitable arm, the TAG Education Collaborative, is focused on helping science, technology, engineering and math (STEM) education initiatives thrive. For more information visit the TAG website at http://www.tagonline.org or TAG's community website at http://www.TAGthink.com.

 

Katie Sewell is Named as TAG'S Associate Director of Business Services

ATLANTA - July 29, 2010 - The Technology Association of Georgia (TAG) has announced today that Katie Sewell has been hired as the Associate Director of Business Services for the organization. In this role, Sewell will assist TAG Chief Executive Officer, Chief Operating Officer and Directors in the overall effective operations of TAG. The Associate Director of Business Services will also have responsibilities for working with the Director of Professional Development to implement TAG's training program and manage effective communications by providing communications support for various events and initiatives.

 

"We are extremely pleased to have Katie on the growing TAG team. With nearly 11,000 members, The strategic addition of staff is critical to our ability to provide quality customer service," says Tino Mantella, President of TAG. "Katie is a fine addition to our strong team. Ultimately, TAG is striving to make Georgia one of the top 5 technology states in the USA. Georgia, with the help of TAG and our many partners, is well-positioned for this goal."

 

Sewell's most recent experience includes working on a Georgia Congressional campaign where she served as the Press Secretary. In this role, she helped facilitate communication between the media and the campaign staff by developing and updating the campaign website and social media sites, developing press releases and assisting in fundraising and event planning efforts.

 

Sewell has a Bachelor's Degree in Communication with a focus in Media Studies from Kennesaw State University.
 

About The Technology Association of Georgia (TAG)

TAG is a leading technology industry association dedicated to the promotion and economic advancement of the state's technology industry. TAG provides leadership in driving initiatives in the areas of policy, capital, education and giving, and also brings the technology community together through events, initiative programs and networking opportunities. TAG serves as an umbrella organization for 27 special interest groups, or societies, including Women in Technology (WIT). Additionally, TAG's charitable arm, the TAG Education Collaborative, is focused on helping science, technology, engineering and math (STEM) education initiatives thrive. For more information visit the TAG website at http://www.tagonline.org or at http://www.TAGthink.com, the community technology network of our nonprofit networking organization.


Jennifer Dunphy, VP Sales & Marketing of Vayu Media was interviewed by TAG Radio. Along with Guest Host, Globalspeak President Frank Baia, explore a Premier TAG Member Showcase on a leading global interactive marketing and development.

TAG-TV-TheRadioP.mp3








A Texas Tycoon Learns a Lesson: Don't Mess With Liverpudlians

Tom Hicks Owns Flailing U.K. Soccer Club; Fans Take Anger to the Bank--Literally


By DAVID ENRICH And GREGORY ZUCKERMAN

In the old days, English soccer hooligans settled scores with knives and broken bottles. As Texas billionaire Tom Hicks is learning this week, the weapons of choice these days--camera phones, Twitter and spam emails--can be almost as scary.

Adam Eljarrah, top, was able to greet the team's owner with an angry poster in New York via a global fan network including Alan Kayll in Liverpool, bottom.

[LIVERPOOL_2] Keith Bedford for The Wall Street Journal

Liverpool fan Adam Eljarrah

[LIVERPOOL] Thomas Kavanagh

Alan Kayll in Liverpool

Mr. Hicks, co-owner of England's hallowed Liverpool FC, is on the run from a mob of angry fans who blame him for the team's tailspin. The 118-year-old club was one of England's best when he bought it in 2007. Since then, the crippling debt load he took on to buy Liverpool has strained the team's finances and contributed to its woes on the pitch.

Now, Liverpool faithful are waging a fierce campaign to evict the American owner. Their strategy: Scare away banks and other financiers who might throw Mr. Hicks a lifeline, starving Mr. Hicks of needed cash and forcing him to sell. To do that, they are using the tools of the digital age to track Mr. Hicks' efforts to drum up money, then bombard would-be lenders with thousands of irate emails, phone calls and Tweets.

On Tuesday afternoon, Mr. Hicks learned firsthand what it's like to be the prey in a digital hunt.

Around 3:40 p.m., as Mr. Hicks sat on a sidewalk bench in midtown Manhattan, he was spotted by Liverpool native Paul Wilson. It occurred to Mr. Wilson, a 35-year-old financial consultant, that the offices of Deutsche Bank AG and J.P. Morgan Chase & Co. were on the same street. He guessed that Mr. Hicks and his son, Tom Hicks Jr., might be visiting the banks to plead for funds.

So Mr. Wilson whipped out his BlackBerry, snapped some photos, and zapped the images to his wife, Erin McCloskey. Then he trailed Mr. Hicks walking into the lobby of the building that houses Deutsche.

"I didn't throw my coffee on him, but the thought did cross my mind," Mr. Wilson said Wednesday.

Ms. McCloskey quickly posted the photos on Twitter and explained the circumstances.

Over in Liverpool, the Hicks sighting was like an open-net goal for Alan Kayll, a 40-year-old cab driver who is a ringleader of the anti-Hicks campaign. Mr. Kayll quickly penned a form letter to J.P. Morgan and Deutsche officials urging them not to help Mr. Hicks refinance roughly £200 million ($313 million) that is owed to Royal Bank of Scotland Group PLC, stemming from his purchase of the team.

"If you join Tom Hicks in raping and pillaging Liverpool Football Club, then you will be making a very powerful enemy," his letter read in part. "You are facing an energized, well-informed mass of Liverpool fans from around the world."

He posted the letter online, along with the email addresses of executives at Deutsche and J.P. Morgan.

An hour later, a senior J.P. Morgan executive had already received 30 emails from Liverpool fans, with new messages landing every few minutes. "It's totally viral right now," the executive said, deleting emails as they arrived. Public-relations staff at Deutsche said they received hundreds.

Neither bank is in talks with Mr. Hicks, said people familiar with the situation. Through a spokesman, Mr. Hicks declined to comment on Tuesday's events or his stewardship of the team.

The team's financial woes have hurt its performance. Liverpool finished last season in seventh place, a disaster for fans accustomed to being in England's top four. A team official said this week that the cost of servicing its debts is depleting club resources. Fans argue that makes it tougher to recruit top players.

Meanwhile, in Manhattan on Tuesday afternoon, the melee was just beginning. Adam Eljarrah, an 18-year-old Liverpool fan attending New York University, saw Ms. McCloskey's Twitter messages. He showed up outside Deutsche's skyscraper on Park Avenue. The pre-med freshman carried a poster, popular among Liverpool supporters in England, declaring that Mr. Hicks and his co-owner are "Not Welcome ANYWHERE."

Mr. Eljarrah says he loitered outside the building for about 45 minutes, hoping to confront Mr. Hicks. Around 6:30 p.m., Mr. Hicks emerged. According to a person familiar with the incident, the younger Mr. Hicks spotted Mr. Eljarrah--identifiable in his red-and-white Liverpool scarf--and told a nearby cop: "This guy is trouble."

As the police officer intercepted Mr. Eljarrah, he says, he waved his sign and yelled, "Get out of our club!"

Liverpool fans aren't the only ones lashing out at American ownership. Manchester United fans have mounted a campaign against the family of American businessman Malcolm Glazer, which owns the team and has loaded it with debt.

In Liverpool, fans who are angling to remove Mr. Hicks are sporting scarves bearing a "Thanks But No Yank$!" slogan.

Lately, financial institutions have borne the brunt of Liverpool's rage. Fans have been flooding RBS with letters and phone calls urging the bank to seize the club and give Mr. Hicks the boot. Top executives' inboxes sometimes have been hit with several hundred emails per day.

A few weeks ago, some fans started a Facebook page encouraging people to boycott RBS. Mr. Kayll, the cab driver, drew up lists of financial institutions Mr. Hicks is believed to have approached, posting them on a website he helps run that urges fans to help oust Mr. Hicks.

The site features an image of a blood-drenched RBS logo. The site's motto: "We will go as far as we need to."

Despite the site's menacing slogan and graphic, Mr. Kayll says his group is "totally against violence. We're a group of passionate fans trying to save their football club. All professional people with families."

The campaign hit Stephen Schwarzman, the billionaire co-founder of Blackstone Partners, whose GSO Capital Partners hedge fund considered participating in a deal to help Mr. Hicks refinance the RBS loan. By Monday, GSO had backed out of the talks. A Blackstone spokesman, Peter Rose, said the emails (including thousands aimed at Mr. Schwarzman) didn't affect GSO's decision not to participate in the deal.

That wasn't the message Mr. Kayll got. Driving his cab in Liverpool Tuesday morning, he says he received a call from London-based GSO executive Michael Whitman. Mr. Kayll says Mr. Whitman told him GSO lost interest in part thanks to the pressure campaign. "He said, 'We understand the passion of Liverpool supporters and obviously took that into consideration,'" Mr. Kayll says.

Mr. Whitman didn't respond to requests for comment. Blackstone acknowledges that Mr. Whitman and Mr. Kayll spoke, but deny he said the email campaign forced GSO out of the deal.

Still basking in victory hours later, Mr. Kayll was euphoric when the Hicks photos from New York dropped into his lap. He crowed: "We know his every move."

--Sara Schaefer Muñoz and Dan Fitzpatrick contributed to this article.

Write to David Enrich at david.enrich@wsj.com and Gregory Zuckerman at gregory.zuckerman@wsj.com

Join Jewelry Artisans, Atlanta custom jewelry designer, September 27th- October 2nd for an incredible silent auction event. The starting bids are so low that you'll have to come in to see it for yourself to believe it. So many exciting pieces will be offered and one of them could be your for less than you ever imagined.

 

Be one of our first fifty bidders and receive a gift bag of exclusive jeweled treats valued at over $75. So mark your calendars. This is an event that you won't want to miss.

 

Here is just a small taste of what will be available to you;

 

14kw 1.00 ctw Swirl Diamond Ring

Retail: $3,285

Starting Bid: $1,233

Buy it Now : $1,45

 

About Jewelry Artisans:

 

At Jewelry Artisans, custom jewelry designers & Atlanta engagement ring designers  - you'll find both fine jewelry and the artisans who craft it. Describe your heart's desire to Jewelry Designer and Owner Jamie Kresl, and watch as he creates your vision -- first with paper and pencil, and then with state-of-the-art CAD drawing tools.

 

Engagement rings, wedding rings, anniversary rings, earrings, necklaces, bracelets and more await you at Jewelry Artisans.

 

And if your style is one-of-a-kind, Jamie will listen, learn and create an original piece of art, just for you ...or your sweetheart.

 

Contact Jewelry Artisans:

Phone: 770-393-0321

4500 Olde Perimeter Way
Atlanta, GA  30346

 

Press Release Services by Vayu Media

Vayu Media is the premier company for internet advertising using search engine marketing and search engine optimization. Vayu Media is taking advantage of the consumer shift from traditional media to internet based marketing.  The company's focus is local online business marketing and web design services. The company's strategy to get out into the market place and consult with local businesses face to face has allowed it to make local business owners aware of the opportunity that exists online.  In order to stay relevant in today's market every local business must have an online marketing strategy and Vayu Media can help.

 

Media Contact:

Jennifer Dunphy, Vayu Media LLC, (800)-456-1563 , info (at) vayumedia dot com

Program will examine Georgia's leadership in healthcare information technology and how we will build and sustain our premier Healthcare IT workforce

 

ATLANTA (September 1, 2010) - The Metro Atlanta Chamber, TAG Health and the Georgia Department of Economic Development announced today that they will jointly host the Healthcare Information Technology (HIT) Leadership Summit on November 9, 2010. This event, which will run from 8:00 AM until 5:00 PM, will examine the national spotlight on healthcare, available federal funding, current economic conditions and the urgent need for jobs in Georgia. This critical event will also provide an opportunity to showcase Georgia's HIT market and career growth in one of the country's fastest growing industries.  

 

Georgia ranks as the leading state for total HIT revenues according to the Healthcare Informatics HCI-100 list. Over the past decade, Georgia has attained the premier nationwide leadership position as an HIT cluster. This notable achievement is due to the vast assets of the state's numerous HIT corporations and healthcare providers, served and supported by the diverse resources of multiple companies located in Georgia. Another vital component of this recognition is the highly trained professional HIT workforce provided by nationally prominent university medical schools, technical colleges and other training programs throughout Georgia.  

 

The primary purpose of the November 9th event is to unite business community leaders, healthcare providers and educators to further advance Georgia as the national leader in HIT. The specific focus of the event is to address current and future industry requirements necessary to expand, equip and sustain the professional workforce required to maximize HIT growth in Georgia.  

 

Registration and information is now available online at http://www.tagonline.org/HIT-11-9-10.php. The event will be held at the historic Fox Theatre in Midtown Atlanta.

 

 

About The Metro Atlanta Chamber

The Metro Atlanta Chamber mobilizes and connects the business community to drive economic development and public policies that promote sustainable growth. Our board of directors draws from Atlanta's top business leaders. We have a professional staff of 90 and serve 4,000 member companies who employ nearly 1 million workers.  We create value in return for our members' time and investment by producing results on each issue we choose to tackle.

 

In economic development, our project managers attract the best companies and jobs. In the last decade, we have recruited over 500 companies creating over 85,000 direct and indirect jobs. We focus on recruiting headquarters and international business -- and companies in the supply chain, healthcare IT, bioscience and technology sectors.

 

In public policy, we tackle crisis issues and critical quality-of-life challenges. In 2010 we achieved an historic "3 for 3" victory by passing all three of our major legislative priorities - transportation, water and school board reform.

 

For members, we offer 150+ events and activities each year to help them connect and make key business contacts.

 

For more information on the chamber's healthcare IT initiatives please contact: David Hartnett, 404-586-8443, dhartnett@macoc.com; Molly Taylor, 404-586-8461, mtaylor@macoc.com 

 

 

About TAG Health

TAG Health is one of 27 special interest groups that make up the Technology Association of Georgia, which is a 10,700-member organization. TAG Health's mission is to create an environment that fosters economic development through health technology in the state of Georgia. That mission is fulfilled through programs and events for our members and guests, which include corporate, government, education and entrepreneurial leaders throughout the state. As the federal government makes funds available for the adoption of healthcare technology, TAG Health is leading the way by bringing together providers, payers, vendors, as well as government and education leaders.  

 

About The Georgia Department of Economic Development (GDEcD)
The Georgia Department of Economic Development (GDEcD) is the state's sales and marketing arm, the lead agency for attracting new business investment, encouraging the expansion of existing industry and small businesses, locating new markets for Georgia products, attracting tourists to Georgia, and promoting the state as a location for film, video and music projects, as well as planning and mobilizing state resources for economic development.

 

About The Technology Association of Georgia (TAG)

TAG is a leading technology industry association dedicated to the promotion and economic advancement of the state's technology industry. TAG provides leadership in driving initiatives in the areas of policy, capital, education and giving, and also brings the technology community together through events, initiative programs and networking opportunities. TAG serves as an umbrella organization for 27 special interest groups, or societies, including Women in Technology (WIT). Additionally, TAG's charitable arm, the TAG Education Collaborative, is focused on helping science, technology, engineering and math (STEM) education initiatives thrive. For more information visit the TAG website at http://www.tagonline.org or TAG's nonprofit networking organization and technology community at http://www.TAGthink.com.

# # #

ATLANTA - August 3, 2010 - The Technology Association of Georgia (TAG) has announced today that Chelsea Arkin has been hired as Director of Economic and Community Resources for the organization. In this role, Arkin is responsible for producing the State of the Industry: Technology in Georgia Report. This report, which is supported by the Georgia Economic and Community Development Department (GDEcD), the Georgia Research Alliance (GRA), and the Metro Atlanta Chamber (MAC), provides an in-depth analysis of factors critical to the continued success and growth of the Atlanta technology community. It will be released at the 2011 Georgia Technology Summit and presented throughout the year to strategic organizations.

Arkin is also responsible for executing TAG's Business Launch Competition, facilitating Leadership Council meetings, TAG Radio, the TAG Ambassadors program, developing White Papers, and TAG's Society Showcase, as well as several TAG societies, including the Business Process Management Society, the Customer Relationship Management Society, and the SmartGrid Society.

Arkin recently completed master's degrees in Public Policy and City and Regional Planning at Georgia Tech, with concentrations in Economic Development and Land and Community Development. While at Tech, she served as a research assistant for Professor Mike Dobbins, helping him complete his book, Urban Design and People, which was published in April of 2009. Also during graduate school, Arkin worked as a Research Assistant at Market Street Services, a private community and economic development consulting firm in Atlanta. At Market Street, her role involved conducting economic and community development research and analyses, and facilitating focus groups and interviews.

"We are thrilled to have Chelsea join our team. The experience and education she will bring to her projects and particularly to the State of the Industry Report, which is one of TAG's major contributions to support Georgia's economic development efforts, will be incredibly valuable," stated Melanie Brandt, TAG's Chief Operating Officer.

Prior to graduate school, Arkin worked for the nonprofit organization Hands on Network as a Project Management Coordinator for the Hands On Schools program. Among other tasks, she helped to launch the program, helped to manage, train, and oversee both corporate and community volunteers participating in projects across the country, and wrote and compiled a comprehensive toolkit in connection with its implementation. Arkin holds an A.B in The Growth and Structure of Cities from Bryn Mawr College, with minors in History of Art and American History.

About The Technology Association of Georgia (TAG)

TAG is a leading technology industry association dedicated to the promotion and economic advancement of the state's technology industry. TAG provides leadership in driving initiatives in the areas of policy, capital, education and giving, and also brings the technology community together through events, initiative programs and networking opportunities. TAG serves as an umbrella organization for 27 special interest groups, or societies, including Women in Technology (WIT). Additionally, TAG's charitable arm, the TAG Education Collaborative, is focused on helping science, technology, engineering and math (STEM) education initiatives thrive. For more information visit the TAG website at http://www.tagonline.org or TAG's community technology center and community technology network at http://www.TAGthink.com.

Atlanta, July 30, 2010 - Recognizing that Georgia generates more than $34 billion annually from the financial technology (FinTech) sector; the Technology Association of Georgia (TAG) has formed a society to promote and further the interests of Georgia's FinTech companies, employees, and investors. TAG FinTech's mission includes building recognition of Georgia as the business center of choice for the world's leading financial technology providers and fostering a business environment to help grow the industry and attract investment.

                           

"Financial technology is one of Georgia's leading industry sectors," stated Tino Mantella, president of TAG. "Georgia FinTech companies are growing, and the strength of the existing cluster and Georgia's pro-business environment has made Georgia a natural choice for companies looking to expand or relocate. The creation of the TAG FinTech Society is intended to further this great momentum and add yet another benefit for TAG members."

 

The TAG FinTech Society's steering committee, which includes FinTech executives, investment bankers, technology pioneers, venture capital firms, and leading service providers, is chaired by C. David Chambless of Abraxas Business Services.

                            

"With the launch of TAG FinTech, we have generated a tremendous amount of attention from people who make their livelihood in this industry and from companies that choose Georgia as their corporate home or have large operations here," said Chambless.  "As Silicon Valley is to technology or Hartford is to insurance, we are looking to make Georgia famous for innovation and commerce in financial technology."

 

John B. Hayes, a founder of such success stories as Peachtree Software and FTRANS, and one of the founders of TAG FinTech, said, "It is a little known, great story of our region's rich history in banking and payment technology.         In fact, Georgia's FinTech economy is third in the U.S. behind only California and New York. TAG FinTech is a great forum for entrepreneurs, investors, and creative people to share information and forge meaningful partnerships."

 

For the inaugural TAG FinTech event, a premier group of FinTech executives met to network and participate in an informal discussion with Jack Guynn, former CEO of the Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta.  In this fireside chat led by         John C. Yates, head of the technology practice of Morris, Manning & Martin, LLP, Guynn recounted key events in the evolution of Georgia's FinTech community.

 

TAG FinTech will host several events in the coming months, including a one-day symposium on November 8, 2010 at 103 West in Atlanta.   Industry executives from companies such as Elavon, First Data, Global Payments, SunTrust Banks, Wells Fargo and TSYS will provide insight into the use of innovative technology to address issues affecting the payments industry. Richard Oliver, senior vice president of the Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta, will be the keynote speaker for the event.

In addition to bi-monthly educational sessions sponsored by the organization, industry executives and thought leaders have volunteered to lead discussions at informal community gatherings throughout the year.  Information about all TAG FinTech events can be found at http://www.tagonline.org/TAG-FinTech.php .

 

 

                 

About The Technology Association of Georgia (TAG)

TAG is a leading technology industry association dedicated to the promotion and economic advancement of the state's technology industry. TAG provides leadership in driving initiatives in the areas of policy, capital, education and giving, and also brings the technology community together through events, initiative programs and networking opportunities. TAG serves as an umbrella organization for 27 special interest groups, or Societies, including Women in Technology (WIT). Additionally, TAG's charitable arm, the TAG Education Collaborative, is focused on helping science, technology, engineering and math (STEM) education initiatives thrive. For more information visit the TAG website at http://www.tagonline.org or TAG's community website at http://www.TAGthink.com.

About TAG FinTech

TAG FinTech was founded in early 2010 to address the specific needs of companies, individuals and investors serving the financial industry both domestically and abroad. Financial technology or FinTech, encompasses products, solutions, services and information providers which drive decisions, process payments and facilitate transactions for financial institutions. Georgia FinTech company revenues are more than $34 billion annually, which places it third in the nation behind New York and California. Together, the banking, insurance and capital markets consistently spend more on technology than any other industry. For more information about TAG FinTech, go to http://www.tagonline.org/TAG-FinTech.php  or the society's blog at http://tagthink.com/society-blogs/ .

Media Contact:                        

Scott Mills, APR

William Mills Agency

678-781-7201

scott@williammills.com

WHO:                   Metro Atlanta Business Network

 

WHAT:                 Linkedin Corporate will present a seminar with Q & A Session at Metro Atlanta Business Network's 2010 Fall Expo.  The event is hosted by Dahlys Hamilton, Founder and CEO, and Janelle Hamilton, Managing Partner. The expo is exclusively for Linkedin members and provides a forum for Linkedin business leaders to meet face-to-face with their Linkedin connections and build strategic alliances.

 

WHEN:                 Saturday, September 25, 2010

                                10 a.m. to 6 p.m.

                               

WHERE:               SunTrust Garden Offices Atrium

                                303 Peachtree Street NE, Atlanta, GA 30308 Located in downtown Atlanta.

                               

WHY:                    The expo will provide a forum for Linkedin business leaders to network and meet the

                          experts from Linkedin Corporate.   

 

WOW:                  Guest speakers will include:

·         April Kelly, Program Director, Linkedin Live, will discuss new Linkedin features and events

·         Laurie Sossa, President of Southern Barter Club will share barter secrets to increase cash flow.

·         Ingo Wolf, Owner of Grid-TV, will announce the launch of Grid-TV in Atlanta, Georgia.  Grid-TV is the oldest, largest internet protocol company in the world, with headquarters in Germany and Switzerland and satellite offices in Russia, Spain, and France.  Realtors can sign up for free channels on Real Estate HDTV, Grid-TV's real estate channel

 

The Expo will include an exhibitor hall with 30-40 exhibitors, a Business Fashion Show featuring Dillards Department Store and Etcetera (women's fashions), "15 Minutes of Fame" where Linkedin members will showcase unique products/ services on stage, and a "Business Dating Game."

 

R.S.V.P.:               Details and tickets:   

                          http://metroabn2010fallexpo.eventbrite.com/?discount=MEDIA

Tickets are available for $35 to Linkedin members.  $10 discount available when using the above link.  Not a Linkedin member?  Sign up for free at http://www.linkedin.com

 

About Metro Atlanta Business Network

 

The Metro Atlanta Business Network was established to create strategic alliances among Linkedin members that will enable them to develop and expand their professional networks, create business opportunities, expand contacts, and increase profits. For more information visit our website http://www.metroabn.com

 

 

Media Contact

Dahlys Hamilton

Metro Atlanta Business Network

dahlys03@aol.com

770.870.9401 cell

http://www.metroabn.com

 

The web's new walls

How the threats to the internet's openness can be averted

WHEN George W. Bush referred to "rumours on the, uh, internets" during the 2004 presidential campaign, he was derided for his cluelessness--and "internets" became a shorthand for a lack of understanding of the online world. But what looked like ignorance then looks like prescience now. As divergent forces tug at the internet, it is in danger of losing its universality and splintering into separate digital domains.

The internet is as much a trade pact as an invention. A network of networks, it has grown at an astonishing rate over the past 15 years because the bigger it got, the more it made sense for other networks to connect to it. Its open standards made such interconnections cheap and easy, dissolving boundaries between existing academic, corporate and consumer networks (remember CompuServe and AOL?). Just as a free-trade agreement between countries increases the size of the market and boosts gains from trade, so the internet led to greater gains from the exchange of data and allowed innovation to flourish. But now the internet is so large and so widely used that countries, companies and network operators want to wall bits of it off, or make parts of it work in a different way, to promote their own political or commercial interests.


Walled wide web

Second, companies are exerting greater control by building "walled gardens"--an approach that appeared to have died out a decade ago. Facebook has its own closed, internal e-mail system, for example. Google has built a suite of integrated web-based services. Users of Apple's mobile devices access many internet services through small downloadable software applications, or apps, rather than a web browser. By dictating which apps are allowed on its devices, Apple has become a gatekeeper. As apps spread to other mobile devices, and even cars and televisions, other firms will do so too.

Third, there are concerns that network operators looking for new sources of revenue will strike deals with content providers that will favour those websites prepared to pay up. Al Franken, a Democratic senator, spelled out his nightmare scenario in a speech in July: right-wing news sites loading five times faster than left-wing blogs. He and other advocates of "net neutrality" want new laws to stop networks discriminating between different types of traffic. But network operators say that could hamper innovation, and those on the right see net neutrality as a socialist plot to regulate the internet.

Thus the incentives that used to favour greater interconnection now point the other way. Suggesting that "The Web is Dead", as Wired magazine did recently, is going a bit far. But the net is losing some of its openness and universality.

That's not always a bad thing. The profits which Apple harvests from its walled garden have enabled it to provide services and devices that delight its customers, who may be happy to trade a little openness for greater security or ease of use; if not, they can go elsewhere. While some parents welcome Apple's policy of blocking racy apps from its devices, for example, anyone who dislikes it can buy a Nokia or an Android phone instead. And existing antitrust laws can always be brought to bear if any company establishes and then abuses a dominant position in, say, mobile-phone operating systems or advertising platforms--something that has not happened yet.

Restrictions imposed by governments are more troubling, and harder to deal with. There is not much that outsiders can do about China's great firewall. But Western governments can at least set a good example. Australia's plan to build a Chinese-style firewall in an effort to block child pornography and bomb-making instructions, for instance, is daft and should be scrapped. It will be easy to evade, and traditional law-enforcement approaches are a better way to handle such problems than messing with the internet's plumbing.

Governments inclined to censor might be swayed by arguments that focus on the economic benefits of openness. Duy Hoang, an American-based campaigner for democracy in Vietnam, has suggested that foreign critics stress the internet's role in fostering trade, development, education and jobs. Similarly, China could be reminded how much more its scientists could achieve if they had unfettered access to information.

What about the risk that operators will fragment the internet by erecting new road-blocks or toll booths? In theory, competition between providers of internet access should prevent this from happening. Any broadband provider that tries to block particular sites or services, for example, will quickly lose customers to rival firms--provided there are plenty of them.


Why net neutrality is a distraction

But that is not the case in America. Its vitriolic net-neutrality debate is a reflection of the lack of competition in broadband access. The best solution would be to require telecoms operators to open their high-speed networks to rivals on a wholesale basis, as is the case almost everywhere in the industrialised world. America's big network operators have long argued that being forced to share their networks would undermine their incentives to invest in new infrastructure, and thus hamper the roll-out of broadband. But that has not happened in other countries that have mandated such "open access", and enjoy faster and cheaper broadband than America. Net neutrality is difficult to define and enforce, and efforts to do so merely address the symptom (concern about discrimination) rather than the underlying cause (lack of competition). Rivalry between access providers offers the best protection against the erection of new barriers to the flow of information online.

This newspaper has always championed free trade, open markets and vigorous competition in the physical world. The same principles should be applied on the internet as well.

The future of the internet

A virtual counter-revolution

The internet has been a great unifier of people, companies and online networks. Powerful forces are threatening to balkanise it

A fragmenting virtual world

THE first internet boom, a decade and a half ago, resembled a religious movement. Omnipresent cyber-gurus, often framed by colourful PowerPoint presentations reminiscent of stained glass, prophesied a digital paradise in which not only would commerce be frictionless and growth exponential, but democracy would be direct and the nation-state would no longer exist. One, John-Perry Barlow, even penned "A Declaration of the Independence of Cyberspace".

Even though all this sounded Utopian when it was preached, it reflected online reality pretty accurately. The internet was a wide-open space, a new frontier. For the first time, anyone could communicate electronically with anyone else--globally and essentially free of charge. Anyone was able to create a website or an online shop, which could be reached from anywhere in the world using a simple piece of software called a browser, without asking anyone else for permission. The control of information, opinion and commerce by governments--or big companies, for that matter--indeed appeared to be a thing of the past. "You have no sovereignty where we gather," Mr Barlow wrote.

The lofty discourse on "cyberspace" has long changed. Even the term now sounds passé. Today another overused celestial metaphor holds sway: the "cloud" is code for all kinds of digital services generated in warehouses packed with computers, called data centres, and distributed over the internet. Most of the talk, though, concerns more earthly matters: privacy, antitrust, Google's woes in China, mobile applications, green information technology (IT). Only Apple's latest iSomethings seem to inspire religious fervour, as they did again this week.

Again, this is a fair reflection of what is happening on the internet. Fifteen years after its first manifestation as a global, unifying network, it has entered its second phase: it appears to be balkanising, torn apart by three separate, but related forces.

First, governments are increasingly reasserting their sovereignty. Recently several countries have demanded that their law-enforcement agencies have access to e-mails sent from BlackBerry smart-phones. This week India, which had threatened to cut off BlackBerry service at the end of August, granted RIM, the device's maker, an extra two months while authorities consider the firm's proposal to comply. However, it has also said that it is going after other communication-service providers, notably Google and Skype.

Second, big IT companies are building their own digital territories, where they set the rules and control or limit connections to other parts of the internet. Third, network owners would like to treat different types of traffic differently, in effect creating faster and slower lanes on the internet.

It is still too early to say that the internet has fragmented into "internets", but there is a danger that it may splinter along geographical and commercial boundaries. (The picture above is a visual representation of the "nationality" of traffic on the internet, created by the University of California's Co-operative Association for Internet Data Analysis: America is in pink, Britain in dark blue, Italy in pale blue, Sweden in green and unknown countries in white.) Just as it was not preordained that the internet would become one global network where the same rules applied to everyone, everywhere, it is not certain that it will stay that way, says Kevin Werbach, a professor at the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania.

To grasp why the internet might unravel, it is necessary to understand how, in the words of Mr Werbach, "it pulled itself together" in the first place. Even today, this seems like something of a miracle. In the physical world, most networks--railways, airlines, telephone systems--are collections of more or less connected islands. Before the internet and the world wide web came along, this balkanised model was also the norm online. For a long time, for instance, AOL and CompuServe would not even exchange e-mails.

Economists point to "network effects" to explain why the internet managed to supplant these proprietary services. Everybody had strong incentives to join: consumers, companies and, most important, the networks themselves (the internet is in fact a "network of networks"). The more the internet grew, the greater the benefits became. And its founding fathers created the basis for this virtuous circle by making it easy for networks to hook up and for individuals to get wired.

Yet economics alone do not explain why the internet rather than a proprietary service prevailed (as Microsoft did in software for personal computers, or PCs). One reason may be that the rapid rise of the internet, originally an obscure academic network funded by America's Department of Defence, took everyone by surprise. "The internet was able to develop quietly and organically for years before it became widely known," writes Jonathan Zittrain, a professor at Harvard University, in his 2008 book, "The Future of the Internet--And How To Stop It". In other words, had telecoms firms, for instance, suspected how big it would become, they might have tried earlier to change its rules.

Whatever the cause, the open internet has been a boon for humanity. It has not only allowed companies and other organisations of all sorts to become more efficient, but enabled other forms of production, notably "open source" methods, in which groups of people, often volunteers, all over the world develop products, mostly pieces of software, collectively. Individuals have access to more information than ever, communicate more freely and form groups of like-minded people more easily.

Even more important, the internet is an open platform, rather than one built for a specific service, like the telephone network. Mr Zittrain calls it "generative": people can tinker with it, creating new services and elbowing existing ones aside. Any young company can build a device or develop an application that connects to the internet, provided it follows certain, mostly technical conventions. In a more closed and controlled environment, an Amazon, a Facebook or a Google would probably never have blossomed as it did.


Forces of fragmentation

However, this very success has given rise to the forces that are now pulling the internet apart. The cracks are most visible along geographical boundaries. The internet is too important for governments to ignore. They are increasingly finding ways to enforce their laws in the digital realm. The most prominent is China's "great firewall". The Chinese authorities are using the same technology that companies use to stop employees accessing particular websites and online services. This is why Google at first decided to censor its Chinese search service: there was no other way to be widely accessible in the country.

But China is by no means the only country erecting borders in cyberspace. The Australian government plans to build a firewall to block material showing the sexual abuse of children and other criminal or offensive content. The OpenNet Initiative, an advocacy group, lists more than a dozen countries that block internet content for political, social and security reasons. They do not need especially clever technology: governments go increasingly after dominant online firms because they are easy to get hold of. In April Google published the numbers of requests it had received from official agencies to remove content or provide information about users. Brazil led both counts (see chart 1).

Not every request or barrier has a sinister motive. Australia's firewall is a case in point, even if it is a clumsy way of enforcing the law. It would be another matter, however, if governments started tinkering with the internet's address book, the Domain Name System (DNS). This allows the network to look up the computer on which a website lives. If a country started its own DNS, it could better control what people can see. Some fear this is precisely what China and others might do one day.

To confuse matters, the DNS is already splintering for a good reason. It was designed for the Latin alphabet, which was fine when most internet users came from the West. But because more and more netizens live in other parts of the world--China boasts 420m--last October the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers, the body that oversees the DNS, allowed domain names entirely in other scripts. This makes things easier for people in, say, China, Japan or Russia, but marks another step towards the renationalisation of the internet.

Many media companies have already gone one step further. They use another part of the internet's address system, the "IP numbers" that identify computers on the network, to block access to content if consumers are not in certain countries. Try viewing a television show on Hulu, a popular American video service, from Europe and it will tell you: "We're sorry, currently our video library can only be streamed within the United States." Similarly, Spotify, a popular European music-streaming service, cannot be reached from America.

Yet it is another kind of commercial attempt to carve up the internet that is causing more concern. Devotees of a unified cyberspace are worried that the online world will soon start looking as it did before the internet took over: a collection of more or less connected proprietary islands reminiscent of AOL and CompuServe. One of them could even become as dominant as Microsoft in PC software. "We're heading into a war for control of the web," Tim O'Reilly, an internet savant who heads O'Reilly Media, a publishing house, wrote late last year. "And in the end, it's more than that, it's a war against the web as an interoperable platform."

The trend to more closed systems is undeniable. Take Facebook, the web's biggest social network. The site is a fast-growing, semi-open platform with more than 500m registered users. Its American contingent spends on average more than six hours a month on the site and less than two on Google. Users have identities specific to Facebook and communicate mostly via internal messages. The firm has its own rules, covering, for instance, which third-party applications may run and how personal data are dealt with.

Apple is even more of a world apart. From its iPhone and iPad, people mostly get access to online services not through a conventional browser but via specialised applications available only from the company's "App Store". Granted, the store has lots of apps--about 250,000--but Apple nonetheless controls which ones make it onto its platform. It has used that power to keep out products it does not like, including things that can be construed as pornographic or that might interfere with its business, such as an app for Google's telephone service. Apple's press conference to show off its new wares on September 1st was streamed live over the internet but could be seen only on its own devices.

Even Google can be seen as a platform unto itself, if a very open one. The world's biggest search engine now offers dozens of services, from news aggregation to word processing, all of which are tied together and run on a global network of dozens of huge data-centres. Yet Google's most important service is its online advertising platform, which serves most text-based ads on the web. Being the company's main source of revenue, critics say, it is hardly a model of openness and transparency.

There is no conspiracy behind the emergence of these platforms. Firms are in business to make money. And such phenomena as social networks and online advertising exhibit strong network effects, meaning that a dominant market leader is likely to emerge. What is more, most users these days are not experts, but average consumers, who want secure, reliable products. To create a good experience on mobile devices, which more and more people will use to get onto the internet, hardware, software and services must be more tightly integrated than on PCs.


Net neutrality, or not?

Discussion of these proprietary platforms is only beginning. A lot of ink, however, has already been spilt on another form of balkanisation: in the plumbing of the internet. Most of this debate, particularly in America, is about "net neutrality". This is one of the internet's founding principles: that every packet of data, regardless of its contents, should be treated the same way, and the best effort should always be made to forward it.

Proponents of this principle want it to become law, out of concern that network owners will breach it if they can. Their nightmare is what Tim Wu, a professor at Columbia University, calls "the Tony Soprano vision of networking", alluding to a television series about a mafia family. If operators were allowed to charge for better service, they could extort protection money from every website. Those not willing to pay for their data to be transmitted quickly would be left to crawl in the slow lane. "Allowing broadband carriers to control what people see and do online would fundamentally undermine the principles that have made the internet such a success," said Vinton Cerf, one of the network's founding fathers (who now works for Google), at a hearing in Congress.

Opponents of the enshrining of net neutrality in law--not just self-interested telecoms firms, but also experts like Dave Farber, another internet elder--argue that it would be counterproductive. Outlawing discrimination of any kind could discourage operators from investing to differentiate their networks. And given the rapid growth in file-sharing and video (see chart 2), operators may have good reason to manage data flows, lest other traffic be crowded out.

The issue is not as black and white as it seems. The internet has never been as neutral as some would have it. Network providers do not guarantee a certain quality of service, but merely promise to do their best. That may not matter for personal e-mails, but it does for time-sensitive data such as video. What is more, large internet firms like Amazon and Google have long redirected traffic onto private fast lanes that bypass the public internet to speed up access to their websites.

Whether such preferential treatment becomes more widespread, and even extortionary, will probably depend on the market and how it is regulated. It is telling that net neutrality has become far more politically controversial in America than it has elsewhere. This is a reflection of the relative lack of competition in America's broadband market. In Europe and Japan, "open access" rules require network operators to lease parts of their networks to other firms on a wholesale basis, thus boosting competition. A study comparing broadband markets, published in 2009 by Harvard University's Berkman Centre for Internet & Society, found that countries with such rules enjoy faster, cheaper broadband service than America, because the barrier to entry for new entrants is much lower. And if any access provider starts limiting what customers can do, they will defect to another.

America's operators have long insisted that open-access requirements would destroy their incentive to build fast, new networks: why bother if you will be forced to share it? After intense lobbying, America's telecoms regulators bought this argument. But the lesson from elsewhere in the industrialised world is that it is not true. The result, however, is that America has a small number of powerful network operators, prompting concern that they will abuse their power unless they are compelled, by a net-neutrality law, to treat all traffic equally. Rather than trying to mandate fairness in this way--net neutrality is very hard to define or enforce--it makes more sense to address the underlying problem: the lack of competition.

It should come as no surprise that the internet is being pulled apart on every level. "While technology can gravely wound governments, it rarely kills them," Debora Spar, president of Barnard College at Columbia University, wrote several years ago in her book, "Ruling the Waves". "This was all inevitable," argues Chris Anderson, the editor of Wired, under the headline "The Web is Dead" in the September issue of the magazine. "A technology is invented, it spreads, a thousand flowers bloom, and then someone finds a way to own it, locking out others."

Yet predictions are hazardous, particularly in IT. Governments may yet realise that a freer internet is good not just for their economies, but also for their societies. Consumers may decide that it is unwise to entrust all their secrets to a single online firm such as Facebook, and decamp to less insular alternatives, such as Diaspora.

Similarly, more open technology could also still prevail in the mobile industry. Android, Google's smart-phone platform, which is less closed than Apple's, is growing rapidly and gained more subscribers in America than the iPhone in the first half of this year. Intel and Nokia, the world's biggest chipmaker and the biggest manufacturer of telephone handsets, are pushing an even more open platform called MeeGo. And as mobile devices and networks improve, a standards-based browser could become the dominant access software on the wireless internet as well.

Stuck in the slow lane

If, however, the internet continues to go the other way, this would be bad news. Should the network become a collection of proprietary islands accessed by devices controlled remotely by their vendors, the internet would lose much of its "generativity", warns Harvard's Mr Zittrain. Innovation would slow down and the next Amazon, Google or Facebook could simply be, well, Amazon, Google or Facebook.

The danger is not that these islands become physically separated, says Andrew Odlyzko, a professor at the University of Minnesota. There is just too much value in universal connectivity, he argues. "The real question is how high the walls between these walled gardens will be." Still, if the internet loses too much of its universality, cautions Mr Werbach of the Wharton School, it may indeed fall apart, just as world trade can collapse if there is too much protectionism. Theory demonstrates that interconnected networks such as the internet can grow quickly, he explains--but also that they can dissolve quickly. "This looks rather unlikely today, but if it happens, it will be too late to do anything about it."

Atlanta Immigration Lawyer Karen Weinstock Explains the Report.

 

 

 

Atlanta immigration lawyer Karen Weinstock reports regarding a recently issued report by the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) which shows the increasing role of immigrants in the U.S. labor market. The CBO must provide objective, nonpartisan analysis, and thus the report makes no recommendations, however various conclusions may be drawn from this report based on it very detailed analysis.

In 2009, there were 24 million foreign born members of the U.S. labor force, more than one in seven, an increase since 2004 where they represented one in 10. In 2009, 40 percent of the foreign-born labor force was from Mexico and Central America, and more than 25 percent was from Asia.

"The report shows that over half of the foreign-born workers from Mexico and Central America did not have a high school diploma or GED compared with just 6 percent of native-born workers. However, nearly half of the foreign-born workers from other countries held bachelor's degrees or higher, compared with 35 percent of the native born workers", said Karen Weinstock, Atlanta immigration attorney and the managing attorney of the Atlanta Immigration Law Firm Siskind Susser.

 

"The report demonstrates how foreign-born workers from Asia and other parts of the world are more highly educated relative to the U.S.-born and more than twice as likely as native-born workers to be in fields such as computer and mathematical sciences, which require a college education. These highly educated workers have average wages similar to those of native-born, which proves again that they are not paid any less", said Weinstock, the Atlanta immigration law attorney.

"Even though the majority of Mexican and Central America born workers is undereducated relative to their U.S. counterparts, the report shows how vital their work is to the economy in construction, hospitality and other industries that do not require education but more difficult physical work", said Weinstock, the Atlanta immigration lawyer, such industries that only 23 percent of native-born work in.  
"As expected, the majority of the foreign-born labor force concentrated in California, New York, Florida, Texas, New Jersey and Illinois", said the head of the Atlanta Immigration Law Firm. "Also interesting that foreign-born men were slightly less likely to be unemployed than the native born, but foreign-born women were slightly more likely to be unemployed than the native born women, which shows that foreign born workers are more likely to participate in the labor force - to have a job or to be looking for one", added the Atlanta immigration lawyer, "even though the recent economic cycle hurt these industries the most", she concluded.

 

 

Media Contact: Karen Weinstock

404-935-0056

Kweinstock (at) visalaw (dot) com

 

About Siskind Susser:

Siskind Susser is one of the largest immigration law firms in North America and its Atlanta Immigration attorneys, a part of the Atlanta immigration law firm  have experience handling all aspects of American immigration and nationality law. Our Atlanta immigration lawyers provide consultations to corporations and individuals on immigration law issues and represent clients before the U.S. government. We are committed to providing quality and efficient service, and are one of the top ranking U.S.  immigration law firms.

 

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