Cracking Down on Corruption | Opinion | The Moscow Times

The FCPA prohibits offering, giving or authorizing anything of value — whether cash or other tangible property or intangibles such as personal favors — to any non-U.S. official, including individuals serving state-controlled commercial enterprises, political party or political candidate to obtain some business advantage. The statute also requires companies to keep accurate books and maintain internal controls designed to prevent or detect improper payments.

Why is this relevant? First, non-U.S. companies are also subject to the FCPA if they conduct business in the United States, if their shares are listed on U.S. exchanges, or if they act on behalf of a U.S. company in connection with an illicit payment to a foreign public official.

Mercedes-Benz’s affiliate in Russia recently became the first Russian-based company to face criminal charges under the FCPA. It pleaded guilty in a Washington courtroom on April 2, agreeing to pay more than $27 million in criminal fines to settle charges arising out of bribes paid to Russian officials or relatives of Russian officials, in many cases through shell companies registered in the United States and into or through bank accounts located in the United States.

Second, Russian companies seeking to do business with U.S. partners and others subject to the FCPA must not present compliance risks that outweigh the potential benefits of cooperation. Faced with evidence that a partner is paying or considering bribes in connection with its business, the U.S. company must undertake an internal investigation that can take years to complete and cost tens of millions of dollars. Criminal and civil fines and remediation can add millions more. Given these risks to their reputation and to their bottom line, companies are increasingly saying “no” if they even suspect that a partner may subject them to risks of FCPA liability.

How can Russian companies make sure that they are saying “yes” instead of “no”? First, they must deal with potential compliance problems as quickly as possible and resolve any issues before their prospective partners begin performing due diligence. Second, it is important that companies institute strict and enforceable internal policies to regulate the use of cash, payments to charitable and political organizations at the request of public officials and the questionable use of intermediary companies.

All companies doing business in Russia should  make a commitment to integrity and transparency. This means that if they make or made illicit payments or provided other benefits to any public officials, these practices must stop and remedial methods must be taken as soon as possible.

Russian companies must be committed to the elimination of illicit payments, and the institution of internal controls should be embodied in a comprehensive anti-corruption compliance program. This must be supported by leadership and updated as the company’s business and anti-corruption rules evolve. Employees must believe that there will be real rewards for compliance in terms of compensation and advancement, and there must be real consequences for failure to comply.

Russian companies must ensure that third parties with which it does business are legitimate companies, capable of performing the services for which they were contracted, and not merely conduits for improper payments. To the extent that a third party is connected to a government official, it should be confident that he will not misuse his position for the company’s benefit.

via Cracking Down on Corruption | Opinion | The Moscow Times.

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It’s time for universal data plans | CNET News

Imagine if your ISP made you pay for a “data plan” on every computer you own. Imagine if the ISP also made you pay a separate monthly fee for, say, attaching a wireless router to your network. Or an Xbox. Or a TiVo. “Data” on a smartphone, an iPad, a Netbook, a Kindle, or any other future always-connected device is simply another word for “a network connection.” And it’s time that network connection stopped being tied to the device and started being tied to an individual or an account.

Make no mistake: Data plans are going to become a much bigger deal in the very near future, because a 3G or even 4G connection will be ubiquitous in the instant-on, always-connected devices of the future. The iPad is almost certainly driving part of AT&T’s decision to drop unlimited data plans, and the second big factor is tethering.

Some of our Buzz Out Loud listeners suggested that AT&T is metering its data plans now because it doesn’t want customers, once they’re equipped with tethering, to just cancel their traditional ISP service and use AT&T&’s 3G data network for full-time Internet access. But you know what? That train’s coming and it won’t be stopped.

Like it or not, wireless is the future of bandwidth, and telecom carriers are becoming de facto ISPs. They know this, their networks are smaller, and they’re hoping to avoid the traffic-shaping pickle ISPs say they’re in by rolling out metered usage from the get-go. AT&T certainly isn’t alone in trying to drop unlimited plans; Verizon has also said it plans to charge for data by usage.

Now, though, with the FCC breathing down carriers’ necks about tiered usage plans, it’s only a matter of time before regulators catch wind of just how many times we’re being charged for the exact same thing. Everyone’s usage is going to start to increase, and this parsing and nickle-and-dime-ing and “plus” and “pro” plans is all just a smoke screen. And, frankly, a rip-off.

Carriers need to keep beefing up those networks and start rolling out universal data plans that are device-agnostic, include either unlimited data or realistic caps that encompass our growing data needs, and that charge you one time for network access, period. That’s how we get to a true wireless broadband future–one where there’s no such thing as a “data plan,” there’s just a network, and we’re all on it.

via It’s time for universal data plans | Molly Rants – CNET News.

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Google rolls out encrypted Web search option | InSecurity Complex – CNET News

Google began offering an encrypted option for Web searchers on Friday and said it planned to roll it out for all of its services eventually.

People who want to use the more secure search option can type “https://www.google.com” into their browser, scrambling the connection so the words and phrases they search on, and the results that Google displays, will be protected from interception.

The beta service of the secure Web search option begins in the United States on Friday and will be rolled out over the next few days to users around the world, said Murali Viswanathan, a Google search product manager.

Friday’s announcement makes Google the first major search engine to offer this privacy-protective feature. AOL, Yahoo, and Microsoft currently do not.

via Google rolls out encrypted Web search option | InSecurity Complex – CNET News.

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More Privilege Issues With Employee E-Mail

This article will explore the implications of the troubling privilege issues that confronted a lawyer in Brooklyn when he found that he owed conflicting duties to two clients in unrelated matters in connection with the same item of privileged information. Following that discussion, the article will return to the topic addressed recently in this column, namely whether or not the attorney-client privilege is lost when clients use their employers' technology to send e-mails to their lawyers. Two more cases have addressed the same issue in recent weeks, raising the question whether a consistent set of principles can be applied when these issues arise.

via More Privilege Issues With Employee E-Mail.

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