Dow bribed Indian officials with cash, jewellery, hospitality-Politics/Nation-News-The Economic Times

A senior central government official and his aides were bribed $32,000 in cash and jewellery while their travel and hotel expenses were also picked up by a subsidiary of Dow Chemicals, which took over the Union Carbide company after the 1984 Bhopal gas leak tragedy, to push its substandard pesticides in the Indian market, a case filed by the Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) says.

The details of the bribes paid by Dow Agro Sciences India Ltd. Mumbai, which was earlier known as DE-Nocil, have been mentioned in the charge sheet filed by the CBI in the case, a senior official told IANS.

The charge sheet was filed on the basis of information furnished by the US authorities to the Indian government in response to a letter rogatory, a formal request from a court to a foreign court for judicial assistance.

‘The legal action comes after the letter rogatory was executed by the US government on Nov 17, 2008 to elicit information regarding vouchers of Dow Chemicals to establish payment of bribes during 1996-2001 by Dow Agro Sciences,’ CBI spokesperson Harsh Bhal told IANS.

via Dow bribed Indian officials with cash, jewellery, hospitality-Politics/Nation-News-The Economic Times.

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Google to Congress: We’re ‘profoundly sorry’ about WiFi-gate – Nextgov

Trying to head off mounting criticism in Congress, Google told key House lawmakers last week it is “profoundly sorry” it collected data from WiFi networks and added that it never used any of the information.

Google has said it accidentally collected so-called payload data from unencrypted WiFi networks while photographing neighborhoods for its Street View mapping program.

“The payload data has never been used in any Google product or service, nor do we intend to use it,” Pablo Chavez, Google’s director of public policy, wrote in a letter on Wednesday to House Energy and Commerce Chairman Henry Waxman and ranking member Joe Barton, as well as Rep. Edward Markey, D-Mass.

“In fact, based on our current investigation, we are aware of only two instances when any Google engineer even viewed the payload data,” the letter added.

via Google to Congress: We’re ‘profoundly sorry’ about WiFi-gate – Nextgov.

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Lawmakers want FTC probe of Google Buzz | ComputerWorld.com

Eleven U.S. lawmakers have asked the U.S. Federal Trade Commission to investigate Googles launch of its Buzz social-networking product for breaches of consumer privacy.

The representatives — six Democrats and five Republicans from the House Energy and Commerce Committee — noted in their letter that Googles roll-out of Buzz exposed private information of users to Googles Gmail service to outsiders. In one case, a 9-year-old girl accidentally shared her contact list in Gmail with a person who has a “sexually charged” username, the lawmakers said in the letter, sent to the FTC Friday and released Monday.

“Due to the high number of individuals whose online privacy is affected by tools like this — either directly or indirectly — we feel that these claims warrant the commissions review of Googles public disclosure of personal information of consumers through Google Buzz,” said the letter, organized by Representative John Barrow, a Georgia Democrat.

In the original public version of Buzz, launched in February, the program compiled a list of the Gmail contacts the users most frequently e-mailed or chatted with and automatically started following those people. Those lists were made public, giving strangers access to the contacts of Buzz users.

There were a flurry of complaints from Gmail users, and Google made changes to Buzz within a couple of days.

via Lawmakers want FTC probe of Google Buzz.

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Two accused of taking bribes in U.N. contract deal with U.S. company – washingtonpost.com

A U.N. anti-corruption task force has accused an Italian executive and a former U.N. official of taking bribes from a U.S. security contractor seeking to do business with the United Nations, according to a confidential U.N. letter obtained by The Washington Post.

Ezio Testa, chief executive of IHC Services, and Alexander Yakovlev, a former Russian procurement official at the United Nations, were charged by U.N. investigators with steering a 2001 contract for bulletproof vests to Armor Holdings, a company based in Jacksonville, Fla.

The U.N. letter, written in December 2008, also links the two men for the first time to a criminal probe by the Justice Department's fraud division into a bribery scheme involving former executives at Armor Holdings, which was acquired by BAE Systems in July 2007.

“Mr. Alexander Yakovlev and Mr. Ezio Testa entered into a corrupt agreement to steer a valuable United Nations contract to Armor Holdings in exchange for promises of sums of money to be paid to the individual participants,” says the letter from the now-defunct U.N. Procurement Task Force.

via Two accused of taking bribes in U.N. contract deal with U.S. company – washingtonpost.com.

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A recent improvement for Arabic searches | Official Google Blog

We've learned that when performing a search on Google, people sometimes forget to separate words with spaces. Moreover, people often mistakenly repeat a letter within a single word. For instance, when writing the query [amazingly beautiful poem], you might write it as [amazingly beautiifullpoem].

These types of errors are much more common in languages like Arabic, where most of the letters are cursive. That means that the shapes of the letters change, based on the position of the letter in the word (initial, middle, final or isolated). Moreover, some Arabic letters are considered word breaks, meaning that the following letter must be in an “initial” shape. In other words, if the last letter of one word is a word break, the following word may not be separated with a space.

For example, the queries [وزارةالتعليم] and [وزارة التعليم] have an identical meaning (Ministry of Education) and they’re both written in a common form for Arabic documents. But they have different, albeit correct, formats — the first query is written as a single word, while the second is written as two. Google needs to understand that while they’re written differently, they mean the same thing and should yield the exact same search results. In this example, both queries were written correctly, just in different formats. But sometimes people just make errors — like repeating the same letter twice. For example, you might write [راائعة الجماال], repeating the letter “ا” twice in both query words. In this case the correct spelling should be [رائعة الجمال]. It's important that Google search recognizes your query — despite spelling errors.

To address issues like this, we recently developed a search ranking improvement that targets certain Arabic queries. Our algorithm employs rules of Arabic spelling and grammar along with signals from historical search data to decide when to leave out spaces between words or when to remove unnecessarily repeated letters. Now, when you type a query leaving out spaces or repeating a letter, we’ll return better results based not only on what you typed, but also on what our algorithm understands is the “correct” query. For example, here's what happens when you type [قصيدة راائعةالجماال] ([amazingly beautiful poem] in Arabic) with repeated letters and dropped spaces between words.

via Official Google Blog: A recent improvement for Arabic searches.

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Twitter Weekly Updates for 2009-11-08

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