International Businessman Granted Bail – Law Blog – WSJ

Victor Dahdaleh, the prominent international businessman accused of bribing officials in Bahrain to score aluminum contracts for metals giant Alcoa has been granted bail in exchange for the equivalent of a $16 million security bond at a U.K. hearing.

Last week the U.K.’s SFO arrested Dahdaleh, a key figure in the bribery investigation of Alcoa’s dealings with Bahrain’s state-owned manufacturing company Alba, short for Aluminum Bahrain BSC. Here’s the coverage on that development and related stories here and here.

The AP today is reporting that District Judge Quentin Purdy told Dahdaleh he would be granted bail until an appearance at London’s Southwark Crown Court on Jan. 13. He ordered Dahdaleh to post 10 million pounds in security and said he must observe a 10 p.m. to 6 a.m. curfew at his central London home.

Dahdaleh has been known to have friends in high places – he has ties to former President Bill Clinton’s philanthropic foundation, having donated between $1 million and $5 million to the organization, and has ties to U.K. Labour Party officials, according to public records.

Yesterday, some of his powerful friends came through for him, according to the AP. Friends and relatives of the billionaire, including senior executives from Credit Suisse and oil giant BP, also agreed to offer 1.42 million pounds (US$2.3 million) in sureties, the AP said.

Charging papers from the SFO accuse Dahdaleh of offering payments to Sheik Isa bin Ali al-Khalifa, son-in-law of Bahrain’s prime minister. He is also accused of offering payments to Bruce Hall, the former CEO of Alba.

via International Businessman Granted Bail – Law Blog – WSJ.

Fujitsu to Offer IaaS Service in North America | PCWorld Business Center

Fujitsu is launching its infrastructure-as-a-service offering in North America in a few months, and will start offering interested customers a free trial next week.

Beginning on May 31, organizations can sign up for a free three-month trial of the service. On Sept. 1, the service will become generally available.

Interested customers can sign up for the service online, and Fujitsu suggests they use it to try out application testing and development as well as processing for workloads like data analytics.

Fujitsu already offers an IaaS service in Japan, Australia, Singapore and the U.K. Expanding into the U.S. means that multinational companies can access the service locally in multiple locations, the company said.

It will offer the North America service from a data center in Silicon Valley with 24-7 support.

via Fujitsu to Offer IaaS Service in North America | PCWorld Business Center.

HyperOffice Adds Cloud-based Email Archiving

HyperOffice’s Email Archiving

The new email offering basically does what it says with no surprises. It offers enterprises the ability to automatically store, index and backup all email passing through multiple user accounts in the company and place them in a centralized repository for as long as needed.

Depending on attributes assigned to the accounts, any email messages that were ever sent or received, attachments, or even deleted emails are secured, and retrievable through advanced email discovery tools.

And there’s the cruncher. The addition of email archiving corresponds with the growing regulatory environment that means now, even SMBs are being forced to look at data storage and the storage of critical business documents.

Until now it seems, SMBs have been playing it by ear in the face of the elevated costs of deploying on-premise email archiving like Exchange 2010.

We use Exchange as an example here because of the large numbers of companies using Outlook but also because HyperOffice’s email products come with Outlook integration, making it possible now with the archiving module to store emails directly from it into the cloud.

via HyperOffice Adds Cloud-based Email Archiving.

KnowledgeTree Integrates with MS Office, Enhancing Enterprise Collaboration

Sometimes, with all the fireworks surrounding Microsoft vs Google for dominance of the business cloud market, we forget that there are indeed other players. KnowledgeTree, another competitor, continues to build its cloud offering for the SMB sector with this week’s new release offering Office integration and new pricing levels that drop as low as US$ 35/month.

The new features collectively aim to address what is increasingly seen as a need to improve the abilities of workers across entire enterprises to share and collaborate.

Citing a recent report from AIIM, Knowledge Tree says that even in small enterprises the growth of information passing through companies is so great that only a well thought-out enterprise content management deployment will impose order.

KnowledgeTree for Office

To make their cloud-based document management software accessible to even the smallest organization, KnowledgeTree has restructured their pricing and added Office integration.

KnowledgeTree for Office enables users to interact with KnowledgeTree content and collaborate with other KnowledgeTree users directly from within their Microsoft Office productivity apps. Office Add-ins let them browse the repository, upload, download, search and email documents from within Microsoft Office applications — including Microsoft Outlook. They can also drag and drop documents into the repository from Microsoft Windows, Mac OSX or Linux desktops.

via KnowledgeTree Integrates with MS Office, Enhancing Enterprise Collaboration.

Cisco Umi brings videoconferencing to the living room – CNN.com

Cisco Systems on Wednesday unveiled Cisco Umi, its consumer-focused telepresence offering that lets people connect to each other using videoconferencing on their HD television in their living rooms.

Cisco Umi (pronounced YOU-me) is a telecommunications system that requires a mix of Cisco hardware and hardware you’ll already need to own.

The Umi service includes a Cisco-issued high-definition camera with an embedded microphone, a set-top box, and a remote, but you’ll need your own HD TV (1080p) and Internet connection to use it.

There is no external microphone, but you can recalibrate the audio quality. Cisco’s algorithms cancel external noice and bring the voices in the foreground.

Video calls and video messages are at the center of the Umi service, but the remote will also let customers manage their contact list, profiles, and settings. In addition, Umi will also record videos capable of being uploaded to Facebook and YouTube, or attached in an e-mail message.

via Cisco Umi brings videoconferencing to the living room – CNN.com.

Cisco Umi brings videoconferencing to the living room – CNN.com

Cisco Systems on Wednesday unveiled Cisco Umi, its consumer-focused telepresence offering that lets people connect to each other using videoconferencing on their HD television in their living rooms.

Cisco Umi (pronounced YOU-me) is a telecommunications system that requires a mix of Cisco hardware and hardware you’ll already need to own.

The Umi service includes a Cisco-issued high-definition camera with an embedded microphone, a set-top box, and a remote, but you’ll need your own HD TV (1080p) and Internet connection to use it.

There is no external microphone, but you can recalibrate the audio quality. Cisco’s algorithms cancel external noice and bring the voices in the foreground.

Video calls and video messages are at the center of the Umi service, but the remote will also let customers manage their contact list, profiles, and settings. In addition, Umi will also record videos capable of being uploaded to Facebook and YouTube, or attached in an e-mail message.

via Cisco Umi brings videoconferencing to the living room – CNN.com.

Cisco Moves to Acquire Skype for US$ 5 Billion

Reportedly, Cisco has made an offer to acquire Skype before they complete their initial public offering process (filed August 9th, 2010). If the rumor pans out to be true, the deal will sport an estimated US$ 5 billion dollar price tag.

Rumors are rumors, but Cisco has been making bold moves as of late. The company attracted a ton of attention with the release of Cisco Quad, a collaboration platform for the enterprise designed to give Microsoft and Google a bit of competition. Following Quad, Cisco kicked out Cius, a tablet poised to rival the iPad, and more interestingly given today’s news, a hosted collaboration platform that zeros in on unified communications and collaboration.

Tacking Skype onto their offerings would catapult Cisco into the mass market of video communications, positioning them as both the world’s largest Internet calling service and heavy competition for the likes of AT&T and Verizon.

via Cisco Moves to Acquire Skype for US$ 5 Billion.

Cisco Moves to Acquire Skype for US$ 5 Billion

Reportedly, Cisco has made an offer to acquire Skype before they complete their initial public offering process (filed August 9th, 2010). If the rumor pans out to be true, the deal will sport an estimated US$ 5 billion dollar price tag.

Rumors are rumors, but Cisco has been making bold moves as of late. The company attracted a ton of attention with the release of Cisco Quad, a collaboration platform for the enterprise designed to give Microsoft and Google a bit of competition. Following Quad, Cisco kicked out Cius, a tablet poised to rival the iPad, and more interestingly given today’s news, a hosted collaboration platform that zeros in on unified communications and collaboration.

Tacking Skype onto their offerings would catapult Cisco into the mass market of video communications, positioning them as both the world’s largest Internet calling service and heavy competition for the likes of AT&T and Verizon.

via Cisco Moves to Acquire Skype for US$ 5 Billion.

Should U.S. Firms Build Local Practices in Hong Kong? | American Lawyer

The Agricultural Bank of Chinas initial public offering, expected to become the worlds largest, debuted Friday, landing squarely in the middle of a debate over whether leading Wall Street law firms should build local practice capability in Hong Kong.The IPO on the Hong Kong and Shanghai exchanges would seem an obvious rallying cry for those arguing that top American capital markets firms will miss out on deals without their own Hong Kong lawyers — except that the lead lawyers on the AgBank deal are from New Yorks Davis Polk & Wardwell, which only practices U.S. law.

via Should U.S. Firms Build Local Practices in Hong Kong?.

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.