Archive for the ‘Internet’ Category

Bulk TV & Internet's Tom Conley Wins 2012 Top Entrepreneur

RALEIGH, N.C., March 28, 2012 /PRNewswire/ --Bulk TV & Internet, a leading provider of DIRECTV services for commercial properties nationwide, is pleased to announce that its COO and Co-Founder, Tom Conley, has been named as one of the Top 50 Entrepreneurs of the Year by Triangle Business Leader magazine.

(Photo: http://photos.prnewswire.com/prnh/20120328/CL78154LOGO )

The Top 50 Entrepreneur awards program recognizes excellence in entrepreneurship through business leaders who have created innovative, successful companies that contribute to their industries and business communities.

Conley follows Bulk TV & Internet's President and fellow Co-Founder, Dave O'Connell as a Top 50 Entrepreneur winner in 2010. "It is an honor to be named as a recipient of the Top 50 Entrepreneur award. It's even more of a privilege to be the second recipient of this award at Bulk TV & Internet," says Conley. "I am proud of what we have been able to accomplish as a company with respect to our aggressive growth curve and our status as one of the best in our industry, which we have achieved in a very short period of time."

Relying on their background in sales and commercial satellite deployments, Conley co-founded Bulk TV & Internet with Dave O'Connell in 2004. The company has since expanded to become DIRECTV's #1 Free-to-Guest Provider for the past four years with over 2,000 customers in all 50 states.

Bulk TV & Internet's exceptional growth has also been recognized by INC's 500's List of Fastest Growing Companies and the Triangle Business Journal's Fast 50. The Triangle Business Journal also named the company as one of the Best Places to Work in the Triangle in 2008, 2010 and 2011.

About Bulk TV & Internet

Bulk TV & Internet is a leading provider of DIRECTV services designed to meet the unique needs of hospitality, long-term care, healthcare and multi-dwelling unit properties as well as small businesses, bars and restaurants. Bulk TV & Internet provides service to more than 200,000 units nationwide including free-to-guest televisionprogramming, digital satellite TV systems, high-speed Internet access and managed data network services. For more information, please visit http://www.bulktv.com.

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Bulk TV & Internet's Tom Conley Wins 2012 Top Entrepreneur

Internet gambling burgeoning: study

Internet gambling is increasing in terms of the amount being spent and the number of people involved.

THE comforts of home and anonymity are luring growing numbers to internet gambling, say academics at Southern Cross University after undertaking Australia's biggest study into the latest betting trend.

All the evidence suggests that internet gambling is increasing in terms of the amount being spent and the number of people involved, and it doesn't look like slowing down, said Sally Gainsbury from the university's Centre for Gambling Education & Research.

A report she published last week with researchers from Sydney University surveyed 6682 internet gamblers to learn more about their behaviour.

The attractions of internet gambling include not having to leave the house or drive anywhere, 24-hour availability, convenience, lack of crowds and unpleasant people.

The main perceived disadvantages of internet gambling were that it is too convenient and that it is easier to spend more money at home where there are no limits applied to credit card use.

The study also showed that internet gamblers participate in a greater variety of gambling formats and are more frequently involved in gambling.

"This could indicate that consumers are adding internet gambling to an existing repertoire of gambling, or conversely, that internet gambling is facilitating a higher frequency of gambling given the high accessibility and convenience of this medium," Ms Gainsbury said. "It is likely that both causal pathways exist".

Understanding the impact of this new mode of gambling on existing and new players was an important contribution to the appropriate regulation of the activity, Ms Gainsbury said.

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Internet gambling burgeoning: study

Happy 20th anniversary Internet Society!

The Internet Society, a nonprofit that operates the .org registry and funds Internet standards development work, is celebrating its 20th anniversary with a gala event in Geneva next month.

ISOC is dedicated to the idea that the Internet should be a decentralised platform for innovation that is open to all people around the globe. ISOC sponsors the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF), a standards-setting body, as well as the Internet Architecture Board, which provides technical advice to policymakers. With 120 corporate members, 100 chapters and nearly 60,000 individual members, ISOC is a powerful advocate for transparent, self-governing process for developing the technical underpinnings of the Internet.

We spoke with Lynn St. Amour (pictured), president and CEO of ISOC, about the group's biggest successes over the last 20 years and the challenges it faces in the future. Here are excerpts from our conversation:

The date of incorporation was in early January 1992. It basically came out of work that Vint Cerf and Bob Kahn [inventors of the Internet Protocol] were doing to create a charter statement for the organization.

We're having a year-long celebration. On our website, we have a feature called "The Wishing Tree" where we are collecting people's wishes for the Internet. We're also launching an Internet Hall of Fame at the INET conference in April. We'll be announcing three categories of winners. One category is pioneers, who are the people who were there at the dawn of the Internet. Another one is for global connectors, those people who have done extraordinary things to bring the Internet to other communities, in some cases developing countries and in other cases new applications. Then we have a third category that is innovators. We'll be making the announcement of our first inductees at the global INET conference in Geneva, where we will have a gala awards dinner. Global INET will be a celebration, where we have past trustees and luminaries such as Leonard Kleinrock coming to speak. We also have Tim Berners-Lee and Vint Cerf. INET is April 23 to 24. The gala is the 23rd.

We're stronger than we've ever been. We are very happy to continue supporting the IETF in a way that's given them autonomy for all of their activities. We're able to do that because ISOC bid to run the .org registry 10 years ago. The Public Interest Registry (PIR) is the supporting entity for ISOC to run .org. The .org income allows us to do an awful lot more in terms of development activities around the world. We do a lot with Internet exchange points and grants, where $5,000 or $10,000 can make a tremendous difference in a whole community. We're financially stable. This year our budget is $35 million, with 80 percent from PIR and .org registrations across the world. The rest is from our members, various IETF events and other grants. We have offices in 14 countries, with our two main offices being in Geneva and just outside Washington, D.C., in Virginia. We will have 80 employees at the end of this year.

One is our support for the IETF and enabling the IETF to maintain its culture, processes and autonomy. I think that's been a great partnership, and it's one of the things we are most proud of. Another is our policy activities. In virtually every significant body that has to do with Internet policy, we are either a member or we have special standing that allows us access to meetings and presentations. That's really come along in the last four to five years. We're extremely happy and proud of that. Lastly, the Internet is successful because of its distributed nature. We're trying to mirror that in our organisation. Five or six years ago, we launched our first regional bureau. Now we have five regional bureaus in Africa, Europe, Latin America and the Caribbean, Asia Pacific and North America. This allows us to build our staff and build much stronger relationships with all the regional players, whether they are policymakers or large, commercial companies. Our third major accomplishment would be our ability to distribute our engagement to a broad global reach.

Scale. There are over 260 countries in the world, and a lot of policy activity going on. Our ability to help people understand the Internet environment in a way that they can establish policy and regulate that environment in a way that's best for their citizens and best for the Internet is a pretty daunting task. We'd like to be more proactive, but often we find ourselves trying to step in and explain why we believe something is inappropriate.

ISOC is a major contributor to the IETF. Do you think the IETF is as relevant as it once was? Vendors tell me regularly that they are frustrated with the slow pace at which the IETF is able to create RFCs.

The IETF has always been the premier standards body for the Internet, and I think that is still true. As the Internet has grown, the number of applications has grown and the complexity of the environment has grown. It does take longer to develop and test a standard. I believe strongly that the IETF way of developing standards is the most appropriate. There is no other comparable body where you can openly debate and deliver standards.

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Happy 20th anniversary Internet Society!

Bernard Tomic asks for his father to be removed from stadium – Video

24-03-2012 21:50 Bernard Tomic asks the umpire for his father to leave the court in Miami

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Bernard Tomic asks for his father to be removed from stadium - Video

FTC urges transparency law for Internet data brokers

The Federal Trade Commission on Monday urged Congress to enact Internet privacy laws that would force data brokers to reveal what information they buy and sell about consumers.

In a wide-ranging report that also supports self-regulatory efforts by businesses, the FTC stopped short of supporting laws that would mandate anti-tracking buttons on Web sites a proposal that Internet advertisers have lobbied hard to keep out of legislation.

The report largely mirrors similar proposals made last month by the White House and highlights a growing consensus among federal officials that consumers need stronger protection for their online privacy.

Over the past year, the FTC has cracked down on Google and Facebook for allegedly exposing user data when launching new products. The agency said that cellphone applications present new privacy challenges: Legal statements are unclear and too hard to read on small screens and companies such as Apple and Google do not force developers to post notices in app stores.

After two years of intense debate between powerful companies and privacy advocates, the FTCs recommendations were a relief to businesses that hope to use consumer data to customize advertising based on a users likes and dislikes without strict government rules.

We wanted not to erect a stop light for businesses but to take a closer look at traffic patterns, FTC Chairman Jon Leibowitz said during a news conference.

Much of the 73-page report focused on the need for companies to clearly explain how they collect data about users and for what purposes they use that information.

The FTC called for legislation on data brokers the Web's information middlemen, such as Lexis Nexis and Choicepoint who take data that has been collected online and merge the information with documents offline to create detailed portraits of consumers.

The brokers sell a wealth of highly personal information about consumers but never interact directly with them, according to the report. Consumers are often unaware of the existence of these entities, as well as the purposes for which they collect and use data.

The FTC said a law should allow consumers to see what those portraits would look like . And the agency said that data brokers should be forced to reveal their data-collection practices.

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FTC urges transparency law for Internet data brokers