Urgent call from Demi Moore’s home to be released

FILE – In this Oct. 17, 2011 file photo, actress Demi Moore attends the premiere of “Margin Call” in New York. A spokeswoman for Moore on Tuesday, Jan. 24, 2012 said the actress is seeking professional help to treat her exhaustion and improve her health. (AP Photo/Peter Kramer, File)

FILE – In this Oct. 17, 2011 file photo, actress Demi Moore attends the premiere of “Margin Call” in New York. A spokeswoman for Moore on Tuesday, Jan. 24, 2012 said the actress is seeking professional help to treat her exhaustion and improve her health. (AP Photo/Peter Kramer, File)

(AP) ? Authorities are set to release an emergency call made from Demi Moore’s home earlier this week.

The Los Angeles Times says the Los Angeles city attorney’s office has recommended that certain portions of the call be deleted to comply with federal privacy laws.

A spokeswoman for Moore said Tuesday that the actress is seeking professional help to treat her exhaustion and improve her health. Publicist Carrie Gordon says the decision is due to the stresses in Moore’s life, and she looks forward to getting well.

Moore announced in November that she had decided to end her marriage to Ashton Kutcher following news of alleged infidelity.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/4e67281c3f754d0696fbfdee0f3f1469/Article_2012-01-27-People-Demi%20Moore/id-e3bac1a7abfb40c487d8796eed8875aa

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Officials identify three cruise ship victims

Authorities have now identified the bodies of three German passengers recovered from the Costa Cruises ship that capsized off the coast of Italy earlier this month. Meanwhile, the children of a American couple still missing after the disaster have released a new statement. NBC’s Michelle Kosinski reports.

By NBC News and msnbc.com news services

Published at 9:15 a.m. ET — GIGLIO, Italy — Italian authorities have identified the bodies of three German passengers as divers kept up the search for those still missing from the Costa Concordia cruise ship that rammed into a reef off Italy.

Sixteen deaths have been confirmed so far in the disaster, but three of those bodies have yet to be identified. Another 16 people are still missing from the ship, which grounded Jan. 13, but officials have acknowledged that it would take a miracle to find any more survivors.

NBC News reports that divers will check 154 cabins onboard the ship Thursday. There are more cabins to search, but they are blocked by debris and remain difficult to access. Objects inside the ship will be recovered after the ship is deemed secure, according to officials.

In addition, three ships are surveying the seabed around the capsized cruise liner to look for passengers who might have drowned and been taken away by currents. According to an Italian civil protection spokesperson who spoke to NBC News, bodies may also be located under the ship or in parts of the wreck that cannot be accessed by rescue divers.

The children of a Minnesota couple missing in the Italian cruise ship disaster say the waiting has become “an extreme test” of their patience.

In a blog posting Wednesday, the children of Jerry and Barbara Heil of White Bear Lake, Minn., say they “so badly want Mom and Dad found” so they can be brought home. The Heils are the only Americans missing in the wreck.

The Concordia ran aground and capsized off the island of Giglio on Jan. 13 after the captain veered from his planned course and gashed the ship’s hull on a reef, forcing the panicked evacuation of 4,200 passengers and crew.

DigitalGlobe

The Costa Concordia, carrying more than 4,200 passengers, ran aground Jan. 13 off the coast of Italy. At least 15 people died in the accident, and rescuers continue to search for others missing.

NBC News reports that during a hearing Thursday at the senate, the general commander of the port authority, Marco Brusco, said that Captain Francesco Schettino “wasted a precious hour” following the incident during which time “people could have been lowered on lifeboats calmly.”

“Instead, he left creating a tense situation by giving contradictory orders,” Brusco said.

Schettino’s lawyer, who says his client admits partial responsibility for the disaster, is seeking to widen the investigation to include third parties with whom he was in contact, notably from ship owners, Costa Cruises.

The wife of the captain accused of grounding the Costa Concordia cruise ship said in an interview published Tuesday she was outraged over the way her husband had been portrayed by the media.

“My husband is at the center of an unprecedented media storm,” his wife, Fabiola Rossi, told French magazine Paris Match. “I cannot think of any other naval or air tragedy in which the responsible party was treated with such violence … This is a man hunt, people are looking for a scapegoat, a monster.”

Salvage experts worked Thursday so they could begin pumping tons of fuel off the ship starting Saturday to avert an environmental catastrophe. The stricken ship lies very close to a marine sanctuary.

There are not yet signs of significant pollution around the ship by oil, detergents and solvents. Samples are being taken repeatedly to keep monitoring the situation. Nevertheless, Italian officials have trained 130 volunteers to be deployed in case of an environmental disaster.

Recovery efforts at the site of the cruise ship disaster off the coast of Italy has entered a new phase Tuesday, with crews ready to remove oil from the wreckage. NBC’s Michelle Kosinski reports.

Related stories:

The Associated Press and Reuters contributed to this report.

Source: http://overheadbin.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2012/01/26/10241992-officials-identify-three-cruise-ship-victims

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Nokia loss tempered by Windows phone launch (AP)

HELSINKI ? Mobile phone maker Nokia Corp. on Thursday posted a fourth-quarter net loss of euro1.07 billion ($1.38 billion) as sales slumped 21 percent even as the company’s first Windows smartphones hit markets in Europe and Asia.

The loss, widened by a euro1 billion loss booked on Nokia’s navigation systems unit, compares with a profit of euro745 million in the same period a year earlier.

Nokia said net revenue ? including both its mobile phones and its network divisions ? fell from euro12.6 billion in the fourth quarter of 2010 to euro10 billion, with smartphone sales plunging 23 percent.

Nokia has lost its once-dominant position in the global cellphone market, with Android phones and iPhones overtaking it in the growing smartphone segment.

The Finnish company is attempting a comeback with smartphones using Microsoft’s Windows software, a struggle that Nokia CEO Stephen Elop characterized as a “war of ecosystems.”

He said Nokia has sold “well over” 1 million such devices since the launch of the Lumia line in the fourth quarter, in line with expectations.

Including other models, Nokia sold 19.6 million smartphones in the quarter, down from 28 million a year earlier. By comparison, Apple sold 37 million iPhones.

The Lumia 800 and Lumia 710 hit stores in Europe and Asia in November, while T-Mobile started offering the 710 in the U.S. in January. Nokia hopes to boost its poor presence in the U.S. with the higher-end Lumia 900, which AT&T will offer later this year.

Elop said Nokia would be shipping Lumia phones to Canada next month and China and South America during the first half of this year.

“With Lumia, our specific intent has been to establish a beachhead in this war of ecosystems, and country by country that is what we are now accomplishing,” Elop said in a conference call.

Nokia shares were up about 1.5 percent at euro4.12 ($5.33) in late trading in Helsinki.

Michael Schroeder, analyst at FIM bank in Helsinki, said markets had welcomed Elop’s comments on Lumia sales.

“It definitely alleviated concerns about a horror scenario, expected by some. Although a million is not a lot in the market, it was better than expected,” Schroeder said.

The company said it would not provide annual targets for 2012 since it was in a “year of transition” but added that it expects operating margins in the first quarter of this year to be “about break-even, ranging either above or below by approximately 2 percentage points.”

It repeated the target of cutting costs by more than euro1 billion by 2013.

Neil Mawston from Strategy Analytics in London said Nokia “was not out of the woods yet,” but its quarterly result was in line with expectations.

“Nokia is not necessarily dead in the water. Profit margins were a bit higher than expected and Nokia has not lost its third position in smartphones, although it is suffering in North America and western Europe,” Mawston said.

Nokia proposed a dividend of euro0.20 per share for 2011 and said that chairman and former CEO Jorma Ollila will step down at the annual meeting in May. A nomination committee proposed board member Risto Siilasmaa as the new chairman.

The average selling price of a Nokia handset rose by euro2 from the previous quarter to euro53 but was down from euro69 a year earlier, reflecting a higher proportion of cheaper mobile phones in Nokia’s product mix.

The company also reported a 4 percent drop in sales for Nokia Siemens Networks, its joint network equipment unit with Siemens AG of Germany.

After selling four in 10 smartphones worldwide in 2010, Nokia has steadily lost market share to competitors, including Apple and Samsung. It didn’t give any market share estimates in the report Thursday, but said its net revenue fell 9 percent to euro38.6 billion in the full year 2011, with smartphone sales plunging 27 percent and total mobile phone sales down 18 percent.

Nokia, based in Espoo near the Finnish capital, employs 130,000 people ? down from more than 132,000 a year earlier.

___

Ritter reported from Stockholm.

(This version CORRECTS Updates with CEO comment, share price, details. Corrects 18 percent drop was for all mobile phones, not just low-end ones. This story is part of AP’s general news and financial services.)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/earnings/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20120126/ap_on_hi_te/eu_finland_earns_nokia

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Long-term-care insurance: Right for some, but not all ? Health …

In the last years of Martin Privot?s life, his family had to start selling his assets to pay for his nursing home costs. ?He needed 24-hour care and couldn?t be left alone,? recalls his daughter Toni Footer. ?My biggest fear was we would run [through his money] and wouldn?t be able to provide the care that he needed.?

Privot died in 2008, from post-surgical complications and other ailments, before all his assets were depleted. Yet Footer, 61, says her dad?s experience ?reinforced my already strong feelings that long-term-care (insurance) is a necessity.? The Rockville, Md., resident says she pays about $2,500 every year for such coverage for herself. ?It?s expensive ? in fact, it?s gone up twice ? but it?s worth every penny. It provides a peace of mind that my family won?t have to struggle to find money to pay for my care.?

Mary McClelland came to the opposite conclusion after seeing how her mother?s expenses were often deemed exempt from coverage.

Her mother, Ruth Mezick, purchased long-term-care, or LTC, insurance in 1990 at age 78 when she was in fairly good health, paying an annual premium of $2,827 until she died 11 years later. In her mid-80s, her health began to deteriorate and she spent time in a nursing home, at home with help and in assisted living. But her policy ? which promised to pay $100 a day ? failed to cover much of those expenses because it kicked in only after she had been in one institution more than 100 days.

?She was never in one place long enough to qualify. She ended up getting about 10 days? coverage, worth about $1,000,? says McClelland, who lives in Arlington, Va. ?That was a lesson to me; I decided it doesn?t always pay off.?

The question of whether to get LTC insurance bedevils consumers and their advisers. Unlike medical insurance, it is intended primarily to cover people who need assistance with so-called activities of daily living ? for example, the care of a dementia patient or someone recovering from a broken hip. It can be expensive: Premiums range from $1,000 to $5,000 a year, depending on the age, sex and health of the purchaser as well as the extent of the coverage. And policy details can be confusing.

Even advocates acknowledge that it isn?t for everyone. Jesse Slome, executive director of the American Association for Long-Term Care Insurance, an industry group, sums it up well: ?Long-term care is a universal issue facing all Americans who are getting older. But long-term-care insurance is not a universal solution.?

So how great is the need for such coverage? It depends on how you look at the data. ?One in two Americans are likely to need long-term-care services sometime in their lives,? says Amy Pahl, a consulting actuary for Milliman Inc, a leading actuarial and consulting company. However, Pahl adds, of those who might need long-term care, about a third will not meet the most common deductible period of 90 days because they will either die or recover before then.

To determine if a long-term-care policy makes sense for you, it is important to understand how the coverage works and what?s available.

Medicare is not the answer

Most standard health insurance plans do not cover long-term care. Nor does Medicare or insurance policies that supplement Medicare.

Medicaid, however, is the largest source of coverage for long-term care. The program pays for more than two-thirds of nursing home residents, according to data from the Kaiser Family Foundation.

But Medicaid comes with significant limitations. The choice of facilities that accept Medicaid is narrow, and the program is restricted to people with extremely limited income and virtually no resources, which forces middle-income consumers to spend down their assets if they want to qualify.

?Medicaid is supposed to be a safety net, but unfortunately it rests just about a half-inch off the floor,? says Tom West, a Northern Virginia financial adviser and long-term-care expert.

Yet Kansas Insurance Commissioner Sandy Praeger cautions that LTC policies may not be a good investment for some people. ?It?s mostly a policy to protect your assets (so you don?t have to sell everything to pay for care) in case you get sick. If you don?t have assets to protect, then you shouldn?t be buying it.? Unfortunately, that can leave those consumers with limited flexibility if they do need long-term care.

How the coverage works

Typically, a policy pays a fixed daily benefit ($150 is common) for a certain period of time (often three to five years) starting at a specified time (90 days is common) after the beneficiary becomes disabled. The policy covers nursing home expenses, assisted living charges or less costly in-home-care bills.

Many policies also allow the initial fixed daily benefit to rise 3 or 5 percent annually to keep up with health-care costs. The policyholder agrees to a premium that can increase only if the change is approved by state regulators. Such increases have occurred frequently in recent years and, as a result, once-flat premiums have risen sharply. So have nursing home costs, which averaged about $214 a day ? or more than $78,000 annually ? for a semi-private room last year, according to a national survey by the insurer MetLife.

As people?s needs have changed, LTC policies have expanded to cover assisted living and home care; some new policies are flexible enough to anticipate technologies that don?t yet exist, such as robotic care.

?The policies have become very innovative,? says Slome. ?Today you can go in and design coverage for particular needs and desires; you can even buy long-term-care insurance to enable you to get your care on a cruise line if you want it ? and can afford it.?

Today?s policies can also allow couples to share benefits, so a husband and wife can each buy a shorter-term policy, for example three years of benefits. About 70 percent of coverage today is sold to couples, Slome said. If it turns out that the husband needs more than three years? coverage, he can tap into his wife?s benefit pool. And in some policies, if the husband completely exhausts the couple?s coverage, the wife may still receive some nominal benefits if she needs care, too.

At the end of 2010, about 7 million Americans had LTC insurance, according to LIMRA, an association of life insurance and financial service companies. About 422,000 new policies were written in 2010.

The 2010 health-care law has a provision creating a voluntary program of LTC insurance. However, in October, the Obama administration announced it would not implement the provision because it was financially unsustainable.

According to Slome, the average age of the buyer is 57, with three-quarters of the policies written when purchasers are between 45 and 64.

When buying insurance, the younger the consumer, the lower the annual premiums. Today, according to Slome?s association, a 55-year-old couple in generally good health can expect to pay $2,675 a year for $338,000 of benefits; that figure would grow to $800,000 by the time they reach 80 if the policy contained a 3 percent annual compounded escalation clause. If they are 65, however, that same policy would cost $4,660 a year and grow to only $527,000 in coverage when they are 80.

Steep rate increases

One of the key concerns among consumers is the rise of premiums.

?It?s probably the most frequent complaint I hear,? says Praeger, who heads the National Association of Insurance Commissioners? health and managed care committee. ?The problem is, the older policies weren?t priced right to begin with. Companies expected about 8 percent of customers to stop paying their premiums, when, in fact the lapse rate is closer to 2 percent.? That meant the insurers had to cover more beneficiaries than they expected at a time when the economic downturn has meant less return on their investments.

Praeger acknowledges that rate increase requests have posed a dilemma for insurance commissioners. ?If we don?t give them the rate increase they need, the insurance carriers could become financially impaired, and that doesn?t help people,? she says. In fact, in recent years, a number of companies have stopped selling policies. As a result, she adds, it?s hard to turn the increases down.

The policies can be very complicated, and Praeger advises consumers to consult with their accountant, attorney or other trusted financial adviser before purchasing a policy.

This article was produced in collaboration with Kaiser Health News. KHN is an editorially independent program of the Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation, a nonprofit, nonpartisan health-policy research and communication organization not affiliated with Kaiser Permanente.

Source: http://bangordailynews.com/2012/01/25/health/long-term-care-insurance-right-for-some-but-not-all/

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Studies: Avastin may fight early breast cancers (AP)

Surprising results from two new studies may reopen debate about the value of Avastin for breast cancer. The drug helped make tumors disappear in certain women with early-stage disease, researchers found.

Avastin recently lost approval for treating advanced breast cancer, but the new studies suggest it might help women whose disease has not spread so widely. These were the first big tests of the drug for early breast cancer, and doctors were cautiously excited that it showed potential to help.

In one study, just over one third of women given Avastin plus chemotherapy for a few months before surgery had no sign of cancer in their breasts when doctors went to operate, versus 28 percent of women given chemo alone. In the other study, more than 18 percent on Avastin plus chemo had no cancer in their breasts or lymph nodes at surgery versus 15 percent of those on chemo alone.

A big caveat, though: The true test is whether Avastin improves survival, and it’s too soon to know that ? both studies are still tracking the women’s health. The drug also has serious side effects.

“I don’t think it’s clear yet whether this is going to be a winner,” Dr. Harry Bear of Virginia Commonwealth University said of Avastin. But he added, “I don’t think we’re done with it.”

Bear led one study, in the United States. Dr. Gunter von Minckwitz of the University of Frankfurt led the other in Germany. Results are in Thursday’s New England Journal of Medicine.

Avastin (uh-VAS’-tihn) is still on the market for some colon, lung, kidney and brain tumors. In 2008, it won conditional U.S. approval for advanced breast cancer because it seemed to slow the disease. Further research showed it didn’t meaningfully extend life and could cause heart problems, bleeding and other problems. The government revoked its approval for breast cancer in November.

Now doctors can prescribe Avastin for breast cancer but insurers may not pay. Treatment can cost $10,000 a month. The drug is made by California-based Genentech, part of the Swiss company Roche. It is still approved for treating advanced breast cancer in Europe and Japan.

The new studies tested it in a relatively novel way ? before surgery. This is sometimes done to shrink tumors that seem inoperable, or to enable women to have just a lump removed instead of the whole breast.

The women in the studies had tumors that were large enough to warrant treatment besides surgery. Their cancers were not the type that can be treated by Herceptin, another widely used drug.

In the U.S. study, 1,200 women were given chemo or chemo plus infusions of Avastin. By the time of their surgery, no cancer could be found in the breasts of more than 34 percent of those given Avastin versus 28 percent of the others. (Surgeons still have to operate because they don’t know the tumor is gone until they check tissue samples.)

The German study involved 1,900 women including some with larger tumors. It used a stricter definition of cancer-free at surgery: no sign of disease in the breast or lymph nodes rather than just the breast. No cancer was seen in 18 percent of women on Avastin versus 15 percent of those given only chemo. Different chemo drugs were used ? a factor that might change Avastin’s effectiveness.

The U.S. study was paid for by the National Cancer Institute with some support from drug companies. The German study was sponsored by drug companies. Some researchers consult for Genentech or other makers of cancer drugs.

If even one of these studies shows a survival advantage for Avastin “that would be a game changer” although side effects remain a concern, said Dr. Gary Lyman. He is a Duke University researcher who was on the federal advisory panel that recommended revoking Avastin’s approval.

However, von Minckwitz said side effects are more justifiable in early breast cancer patients because “the intention is cure” rather than in late-stage disease where cure isn’t usually possible.

Of the more than 200,000 women in the U.S. diagnosed each year with breast cancer, about 30,000 are like those in the new studies, Lyman estimated.

But the studies’ impact could be far greater: The participants’ tissue samples are being analyzed for genes and biomarkers to predict which women are most likely to respond to Avastin. That could lead to a relook of using the drug for certain women with advanced disease, too.

Three other studies are under way testing Avastin in early breast cancer; one is expected to have results by the end of this year, said Dr. Sandra Horning, global development chief of cancer drugs for Roche and Genentech. The company does not plan to seek any change in Avastin’s use until more results are available, she said.

___

Online:

Studies: http://www.nejm.org

Avastin: http://www.avastin.com

___

Marilynn Marchione can be followed at http://twitter.com/MMarchioneAP

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/diseases/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20120125/ap_on_he_me/us_med_breast_cancer_avastin

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Arab League says Syria monitoring will continue (Reuters)

CAIRO (Reuters) ? Arab peace monitors will continue their work in Syria, the deputy head of the regional body said on Tuesday, after Gulf Arab states decided to pull their monitors out of the country.

“The mission will continue its task now because the protocol was temporarily extended till January 24,” Ahmed Ben Helli told reporters in Cairo.

He said the Arab League, which resolved on Sunday to prolong the mission, was waiting for Syria’s government to accept the extension. There were now 110 Arab monitors left in Syria after 55 Gulf Arab monitors withdrew, Ben Helli said.

(Reporting by Edmund Blair and Ayman Samir; Writing by Tom Pfeiffer)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/world/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20120124/wl_nm/us_syria

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Democrats get to break up GOP sand sculpture in SC

AAA??Jan. 23, 2012?6:00 PM ET
Democrats get to break up GOP sand sculpture in SC
AP

Members of The Democratic Women of Horry County, S.C., demolish the Republican 2012 Primary Debate sand sculpture Monday, Jan. 23, 2012, a feature from last week’s televised Myrtle Beach, S.C. debate hosted by the South Carolina GOP and televised by Fox News. The organization secured the rights to demolish the sand sculpture. Dubbed ?Mount Myrtle?, the sand feature is located across the street from the Sheraton Myrtle Beach Hotel and Convention Center and encompasses over 700,000 pounds of sand. (AP Photo/The Sun News, Steve Jessmore)

Members of The Democratic Women of Horry County, S.C., demolish the Republican 2012 Primary Debate sand sculpture Monday, Jan. 23, 2012, a feature from last week’s televised Myrtle Beach, S.C. debate hosted by the South Carolina GOP and televised by Fox News. The organization secured the rights to demolish the sand sculpture. Dubbed ?Mount Myrtle?, the sand feature is located across the street from the Sheraton Myrtle Beach Hotel and Convention Center and encompasses over 700,000 pounds of sand. (AP Photo/The Sun News, Steve Jessmore)

Members of The Democratic Women of Horry County, S.C., celebrate after they demolished the Republican 2012 Primary Debate sand sculpture Monday, Jan. 23, 2012, in Myrtle Beach, a feature from last week’s televised Myrtle Beach, S.C. debate hosted by the South Carolina GOP and televised by Fox News. The organization secured the rights to demolish the sand sculpture. Dubbed ?Mount Myrtle?, the sand feature is located across the street from the Sheraton Myrtle Beach Hotel and Convention Center and encompasses over 700,000 pounds of sand. (AP Photo/The Sun News, Steve Jessmore)

Flora Pickett, left, and Elizabeth Bowns help demolish a sculpture going first for the likenesses of candidates Mitt Romney and Newt Gingrich. “It felt great. I’m not a great fan of Newt so I wanted to get him first,” Pickett said. The Democratic Women of Horry County secured the rights to demolish the Republican 2012 Primary Debate Sand Sculpture today Monday, January 23, 2012, a visible feature from last week’s televised Myrtle Beach, SC debate hosted by the South Carolina GOP and televised by Fox News. Dubbed ?Mount Myrtle?, the sand feature is located across the street from the Sheraton Myrtle Beach Hotel and Convention Center and encompasses over 700,000 pounds of sand. ?The candidates did a lot of talking, and now we?ll clean up in the aftermath,? said the group’s president Sally Howard. ?In the words of Margaret Thatcher?If you want something said, ask a man?if you want something done, ask a woman.? Sun News Photo by Steve Jessmore

(AP) ? In South Carolina, it’s not just Republicans who have been bashing each other lately. Local Democrats picked up pink shovels and took a whack at a sand sculpture of six GOP hopefuls that had been erected at Myrtle Beach.

With the South Carolina primary over, a Democratic women’s group used pink shovels Monday to begin dismantling the sand sculpture depicting the Republican contenders. The sculpture was a prominent feature of the GOP debate Jan. 16 and took more than 700,000 pounds of sand to make.

A bulldozer finished the demolition job Monday as the women in yellow hard hats cheered. The sand is to be recycled into future sculptures.

The women won the right to demolish the sculpture after making a donation to a local crime-fighting cause.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/89ae8247abe8493fae24405546e9a1aa/Article_2012-01-23-GOP%20Sand%20Sculpture/id-6f227c88c0084486a2ad26e3e1feb6dd

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Equatorial Guinea gets $1M win over Libya

Co-host of African Cup of Nations earns bonus with 1-0 upset

By MARK WALSH

updated 4:57 p.m. ET Jan. 21, 2012

BATA, Equatorial Guinea – Equatorial Guinea made a dramatic and rich debut in the African Cup of Nations with a stunning 1-0 win over Libya in the tournament opener on Saturday.

Equatorial Guinea qualified for the first time only because it’s the co-host with Gabon, but it gave Africa’s showpiece event a terrific start despite police having to tear gas some of the thousands of fans who overcame the security at Bata Stadium to force their way in.

In a game in which Equatorial Guinea deserved to win, it threatened the upset throughout and finally delivered when Javier-Angel Balboa scored after racing onto a throughball and slotting past Libya goalkeeper Samir Aboud into the top corner in the 87th minute.

“We played a good game. We had trained so little time, but the tactical dedication of our players was great,” said Equatorial Guinea coach Gilson Paulo.

Paulo had only a few weeks to get to know his squad after replacing predecessor Henri Michel, who resigned just before the tournament.

This week, the team was promised a $1 million bonus from the son of the country’s president if the team won the match.

“It’s the famous $1 million,” midfielder Juvenal Edjogo-Owono said a grin. “For us the money is not very important, the most important thing is to start the competition with a win.

“Now we will see the future more optimistically.”

Edjogo-Owono missed a chance in the first half when his deflected shot rebounded off a post. Ivan Bolado put the rebound into the net, but the effort was disallowed for offside.

Despite injured captain Rodolfo Bodipo managing only a 15-minute substitute role, Equatorial Guinea belied its billing as the tournament’s lowest-ranked team by matching Libya and creating opportunities.

Libya controlled possession early on, the first half-chance falling to Walid al-Katroushi, who was tackled at full stretch by Rui Da Gracia just before shooting in the opening minutes.

Unexpectedly, the co-host then took control of the match, forcing Libya goalkeeper Samir Aboud into some nervous fumbles.

The game continued its surprise pattern into the second half. Thierry Fidjeu tried an acrobatic finish but hooked his volley wide in the 53rd.

Meanwhile, Libya’s players looked sluggish and hesitant – overawed perhaps by the expectations of a nation hoping to cap a year that included the overthrow of Moammar Gadhafi with sporting success at the African Cup.

After the final whistle, the fans streamed outside blowing vuvuzelas and dancing with their hands in the air.

Libya coach Marcos Paqueta congratulated Equatorial Guinea.

“The conditions were very difficult facing the Equatorial Guinea team at home,” he said.

“We started the game well, we kept the ball well, but the team started after that to get a bit nervous so we missed easy passes and lost control.”

? 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.


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Balotelli lifts Man City

??Mario Balotelli scored a stoppage-time penalty kick Sunday to give first-place Manchester City a 3-2 victory over Premier League title rival Tottenham.

Getty Images

Hat trick

Clint Dempsey became the first American to score a hat trick in England’s Premier League, helping Fulham rally from a halftime deficit to rout Newcastle 5-2 Saturday.

Source: http://nbcsports.msnbc.com/id/46084154/ns/sports-soccer/

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Europe to issue tough new data-protection rules soon (Reuters)

MUNICH/PARIS (Reuters) ? The European Union will propose tough new rules in the coming days on how corporations handle Internet users’ personal data, a long-awaited move that could have far-reaching implications for Web giants such as Google Inc and Facebook.

Viviane Reding, vice president of the European Commission, said in a speech on Sunday that the new data-protection legislation was needed to protect users and cut red tape for businesses in Europe.

“Only if consumers trust that their data is protected will they entrust companies with it … We need individuals to be in control of their information,” Reding said at the DLD conference of tech industry leaders in Munich.

But Reding also emphasized a need to simplify Europe’s approach to online data protection, arguing that the current system was too cumbersome and costly for business.

“In Europe we have too many rules, conflicting rules,” she said. “The extra cost to business of this fragmentation is 2.3 billion euros ($3 billion) a year.”

Europe’s new data-protection rules are expected to be issued on January 25.

The EU regulation will need to be approved by national governments, some of which, such as France and Germany, may resist seeing their oversight on privacy matters shift to Brussels.

The legislative process is likely to take at least two years, so the rules could still change considerably. Internet companies will not be required to comply before 2014 or 2015.

The new rules come amid widespread change in how people use the Internet. Social networks such as Facebook and LinkedIn have attracted nearly a billion users, while so-called cloud computing services, which allow businesses and people to stock data on distant servers and access it anywhere, are going mainstream.

The questions of who owns such data, to what end companies can use it and for how long remain major issues of debate among Internet firms, governments and consumers.

Facebook, the world’s largest social network, has been investigated by U.S. and European regulators for its treatment of user data and privacy policies. In November, it signed a settlement with the U.S. Federal Trade Commission that will subject it to 20 years of independent audits, and it recently signed an accord with Ireland’s privacy regulator on how it treats international users’ data.

There has also been a series of high-profile breaches such as one at Sony Corp’s online videogame network last year in which hackers stole the data of some 77 million users.

NEW POWERS

According to a draft obtained by Reuters, the EU proposals would bolster significantly regulators’ powers on fighting data-protection breaches, requiring companies to notify regulators when data has been stolen or mishandled.

The proposals also give member states new powers to fine companies up to 1 percent of their global revenues for violating EU data rules. The Financial Times reported in December that the rules would allow for fines up to 5 percent of global revenues, so the EU may have reconsidered its approach since then.

The proposals grant broad, new rights to individuals, including a so-called “right to be forgotten” that would allow people to request that their information be erased and not disseminated online.

The rules also create a “right to data portability” to ensure that people can easily transfer their personal information between different companies or services.

Such rules could force social networks to change the way they handle users’ data.

In written comments submitted to the EU last year, Facebook expressed concerns that the EU’s approach in some areas was too proscriptive for the fast-changing world of the Internet and urged caution on proposals for stiffer sanctions.

“There is a risk that an excessively litigious environment would impede the development of innovative services that can bring real benefit to European citizens,” the company wrote.

Participants at the DLD conference were also divided about coming EU changes.

Stefan Gross-Selbeck, CEO of Germany’s professional social network Xing, said his company was still subject to harsher rules than its U.S. counterparts.

“I appreciate the EU commitment to create a level playing field in Europe … But the regulation that Facebook’s founder Mark Zuckerberg is subject to is nothing compared to what I’m subject to.”

Chris Poole, founder of the online community 4chan that is a haven for hackers, welcomed the prospect of even tougher enforcement on companies that mishandle users’ data.

“I would love to see some regulation that would hold Sony responsible,” he said, referring to the PlayStation data breach last year. “They deserve to be punished.” ($1 = 0.7740 euros)

(Additional reporting by Claire Davenport and Justnya Pawlak in Brussels; Editing by Dale Hudson)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/internet/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20120122/wr_nm/us_eu_data

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TCTV Debate: Can SOPA Be Fixed Or Should It Stay Dead?

SOPA Debate Part 1.mov-2The controversial Stop Online Piracy Act (SOPA) has been pulled?and its Senate counterpart, the Protect IP Act (PIPA) is on hold. The Internet won this round, it seems. But don’t celebrate just yet. The forces behind these acts are simply regrouping. Should SOPA and PIPA be killed, or can they be fixed? We invited Viacom’s General Counsel and EVP?Michael Fricklas and?David Sohn, General Counsel and Director of the Center for Democracy And Technology, to debate the issue in the video above.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/DFBV8qBlagk/

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