Friday, February 5, 2016

Showdown in Europe over privacy has US firms ducking for cover

Showdown in Europe over privacy has US firms ducking for cover

[FRANKFURT] The free flow of data across the Atlantic, the lifeblood of modern business dealings, faces an uncertain future, despite a belated, high-level deal between European and US officials this week.
Restive regulators in Europe are gearing up to enforce tough privacy laws and further court challenges await, activists say.
The breakdown of the main framework for providing legal cover for cross-border data transfers has companies large and small racing to find workable alternatives. These range from stricter data-handling policies to new technologies or paying to lease datcenters based in Europe.
Companies, facing renewed threats by privacy regulators, find themselves on legal thin ice with many of the existing procedures for managing cross-border data flows, experts say.
Google, Facebook and other big Internet services which transfer mountains of data globally are likely to be the first targets in any regulatory crackdown, they said.
Hailed as a "Privacy Shield" by European Union and U.S. negotiators who reached the new cross-border data sharing agreement, the deal faces a labyrinthine approval process before the new rules have any chance of coming into force. "Once it becomes available, businesses will want to be cautious about signing up to Privacy Shield given the potential legal challenges that special interest groups have already suggested they will be considering," cautioned Marc Dautlich, a partner with Pinsent Masons in London.
Cross-border data transfers are used in many industries for sharing employee information, when consumer data is shared to complete credit card, travel or e-commerce transactions, or to target advertising based on customer preferences.
Since 2000, up to 4,500 US companies had come to count on a simple set of rules, dubbed Safe Harbour, allowing them to self-certify they complied with privacy principles for personal data transfers from Europe to the United States. Many other firms, especially fast-growing start-ups, did nothing to comply.
In October, the European Court of Justice threw out Safe Harbour. In a landmark decision, it ruled the mechanism provided inadequate protections under European privacy laws against the sorts of spying by U.S. intelligence agencies revealed by former NSA contractor Edward Snowden in 2013.
Independent-minded national privacy regulators say they need to know more details about the so-called "Privacy Shield" but many openly doubt the agreement can bridge the gulf between the two continents' privacy practices. "Transfers to the US cannot take place on the basis of the invalidated Safe Harbour decision. EU data protection authorities will therefore deal with related cases and complaints on a case-by-case basis," Europe's national privacy regulators said in a joint statement on Wednesday.
The data commission for Schleswig-Holstein, Germany's most northern state, said it was prepared to take action on national data protection rules if citizens file complaints.
The regulator warned in October that firms found in violation of German data protection rules could face fines up to 300,000 euros (US$335,000). Across the region, multi-million euro fines could be imposed on offenders and commercial transfers of personal data prohibited, privacy experts say.
An alternative form of legal compliance offered by the EU are "standard contact clauses", or "model contracts", which require companies to spell out exactly what data is being transferred to what US companies and the measures to be taken to ensure compliance with European privacy law.
Some national data authorities offer what is known as "binding corporate rules" (BCRs), which companies mostly use for cross-border employee data transfers inside their organisations. But BCRs can take up to 12-18 months to be formalised, while model contracts can take days or weeks.
However, many regulators and privacy experts say that the same high court ruling that struck down Safe Harbour may also render model contracts and BCRs invalid, making them only a temporary safe haven for meeting European rules.
Using technology to keep data within Europe's borders is a longer term, if pricier solution. Leasing datacenters based in Europe rather than relying on centralised US servers has started to take off over the past year or two.
That's an approach huge cloud-based software companies Microsoft and Amazon.com and specialist datacenter providers have begun offering to customers to meet a patchwork of data residency requirements in Europe.
US file-sharing company Syncplicity has introduced software that keeps sensitive corporate data created in Europe within the region, offering new ways to store data in the cloud locally.
REUTERS

WikiLeaks' Assange to demand freedom as wins backing from UN panel

WikiLeaks' Assange to demand freedom as wins backing from UN panel

[LONDON] WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange will demand that he be allowed to leave the Ecuadorian embassy in London a free man, after a UN panel ruled on Friday he was detained arbitrarily there.
Assange, who enraged the United States by publishing hundreds of thousands of secret US diplomatic cables, has been holed up in the embassy since 2012 to avoid a rape investigation.
Assange appealed to the UN panel, saying he was a political refugee whose rights had been infringed by being unable to take up asylum in Ecuador. The panel of five independent experts ruled in Assange's favour on Friday.
The former computer hacker denies allegations of a 2010 rape in Sweden, saying the charge is a ploy that would eventually take him to the United States where a criminal investigation into the activities of WikiLeaks is still open.
Britain said it had never arbitrarily detained Assange and that the Australian had voluntarily avoided arrest by jumping bail to flee to the embassy.
Both Sweden and Britain said they would not be bound by the panel's ruling.
But Assange, 44, said in a short statement posted on Twitter: "Should I prevail and the state parties be found to have acted unlawfully, I expect the immediate return of my passport and the termination of further attempts to arrest me." He had said that if he lost the appeal then he would leave his cramped quarters at the embassy in the Knightsbridge area of London, though Britain said he would be arrested and extradited to Sweden as soon as he stepped outside.
The decision in his favour marks the latest twist in a tumultuous journey for Assange since he incensed Washington with his leaks that laid bare often highly critical US appraisals of world leaders from Vladimir Putin to the Saudi royal family.
While the ruling - which will be published on Friday - may draw attention to Assange's fate, it is unlikely to immediately affect the current investigations against him.
The UN Working Group does not have the authority to order the release of a detainee, but it has considered many high-profile cases and its backing carries a moral weight that puts pressure on governments.
Recent high-profile cases submitted to the U.N. panel include that of jailed former Maldives President Mohamed Nasheed, represented by Amal Clooney, and of Washington Post reporter Jason Rezaian, an Iranian-American jailed in Iran until a prisoner swap last month.
But governments have frequently brushed aside its findings such as a ruling on Myanmar's house arrest of opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi in 2008, a call in 2008 for the Iraqi government not to hang former dictator Saddam Hussein, and frequent pleas for the closure of the US military prison at Guantanamo Bay.
"We have been consistently clear that Mr Assange has never been arbitrarily detained by the UK but is, in fact, voluntarily avoiding lawful arrest by choosing to remain in the Ecuadorean embassy," a British government spokeswoman said.
Swedish prosecutors said the UN decision had no formal impact on the rape investigation under Swedish law. A U.S. Grand Jury investigation into WikiLeaks is ongoing.
White House spokesman Josh Earnest said it was unclear what impact "a pronouncement from the United Nations would have on the situation." "But, you know, but he's facing serious charges inside of Sweden," Earnest said.
Assange said that he had been deprived of fundamental liberties including access to sunlight and fresh air, adequate medical facilities and legal and procedural security.
Since he sought refuge in the small embassy, British media have reported Assange has suffered from an irregular heartbeat, a chronic cough and high blood pressure.
Assange made international headlines in early 2010 when WikiLeaks published classified US military video showing a 2007 attack by Apache helicopters that killed a dozen people in Baghdad, including two Reuters news staff.
Later that year, the group released over 90,000 secret documents detailing the US-led military campaign in Afghanistan, followed by almost 400,000 internal US military reports detailing operations in Iraq.
More than 250,000 classified cables from US embassies followed, then almost three million dating back to 1973.
REUTERS

French trade deficit narrows in December to 3.9b euros

French trade deficit narrows in December to 3.9b euros

[PARIS] France's trade deficit narrowed more than expected in December to 3.9 billion euros (US$4.36 billion), seasonally adjusted data published on Friday by the customs office showed.
A Reuters poll of five economists had an average forecast for a deficit of 4.4 billion euros.
The deficit was pared from 4.527 billion euros in November, revised from an initial reading of 4.63 billion, and was the smallest since September.
The customs office said imports of aeronautics materials and chemical products had fallen in December, while exports of aerospace and space goods held up.
For the whole of the year, the trade deficit came to 45.670 billion euros, the lowest since 2009.
Separately, the Bank of France reported that the current account balance showed a deficit of 700 million euros in December after 1.5 billion in November.
REUTERS

China not going back to 'old road' of capital controls: forex regulator

China not going back to 'old road' of capital controls: forex regulator

[BEIJING] China will continue to crack down on illegal foreign exchange activities but won't revert back to"old road" of capital controls, an official of the country's foreign exchange regulator said.
The remarks were made by Pan Gongsheng, head of the State Administration of Foreign Exchange (SAFE), at a meeting with Andrew Rashbass, CEO of Euromoney Institutional Investor PLC, and Blackstone's president Tony James on Wednesday. The document was published on Friday.
Mr Pan said China's economic growth is in reasonable range. Its yuan currency is basically stable against a basket of currencies, and there is no basis for continued yuan depreciation.
He added that the international balance of payments position is basically stable, while cross-border capital flow risks are under control.
REUTERS

CAD seized private banker's 12 bank accounts with nearly S$10m in 1MDB probe

CAD seized private banker's 12 bank accounts with nearly S$10m in 1MDB probe

SINGAPORE's white-collar crime buster, the Commercial Affairs Department (CAD), seized 12 accounts holding some S$9.7 million of Yak Yew Chee, a senior private banker of wealth manager BSI Singapore, court documents revealed.
Mr Yak, 58, is believed to be the relationship manager of Malaysian tycoon Jho Low and some entities linked to Malaysia's controversial state-backed firm 1Malaysia Development Berhad. He has been a banker with BSI Singapore from 2010 - currently on paid leave - and prior to that was with RBS Coutts, said a source.
CAD officer Wan Abdul Rahman Abdul Latiff said in an affidavit that the banker was one of the individuals being investigated for possible breaches of the Penal Code and the Corruption, Drug Trafficking (Confiscation of Benefits) Act in its ongoing probe which "encompasses various entities and individuals".
On Friday, the banker who was not present in court and was represented by senior counsel Roderick Martin of Martin & Partners, withdrew his motion to lift the freeze on his bank accounts after Singapore's deputy public prosecutor Tan Kiat Pheng confirmed - upon request by Mr Martin - that Mr Yak could remit some S$1.76 million to Singapore from abroad to settle tax and legal matters and that these funds will not be frozen.
The judge granted Mr Yak's request to withdraw the application.
Mr Yak had filed a criminal motion in the Singapore High Court on Nov 24 last year seeking for all the funds in his bank accounts in DBS, Bank of China, CIMB Bank and OCBC, which were seized by the CAD, to be released to pay taxes and legal fees. His tax liability for 2015 alone amounted to S$1.36 million based on an employment income of S$6.9 million in 2014.
The public prosecutor submitted that Mr Yak's application should be dismissed as the accounts frozen in Singapore were not shown to be necessary for various expenses. This more so as the banker had remitted close to S$8 million to his overseas bank accounts since 2012, a bulk or S$5.6 million of which was transferred out only after BSI commenced investigations against him for misconduct.
Based on the affidavit, Mr Yak was also seeking the release of the funds to continue having his solicitors on retainer given the "complex criminal investigation" against him which was taking place against an international background.
The probe was described as a "high-profile" criminal matter concerning "multiple, complex issues of law" and various high net worth individuals including public personalities and politicians and numerous cross-border transactions involving large sums of money via intermediary funds.
"My client is not guilty of any wrongdoing," said Mr Martin outside the courthouse.

Profit fell more than 50% at France's biggest bank

Profit fell more than 50% at France's biggest bank

France Paris Taxi Divers Uber Protest FlagREUTERS/Charles PlatiauFrench striking taxi drivers block the traffic as they demonstrate at Porte Maillot in Paris during a national protest about competition from private car ride firms like Uber, France, January 26, 2016.
It's tough being a big investment bank at the moment.
Profit at BNP Paribas, France's biggest bank, fell 52% in the fourth quarter. 
Income fell to €665 million (£511 million) from more than €1 billion a year earlier.
The bank had to write-down the value of assets at BNL its Italian unit and took a hit in its investment banking division as costs increased.
Like almost all the other big European bank, BNP Paribas is restructuring, and is planning to save up to a billion euros by scaling back its investment bank and boosting its wealth management divisions.
Tough rules on how banks must plan for losses on their assets, combined with anemic global growth and low interest rates have made traditional investment banking business models non-viable.
Credit Suisse said it will accelerate its cost-cutting programme — read job cuts — on Thursday after posting its first annual loss since 2008. Meanwhile, Deutsche Bank is struggling with the same problems and last month posted a huge €6.8 billion (£5.1 billion) loss for 2015.

News Corp's revenue fall for fourth quarter in a row

News Corp's revenue fall for fourth quarter in a row

Passers-by walk near the News Corporation building in New York in this June 28, 2012 file photo. REUTERS/Keith Bedford Thomson ReutersPassers-by walk near the News Corporation building in New York
(Reuters) - News Corp's quarterly revenue fell for the fourth quarter in a row, hurt by a slump in its core news and information services business, which includes Dow Jones and the Wall Street Journal.
The company, which is controlled by media mogul Rupert Murdoch, said total revenue fell 4.3 percent to $2.16 billion in the second quarter ended Dec. 31 from $2.26 billion a year earlier.
Net income available to shareholders fell to $62 million, or 11 cents per share, from $142 million, or 24 cents per share.
(Reporting by Anya George Tharakan in Bengaluru; Editing by Savio D'Souza)
Read the original article on Reuters. Copyright 2016. Follow Reuters on Twitter.

Support for Brexit is snowballing

Support for Brexit is snowballing

Support for Britain leaving the European Union — Brexit — has gained a massive amount of momentum since the UK's Prime Minister David Cameron published his draft EU deal this week.
In the latest YouGov poll,commissioned by The Times newspaper, 45% are in favour of leaving the 28 nation bloc while 36% support staying in the EU.
This is the latest poll since Cameron released his draft deal with the European Union on February 2, which was immediately showered with criticism.
yougov8YouGov/TheTimes
The draft EU deal has four components, which you can read here, but the biggest issues that people care about is the sections related to immigration.
  • There will be an "emergency brake" that will stop EU migrants from being paid in-work benefits in full for fours years.
  • Britain would be allowed to work with other parliaments to stop EU laws being made. Known as the "red card" it will mean that if 15 EU countries club together, they can block EU legislation
However, Cameron was forced to defend the deal after the public, the opposition, and even politicians within his own party slammed the deal for being without substance.
For example, one of Cameron's fellow Tory MPs said the plan was akin to "polishing poo."
YouGov said in a statement that "the negative press has pushed [the] Leave [vote] significantly ahead" in the polls.
"All of the changes proposed within the deal are popular – aside from withdrawing from the commitment to "ever closer union", supported by 47% to 14% but opposed 32%-26% by Labour voters, all the main components are supported by a majority and tend to be supported by voters of all stripes," added YouGov.
Overall, only 22% said the draft EU deal is a "good deal" while 56% say the changes do not go far enough.
yougov9YouGov/TheTimes
Meanwhile, Cameron is allegedly aiming to get the endorsement of popular politician, the Mayor of London Boris Johnson, to help his cause to keep Britain in the EU.
On top of that, Cameron is expected to promise the public a new UK sovereignty law to steer Brits away from voting against a Brexit, according to the Financial Times.

Obama is about to propose a provocative new tax on oil

Obama is about to propose a provocative new tax on oil

U.S. President Barack Obama speaks at an event honoring the 7th anniversary of the signing of the Lilly Ledbetter Fair Pay Act at the White House in Washington January 29, 2016. REUTERS/Kevin LamarqueThomson ReutersBarack Obama speaks at the Lilly Ledbetter Fair Pay Act event in Washington, DC.
U.S. President Barack Obama will propose a new $10 a barrel fee on oil in his budget plan next week, as the White House seeks to boost the nation's investments in clean transportation projects, the White House said on Thursday.
The proposed fee, which would be paid by oil companies, is likely to fall flat in the Republican-controlled U.S. Congress.
Reporting by Ayesha Rascoe and Roberta Rampton. Editing by Eric Beech.
Read the original article onReuters. Copyright 2016. Follow Reuters on Twitter.

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