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Tag Archive: Turkey

PayPal Expands Global Service

PayPal Expands Global Service

Folks who thought eBay’s online payment service PayPal was already pretty ubiquitous might be in for a little shock: the service is expanding its global reach by rolling out fully localized sites in Mexico, Singapore, and Hong Kong, as well as adding nine new languages to its primary Web site, including Danish, NOrwegian, Portuguese, Russian, Swedish, Thai, Traditional Chinese, Turkish, and Bahasa Indonesian.

The additions bring the number of localized PayPal sites to 18, and make PayPal accessible to about 120 million more potential users. Users will be able to send and receive payments using their local currencies, as well as conduct transactions with PayPal’s existing 65 million account holders.

XO Laptop Hits Europe

One Laptop Per Child (OLPC) has been selling its machines through Amazon in the US since September, after having had trouble delivering machines under its Give One, Get One scheme, through which buyers obtain a laptop for themselves and in the price donate one to a school child in a developing country.

As of today the scheme will begin operating in Europe, again through Amazon, with OLPC’s distinctive laptop available in all 27 EU countries, as well as Turkey, Switzerland and Russia, the BBC reports. It will retail for around $395.

Vodafone to Offer iPhone in 10 Markets

International mobile operator Vodafone—which owns part of the U.S.’s Verizon Wireless—has announced that it has reached an agreement with Apple to sell the iPhone in ten international markets—including Italy, where Telecom Italia had recently been reported to have made a non-exclusive deal with Apple to sell a 3G iPhone.

In addition to Italy, Vodafone says it will offer iPhones in Australia, the Czech Republic, Egypt, Greece, India, Portugal, New Zealand, South Africa, and Turkey. Vodafone hasn’t released any other information, including which version of the iPhone it plans to sell: the existing GSM/EDGE model, or the forthcoming 3G model.

Pakistan Causes YouTube Disruption

Pakistan Causes YouTube DisruptionIt was a small mistake with major consequences. According to the BBC, in a domino effect, a decision by Pakistan to block YouTube led to the site being unavailable globally for over an hour yesterday.   Reportedly, the country blocked the site because it contained content deemedoffensive to Islam, although no one seemed absolutely certain what that was. Some believed it was because YouTube had the Danish cartoons regarding Muhammad that caused an uproar before, while otherssaid it was because of a trailer for a new film by Dutchman Geer Wilders, which is very negative about the religion.   Whatever the root cause, the BBC believes Pakistan Telecom hijacked YouTube’s server address, and passed the details to the country’s ISPs. This meant that whenever a Pakistani user attempted toaccess YouTube, they were re-directed elsewhere.   The larger issue appears to have arisen because an engineer at ISP PCCW leaked out information of thehijack, which brought a global block – at least until YouTube engineers informed PCCW of the problem, after which all was corrected.   Needless to say, joining the Ban YouTube club –which includes Thailand and Turkey, among others – hasn’t helped the government’s popularity in Pakistan. Wahaj-us-Siraj, convener of the Association of Pakistan Internet ServiceProviders, said,   "They [Pakistan's telecommunications authority] asked us to ban it immediately… and the order says the ban will continue until further notice. Users are quite upset.They’re screaming at ISPs which can’t do anything. The government has valid reason for that, but they have to find a better way of doing it. If we continue blocking popular websites, people will stopusing the internet."  

Turkey Blocks Access to YouTube…Again

A Turkish court has blocked access to Google’s popular video sharing Web site YouTube because the site offers clips allegedly insulting the country’s founder, Mustafa Kemal Ataturk. Turkish visitors attempting to visit YouTube are instead being greeted with a notice in English and Turkish saying access to the site has been banned by the order of an Ankara court issued January 17.

Back in March, another Turkish court blocked access to YouTube for two days over similar complaints. In that instance, the block was lifted after YouTube removed the videos at the source of the complaint. There’s no word on how long the current ban may last, but if the past episode is any indicator, Google will move to have access re-established quickly.

Dailymotion The Next YouTube?

Have you heard of Dailymotion? Perhaps not, but what’s being touted as the French answer to YouTube has been racking up successes.   It claims to be the Web’s largest independent video site, with 1.2 billion pages views and more than 37 million unique visitors in July alone. And it’s just raised a cool $34 million is a second round of funding.   Big it might be, but it remains very much in the shadow of the giant. Dailymotion might add 15,000 videos every day, but YouTube adds six hours of video every single minute and is believed to be responsible for a staggering 10% of all Web traffic.   However, the smaller profile has helped Dailymotion in one respect – it hasn’t been the recipient of copyright suits yet, although that might change, since there’s plenty of copyrighted material available there.   However, the site recently imposed a 20-minute upper limit on video slips, which means no more entire episodes of shows, and they plan to bring in new filtering technology to remove all copyrighted material, which will build on their obligation to remove “all clearly illegal content which has been effectively brought to our attention.”   Now flush with cash, Dailymotion plans to increase its overseas expansion. It already has sites in 14 different countries, including South Korea and Turkey, and looks set to work in the areas largely ignored by YouTube. Naturally, part of that expansion will mean increasing the investment in infrastructure for advertisers.  

Hackers Hit UN Site

A group of hackers, claiming to be from Turkey, attacked the United Nations web site and forced the U.N. to take some sections offline for the repair.   The hackers, who called themselves kerem 125, Gsy and MOsted defaced pages reserved for statements from U.N. Secretary General Ban Ki-Moon.   Hackers with the same names have attacked many sites, including that of a travel agency, where they identified themselves as “Turkish defacers.”   In the U.N. attack, they accused both Israel and the U.S. of killing children, and added the message,   “Hey Ysrail and Usa dont kill children and other people Peace for ever No war.”   In addition to Ban Ki-Moon’s pages, the self-described cyberprotesters also hacked into other pages on the site. Although pages were removed, those of the Secretary General were later reinstated.

HP Dragon Helps Track Telecom Use For Feds

The government is watching you. Or they can, anyway. Hewlett-Packard announced on Thursday a new way for telecommunications service providers to store information about what their customers are doing, and quickly retrieve it at the government’s request. The HP Data Retention and Guardian ONline (DRAGON) system is intended to help governments fight against global terrorism, organized crime and drug trafficking.

The need for systems like DRAGON is driven by tightening government legislation that determines what records service providers must keep on hand. Although actual content is never stored, the details of tracking land lines, cell phones, VoIP phones, email, voicemail, Internet usage, text messaging, and other features can add up to terabytes worth of data every year.

Turkish ISP Blocks YouTube Over Insult

Throughout the world, it’s generally well-known that Mustafa Kemal Atatürk is the founder of the modern republic of Turkey; it’s not so generally well-known that insulting Atatürk is a crime in the modern republic of Turkey.

Tuesday, Turk Telecom, the nations largest fixed-line communications provider, blocked access to Google’s video sharing site YouTube following a court ruling deeming a video available on the service were insulting to Atatürk. According to Turkish media reports, the court ruling came after “hundreds of thousands” of Turks complained about the video, which featured insults written in English appearing over a picture of Atatürk and the Turkish flag.

Omnifone Announces Mobile Music Service

Omnifone Announces Mobile Music Service

Britain’s Omnifone has announced an ambitious new MusicStation mobile music service, aiming to provide an all-you-can-eat subscription-based music from all major music labels to owners ot 2.5G and 3G mobile phones throughout Europe (and, eventually, other regions). The service will be priced at £1.99/&euro2.99 a week, and has already set up partnership deals with 23 mobile network operators.

"The launch of MusicStation heralds the next generation mobile music experience for the hundreds of millions of mobile phone subscribers worldwide who want a simple, easy-to-use digital music experience," said Rob Lewis, CEO of Omnifone, in a statement. "MusicStation will give users of any music-capable handset the ability to legally access, download and enjoy an unlimited amount of music, from a global music catalogue supported by the music industry, all for a small weekly fee, wherever they are."

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