The Joy of Trump
Vancouver Island Eyes on the World
Friday, July 27, 2012
Sunday, July 22, 2012
Wealthy hiding $21 trillion in tax havens, report says - World - CBC News
CBC News
Posted: Jul 22, 2012 1:58 PM ET
The world's "super-rich" are hiding between $21 trillion US and $32 trillion in tax havens, according to a new report. (Lee Jin-man/Associated Press)
| ||||||
(Note:CBC does not endorse and is not responsible for the content of external links.)
The "super-rich elite" are hiding more than $21 trillion US in tax havens around the world, an amount roughly equal to the combined GDP of the United States and Japan, according to a new report.
Commissioned by the Tax Justice Network, an independent British organization, the report is said to be the most comprehensive ever done concerning what it calls the “offshore economy.”
Researched and written by James Henry, an expert on tax havens, the report states the hidden money could be as large as $32 trillion, and represents a massive black hole in the world's economy.
The amount of tax income lost "is large enough to make a significant difference to the finances of many countries,” Henry noted.
Hidden money from elites living in developing countries is "enough to make a significant difference to the finances of many countries... that are now struggling to replace lost aid dollars and pay for climate change.
Indeed, once we take these hidden offshore assets and the earnings they produce, 'debtor countries' are in fact revealed to be wealthy," he said.
The Report says:
- UBS, Credit Suisse and Goldman Sachs are the three private banks handling the most assets offshore
- 92,000 people, or 0.001 per cent of the world’s population, hold $21 trillion in hidden assets
"These estimates reveal a staggering failure: inequality is much, much worse than official statistics show, but politicians are still relying on trickle-down to transfer wealth to poorer people," said John Christensen of the Tax Justice Network.
Source:
Wealthy hiding $21 trillion in tax havens, report says - World - CBC News
http://www.cbc.ca/news/world/story/2012/07/22/tax-havens.html
Always be Drunken
To be read by romantics or fools?
“Even when she walks one would believe that she dances.”
― Charles Baudelaire
“The beautiful is always bizarre.”
― Charles Baudelaire
“a multitude of small delights constitute happiness”
― Charles Baudelaire
“There are women who inspire you with the desire to conquer them and to take your pleasure of them; but this one fills you only with the desire to die slowly beneath her gaze.”
― Charles Baudelaire
“Be always drunken.
Nothing else matters:
that is the only question.
If you would not feel
the horrible burden of Time
weighing on your shoulders
and crushing you to the earth,
be drunken continually.
Drunken with what?
With wine, with poetry, or with virtue, as you will.
But be drunken.
And if sometimes,
on the stairs of a palace,
or on the green side of a ditch,
or in the dreary solitude of your own room,
you should awaken
and the drunkenness be half or wholly slipped away from you,
ask of the wind,
or of the wave,
or of the star,
or of the bird,
or of the clock,
of whatever flies,
or sighs,
or rocks,
or sings,
or speaks,
ask what hour it is;
and the wind,
wave,
star,
bird,
clock will answer you:
"It is the hour to be drunken!”
― Charles Baudelaire, Paris Spleen
Hurdler demonstrates FLOW
“Even when she walks one would believe that she dances.”
― Charles Baudelaire
“The beautiful is always bizarre.”
― Charles Baudelaire
“Life has but one true charm: the charm of the game. But what if we’re indifferent to whether we win or lose?”
― Charles Baudelaire
― Charles Baudelaire
― Charles Baudelaire
“One should always be drunk. That's all that matters...But with what?
With wine, with poetry, or with virtue, as you chose. But get drunk.”
― Charles Baudelaire
― Charles Baudelaire
“There are women who inspire you with the desire to conquer them and to take your pleasure of them; but this one fills you only with the desire to die slowly beneath her gaze.”
― Charles Baudelaire
Nothing else matters:
that is the only question.
If you would not feel
the horrible burden of Time
weighing on your shoulders
and crushing you to the earth,
be drunken continually.
Drunken with what?
With wine, with poetry, or with virtue, as you will.
But be drunken.
And if sometimes,
on the stairs of a palace,
or on the green side of a ditch,
or in the dreary solitude of your own room,
you should awaken
and the drunkenness be half or wholly slipped away from you,
ask of the wind,
or of the wave,
or of the star,
or of the bird,
or of the clock,
of whatever flies,
or sighs,
or rocks,
or sings,
or speaks,
ask what hour it is;
and the wind,
wave,
star,
bird,
clock will answer you:
"It is the hour to be drunken!”
― Charles Baudelaire, Paris Spleen
Tuesday, July 17, 2012
Monday, July 16, 2012
India at the Bottom of the Pyramid
Marketing to the "bottom of the pyramid" is a fascinating, potentially hugely profitable idea that involves the challenge of carving off the "fat" on technologies and creating affordable products like the automobile called the Tata Nano, low priced shampoo sachets, a much-needed, cheap water filter or medical equipment to save millions of lives. You direct your innovation and marketing efforts to the overlooked billions of people living on under $2.5o per day who have vast unmet needs ....
Pedestrians watch the first Tata Nano car being driven on the road in Mumbai on July 17, 2009.
(Rajanish Kakade/AP)
Shashi Tharoor
Shashi Tharoor is an an author and member of India’s Parliament.
SOURCE:
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/report-on-business/small-business/starting-out/lessons-i-learned-from-three-startup-failures/article4377100/
India’s frugal revolution - The Globe and Mail
by UCLA
on Sep 26, 2008
Pedestrians watch the first Tata Nano car being driven on the road in Mumbai on July 17, 2009.
(Rajanish Kakade/AP)
ECONOMY
India’s frugal revolution
Shashi Tharoor
New Delhi — The Globe and Mail
Published
India’s sliding economy has inspired gloom and doom far and wide, but increasingly bearish sentiment is misplaced.
India still offers hope, but, to understand why, you have to leave macroeconomic indicators aside and go microeconomic.
Indian companies have long recognized the opportunities in meeting previously overlooked demand at the “bottom of the pyramid.”
Shampoo sachets originated in India more than two decades ago, creating a market for a product that the poor had never before been able to afford.
Indians without the space or money to buy a whole bottle of shampoo for 100 rupees could spend five for a sachet that they’d use once or twice.
But India’s leadership in “frugal innovation” goes beyond downsizing:
it involves starting with the needs of poor consumers – itself a novel term (who knew the poor could be consumers?)
– and working backward.
Indians are natural leaders in frugal innovation, imbued as they are with the jugaad system of developing makeshift but workable solutions from limited resources. Jugaad essentially conveys a way of life, a worldview that embodies the quality of making do with what you have to meet your needs.
But jugaad is not about pirating products or making cheap imitations of global brands.
It is about innovation; finding inexpensive solutions, often improvised on the fly, within the constraints of a resource-starved developing country full of poor people.
An Indian villager constructs a makeshift vehicle to transport his livestock and goods by rigging a wooden cart with an irrigation hand pump that serves as an engine. That’s jugaad.
Common machines and household objects are reincarnated in ways that their original manufacturers never intended.
Everything is reusable or reimaginable. If you cannot afford your cellphone bills, you invent the concept of the “missed call” – a brief ring that is not answered but that signals your need to speak to the recipient.
Indian ingenuity has produced a startling number of world-beating innovations, none more impressive than the car - Tata Nano, which, at $2,000, costs roughly the same as a high-end DVD player in a Western luxury car.
Of course, there’s no DVD player in the Nano (and no radio, either, in the basic model) but its innovations (which have garnered 34 patents) are not merely the result of doing away with frills (including power brakes, air conditioning, and side-view mirrors).
Reducing the use of steel by inventing an aluminum engine, increasing space by moving the wheels to the edge of the chassis and relying on a modular design that enables the car to be assembled from kits proved conclusively that you could do more with less.
Then there’s the GE MAC 400, a hand-held electrocardiogram (ECG) device that costs $800 (the cheapest alternative costs more than $2,000), and the Tata Swachh, a $24 water purifier (10 times cheaper than its nearest competitor).
The GE MAC 400 uses just four buttons, rather than the usual dozen, and a tiny portable printer, making it small enough to fit into a satchel and even run on batteries; it has reduced the cost of an ECG to just $1 per patient.
Given that some five million Indians die of cardiovascular diseases every year, more than a quarter of them under 65, and that about two million die every year from drinking contaminated water, these innovations’ value is apparent.
Many other examples of frugal innovation are already in the market, including:
- a low-cost fuel-efficient mini-truck,
- an inexpensive mini-tractor being sold profitably in the U.S.,
- a battery-powered refrigerator,
- a $100 electricity inverter, and
- a $12 solar lamp.
An Indian company has invented a cheaper Hepatitis B vaccine, bringing down the price from $15 per injection to about 10 cents.
Insulin’s price has fallen by 40 per cent, thanks to India’s leading biotech firm.
A Bangalore company’s diagnostic tool to test for tuberculosis and infectious diseases -costs $200, compared to $10,000 for comparable equipment in the West.
Even the financial sector has seen innovation:
Just three years ago, there were only 15 million bank accounts in a country of 1.2 billion people.
Indians concluded that if people won’t come to the banks, the banks should go to the people.
The result has been the creation of brigades of travelling tellers with hand-held devices, who have converted the living rooms of village homes into makeshift branches, taking deposits as low as a dollar.
More than 50 million new bank accounts have been established, bringing India’s rural poor into the modern financial system.
Frugal innovation pervades the Indian economy.
It is one of the reasons why there is more dynamism in the Indian economy than those who look only at the macroeconomic data believe.
Sometimes it is important to stop looking at the forest and focus on the trees.
India still offers hope, but, to understand why, you have to leave macroeconomic indicators aside and go microeconomic.
Indian companies have long recognized the opportunities in meeting previously overlooked demand at the “bottom of the pyramid.”
Shampoo sachets originated in India more than two decades ago, creating a market for a product that the poor had never before been able to afford.
Indians without the space or money to buy a whole bottle of shampoo for 100 rupees could spend five for a sachet that they’d use once or twice.
But India’s leadership in “frugal innovation” goes beyond downsizing:
it involves starting with the needs of poor consumers – itself a novel term (who knew the poor could be consumers?)
– and working backward.
Instead of complicating or refining their products, Indian innovators strip them down to their bare essentials, making them
affordable, accessible, durable and effective.
Indians are natural leaders in frugal innovation, imbued as they are with the jugaad system of developing makeshift but workable solutions from limited resources. Jugaad essentially conveys a way of life, a worldview that embodies the quality of making do with what you have to meet your needs.
But jugaad is not about pirating products or making cheap imitations of global brands.
It is about innovation; finding inexpensive solutions, often improvised on the fly, within the constraints of a resource-starved developing country full of poor people.
An Indian villager constructs a makeshift vehicle to transport his livestock and goods by rigging a wooden cart with an irrigation hand pump that serves as an engine. That’s jugaad.
Common machines and household objects are reincarnated in ways that their original manufacturers never intended.
Everything is reusable or reimaginable. If you cannot afford your cellphone bills, you invent the concept of the “missed call” – a brief ring that is not answered but that signals your need to speak to the recipient.
Indian ingenuity has produced a startling number of world-beating innovations, none more impressive than the car - Tata Nano, which, at $2,000, costs roughly the same as a high-end DVD player in a Western luxury car.
Of course, there’s no DVD player in the Nano (and no radio, either, in the basic model) but its innovations (which have garnered 34 patents) are not merely the result of doing away with frills (including power brakes, air conditioning, and side-view mirrors).
Reducing the use of steel by inventing an aluminum engine, increasing space by moving the wheels to the edge of the chassis and relying on a modular design that enables the car to be assembled from kits proved conclusively that you could do more with less.
Then there’s the GE MAC 400, a hand-held electrocardiogram (ECG) device that costs $800 (the cheapest alternative costs more than $2,000), and the Tata Swachh, a $24 water purifier (10 times cheaper than its nearest competitor).
The GE MAC 400 uses just four buttons, rather than the usual dozen, and a tiny portable printer, making it small enough to fit into a satchel and even run on batteries; it has reduced the cost of an ECG to just $1 per patient.
The Swachh uses rice husks (one of India’s most common waste products) to purify water.
Given that some five million Indians die of cardiovascular diseases every year, more than a quarter of them under 65, and that about two million die every year from drinking contaminated water, these innovations’ value is apparent.
Many other examples of frugal innovation are already in the market, including:
- a low-cost fuel-efficient mini-truck,
- an inexpensive mini-tractor being sold profitably in the U.S.,
- a battery-powered refrigerator,
- a $100 electricity inverter, and
- a $12 solar lamp.
Moreover, medical innovations are widespread.
An Indian company has invented a cheaper Hepatitis B vaccine, bringing down the price from $15 per injection to about 10 cents.
Insulin’s price has fallen by 40 per cent, thanks to India’s leading biotech firm.
A Bangalore company’s diagnostic tool to test for tuberculosis and infectious diseases -costs $200, compared to $10,000 for comparable equipment in the West.
Even the financial sector has seen innovation:
Just three years ago, there were only 15 million bank accounts in a country of 1.2 billion people.
Indians concluded that if people won’t come to the banks, the banks should go to the people.
The result has been the creation of brigades of travelling tellers with hand-held devices, who have converted the living rooms of village homes into makeshift branches, taking deposits as low as a dollar.
More than 50 million new bank accounts have been established, bringing India’s rural poor into the modern financial system.
Frugal innovation pervades the Indian economy.
It is one of the reasons why there is more dynamism in the Indian economy than those who look only at the macroeconomic data believe.
Sometimes it is important to stop looking at the forest and focus on the trees.
Shashi Tharoor is an an author and member of India’s Parliament.
SOURCE:
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/report-on-business/small-business/starting-out/lessons-i-learned-from-three-startup-failures/article4377100/
India’s frugal revolution - The Globe and Mail
C.K. Prahalad Describes the Growth of Microfinance, UCLA
by UCLA
on Sep 26, 2008
Best-selling author shares his vision of world-class products for the world's poorest customers.
Visit UCLA Anderson School of Management
http://www.anderson.ucla.edu/
Click here for more Distinguished Speaker Videos from UCLA Anderson School
of Management
http://www.anderson.ucla.edu/x17389.xml
Visit UCLA Anderson School of Management
http://www.anderson.ucla.edu/
Click here for more Distinguished Speaker Videos from UCLA Anderson School
of Management
http://www.anderson.ucla.edu/x17389.xml
Saturday, July 14, 2012
Quotes
The internet is busy disassembling the newspaper and reorganising its elements in new forms,"...
: "Newspapers have little option but to follow their readers online," says publisher...
"We are creating a future for children, yet our greatest concern remains money," teacher tells...
Keep others in suspended terror: cultivate an air of unpredictability."
Small acts, when multiplied by millions of people, can transform the world. - Howard Zinn
Thousands have lived without love, not one without water - W.H. Auden
"Know your enemy and yourself, and you need not fear the outcome of a thousand battles" - TsunTzu
Al Jazeera English (AJEnglish) on Twitter
: "Newspapers have little option but to follow their readers online," says publisher...
"We are creating a future for children, yet our greatest concern remains money," teacher tells...
"Know your enemy and yourself, and you need not fear the outcome of a thousand battles"
- Sun Tzu
Keep others in suspended terror: cultivate an air of unpredictability."
Great things are not done by impulse, but by a series of small things brought together. - Vincent Van Gogh
They are not only idle who do nothing, but they are idle also who might be better employed.
- Socrates
Human history is a race between education and catastrophe. - H G Wells
Thousands have lived without love, not one without water - W.H. Auden
"Know your enemy and yourself, and you need not fear the outcome of a thousand battles" - TsunTzu
Al Jazeera English (AJEnglish) on Twitter
JOKE: Where Are Your Limitations?
Every limitation limits us as an artist to some extent.
I think most people, including myself, live safely within their limits. But here’s why it’s important to constantly test those limits and explore where they lie.
A) Society. Your limitations are imposed on you by society.
Exploring the edge of your fear is the only way to learn and improve and to combat the brainwashing that society (and your peers, colleagues, bosses, friends, family) constantly impose on you.
B) Business. Going past the limitations of society or your peer group can help you solve problems that nobody has looked at yet. If you are the first guy standing on unexplored territory you can put the flag down and start charging people for it.
Source:
Where Are Your Limitations? Altucher Confidential
Quotes
"The greatest things ever done on Earth have been done little by little."
- William Jennings Bryan
A good marriage is one which allows for change and growth in the individuals and in the way they express their love.
- Pearl S. Buck
Friday, July 13, 2012
Green TEchnologies
Book Review: 'Clean Money' By John Rubino
April 18, 2012 | includes: ADM, AMSC, ANDE, APD, BG, ENER, ENS, ESLRQ.PK, FSLR, GE, HTM, IBM, ITRI, JCI, ORA, PG, PX, SI, SPWR, UTX, VMI
"Clean Money - Picking Winners in the Green-Tech Boom," by John Rubino (John Wiley & Sons, Inc., 2009)
This book is a must read for all investors as well as those interested in learning about technological advances in the alternative energy. It is comprehensive in the sense that it covers all areas of clean and green technologies.
It is brief in the sense that it explains only the information needed by any investor to be well aware of anything green before making an investment decision. The book uses less technical jargon and is an easy read.
Transformation of Oil Economies to Green Economies
First part of the book conveys a strong message that humans need to adapt again to old ways of living. We have been using earth's resources unscrupulously and at an accelerating pace to fulfill our insatiable lavish living lifestyles. It is a harsh realization that the resources like oil and forest that we thought were in abundance are, in fact, limited. The earth cooled itself by absorbing zillions of tons of carbon-dioxide by ancient life forms and stored it as oil. Now we have been and are warming up the earth again by releasing all the trapped carbon and sublimely destroying our own habitat.
The book not only provides a repository of publicly traded companies and private venture funded companies that are in the verge of going public, but also provides a lucid explanation of each of the emerging technologies for the novice.
Alternative Energy Stocks to the Rescue
The second part of the book details all the recent trends in energy generation, storage and distribution. Huge strides are being made in solar power, battery technologies, hybrid automobiles, efficient power distributions using smart grids, biofuels and so forth. The chapters list companies of all sizes, public, private and the with potential to become public, what green technologies have failed, what may fail or succeed. It also lists clean tech public companies with their stocks' ticker symbols across global markets (stock exchanges).
Listed below are some of the key publicly traded alternative energy technology companies listed in the U.S. as mentioned in the book:
Solar Power: First Solar (FSLR), Evergreen Solar (ESLR) Energy Conversion Devices (ENER), SunPower (SPWR)
Wind Power: General Electric (GE), Siemens (SI), Valmont Industries (VMI)
Geothermal: U.S. Geothermal (HTM), Ormat Technologies (ORA)
Energy Storage: P&G/Duracell (PG), Johnson Controls (JCI), Enersys (ENS)
Bio Fuels: Archer Daniels Midland (ADM), Bunge (BG), Andersons (ANDE)
Fuel Cells: Air Products (APD), Praxair (PX), United Technologies (UTX)
Smart Grid: IBM (IBM), Itron (ITRI), American Superconductor (AMSC)
Water and Waste Are Gold
The third part of the book discusses clean technologies related to human necessities of water, living space, food and the by-product of human consumptions, pollution. With the ever increasing human population there is a dearth of fresh water even for people in developed countries. There is a huge growth potential in water related stocks. With increasing cost of power and pervasive talk of corporate social responsibilities, companies are building LEED certified buildings, retrofitting existing office spaces, reducing inefficiencies, and conserving energy. All these are possible with green building technologies and green materials. With depleting arable land, scarcity of irrigation, and an increasing number of mouths to feed, agriculture related stocks are to be watched very closely. Cleaning up the trash we have been dumping into earth in all its forms, namely, land, water and air, is also a big business.
The final part of the book gives some historical viewpoint of bubbles and bear markets and possible strategies to invest in these green technologies in either directions, up or down. It gives some valuable tips on different ways to invest in these stocks via alternative energy funds, ETFs and foreign markets.
Use This "Pocket" Book to Prepare for the Boom in Green Energy Stocks
The emergence of the global economy out of the financial crisis of the beginning decade of this 21st century will be the harbinger of the green tech boom. There have been few green tech bubbles in the past, but this time the bubble will be prolonged and huge. The book should be in the desk, not in the shelf, of every investor who wants to renew ones' portfolio with these green baby stocks.
Disclosure: I have no positions in any stocks mentioned, and no plans to initiate any positions within the next 72 hours.
Link: http://seekingalpha.com/article/507961-book-review-clean-money-by-john-rubino?source=reuters
Book Review: 'Clean Money' By John Rubino - Seeking Alpha
April 18, 2012 | includes: ADM, AMSC, ANDE, APD, BG, ENER, ENS, ESLRQ.PK, FSLR, GE, HTM, IBM, ITRI, JCI, ORA, PG, PX, SI, SPWR, UTX, VMI
"Clean Money - Picking Winners in the Green-Tech Boom," by John Rubino (John Wiley & Sons, Inc., 2009)
This book is a must read for all investors as well as those interested in learning about technological advances in the alternative energy. It is comprehensive in the sense that it covers all areas of clean and green technologies.
It is brief in the sense that it explains only the information needed by any investor to be well aware of anything green before making an investment decision. The book uses less technical jargon and is an easy read.
Transformation of Oil Economies to Green Economies
First part of the book conveys a strong message that humans need to adapt again to old ways of living. We have been using earth's resources unscrupulously and at an accelerating pace to fulfill our insatiable lavish living lifestyles. It is a harsh realization that the resources like oil and forest that we thought were in abundance are, in fact, limited. The earth cooled itself by absorbing zillions of tons of carbon-dioxide by ancient life forms and stored it as oil. Now we have been and are warming up the earth again by releasing all the trapped carbon and sublimely destroying our own habitat.
We have reached the critical hour and it's the most opportune time to act. And we are waking up. Energy companies and scientists are embracing technologies to maximize utilization of renewable energy forms like solar, wind, tides, geothermal etc. The next boom or bubble is about to start along the lines of the industrial bubble of the early and mid 20th Century and the Internet bubble of the late 90s.
The book not only provides a repository of publicly traded companies and private venture funded companies that are in the verge of going public, but also provides a lucid explanation of each of the emerging technologies for the novice.
Alternative Energy Stocks to the Rescue
The second part of the book details all the recent trends in energy generation, storage and distribution. Huge strides are being made in solar power, battery technologies, hybrid automobiles, efficient power distributions using smart grids, biofuels and so forth. The chapters list companies of all sizes, public, private and the with potential to become public, what green technologies have failed, what may fail or succeed. It also lists clean tech public companies with their stocks' ticker symbols across global markets (stock exchanges).
Listed below are some of the key publicly traded alternative energy technology companies listed in the U.S. as mentioned in the book:
Solar Power: First Solar (FSLR), Evergreen Solar (ESLR) Energy Conversion Devices (ENER), SunPower (SPWR)
Wind Power: General Electric (GE), Siemens (SI), Valmont Industries (VMI)
Geothermal: U.S. Geothermal (HTM), Ormat Technologies (ORA)
Energy Storage: P&G/Duracell (PG), Johnson Controls (JCI), Enersys (ENS)
Bio Fuels: Archer Daniels Midland (ADM), Bunge (BG), Andersons (ANDE)
Fuel Cells: Air Products (APD), Praxair (PX), United Technologies (UTX)
Smart Grid: IBM (IBM), Itron (ITRI), American Superconductor (AMSC)
Water and Waste Are Gold
The third part of the book discusses clean technologies related to human necessities of water, living space, food and the by-product of human consumptions, pollution. With the ever increasing human population there is a dearth of fresh water even for people in developed countries. There is a huge growth potential in water related stocks. With increasing cost of power and pervasive talk of corporate social responsibilities, companies are building LEED certified buildings, retrofitting existing office spaces, reducing inefficiencies, and conserving energy. All these are possible with green building technologies and green materials. With depleting arable land, scarcity of irrigation, and an increasing number of mouths to feed, agriculture related stocks are to be watched very closely. Cleaning up the trash we have been dumping into earth in all its forms, namely, land, water and air, is also a big business.
The final part of the book gives some historical viewpoint of bubbles and bear markets and possible strategies to invest in these green technologies in either directions, up or down. It gives some valuable tips on different ways to invest in these stocks via alternative energy funds, ETFs and foreign markets.
Use This "Pocket" Book to Prepare for the Boom in Green Energy Stocks
The emergence of the global economy out of the financial crisis of the beginning decade of this 21st century will be the harbinger of the green tech boom. There have been few green tech bubbles in the past, but this time the bubble will be prolonged and huge. The book should be in the desk, not in the shelf, of every investor who wants to renew ones' portfolio with these green baby stocks.
Disclosure: I have no positions in any stocks mentioned, and no plans to initiate any positions within the next 72 hours.
Link: http://seekingalpha.com/article/507961-book-review-clean-money-by-john-rubino?source=reuters
Book Review: 'Clean Money' By John Rubino - Seeking Alpha
Thursday, July 12, 2012
Quotes
"The first requisite of success is the ability to apply your physical and
mental energies to one problem without growing weary."
- Thomas Edison
The first principle is that you must not fool yourself and you are the easiest person to fool.
- Richard P. Feynman
Marc Goodman | Profile on TED.com
Marc Goodman on the Web
Marc Goodman: Global Security Futurist
Why you should listen to him:
Goodman heads the Future Crimes Institute, a think tank and clearinghouse that researches and advises on the security and risk implications of emerging technologies. He also serves as the Global Security Advisor and Chair for Policy and Law at Singularity University.
"Moore’s Law moves fast, Goodman points out, while statute progresses like molasses. In between lies a huge potential for economic growth and public good — or stagnation, discord, and collapse. "Ted Greenwald on Forbes.com
Quotes by Marc Goodman
-
“We are at the dawn of a technological arms race, an arms race between people who are using technology for good and those who are using it for ill.”
-
“All the drug dealers and gang members with whom I dealt had [a cell phone] long before any police officer I knew did. ”
-
“A search engine can determine who shall live and who shall die.”
-
“The ability of one to affect many is scaling exponentially — and it's scaling for good and it's scaling for evil.”
-
“More connections to more devices means more vulnerabilities.”
-
“If you control the code, you control the world. This is the future that awaits us.”
-
“To hackers, DNA is just another operating system waiting to be hacked.”
-
“If you're expecting the people who built [airport security] to protect you from the coming robopocalypse, you may want to have a backup plan.”
Watch this talk »
Marc Goodman | Profile on TED.com
Marc Goodman | Profile on TED.com
Terrified Terrorism Expert!
Marc Goodman: A vision of crimes in the future
License: Standard YouTube License
Calgary Stampede et al
Tuesday: A man photographs a full moon in Brasilia, Brazil. (Ueslei Marcelino/Reuters)
Wednesday: A helicopter drops water on a forest fire outside Big Piney, Wyoming. (Jim Urquhart/Reuters)
A man dressed as a giant holds a young girl during the so-called ‘giants and big heads parade’ during the San Fermin festival on July 10, 2012. Tens of thousands of festival-goers gather in the northern Spanish city for the week-long party, made famous for the running of the bulls. (Pedro Armestre/AFP/Getty)
Source:
CBC News - Latest Canada, World, Entertainment and Business News
http://www.cbc.ca/news/world/photos/2727/#igImgId_45230
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