Archive for the ‘ Internet ’ Category

China’s train ticket website gets 1 bln hits daily

The national train ticket website (www.12306.cn) has received more than 1 billion hits daily from Jan. 1 to Jan. 7.

It is the very first time that Chinese railway opens national online ticketing system and ticketing hotlines, Hu Yadong, vice-minister of railways, said on Sunday.

Thanks to these new ways, an average of 2 million train tickets were sold in each of the past few days and one third of passengers no longer need to queue up for hours at train stations or ticket agencies. So far, at least 10 million people have been registered at the website, said Hu.

It is estimated that more than 3 billion passengers will be transported in 2012’s Chinese Spring Festival season, up 9.1 percent from a year earlier, which hits a new record.

During the Spring Festival travel season Chinese rail will handle more than 235 million passenger trips, increasing 13.5 million trips or 6.1 percent, or 5.88 million passenger trips each day.

According to statistics, since 1990s the number of passengers has increased 5.6 percent annually. In recent years the annual net increase of passenger volume hits 200 million, nearly up 10 percent year on year. Last year, a total of 2.9 billion passengers were on the move during the Spring Festival travel season.

Tianya Hacked, 4 Million Passwords Published

The series of mega-hacks is continuing in China, with gigantic BBS community Tianya the latest in a series of high-profile hacking cases that has affected numerous internet services and revealed the passwords of millions of internet users.

The good — well, kinda good — news for Tianya users among the 4 million whose usernames and passwords were published online is that the data the hackers published is reportedly from a backup database made before 2009. Since an upgrade in 2010, Tianya has stored users passwords in an encrypted format, so anyone who has changed their password since 2009 shouldn’t have much to worry about (unless they still use the old username/password combination for other sites). Tianya currently has over 20 million registered users.

Of course, that raises a pretty obvious follow-up question: so Tianya’s password database wasn’t encrypted until 2010? Apparently at least some of them weren’t, with passwords stored in plain text in a database. In its statement about the hacking, Tianya says there are “historical reasons” for this, but declined to elaborate any further.

In any event, as if it wasn’t clear enough already, users of internet services in China should be very careful about the passwords they’re using. If you’re not sure whether your password is safe or not, we offer some tips to keeping your accounts and personal information secure at the end of this post.

Small Merchants Attack Tmall Over Higher Fees

OCT  11 thousands of small merchants “attacked” Tmall, China’s biggest B2C platform, with a flood of traffic and fake orders that crippled many of its brand sites.

The protest came in response to a recent decision by Tmall, a subsidiary of the Alibaba Group, to charge higher annual fees to merchants, upsetting small merchants.

About 7,000 small merchants gathered in the online chat rooms of YY Yuyin yesterday complaining about Tmall’s new rules, according to reports in the Chinese media. The gathering soon turned into several hours of online attacks upon big merchants on Tmall, who the small merchants claimed are favored by Tmall’s policy changes.

Tmall denounced the attacks today in an official statement, noting that they were organized by a group small merchants who want to press Tmall to change its new merchant management system.

Under the new regulations, merchants have to pay an advance deposit of at least RMB 10,000 to protect against contract violations. The new rules also raise the techinical services fee for Tmall merchants from RMB 6,000 to RMB 30,000 or RMB 60,000.

The merchant protest is unlikely to have a major impact upon TMall. Previous rule changes on Taobao, the Alibaba Group’s C2C e-commerce site, also resulted in protests, but the site remains China’s most popular e-commerce site by a wide margin. A few of the angry merchants may turn to TMall’s rivals such as Tencent’s new QQ Buy.

Jack Ma, CEO of Alibaba Group, was unmoved, stating on Sina Weibo today that the company will “continue to do whatever it has chosen to do.”

Small merchants are numerous on but contribute only a small percentage of the sales revenue and profits on Tmall. Over the past few years, Tmall has been trying to attract big brands and merchants to join to the platform, from whom it can generate more revenue. Tmall also said earlier that many small merchants are the source of counterfeits on Taobao and Tmall.

Major Chinese Internet companies have all entered China’s B2C market. Earlier this week, Tencent and Shanda launched their own B2C websites, in a hope to challenge the dominant position of TMall.

According to figures from Beijing-based research firm Analysys International, TMall accounted for 32.8% share in China’s B2C market in Q2 2011.

Groupon, Foursquare partner on real-time deals

Groupon has teamed up with location-based service Foursquare to offer its daily deals through the Foursquare mobile application, giving the Chicago-based company another way to sell its discounts.

Foursquare members “check in” to local businesses such as restaurants and bars with their mobile phones and can share their whereabouts with friends. New York-based Foursquare has amassed 10 million members worldwide and recently made a bigger push into loyalty programs and rewards.

“Foursquare’s goal is to help people connect in the real world, discover new places, and save money through Specials and Deals,” the company said in a statement. “We’re excited that Groupon’s daily deals and real-time deals will now be included in our Deals platform.”

Earlier this month, Foursquare announced it had partnered with five deal providers to integrate their offers into its Specials platform. Groupon was conspicuously absent from the list, which included several of the company’s major rivals, including LivingSocial and BuyWithMe. The other three partners were Gilt City, Zozi and AT&T, which offers deals through its yellowpages.com subsidiary in select cities.

With the Groupon partnership in place, the Chicago company’s deals will appear on Foursquare’s mobile app for purchase. Groupon is the only deal provider on Foursquare to offer real-time deals through the app. These are offers that are pushed to consumers based on their location and have a shorter purchase window to encourage spontaneity.

The Groupon link-up with Foursquare represents an expansion of Groupon Now, a real-time deal service that the company launched locally in May and has expanded to 25 markets. The service delivers deals to consumers based on their location. Unlike Groupon’s traditional deals, which typically have a 24-hour purchase window and require a minimum amount of buyers to activate, Groupon Now deals last just a few hours and do not have a tipping point.

“When we think of mobile addiction beyond (Groupon Now), we think Foursquare, and many of you guys do, too,” Groupon said in a Thursday post on its official blog announcing the partnership.

Are you in the Google+ circle?

The current times might be a watershed moment in the social media world, not just in Pakistan but all around the globe. The company that may or may not cause this revolution is Google.

In the past, Google has eliminated whatever competition came in its path of it’s search engine to the extent that “Google it” has replaced “search for it” in our vocabulary. It did the same when it integrated photos via Picasa and documents via Google Docs.

It has however not been able to make a place for itself in the social networking world but then the company’s only attempt was the half-baked Google Buzz. Now, Google has decided to take on the giants with its latest project Google+, a complete social networking stream and site, the likes of which we have never seen before.

Although it is closed for the general public right now, I received an invitation to check out its Beta version.

So, what is the difference between Google+ and Facebook? I think we can limit this down to three broad areas:

1. Google+ Hands on and Circles

The basic content stream may look Facebook-ish, but the approach is entirely different under the hood. First of all, instead of categories among friends we have ‘circles.’ You can add and subtract your contacts to these circles.

What is really cool is how you can target different circles and share different content streams with them without going crazy with privacy settings ala Facebook. For instance you can say “I hate you all” in a status update and share it with a circle called ‘losers’ – very streamlined.

The ‘like’ button has been replaced by the ‘plus one’ button and there is a separate box aggregating this in your profile as a ‘brag it’ badge.You can add the usual pictures, videos and all that jazz to any content stream and they show up in a much wider space as well – so less scrolling, more ogling.

2. Hangout

Not being satisfied with taking Facebook on, the brains behind G+ have thrown a challenge at Skype as well.

This feature is not available everywhere in Pakistan at the moment (do we have to wonder why?) but will involve your name showing as online and ready to “hang” if allowed. Through this an audio/video conference can be initiated between the parties. Don’t ask me how I tested this but I found it very fast and streamlined.

The feature also offers YouTube integration, letting users collaboratively watch videos and create running commentaries in the chat, or verbally using the new Google Voice Search technology. Imagine live cricket match replays on it – with all of your friends.

3. Huddle

To me, the best feature of the new G+ social network is its ability to cross platform chat. Yes, Facebook has its chat but then that’s just plain annoying and this module is very similar to Gtalk and even faster in its mobile version which is available in the G+ app for android. So, as soon as it’s available for Nokia, Blackberry and iPhone, we can say “bye bye” to Whatsapp and that cave to cave… umm… Blackberry to Blackberry network known as BBM.

Can BitCoin, the First Open Source Currency, Threaten the Dollar?

It’s been called “the most dangerous technological project since the internet itself.”  Can the BitCoin give power back to the people?

In the book “Mythmakers & Lawbreakers” edited by Magpie Kiljoy, Alan Moore is interviewed and makes a very profound point.  The writer was paraphrasing a professor at the London School of Economics, and stated the following:

“[The lecturer] was saying that the only reason that governments are governments is that they control the currency; they don’t actually do anything for us that we don’t pay for, other than expose us to the threat of foreign wars by their reckless actions. They don’t actually really even govern us; all they do is control the currency and rake off the proceeds.”

Now, I’d certainly been aware of our government’s currency power creating problems for people in a system which they had never had a hand in creating or to which they had willingly agreed in the first place, quite contrary to Thomas Jefferson’s vision of a government that would dissolve and reconstitute every few decades.  But, it wasn’t until reading the Moore interview that a crystallization occurred, and I began to wonder if currency was perhaps the best way to neutralize a government’s power.

The initial thought had been that this solution could be arrived at by encouraging people to engage in black markets, which many billions do worldwide already.  Not effective enough.  Then it occurred to me that someone must create an alternate currency through which individuals can disengage from their country’s currency, thereby bypassing violent insurrection.

This is essentially what the creators of BitCoin have done with the introduction of their open source digital currency, controlled by each user, kept on one’s computer and impervious to hacks and manipulation, including the inflation that occurs when governments flood countries with newly-minted currency.

Not only does the BitCoin already have practical value—for users are already exchanging them via the internet—but it has struck a symbolic blow against states everywhere, even in its very early stages.

What are the defining characteristics of a BitCoin?  They cannot be tracked or frozen, for one thing.  They cannot be taxed, which would remove yet another source of power the state has over individuals.  The power of the state essentially lies in its taxation powers, which allows it to wage war and allow for modern empire, as well as dispense that taxpayer money to other countries.  BitCoin exchanges can be done anywhere in the world and fees are extremely minimal compared to similar exchanges within and across banks.

BitCoins have already been used to purchase books, video games and other items.  Of course, since the BitCoins can’t be tracked, it opens up a wealth of exploitable opportunity for black markets such as drug dealing and prostitution.  This alone will alarm politicians, who one can imagine are already considering making the new currency illegal.  The same thing could be said of CraigsList, however, and yet it is still legal.

How does one generate BitCoins?  This is where things get interesting and slightly confusing to the not-so-tech savvy.  Each computer can act as a BitCoin miner.  The computer “mines” BitCoins at a predictable rate, which requires time and energy (processing power, electricity and anywhere from 5 to 10 years), and then the fully mined BitCoins are stored locally on the computer.  The risk being that computer theft or computer crashes will erase BitCoin files, leaving users BitCoin-less.  It seems likely, however, that there will be ways of backing up BitCoin accounts.

One of the most fantastic aspects of BitCoin is that it is open source software, which means that one wouldn’t have to buy the software, but simply download it.  Open source has long been a dream of many hackers going back to the creation of home computers and the internet, and has taken on renewed vigor as corporations and governments have gradually consolidated power over computer software and the internet.

The catch with BitCoin is that there will be a limit to the number of BitCoins ultimately generated.  According to a Launch Conference article, only 21 million can be generated by 2140, “but at this point the electricity and time it would take to produce a BitCoin is larger than the actual value of a BitCoin (your laptop might take five years to make one batch of 50, and they currently trade at $6.70 per BitCoin).”

This built-in limitation would seem to restrict the BitCoin to the fringes, unless more and more people download the software, and the value of the BitCoin skyrockets.  And since it has limitations, it’s clear that not all human transactions could be done by way of the BitCoin, which would certainly limit its mission to put power back in the hands of people.  Question: would the tech savvy have an advantage in generating BitCoins?  This seems to be what BitCoin Tech Lead Gavin Andreson is intimating when he told Jason Calacanis on “This Week in Start-Ups” that generating BitCoins has become a specialized business.

In the interview, Calacanis gives BitCoin 24 months before it is dismantled by the US government.  And my good friend noted yesterday that it probably won’t take long before it’s somehow infiltrated and subverted by the US government.  Gavin Andresen, in fact, has already been asked to speak about the software to the CIA’s investment arm In-Q-Tel.  Also interesting is the possibility that open source currencies could revolutionize work: power relationships, work days, etc., freeing up humans to enjoy life instead of being tethered to jobs they hate.

Whatever happens, the invention of the BitCoin is a rather seismic event, and might point to the way of the future, in which the people might finally wrest the power that the state and corporations have held over individuals for far too long.