May 21, 2013

Yahoo’s board approves $1.1 billion Tumblr acquisition: WSJ

 Yahoos board approves $1.1 billion Tumblr acquisition: WSJ

(Reuters) – has approved a deal to buy blogging and site Tumblr for $1. in cash, the cited people familiar with the matter as saying on Sunday.

Such an acquisition would be Marissa Mayer’s largest deal since taking the of the once-iconic in July 2012. Yahoo is keen on fast-growing Tumblr because its younger user base would bolster the older website’s “cool factor,” the technology AllThingsD cited the sources as saying.

Mayer, who spent at Inc, is trying to revitalize a former Internet powerhouse that in recent years has struggled with declining business. On its home page, Tumblr says it hosts 108 million blogs, with 50.7 billion posts between them.

Yahoo declined to comment, while Tumblr did not respond to requests for comment.

The deal comes after a recent failed attempt to buy a controlling stake in French video site Dailymotion, owned by France Télécom SA. Tumblr, one of the more successful Internet start- out of New York, has only just begun earning revenue through advertising. On its home page, Tumblr says it hosts 108 million blogs, with 50.7 billion posts between them.

Yahoo has invited press to an event in Manhattan on Monday at which it promised to “share something special,” without elaborating.

(Reporting By Jeanine Prezioso; Editing by Marguerita Choy)

Yahoo to vote on $1.1 billion Tumblr buy: AllThingsD

 Yahoo to vote on $1.1 billion Tumblr buy: AllThingsD

(Reuters) – Inc’ will meet on Sunday to vote on whether to offer $1. in cash for New York-based blogging service , tech AllThingsD cited sources close to the situation as saying on Friday.

Such an acquisition would be ’s largest deal since taking the of the once-iconic Internet company in July 2012. Yahoo is keen on Tumblr because its younger user base would enhance the older website’s “cool factor,” the technology blog cited the sources as saying.

The news could be announced as soon as Monday, it said. Yahoo has invited press to an event in Manhattan at which it promised to “share something special,” without elaborating.

Mayer, who spent at Inc, is trying to revitalize a former Internet powerhouse that in recent years has struggled with declining business. On its home page, Tumblr says it hosts 108 million blogs, with 50.7 billion posts between them.

Yahoo declined to comment, while Tumblr did not respond to requests for comment.

(Reporting by ; Editing by Eric Walsh)

Analysis: Big Tech tests the waters of the music stream

 Analysis: Big Tech tests the waters of the music stream

() – Apple, Google and Amazon are furiously maneuvering for position in the online music business and looking at ways to make streaming profitable, despite the fact that pioneer Pandora has never made a profit.

It has been more than a decade since the iPod heralded the revival of Apple and presaged the smartphone revolution, even as music-sharing site was showing the disruptive power of the Internet in the music business.

Now Google, Amazon.com Inc and Apple are among the powerhouses sounding out top recording industry executives, according to sources with knowledge of talks and media reports. Streaming service Pandora is spending freely and racking up losses to expand globally. Even social media stalwarts and are jumping on the bandwagon.

All of them see a viable music streaming and subscription service as crucial to growing their presence in an exploding mobile environment. For Google and Apple, it is critical in ensuring users remain loyal to their mobile products.

Music has been integral to the mobile experience since the early days of iTunes, which upended the old models with its 99-cent per song buying approach. Now, as smartphones and tablets supplant PCs and virtual storage replaces songs on devices, mobile players from handset makers to social networks realize they must stake out a place or risk ceding control of one of the largest components of mobile device usage.

About 48 percent of smartphone users listen to music on their device, making it the fourth most popular media-related activity after , games and news, according to a ComScore survey of mobile behavior released in February. Users ranked a phone’s music and video capability at 7.4 on a scale of 1 to 10, with 10 being most important purchase consideration factor, according to the study.

“Music is very strategic for the various electronic devices Samsung manufactures,” said Daren Tsui, CEO and co-founder of streaming music service mSpot, which Samsung bought last year to create the Music Hub service now available on Galaxy smartphones in the United States and Europe.

“By owning it, we can absolutely customize the music experience and leverage the fact that it’s not just a service but there’s also a hardware component.”

In January, Beats Electronics, the startup co-founded by recording supremo Jimmy Iovine and hip-hop performer-producer Dr. Dre, and backed by Universal and Warner Music, announced a new streaming-subscription service dubbed “Daisy” to take on Pandora and Spotify starting this summer.

Now, industry insiders expect Apple, Google and other technology titans to jump into the fray. Apple is talking with music labels about tacking a subscription service option onto iTunes, sources have said, while Google is said to be planning a YouTube subscription music service, according to media reports.

“There are some content creators that think they would benefit from a subscription revenue stream in addition to ads, so we’re looking at that,” a YouTube spokesperson said, but declined to comment on any specific negotiations.

Apple declined to comment.

Microsoft is already promoting its Xbox Music service. Their entry promises to catalyze an industry shake-up and propel music streaming further into the mainstream.

“ITunes was great but it needs a step forward,” Iovine, chairman of Universal Music’s Interscope-Geffen-A&M Records, told the AllThingsD conference in February. “There is an ocean of music out there that people want.”

MOBILE MUSIC LOVERS

Music streaming, or playing songs over the Internet, has in recent years begun to come into its own as listeners increasingly choose to stream songs from apps like Pandora via their smartphones, rather than buy and store individual tracks.

The ad-free subscription model, where consumers pay a flat fee for near-unlimited listening time, is relatively new and quickly gaining popularity.

Pandora, one of the pioneers, is now trying to convert users of its free ad-supported radio service into subscribers. It says mobile users account for more than two thirds of its music, up from just 5 percent of listener-hours three years earlier.

Subscription services are expected to have crossed the 10 per cent mark as a share of total digital music revenues in 2012 for the first time, according to a recent report from the International Federation of the Phonographic Industry, which represents the recording industry worldwide.

Consumers spent $5.6 billion worldwide for digital music in 2012, an increase of 9 percent, offsetting the decline in CDs and other physical ways to provide music. That gave the industry its best growth since 1998, albeit a miniscule 0.3 percent, according to the IFPI.

Pure buyers “have to spend hundreds of dollars a month on music, which most people can’t afford to do,” Spotify founder and CEO Daniel Ek told Reuters in an interview last week at South-by-Southwest Interactive. “It’s pretty obvious that the access model or the subscription model is a much better proposition for most people.”

U.S. consumers will stream an estimated 100 billion tracks this year, says David Bakula, senior vice-president for client development and analytics for Nielsen Entertainment.

“The big question is who has the business model to make it work,” said Bakula, a former executive at Universal Music, one of the four major music labels. “The first ones in the market may not be the winners.”

Apple CEO recently met with Iovine and other Beats executives to find out more about that business. It is unclear if Apple will join Beats’ Project Daisy.

SHOW ME THE MONEY

Making money off music streaming is difficult. Leading players Pandora and Spotify, despite attracting hundreds of millions of dollars in financing and millions of subscribers, have never reported a cent of profit.

No less a personage than himself was a skeptic.

“Never say never, but customers don’t seem to be interested in it,” the late Apple co-founder and online music visionary told Reuters in a 2007 interview. Apple’s current executives have not publicly stated their views on streaming music.

Pandora, which went public in 2011, now has 67 million monthly listeners worldwide – a 41 percent jump from a year ago – together listening to more than 13 billion hours of music.

But its losses more than doubled to $38.1 million in the year to January 31, 2013, hurt by the high cost of standard streaming licenses that typically have a per-track royalty model. This has forced Pandora, which relies mainly on advertising for revenue, to cap free mobile listening at 40 hours per month.

It and other music services such as Clear Channel Communications’ iHeartRadio are now urging lawmakers in the U.S. Congress to pass the “Internet Radio Fairness Act,” which would set royalty rates for subscription music services using the same standard that has so far been applied to other forms of radio.

But a group of 125 musicians, including Billy Joel and Rihanna, are speaking up against it, arguing that the bill would cut by 85 percent the amount of money an artist receives when his or her songs are played over the Internet.

The issue of how recording labels and musicians will be paid is one of the biggest roadblocks to growth. Competition will almost certainly force a shakeout, with winners and losers.

That could accelerate once major technology companies like Amazon and Google flex their marketing muscles, not to mention Apple with its ability to leverage its enormous base of online music buyers. The California gadget giant is unlikely to cede its lead in selling music without a fight.

While streaming could undercut sales of music tracks, Apple has always maintained that if there is potential for cannibalization of its products, the gadget maker would rather be in charge than let others in on it.

Finally, Microsoft has a large audience of Windows and Xbox players to whom it can promote Xbox Music Pass, a $9.99 a month service it launched in October. The software giant has declined to talk about its future plans in this area.

Bring it on, says Ek from Spotify.

“It’s rare that gigantic companies figure out a new way to do something peripheral,” Ek said. “I don’t believe the world will only be controlled by a Google or an Apple. It will be companies who are great at games like EA, at films like , or at music like Spotify.”

(Additional reporting by Gerry Shih in San Francisco; Editing by Claudia Parsons)

Gmail To Prevent Drunk Messaging (Well, On The Weekends, At Least)

3ea3330e9a82cfaf4afec80f816c35e9 Gmail To Prevent Drunk Messaging (Well, On The Weekends, At Least)

(PhatzNewsRoom / The Frisky) — We’ve all been there, we’ve had a bit too much to drink — more than some of us would care to admit — and suddenly, calling, , or emailing an seems like the best. Idea. Ever!! You know it never goes well and the the next morning is worse than the raging hangover. It’s not just old flames we drunkenly reach out to, either — there are also estranged friends and family members, old (or, worse, current) bosses and co-workers, and random cuties online. Back when Friendster was the du jour and I was nursing a and wounded ego, I spent more than one wine-soaked evening exchanging messages with attractive, 28-38 year-old men in my area, messages I hope stay as buried as that broken relationship I was trying to get over.

On occasions like those, it would have been nice to have someone — anyone! — stop me and say, “Wendy, do you really want to send that message? Are you sure it’s not just the talking?” I can’t guarantee I wouldn’t have pushed “send” just the same, but still, maybe a voice of reason would have saved me from one or two of my more embarrassing drunken messaging . If has anything to say about it, all of us are about to have that much-needed voice of reason in our lives…well, on the weekends, anyway (and provided you don’t suck at math).

According to Gmail’s official , it has just launched a new Labs feature called Mail Goggles that could prevent you from you may later regret. When you enable the feature, which is only available on late night weekends (“at that time you’re most likely to need it”), it will make sure you’re in your right state of mind by having you solve a few simple math problems before letting you send your message. The only thing that would improve my life even more is a feature that asks, “Are you really going out wearing that?” every time I left the house. Hey , get on it, okay?

20 Things We’re Only Good At When We’re Drunk

e128794cbae72ae1093fd67a5e283de0 20 Things We’re Only Good At When We’re Drunk

(PhatzNewsRoom / The Frisky) — This Sunday is St. Patrick’s Day, a holiday which holds many different meanings for different religious and ethnic groups, but for many young people, it’s generally interpreted as “The Day We All Get Super Drunk At Noon.” And so, in the spirit of overindulgence, I thought I’d take a moment to ask the rest of The Frisky staff about their random drunk talents — the things we can’t do (or at least can’t do very well) sober, but we excel at after a few martinis. Check out our list after the jump, and please share your own drunk skills in the comments!

1. Socializing with others.

2. in .

3. Dancing.

4. or .

5. Sending bold if inadvisable text messages.

6. Thinking it’s a good idea to trim my own .

7. Eating all the .

8. Booty calling.

9. Telling my boyfriend I hope he finds love after I’m dead.

10. Remembering all the lyrics to “Bye Bye Miss American Pie.”

11. Google stalking.

12. Releasing all remaining sexual inhibitions.

13. Getting mad at people who haven’t done anything wrong.

14. Napping.

15. Making bawdy, off-color jokes.

16. Composing long, heart-felt emails to people I have with.

17. .

18. Making the first move.

19. Scrubbing the .

20. Crying in public.

Business: Sony set to make pre-emptive strike on Microsoft with PS4

 Business: Sony set to make pre emptive strike on Microsoft with PS4

(Reuters) – is expected to showcase a new PlayStation console on Wednesday in a pre-emptive strike against Microsoft Corp’s bid to make its Xbox the world’s leading hub for household entertainment.

The rare PlayStation event in New York comes amid industry speculation that Microsoft is set to unveil the successor to its Xbox 360, which beats the seven-year-old ′s online network with features such as voice commands on interactive gaming and superior connectivity to smartphones and tablets.

“Their focus is on establishing a beachhead for the next generation of consoles, and that’s what February 20 is all about,” said P.J. McNealy, and founder of Digital World Research. “The reality is they have been playing catch-up.”

Pushing ahead of Microsoft’s Xbox and Nintendo Co Ltd’s new U could help Sony revive an electronics business hurt by a dearth of hit gadgets, a collapse in TV sales and the convergence of consumer interest around tablets and smartphones built by rivals Apple Inc and .

Tablets and smartphones already account for around 10 percent of the $80 billion gaming market. Those mobile devices, analysts predict, will within a few years be as powerful as the current slew of game-only consoles.

After six years, Sony PlayStation sales are just shy of Xbox’s 67 million installed base and well behind the 100-million selling Wii, analysts said.

A lackluster launch in November of the Wii successor, the Wii U, gives Sony a chance to focus on toppling Microsoft as all three battle the encroachment of casual gaming on tablets and smartphones. Nintendo cut its sales target to 4 million machines from 5.5 million for the year ending March 31.

STREAMING

Microsoft’s answer to the casual gaming threat has been software that gives users extra content and allows them to surf the Internet from their mobile devices. The Xbox already streams and and links to tablets and smartphones using Windows or Apple’s iOS and Inc’s Android. Sony’s PS3 online network has lagged.

“For Sony, they have to come out and make this PlayStation event the definitive statement of why gamers need to adopt the PlayStation 4 or PlayStation Orbis or whatever they end up calling it,” said Greg Miller, PlayStation executive editor at video game site IGN.com.

Sony’s purchase in July of U.S. cloud-based gaming company Gaikai for $380 million hints that the Japanese company will pursue a similar streaming strategy to Microsoft. Sony, industry watchers say, may also offer an expanded range of free games to counter the threat from casual gaming.

Sony, which under its CEO Kazuo Hirai is focusing on gaming, mobile devices and cameras, needs a hit product. But by betting on a PS3 successor, Hirai, whose most profitable business is life insurance, risks deepening consumer electronic losses as he will have to sell consoles at below the manufacturing cost to gain market traction.

That choice is made harder because the other two pillars of Hirai’s new Sony – cameras and mobile – are losing money.

Sony expects to post a $1.4 billion operating profit in the current fiscal year. Yet, much of that rebound is gains from offloading real estate, including $1. for its New York headquarters.

The PlayStation event in New York starts at 2300 GMT (1800 EST).

($1 = 93.5200 Japanese yen)

(Additional reporting by Reiji Murai; Editing by Ryan Woo)

Business: Apple and Samsung, frenemies for life

 Business: Apple and Samsung, frenemies for life

() – It was the late Steve Jobs’ worst nightmare.

A powerful Asian manufacturer, , uses Google Inc’s software to create smartphones and tablets that closely resemble the and the . Samsung starts gaining market share, hurting Apple Inc’s margins and and threatening its reign as the king of cool in consumer electronics.

Jobs, of course, had an answer to all this: a “thermo-nuclear” that would keep clones off the market. Yet nearly two years after Apple first filed a patent-infringement lawsuit against Samsung, and six months after it won a huge legal victory over its South Korean rival, Apple’s chances of blocking the sale of are growing dimmer by the day.

Indeed, a series of recent court rulings suggests that the smartphone patent wars are now grinding toward a stalemate, with Apple unable to show that its sales have been seriously damaged when rivals, notably Samsung, imitated its products.

That, in turn, may usher in a new phase in the complex relationship between the two dominant companies in the growing mobile computing business.

Tim Cook, Jobs’ successor as Apple chief executive, was opposed to suing Samsung in the first place, according to people with knowledge of the matter, largely because of that company’s critical role as a supplier of components for the iPhone and the iPad. Apple bought some $8 billion worth of parts from Samsung last year, analysts estimate.

Samsung, meanwhile, has benefited immensely from the market insight it gained from the Apple relationship, and from producing smartphones and tablets that closely resemble Apple’s.

While the two companies compete fiercely in the high-end smartphone business – where together they control half the sales and virtually all of the profits – their strengths and weaknesses are in many ways complementary. Apple’s operations chief, Jeff Williams, told Reuters last month that Samsung was an important partner and they had a strong relationship on the supply side, but declined to elaborate.

As their legal war winds down, it is increasingly clear that Apple and Samsung have plenty of common interests as they work to beat back other potential challengers, such as BlackBerry or Microsoft.

The contrast with other historic tech industry rivalries is stark. When Apple accused Microsoft in the 1980s of ripping off the Macintosh to create the Windows operating system, Apple’s very existence was at stake. Apple lost, the Mac became a niche product, and the company came close to extinction before Jobs returned to Apple in late 1996 and saved it with the iPod and the iPhone. Jobs died in October 2011.

Similarly, the Internet browser wars of the late 1990s that pitted Microsoft against Netscape ended with Netscape being sold for scrap and its flagship product abandoned.

Apple and Samsung, on the other hand, are not engaged in a corporate death match so much as a multi-layered rivalry that is by turns both friendly and hard-edged. For competitors like Nokia, BlackBerry, Sony, HTC and even Google – whose Motorola unit is expected to launch new smartphones later this year – they are a formidable duo.

THE WAY THEY WERE

The partnership piece of the Apple-Samsung relationship dates to 2005, when the Cupertino, California-based giant was looking for a stable supplier of flash memory. Apple had decided to jettison the hard disc drive in creating the iPod shuffle, iPod nano and then-upcoming iPhone, and it needed huge volumes of flash memory chips to provide storage for the devices.

The memory market in 2005 was extremely unstable, and Apple wanted to lock in a supplier that was rock-solid financially, people familiar with the relationship said. Samsung held about 50 percent of the NAND flash memory market at that time.

“Whoever controls flash is going to control this space in consumer electronics,” Jobs said at the time, according to a source familiar with the discussions.

The success of that deal led to Samsung supplying the crucial application processors for the iPhone and iPad. Initially, the two companies jointly developed the processors based on a design from ARM Holdings Plc, but Apple gradually took full control over development of the chip. Now Samsung merely builds the components at a Texas factory.

The companies built a close relationship that extended to the very top: in 2005, Jay Y. Lee, whose grandfather founded the Samsung Group, visited Jobs’ home in Palo Alto, California, after the two signed the flash memory deal.

The partnership gave Apple and Samsung insight into each other’s strategies and operations. In particular, Samsung’s position as the sole supplier of iPhone processors gave it valuable data on just how big Apple thought the smartphone market was going to be.

“Having a relationship with Apple as a supplier, I am sure, helped the whole group see where the puck was going,” said Horace Dediu, a former analyst at Nokia who now works as a consultant and runs an influential blog. “It’s a very important advantage in this business if you know where to commit capital.”

Samsung declined to comment on its relationship with a specific customer.

As for Apple, it reaped the benefit of Samsung’s heavy investments in research and development, tooling equipment and production facilities. Samsung spent $21 billion (23 trillion won) on capital expenditures in 2012 alone, and plans to spend a similar amount this year.

By comparison, Intel Corp spent around $11 billion in 2012, and Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co Ltd (TSMC) expects to spend $9 billion in 2013.

But component expertise, cash and good market intelligence did not assure success when Samsung launched its own foray into the smartphone market. The Omnia, a Windows-based product introduced in 2009, was so reviled that some customers hammered it to bits in public displays of dissatisfaction.

Meanwhile, Samsung publicly dismissed the iPhone’s success.

“The popularity of iPhone is a mere result of excitement caused by some (Apple) fanatics,” Samsung’s then-president, G.S. Choi, told reporters in January 2010.

Privately, though, Samsung had other plans.

“The iPhone’s emergence means the time we have to change our methods has arrived,” Samsung mobile business head J.K. Shin told his staff in early 2010, according to an internal email filed in U.S. court.

Later that year, Samsung launched the Galaxy S, which sported the Android operating system and a look and feel very similar to the iPhone.

STANDOFF

Jobs and Cook complained to top Samsung executives when they were visiting Cupertino. Apple expected, incorrectly, that Samsung would modify its design in response to the concerns, people familiar with the situation said.

Apple’s worst fears were confirmed with the early 2011 release of the Galaxy Tab, which Jobs and others regarded as a clear rip-off of the iPad.

Cook, worried about the critical supplier relationship, was opposed to suing Samsung. But Jobs had run out of patience, suspecting that Samsung was counting on the supplier relationship to shield it from retribution.

Apple filed suit in April 2011, and the conflagration soon spread to courts in Europe, Asia and Australia. When Apple won its blockbuster billion-dollar jury verdict against Samsung last August, it appeared that it might be able to achieve an outright ban on the offending products – which would have dramatically altered the smartphone competition.

But Apple has failed to convince U.S. judges to uphold those crucial sales bans – in large part because the extraordinary profitability and market power of the iPhone made it all but impossible for Apple to show it was suffering irreparable harm.

“Samsung may have cut into Apple’s customer base somewhat, but there is no suggestion that Samsung will wipe out Apple’s customer base, or force Apple out of the business of making smartphones,” U.S. District Judge Lucy Koh wrote. “The present case involves lost sales – not a lost ability to be a viable market participant.”

Samsung, meanwhile, came under pressure from antitrust regulators and pulled back on its effort to shut down Apple sales in Europe over a related patent dispute.

A U.S. appeals court recently rejected Apple’s bid to fast-track its case, meaning its hopes for a sales ban are now stuck in months-long appeals, during which time Samsung may very well release the next version of its hot-selling Galaxy phone.

THE WORLD IS OURS

The legal battles have been less poisonous to the relationship than some of the rhetoric suggests.

“People play this stuff up because it shows a kind of drama, but the business reality is that the temperature isn’t that high,” said one attorney who has observed executives from both companies.

Still, the hostilities appear to have put some dents in the partnership. Apple is likely to switch to TSMC for the building of application processors, according to analysts at Goldman Sachs, Sanford Bernstein and other firms. But analysts at Korea Investment & Securities and HMC Securities point out that Apple will not be able to eliminate Samsung as a flash supplier because it remains the dominant producer of the crucial chips.

Apple declined to comment on the details of its relationships with any one supplier.

Meanwhile, both companies are deploying strategies out of the other’s playbook as they seek to maintain and extend their lead over the pack.

Samsung has developed a cheeky, memorable TV ad that mocks Apple customers, and dramatically ramped up spending on marketing and advertising, a cornerstone of Apple’s success. U.S. ad spending on the Galaxy alone leaped to nearly $202 million in the first nine months of 2012, from $66.6 million in 2011, according to Kantar Media.

For its part, Apple is investing in manufacturing by helping its suppliers procure the machinery needed to build large-scale plants devoted exclusively to the company.

Apple spent about $10 billion in fiscal 2012 on capital expenditures, and it expects to spend a further $10 billion this year. By contrast, the company spent only $4.6 billion in fiscal 2011 and $2.6 billion in fiscal 2010.

But Apple and Samsung retain very different strategies. Apple has just one smartphone and only four product lines in total, and tries to keep variations to a bare minimum while focusing on the high end of the market.

Samsung, by contrast, has 37 phone products that are tweaked for regional tastes and run the gamut from very cheap to very expensive, according to Mirae Asset Securities. The company also makes chips, TVs, appliances and a host of other products (and its brethren in the Samsung Group sell everything from ships to insurance policies).

Apple devices are hugely popular in the United States; Samsung enjoys supremacy in developing countries like India and China. Apple keeps its core staff lean – it has only 60,000 employees worldwide – and relies on partners for manufacturing and other functions. , part of a sprawling “chaebol,” or conglomerate, that includes some 80 companies employing 369,000 people worldwide, is far more vertically integrated.

It is those differences, combined with the formidable strengths that both companies bring to the market, that may render quiet cooperation a better strategy than all-out war for some time to come.

Said Brad Silverberg, a former Microsoft executive who was involved in the Mac vs. Windows wars, “Apple had learnt a lot of lessons from those days.”

(Reporting by Dan Levine and Poornima Gupta in San Francisco, and Miyoung Kim in Seoul; Editing by Jonathan Weber, Tiffany Wu and Peter Cooney)

Google’s N. Korea visit could harm U.S. sanction plans

 Googles N. Korea visit could harm U.S. sanction plans
(Photo: , AP)

Story Highlights

Former governor says visit is ‘a private
State Department says trip is ‘ill-advised’
U.S. pushes U.N. for more penalties on regime

(PhatzNewsRoom / USA Today) — A visit to by former New Mexico governor Bill Richardson and chairman could harm U.S. efforts to sanction the dictatorship for refusing to curb its nuclear program and missile production, Korea experts say.

The U.S. State Department complained Monday that the visit by Richardson and Schmidt was poorly timed given that the United States is trying to persuade the United Nations to further sanction North Korea.

“We think the timing is ill-advised,” State said.

The reason for State’s objection is that North Korea and its allies in China will use the visit to convey “an image of openness and to the outside,” said Evans Revere, the State Department’s deputy chief negotiator with North Korea during the Clinton administration.

The visit helps the regime “convey a sense of legitimacy and and acceptance to its own people” at the very moment that the State Department is preparing to respond with sanctions in the U.N. Security Council, Revere said.

Richardson described the visit as “a private humanitarian mission.” He said he hoped to meet with U.S. citizen Kenneth Bae, who was born in South Korea and arrested in North Korea during a tourist visit in November.

Richardson, a former U.S. and a former candidate for the , has traveled to North Korea at least twice before to seek the release of American detainees.

Schmidt heads one of the world’s richest companies, and Google ranks 73rd on Forbes’ list of 500 top companies. He is part of a delegation that will spend four days in the nation but has yet to say what he is doing there and whom he will meet.

He is due to arrive in China on Thursday, and Richardson says he expects to hold a news conference then.

Schmidt characterizes himself as an advocate for the freedom of information worldwide. He is traveling with Jared Cohen, head of Google Ideas, the company’s think tank, with whom Schmidt is writing a book about how the Internet is changing the world.

The Internet is banned in North Korea. The country has no independent media, popular elections do not exist and the government is among the most repressive in the world. By contrast, South Korea has among the highest rates of Internet access in the world and a market economy that is fully integrated into the global economy.

A private visit to North Korea is not illegal, though goods, services and technology from North Korea may not be imported into the USA without a license from the Treasury Department.

The visit comes in the wake of a series of hostile North Korean actions and threats toward the United States and its allies, among them an attack in 2010 on a South Korean warship and an artillery bombardment on the South’s Yeonpyeong Island that killed four people that same year.

In December, the North defied warnings from the United States and other nations and launched an alleged weather satellite that the United States suspects was a test for an intercontinental ballistic missile capable of reaching U.S. shores. The North has refused to abide by its obligations under international treaties to open up its nuclear facilities to inspection.

The North Koreans have launched a campaign of more friendly signals over the past few weeks toward South Korea, Japan and the United States, countries that have given assistance to North Korea when it agreed to negotiate with them.

North Korean leader Kim Jong Un’s New Year’s Day speech included statements on improving the North’s economy and called for reunification with South Korea.

Revere says Richardson and Schmidt’s visit “is smartly used by the North Koreans to communicate an atmosphere of openness and willingness to re-engage with the United States and others.”

Bruce Klingner, a former chief of the CIA’s Korea branch who is at the Heritage Foundation in Washington, says China is likely to seize on the visit as an argument against new U.N. Security Council sanctions.

“China would say North Korea is showing it’s more open, so it would be counterproductive to put penalties on them when they’re showing they’re turning over a new leaf,” Klingner said.

The problem, he and Revere said, is that no real evidence exists that North Korea is reforming.

For the world’s most reclusive regime to open up to Google “would go against 60 years of history in North Korea,” Klingner said.

Contributing: Roger Yu

Updated: NORAD’s Santa trackers have record-breaking night

NORAD gears up for Santa Claus tracking Updated: NORADs Santa trackers have record breaking night

Story Highlights

’s number was inadvertently listed in ad inviting kids to call Santa
NORAD got calls from 220 countries and territories last year
Trackers answered more than 111,000 calls, breaking last year’s record of 107,000.

, Colorado (AP) — Volunteers at a base monitoring Santa Claus’ progress around the world were on hand to answer a record number of calls Monday from children wanting to know everything from Saint Nick’s age to how reindeer fly.

Oh, and when are the presents coming?

Phones were ringing nonstop at Base, headquarters of the North American Aerospace Command’s annual Santa-tracking operation.

NORAD, a joint U.S.-Canada command responsible for protecting the skies over both nations, says its Santa-tracking rite was born of a humble mistake in a in 1955.

The ad in a Colorado Springs newspaper invited children to call Santa but inadvertently listed the phone number for the Command, NORAD’s predecessor, also based in Colorado Springs.

Officers played along. Since then, has gone global, posting updates for nearly 1.2 million fans and 104,000 followers.

Spokeswoman 1st Lt. Stacey Fenton said that as of midnight Tuesday, trackers answered more than 111,000 calls, breaking last year’s record of 107,000.

NORAD got calls from 220 countries and territories last year, and non-English-speakers called this year as well.

Volunteers who speak other languages get green Santa hats and a listing their languages so organizers can find them quickly.

“Need a Spanish speaker!” one organizer called as he rushed out of one of three phone rooms.

First lady , who is spending the holidays with her family in Hawaii, also joined in answering calls as she has in recent years. She spent about 30 minutes talking with children from across the country.

Volunteer Sara Berghoff was caught off-guard when a child called to see if Santa could be especially kind this year to the families affected by the recent Connecticut school shooting.

“I’m from Newtown, Connecticut, where the shooting was,” she remembered the child asking. “Is it possible that Santa can bring extra presents so I can deliver them to the families that lost kids?”

Sara, just 13 herself, gathered her thoughts quickly. “If I can get ahold of him, I’ll try to get the message to him,” she told the child.

Other questions required the volunteers to think fast:

“How do reindeer fly?”

“How many elves does Santa have?”

“Does Santa leave presents for dogs?”

“How old is Santa?” The answer to that one is in the FAQs that NORAD hands out to volunteers: “It’s hard to know for sure, but NORAD intelligence indicates Santa is at least 16 centuries old.”

One little boy phoned in to ask what time Santa delivered toys to heaven, said volunteer Jennifer Eckels, who took the call. The boy’s mother got on the line to explain that his sister had died this year.

“I think Santa headed there first,” Eckels told him.

NORAD suggested that its volunteers tell callers that Santa won’t drop off the presents until all the kids in the home are asleep.

“Ohhhhhhh,” said an 8-year-old.

“Thank you so much for that information,” said a grateful mom.

A young boy called to ask if Santa was real.

Air Force Maj. Jamie Humphries, who took the call, said, “I’m 37 years old, and I believe in Santa, and if you believe in him as well, then he must be real.”

The boy turned from the phone and yelled to others, “I told you guys he was real!”

Is Exchanging Naughty Pictures With a Stranger Cheating?

boardinggate2 Is Exchanging Naughty Pictures With a Stranger Cheating?

(PhatzNewsRoom / The Stir) — With the Internet at our fingers, we’re one Google search away from anything we can dream of.

The Internet truly does connect us – sometimes in ways that are a bit more intimate than we want or expect. Especially when it comes to naughty pictures sent by virtual friends.

But is exchanging racy photos with strangers really ?

Every time I turn around, someone famous like , or even just a regular old , is busted for sending snaps of their naughty bits in “private messages” on or .

Because we have this gateway into (almost) any virtual world we want, many people say and act differently than they would if you met them face-to-face. This includes “online ” with folks who are otherwise spoken for in real life. I’ve even known people who’ve had these online before – alert! None end well!

So I’m curious, is sending half-naked or seductive pictures to an online “friend” cheating?

This might surprise you, but I’d say probably not.

Let’s be clear: I’d never do it, nor do I have any desire to take pictures of myself in and send them around the Internet a la . But for some people, I think exchanging sexy snaps is simply like looking at pornography, which we all know the Internet is literally bursting with.

How could I say such a thing?

Well, I think that exchanging with an online friend can help a relationship between two real-live people, if both parties are aware of what’s going on. Why? If it turns you both on and leads to some hot and heavy action between you and your partner, that’s a bonus!

The line, I think, gets blurred when the relationship extends past naughty photos and into the emotionally intimate territory. I’d much prefer that my (non-existent) partner see some girl’s boobs than have her tell him she loves him.

However, it’s important to note that if sending lewd shots around to people you don’t know is part of your life (and it is for some), then it requires honesty with your partner. Sending and receiving naughty pictures has to be done in the open, with honest communication between both partners and the person sending or receiving the pictures in order for it not to be considered cheating.

It sounds like a weird concept, I know, but in the end, every couple has to do what works for them. And if it spices things up? Then no one gets hurt.

But don’t even get me STARTED on sexting.