Sunday, 2 January 2011

Facebook, PayPal tycoon embraces sci-fi future

SAN FRANCISCO —

In the movie “The Social Network,” the character of Peter Thiel is played as a slick Master of the Universe, a tech industry king and kingmaker with the savvy to see that a $500,000 investment in Facebook could mint millions later.

Reality is a little more rumpled.

On a recent December night, Thiel walked, slightly stooped, across a San Francisco stage to make a pitch to an invitation-only audience of Silicon Valley luminaries—investors and innovators who had scored sometimes huge fortunes through a mix of skill, vision and risk-taking.

The billionaire PayPal co-founder didn’t tell them about the next big startup. He wanted them to buy into a bigger idea: the future.

A future when computers will communicate directly with the human brain. Seafaring pioneers will found new floating nations in the middle of the ocean. Science will conquer aging, and death will become a curable disease.

If anything can transform these wild dreams into plausible realities, he believes it is the entrepreneurs of Silicon Valley—the minds and money that have conjured the technological marvels that have already altered everyday life.

“Do we try to pursue ideas that are weird and have optimism about the future, or do we give up on all new things and compromise?”

Sitting before him in the audience, among others: Facebook co-founder Dustin Moskovitz, Yelp co-founder and CEO Jeremy Stoppelman and technology publishing guru Tim O’Reilly.

As venture capital in Silicon Valley chases the next big mobile app or group discount service, Thiel was asking for them to fund technological breakthroughs that some believe in fervently and others see as sheer fantasy.

He even has a name for it: Breakthrough philanthropy.

Instead of just giving to help the less fortunate here and now, Thiel encouraged his fellow moguls to put their money toward seemingly far-fetched ventures that he believes could improve the lives of everyone for good.

Gathered on the stage were eight groups that Thiel thinks are on the right path.

One was the Singularity Institute, whose members believe in the near-inevitability of the arrival within the next century of computers smarter than the humans who created them.

The institute works to ensure that self-programming machines will create a world that looks more like “Star Trek,” less like the “Terminator.”

Another was the SENS Foundation, a group of biomedical researchers seeking a path to radical life extension based on the controversial aging theories of computer scientist-turned-gerontologist Aubrey de Grey.

And the Seasteading Institute, led by Patri Friedman, the grandson of famed economist Milton Friedman. It looks to establish distant ocean colonies to serve as laboratories for experimenting with new forms of government or “startup countries.”

“As innovators, you are the best at finding and nurturing the right big ideas that can change the world,” Friedman told the audience.

The history of Silicon Valley is filled with such ideas. The smartphone, the Web, the search engine, the personal computer itself _ these all seemed far-fetched until they became commonplace.

To raise money from the wealthy, it’s a time-honored strategy to flatter. Witness the names emblazoned across hospital wings and university buildings. But building important buildings has never seemed to especially interest Silicon Valley’s elite.

They have “the right kind of cultural DNA to at the very least pay attention,” said Greg Biggers, a longtime software executive who recently founded a startup, Genomera, that lets members conduct health studies using their own genetic data.

Biggers said Silicon Valley entrepreneurs would likely be receptive to Thiel’s unconventional message because they succeeded by not conforming to others’ expectations of what was possible.

“This is a roomful of people who bucked the system,” he said as he mingled, glass of wine in hand.

Charles Rubin, a Duquesne University political science professor and blogger who has written critically about some of the movements endorsed by Thiel, said these visions of the future align closely with the Silicon Valley outlook.

All share the view that “scientific knowledge and technical capacity will continue to increase at an accelerating rate,” Rubin said. “This is a core idea that practically defines what Silicon Valley is all about: ceaseless innovation.”

Thiel himself seems to thrive on flouting convention, sometimes in ways that have led to harsh criticism.

In September, he announced a program designed to discover the next Mark Zuckerberg, Facebook’s founder, by paying $100,000 each to 20 young people under 20 years old to skip college for two years to learn about entrepreneurship.

Jacob Weisberg, editor of the online magazine Slate, excoriated Thiel for the program and what he sees as its underlying impetus.

“Thiel’s philosophy demands attention not because it is original or interesting in any way—it’s puerile libertarianism, infused with futurist fantasy—but because it epitomizes an ugly side of Silicon Valley’s politics,” Weisberg wrote.

Thiel is not a traditional conservative—he has donated to Republican candidates but also to California’s marijuana legalization ballot measure. But he does seem to believe in a trickle-down theory of technology.

Unlike the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, which has poured billions into providing basic health care for some of the world’s most impoverished people, Thiel said he wants to prioritize major scientific advances he thinks will spread to benefit humanity as a whole.

His faith appears grounded in a pervasive Silicon Valley belief that motivates gifted individuals to achieve on a grand scale, no matter the apparent hurdles _ death included.

But even Thiel admitted he has no idea how long that last obstacle will take to overcome.

“I would like to say that I would still be doing this even if I thought there was no chance I would benefit from this in any way,” he said in an interview. “I think we have to work on these things even if they take centuries.”

2010 traffic death toll at 4,863, down for 10th straight year

TOKYO —

The road traffic death toll in Japan during 2010 was 4,863, down 51, or 1%, from the previous year and marking the 10th straight year of decline, the National Police Agency said Sunday.

The figure, which fell below 5,000 in 2009 for the first time since 1952, decreased further last year owing to factors such as a rise in seat belt usage and a decline in the number of accidents caused by gross negligence such as drunk driving, the agency said.

The number of road traffic accidents during 2010 totaled 724,811, while the number of people injured in them stood at 894,281, both falling for a sixth consecutive year, according to the agency’s preliminary data.

By prefecture, Hokkaido and Tokyo had the largest number of traffic deaths last year at 215 each.

Dept stores begin 2011 business with lucky bags, winter bargains

Dept stores begin 2011 business with lucky bags, winter bargains

Shoppers jostle to buy “fukubukuro” bags at Mitsukoshi department store in Nihonbashi on Sunday.
SANKEI

TOKYO —

Major department stores kicked off business for 2011 on Sunday as crowds of shoppers sought ‘‘lucky bags’’ filled with discount goods and other New Year bargains.

Department stores are hoping the New Year sales will help lead to a recovery in consumption among thrifty consumers.

Mitsukoshi Ltd’s flagship store in Tokyo’s Nihombashi district opened at 9:45 a.m., 15 minutes earlier than scheduled, as many people were lined up in front of the store. As one of the features of its New Year sales, the store was offering lucky bags filled with clothing for 10,500 yen.

Takashimaya Co prepared luxury lucky bags containing tickets for a cruise tour to the Antarctica, priced at 1.8 million yen, to mark the 180th anniversary of its founding.

The Seibu flagship store in Tokyo’s Ikebukuro, meanwhile, offered a series of lucky bags named after recent booms in Japan. They included lucky bags containing outdoor items for ‘‘yama (mountain) girls,’’ the nickname for the growing number of women taking to the hills in fashionable garb, and those including lunchbox and other items for ‘‘bento danshi,’’ or men who fix their own home-made lunches.

Afghan envoys head to Pakistan for peace talks

2 January 2011 - 08H57

Afghan President Hamid Karzai (R) and former president Burhanuddin Rabbani (L) in Kabul in December 2001. Afghan efforts to broker peace with the Taliban enter a new phase this week with the first scheduled visit of envoys to Islamabad, part of a growing recognition that the process hinges on Pakistan.
Afghan President Hamid Karzai (R) and former president Burhanuddin Rabbani (L) in Kabul in December 2001. Afghan efforts to broker peace with the Taliban enter a new phase this week with the first scheduled visit of envoys to Islamabad, part of a growing recognition that the process hinges on Pakistan.
US and Afghan soldiers on a patrol in Kandahar province in December 2010. Afghan efforts to broker peace with the Taliban enter a new phase this week with the first scheduled visit of envoys to Islamabad, part of a growing recognition that the process hinges on Pakistan.
US and Afghan soldiers on a patrol in Kandahar province in December 2010. Afghan efforts to broker peace with the Taliban enter a new phase this week with the first scheduled visit of envoys to Islamabad, part of a growing recognition that the process hinges on Pakistan.
Afghan soldiers in Kandahar province in December 2010. Afghan efforts to broker peace with the Taliban enter a new phase this week with the first scheduled visit of envoys to Islamabad, part of a growing recognition that the process hinges on Pakistan.
Afghan soldiers in Kandahar province in December 2010. Afghan efforts to broker peace with the Taliban enter a new phase this week with the first scheduled visit of envoys to Islamabad, part of a growing recognition that the process hinges on Pakistan.

AFP - Afghan efforts to broker peace with the Taliban enter a new phase this week with the first scheduled visit of envoys to Islamabad, part of a growing recognition that the process hinges on Pakistan.

Afghanistan's ex-president Burhanuddin Rabbani is set to lead a delegation from President Hamid Karzai's High Council for Peace in talks with officials from neighbouring Pakistan.

Pakistan is increasingly seen as key to Afghan stability, despite historic tensions between the two countries linked to Pakistan's desire to extend its sphere of influence in the region as a bulwark against arch-rival India.

Key Taliban figures are believed to be hiding out in Pakistan's wild border regions, while experts say agents from its powerful Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) have protected or even controlled the militants for years.

Islamabad has said it stands ready to facilitate dialogue between Afghanistan and the Taliban.

"There will be talks with all stakeholders about bringing peace to Afghanistan," Rabbani's deputy Ataullah Ludin told AFP.

"This trip is the beginning. We cannot talk about the result now, however, we are optimistic for all peace efforts."

Ludin said the group would meet figures including Pakistan's President Asif Ali Zardari and Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani but would not disclose which day the visit starts.

The move comes at the start of a crucial year for Afghanistan -- limited international troop withdrawals are expected to start in July before a planned handover of responsibility for security to Afghan troops in 2014.

But some international diplomats and commanders enter 2011 convinced that the plan can only succeed if there are meaningful talks with the Taliban, and the role of Pakistan is seen as crucial.

Taliban leaders fled to Pakistan's border regions after the 2001 US-led invasion of Afghanistan after the September 11 attacks.

Most of the Taliban's top command, including supreme leader Mullah Omar, are believed to be hiding in Pakistan, mostly in the southwestern city of Quetta.

The militia is "intellectually and politically independent but physically under the control of Pakistan", said Gilles Dorronsoro, a visiting scholar on Afghanistan at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace.

According to Mullah Arsala Rahmani, a former Taliban mediator in Kabul, "at least 29 important Taliban leaders have been arrested by the ISI" since 2001.

Relations between Afghanistan and Pakistan have long been tense, but the intensity of the rhetoric between them has eased since Zardari took over from Pervez Musharraf in 2008.

It seems that Afghanistan may need all the help it can get in making progress on peace.

Karzai made negotiations a top priority in 2010, calling a national conference and creating the High Council for Peace. But attempts to open discussions with the rebels have so far got nowhere.

Media reports in November suggested a Pakistani shopkeeper posing as a senior Taliban leader was brought to Kabul for talks with Karzai before being exposed as a fake. Afghan officials deny he was ever brought to the capital.

Another major setback was Pakistan's arrest last February of Abdul Ghani Baradar, described by the US as Mullah Omar's right-hand man who was rumoured to be exploring peace contacts.

By detaining him, "Pakistan was telling Kabul, the West and other Taliban leaders that nothing can happen without it", Dorronsoro said.

In public, too, Islamabad has made clear that it believes it is crucial to bringing peace to Afghanistan.

"Nothing will happen without us, because we are a part of the solution," said Gilani in October, reiterating that his government was ready to facilitate dialogue between Kabul and the Taliban.

Last week, foreign affairs ministry spokesman Abdul Basit confirmed the High Council for Peace's visit and vowed Pakistan would "continue to support and help in whatever way the Afghanistan government wants".

Experts say that one key to getting Pakistan to play straight is for the United States to be flexible when it comes to Islamabad's main obsession -- India's growing influence in Afghanistan and Washington.

But any policy seen as soft on terror could jeopardise President Barack Obama's re-election prospects in 2012, a date which Dorronsoro warns could become "a real problem".

Australian wildcard Peers wins in Brisbane

2 January 2011 - 11H07

Sally Peer of Australia hits a backhand return to Alisa Kleybanova of Russia in the first round of the Brisbane International tennis tournament, in Brisbane. Peer, the Australian wildcard entrant, won the match 3-6, 6-4, 6-3.
Sally Peer of Australia hits a backhand return to Alisa Kleybanova of Russia in the first round of the Brisbane International tennis tournament, in Brisbane. Peer, the Australian wildcard entrant, won the match 3-6, 6-4, 6-3.

AFP - Australian wildcard Sally Peers stunned seventh seeded Russian Alisa Kleybanova with a 3-6, 6-4, 6-3 win in the opening match of the Brisbane International tennis tournament on Sunday.

The 24-year-old Peers, ranked 154th in the world heading into the tournament, beat Kleybanova over an exhausting two hours, 18 minutes in stifling conditions at the Pat Rafter Arena.

Kleybanova, 21, took the first set comfortably and looked on track to claim the second when she led led 3-2 and was up 40-0 to take a 4-2 lead.

But Peers fought back to break Kleybanova's serve, took the second set 6-4 and then opened a 5-1 lead in the decider.

Kleybanova came back to make it 5-3 but Peers was not to be denied, holding on to ease her way into the second round.

"That game that I came back from love-40 gave me a lot of confidence to know that I could stick with her and really fight it out," Peers said.

"I tried to stay out there as long as possible -- maybe she's not used to the warm conditions and I love playing up here, so I think I used that to my advantage."

Serbia's Bojana Jovanovski brought the Brisbane crowd back down to earth when she beat the higher ranked Russian-born but naturalised Australian Anastasia Rodionova 2-6, 6-2, 6-3.

The Serbian number three is ranked 80th to Rodionova's 64th but she finished too strongly for the Australian, wrapping up the match in two hours, nine minutes.

Fifth seed Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova fought off a spirited challenge from fellow Russian Alla Kudryavtseva before winning 6-2, 6-7 (5/7), 6-3, while Lucie Safarova of the Czech Republic recorded a 6-3, 3-6, 6-2 win over Uzbekistan's Akgul Amanmuradova.

In the last match of the day, Australian Jarmila Groth delighted the home crowd when she beat Spain's Arantxa Parra Santonja in straight sets 6-2, 7-5.

There was only one men's first round match on Sunday, sixth seeded Spaniard Feliciano Lopez downing German Philipp Petzschner 6-4, 7-6 (13/11).

Egypt media warn of civil war after bombing

02 January 2011 - 11H28

Egyptian policemen in plain clothes detain a Christian youth throwing stones at riot policemen during clashes outside the Al-Qiddissine church in Alexandria, following an overnight car bomb attack on the church. Egyptian newspapers have warned that civil war could break out unless Christians and Muslims close ranks after the attack, which killed 21 people and wounded 79 others.
Egyptian policemen in plain clothes detain a Christian youth throwing stones at riot policemen during clashes outside the Al-Qiddissine church in Alexandria, following an overnight car bomb attack on the church. Egyptian newspapers have warned that civil war could break out unless Christians and Muslims close ranks after the attack, which killed 21 people and wounded 79 others.
Egyptians transport the body of a Christian worshipper from the Al-Qiddissin church following an overnight car bomb attack in the Egyptian port city of Alexandria on New Year's Day. Egyptian newspapers have warned that civil war could break out unless Christians and Muslims close ranks after the attack, which killed 21 people and wounded 79 others.
Egyptians transport the body of a Christian worshipper from the Al-Qiddissin church following an overnight car bomb attack in the Egyptian port city of Alexandria on New Year's Day. Egyptian newspapers have warned that civil war could break out unless Christians and Muslims close ranks after the attack, which killed 21 people and wounded 79 others.
A man cleans blood stains from the main gate of the Al-Qiddissine church in the Egyptian port city of Alexandria. Egyptian newspapers have warned that civil war could break out unless Christians and Muslims close ranks after the attack on the Coptic church on New Year's Day, which killed 21 people and wounded 79 others.
A man cleans blood stains from the main gate of the Al-Qiddissine church in the Egyptian port city of Alexandria. Egyptian newspapers have warned that civil war could break out unless Christians and Muslims close ranks after the attack on the Coptic church on New Year's Day, which killed 21 people and wounded 79 others.

AFP - Egyptian newspapers warned on Sunday that "civil war" could break out unless Christians and Muslims close ranks after a deadly attack on a Coptic church that triggered angry protests.

The authorities said that a suicide bomber blew himself up outside Al-Qiddissin church in the Mediterranean city of Alexandria early on New Year's Day, killing 21 people and wounding 79 others.

Protests by Christians and clashes with the police that erupted after Saturday's attack could worsen and plunge Egypt into a new spiral of sectarian violence, the government and independent newspapers said.

The papers also urged the government to give serious consideration to the plight of the Copts who account for up to 10 percent of Egypt's 80-million population and often complain of discrimination.

"Someone wants to make this country explode... We must realise that there is a plot aimed at triggering religious civil war," the pro-government daily Rose el-Yussef said.

Egyptians should foil attempts by "terrorists" to strike at the country, it said.

The independent paper Al-Shorouk said Christians had a right to be angry, but urged them not play into the game of "the instigators of (Saturday's) crime."

"No one can blame the Christian brothers if they are angry and disgusted," the daily said.

The bombing sparked anger among Christians, who clashed on Saturday for several hours with police and shouted slogans against the regime of President Hosni Mubarak.

"O Mubarak, the heart of the Copts is on fire," protesters shouted as they darted in and out of side-streets around the bloodied church to shower police with stones. Police fired tear gas grenades at the demonstrators.

Al-Shorouk said it would be "more dangerous for the Christians to be mired in their feelings of anger and frustration, than the attack itself."

"It would increase their isolation and the instigators of the crime would have then achieved their goal," it said.

"If all goes as planned, criminal operations against Coptic targets and holy places will increase. Copts will clash with their Muslim neighbours and we will be stuck in marshlands like Lebanon was in April 1975," it said.

A civil war broke out in Lebanon that month, lasting 15 years and pitting Christians against Muslims.

Another independent daily, Al-Masri Al-Yom, urged the authorities to take the bull by the horns and look beyond the security implications of Saturday's bombing, including at the political, social and cultural aspects.

"We should not hide our heads in the sand. Some say that foreign hands are probably behind this crime. But we believe that if the national fabric is solid enough, no foreign faction could set the fire in our midst."

The solution lies "in a serious dialogue around this sensitive issue" of the Copts, Al-Masri al-Yom said.

The attack, which Mubarak has blamed on "foreign hands," drew international condemnation with Pope Benedict XVI leading the fray on Saturday urging world leaders to defend Christians against abuse.

US President Barack Obama denounced "this barbaric and heinous act," and the European Union "unreservedly" condemned the bombing.

The World Council of Churches (WCC) condemned "the vicious attack" and called for "proactive engagement in dialogue and partnership between Christians and Muslims in Egypt."

Turkey and Israel have said they were "shocked" by the attack which Ankara on Sunday called a "cowardly terrorist" act.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu called Mubarak on Saturday to express solidarity.

Singer Shania Twain weds

02 January 2011 - 12H06

Country pop diva Shania Twain has celebrated the New Year by getting married, in a private ceremony on the Caribbean island of Puerto Rico, her manager said.
Country pop diva Shania Twain has celebrated the New Year by getting married, in a private ceremony on the Caribbean island of Puerto Rico, her manager said.

AFP - Country pop diva Shania Twain celebrated the New Year by getting married on Saturday, in a private ceremony on the Caribbean island of Puerto Rico, her manager said.

Twain tied the knot with Frederic Thiebaud, two years after splitting with her husband of 14 years Robert Lange -- who allegedly had an affair with Thiebaud's then wife.

The couple announced their engagement last month, and chose a romantic island location to exchange vows hours after seeing in 2011.

"They were married at sunset in Rincon, Puerto Rico, in front of 40 of their closest family and friends," Twain's manager Jason Owen told said in a statement to cited on the Canadian-born singer's website.

People magazine reported that the pair became romantically involved in 2009, finding solace after their respective spouses allegedly had an affair which broke up both marriages.

In a letter to fans in December, Twain wrote: "In the last two and a half years of adjusting to life after separation and divorce, I needed to lean on others more often than I was accustomed to.

"I am excited to share some personal news with you: I'm in love!" she said, adding that Thiebaud was "a compassionate, understanding friend and over time, an amazing love has blossomed from this precious friendship."

Twain and music producer Lange had married in 1993, six months after meeting. Living between homes in New Zealand and Switzerland, the couple had a son who was six when they separated.