Friday, May 22, 2015

Carmakers team up with General Atlantic to bid for Nokia map firm: Report

Carmakers team up with General Atlantic to bid for Nokia map firm: Report
Image: AP
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22 May 2015 , 09:02
Germany’s premium carmakers Mercedes, Audi and BMW have teamed up with private equity firm General Atlantic to increase their firepower to acquire Nokia’s mapping unit HERE, according to two people familiar with the matter.
Finland’s Nokia started a strategic review of its maps business last month, setting in motion an auction process that has pitted Internet players like Uber and Baidu against carmakers in a deal that could be worth up to $4 billion. The review came after Nokia announced a 15.6 billion-euro takeover of network equipment maker Alcatel Lucent.
One financial industry source said on Thursday that General Atlantic would likely take a 30 percent stake in the auto industry-led consortium, but that the exact percentage had not yet been finalised and could change.
A separate source, from the auto industry, said that each of the three carmakers was prepared to chip in up to 700 million euros ($780 million) but that the percentage stakes of each manufacturer was not yet fixed.
The carmakers have made an indicative offer for an undisclosed amount. But they have not heard back from Nokia and are waiting for a response before they weigh whether to top up their bid, another auto industry figure said.
“The upper limit is basically what it would cost to build the maps through other means, by partnering with another player or going it alone, for example,” the auto industry source said.
A second financial industry source said carmakers were ready to include other financial players in their consortium, but will demand they retain overall control of the map assets. There is no hard deadline for final offers but the process is at its end and could come to a head in days rather than weeks.
Nokia, Mercedes-Benz parent Daimler, BMW and Volkswagen’s (VOWG_p.DE) Audi declined to comment. General Atlantic Partners, which is based in Greenwich, Connecticut, also declined to comment.
Rivals bids
Analysts put the potential value of Nokia’s HERE navigation business at 2 billion euros to 4 billion euros.
Based on current bids, the value has climbed to the upper end of that range, a second auto industry source familiar with the discussions said, adding that the $3 billion valuation mooted previously had been “overtaken by events” but that far higher estimates of up to $6 billion were exaggerated.
Local transport services firm Uber Technologies Inc is teaming up with China’s web services provider Baidu and private equity firm Apax Partners to bid for HERE, for undisclosed terms, people with knowledge of the matter said.
Another group, which teams media, mobile and Internet services firm Tencent Holdings, map maker NavInfo Co., both of China, with Swedish buyout firm EQT Partners AB, is also bidding, three sources said, asking not to be identified as negotiations are private.
Auto industry players remain fairly relaxed about their chances as a snub to them could potentially be costly for HERE, as it depends on carmakers – which use its maps in vehicle navigation systems – for more than half of its revenue.
Carmakers are counting on these maps to provide crucial context for collision-detection systems in future cars. But they believe other options exist, including turning to rival TomTom, industry sources said.
“We are not out of the race as far as we know and Nokia would also have something to worry about if we were,” the first automotive industry source said.
Morgan Stanley upgraded its stock rating on Dutch navigation software company TomTom on Thursday, arguing that the sale of HERE would leave it as the only independent global map maker.
Shares of TomTom jumped 7 percent on Tuesday after the company said existing customer Apple Inc had renewed a deal to license its maps in Apple products. The stock is now trading at levels not seen since 2009.
Reuters

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Twitter co-founder invests in Indian shopping app ‘Lookup’

Twitter co-founder invests in Indian shopping app ‘Lookup’
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22 May 2015 , 09:22
Lookup, a local shopping app, on Thursday said it is looking to raise $3 million in funding, and has already roped in Twitter co-founder Biz Stone to invest in the startup. Set up last October, the company has already raised $382,000 in its seed round from multiple investors including Infosys co-founder Kris Gopalakrishnan, Teru Sato, DeNA and MKS Group (Switzerland).
“We are looking at closing our Series A round of about $3 million by the end of this month and our existing investors have evinced interest in investing. We have Twitter co-founder Biz Stone on board now… We are looking for a strategic venture capitalist firm to act as an anchor investor,” Lookup founder and CEO Deepak Ravindran told PTI.
The Series A funding will be invested in expanding Lookup’s merchant base in order to enhance convenience for its users and to branch out in newer geographies, he added.
Within about five months of launch, Lookup has already registered over 200,000 downloads and has answered over three million queries.
“We plan to integrate all the offline businesses into the online world and connect them to their customers. The final goal is to make Lookup a global phenomenon and hope to ease the busy lives of the people,” he said.
The Twitter co-founder has joined Lookup’s team as an investor and advisor. However, details of his investment were not shared.
Speaking on his investment, Stone said: “I am truly impressed by what he has already accomplished in his life. I’m very excited about working with such an inspiring entrepreneur, whom I share common ideologies with.”
Besides co-founding Twitter, Stone also helped create and launch Xanga, Odeo, The Obvious Corporation and Medium.
In 2012, Stone co-founded a startup called Jelly Industries, where he serves as CEO.
PTI

Women form a third of India’s Internet population: Google

Women form a third of India’s Internet population: Google
(Image credit: Reuters)
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22 May 2015 , 09:25
Only one-third of the total Indian population with access to the Internet are women, says a survey conducted by Google. The survey revealed that 49 percent of women do not see any reason to access the Internet.
“While there is low awareness about the benefits of Internet amongst women in India, there are many who want to get online to succeed in life,” said Sandeep Menon, country head marketing for Google India.
The study titled “Women & Technology” that involved 828 Indian women aged from 8 to 55 identified that connection issues, affordability and time as the key constraints to accessing the Internet.
Many of the respondents said managing their households left little time for what is perceived to be a leisure activity. Some women also said they feared angering their in-laws for spending too much time online.
Smartphones and Internet cafes could be a cheaper, more private way for Indian women to access the Internet, the report pointed out.
The respondents said, they would use the Internet more, if they had more privacy. The survey also looked at income and demographic differences between Internet users and non-users. Women who are online tend to have slightly higher incomes.
Most are younger, single and students. The non-users tend to be slightly older and more likely to be married with children. The survey revealed that younger women are keen to get online, and 32 percent of all non-Internet users plan to use the Internet soon, and 46 percent of non-users in the age group from 18 to 29 are likely to use the Internet soon.
Releasing the report, the Internet giant also launched a new film to inspire young digital natives to bring their mothers online.
“We are working with various partners to help spread awareness about the benefits of being online amongst women. We have launched a new film to inspire young digital natives to bring their mothers online,” Menon said.
“There are large number of educated women in India with Internet access in their households, but they still do not use the Internet. We are making an appeal to their children to hold their mother’s hand as she discovers a new world online,” Menon concluded.
IANS

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Alibaba-owned UC Browser found to leak data: Research group

Alibaba-owned UC Browser found to leak data: Research group
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22 May 2015 , 11:48
A popular mobile web browser from a company that Alibaba paid more than $1 billion for last year leaks sensitive user data and is a privacy risk, a Canadian technology research group said on Thursday.
Citizen Lab said Chinese and English-language versions of UC Browser, developed by UCWeb Inc, made easily available to third parties personally identifiable information like location, search details and mobile subscriber and device numbers.
The transmission of this information “represents a privacy risk for users because it allows anyone with access to the data traffic to identify users and their devices, and collect their private search data”, it said in a report.
Alibaba spokesman Bob Christie said the problems were immediately fixed and customers notified of an update to the browser after Citizen Lab brought the issues to Alibaba’s attention in April.
“We take security very seriously and we do everything possible to protect our users,” he said.
A UCWeb spokesman declined immediate comment.
Citizen Lab, based at the University of Toronto, said UC Browser had more than 500 million registered users and was the most popular web browser in China and India.
Citizen Lab said the Chinese version was more vulnerable and said that by installing and opening that version users exposed “a significant number” of personal identifiers and location information to third parties.
“By leaking a large volume of fine-grained data points to multiple network operators, the UC Browser app is increasing the risks to its users that such data may be used against them by authorities, criminals, or other third parties,” it said.
Alibaba acquired UCWeb last June, in what was at the time the biggest merger in Chinese internet history.
Reuters

New app aims to create gender-inclusive online community

New app aims to create gender-inclusive online community
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22 May 2015 , 11:49
Frustrated by what he saw as the non-inclusive world of lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and queer (LGBTQ) mobile apps, a Harvard student set out to create one that would be truly inclusive of all genders. According to young developer Eric Cervini, most social networking and dating apps that cater to the LGBTQ community rigidly categorise their users by gender identity, sexual orientation and physical appearance.
“When we log on, we’re constantly told to be a man, to have a perfect body, to act or to talk a certain way, to be someone other than who we truly are,” California-born Cervini said in a statement.
His app “Q” lets users choose from over 20 genders to include all those who identify as queer, a term used by some to encompass the many facets of gender identity and sexual orientation.
In the United States and beyond, a growing movement views gender as a complex, mainly psychological phenomenon in which a person’s external anatomy is no longer the defining factor.
According to Cervini, Q is “a community-driven social networking app for humans – of all genders and sexual orientations – who identify as queer.”
The app still allows some filtering and requires members to display first names and faces while encouraging them to describe themselves in “memoirs” that have no character limit.
“Q is…about creating a queer community that is devoted to making its members of any gender or background feel welcome,” said Cervini. If the Kickstarter campaign to fund a polished version of Q for release is successful, the app will be available for iPhone and Android in June.
Reuters

BlackBerry to buy up to 12 million shares for cancellation

BlackBerry to buy up to 12 million shares for cancellation
BlackBerry logo is seen in this photo. Reuters
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22 May 2015 , 11:51
Canadian smartphone maker BlackBerry Ltd said it plans to buy back 12 million shares, sending its stock up nearly 2 percent in extended trading in the United States.
BlackBerry, which has not repurchased any outstanding securities in the last one year, said it would present a new employee share purchase programme and propose an increase in its equity incentive plan at its annual meeting next month.
If the proposals are not approved by shareholders, the company, which has struggled to cope with competition from a host of smartphone makers, would drop the repurchase plan.
BlackBerry said it would buy the shares, representing about 2.6 percent of its outstanding public float, over the Nasdaq Stock Market or on the Toronto Stock Exchange, subject to approval.
As of May 10, the Waterloo, Ontario-based company had a free float of 502.8 million shares, according to Thomson Reuters data.
Reuters

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