Apple hits out at British plans to extend online surveillance

LONDON Apple has warned that a British plan to give intelligence agencies extra online surveillance powers could weaken the security of personal data for millions of people and paralyse the tech sector.

Britain unveiled proposals for new online powers last month that it said were needed to keep the country safe from criminals, fraudsters and militants, including the right to find out which websites people visit.

Critics however say the Investigatory Powers Bill gives British spies authority beyond those available in other Western countries, including the United States, and that it constitutes an assault on personal freedom.

"We believe it is wrong to weaken security for hundreds of millions of law-abiding customers so that it will also be weaker for the very few who pose a threat," the iPhone maker said.

Apple submitted its response to a British parliamentary committee that is scrutinising the new bill in the latest clash between Western governments seeking to monitor the threat from Islamist militants and online companies working to maintain security.

Apple said the draft laws could weaken data encryption, sanction interference with its products, force non-UK companies to break the laws of their home countries, and spark similar legislation in other countries that could paralyse firms under the weight of dozens of contradictory laws.

Lending support to Apple's view, Microsoft also said an international approach would keep people more secure than competing measures from different countries.

"The legislation must avoid conflicts with the laws of other nations and contribute to a system where likeminded governments work together, not in competition, to keep people more secure," a spokeswoman said.

Apple said in its submission an attempt to force non-UK companies to take action that violated the laws of their own countries "would immobilize substantial portions of the tech sector and spark international conflicts".

The British government, which failed with a previous attempt to increase online surveillance dubbed the "snoopers' charter", has said the proposals will not ban encryption or do anything to undermine the security of people's data.

But Apple said proposals in the new bill would weaken encryption, such as the explicit obligation on service providers to help intercept data and hack suspects' devices.

The California-based company, which uses end-to-end encryption on its FaceTime and iMessage services, said the best way to protect against increasingly sophisticated hacking schemes and cyber attacks was by putting into place increasingly stronger -- not weaker -- encryption.

"In this rapidly evolving cyber-threat environment, companies should remain free to implement strong encryption to protect customers," it said.

As well as being able to carry out bulk interception of communications data, the bill would also allow the security services to perform "equipment interference", whereby spies take over computers or smartphones to access their data.

In its submission to the draft bill, Apple criticised any such requirement to create "backdoors" that could weaken the protections built into Apple products.

"A key left under the doormat would not just be there for the good guys," it said. "The bad guys would find it too."

(Editing by Guy Faulconbridge and Dominic Evans)

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Facebook service aimed at professionals to launch in coming months

n">Facebook at Work, Facebook Inc's (FB. O) professional version of its social network, is expected to launch in the coming months, after spending a year in tests, a company executive said.

The new service, geared towards workplace collaboration, is nearly identical to its ubiquitous social network, with a scrolling news "feed", "likes" and a chat service.

"I would say 95 percent of what we developed for Facebook is also adopted for Facebook at Work," Julien Codorniou, director of global platform partnerships at Facebook, told Reuters.

However, Facebook at Work users will maintain special profiles that are distinct from their existing Facebook profiles.

The company is also developing exclusive products for Facebook at Work, including security tools, Codorniou said.

Facebook started beta-testing the service in January and has kept it as a free, "invite-only" service for companies so far.

The service will be open to all companies once launched and Facebook plans to charge "a few dollars per month per user" for premium services such as analytics and customer support, a company spokeswoman said.

The online career market, which includes LinkedIn Corp (LNKD. N) and Monster Worldwide Inc (MWW. N), is worth about $6 billion a year, market research firm IDC had said in August.

More than 300 companies, including Heineken (HEIN. AS), Royal Bank of Scotland (RBS. L) and jewelry company Stella and Dot, are using Facebook at Work and Club Mediterranee SA is set to be the latest adopter.

The French resort company will offer the service to all its 13,000 employees through summer 2016, Anne Browaeys-Level, Club Mediterranee's chief marketing & digital officer, told Reuters.

Facebook's Codorniou said almost everything on Facebook at Work is the same as the regular Facebook social network, with some minor exceptions.

"You cannot play Candy Crush on Facebook at Work."

(Reporting by Anya George Tharakan in Bengaluru; Editing by Savio D'Souza)

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Dell acknowledges security hole in new laptops

n">Major U. S. computer company Dell Inc [DI. UL] said on Monday a security hole exists in some of its recently shipped laptops that could make it easy for hackers to access users’ private data.

A pre-installed program on some newly purchased Dell laptops that can only be removed manually by consumers makes them vulnerable to cyber intrusions that may allow hackers to read encrypted messages and redirect browser traffic to spoofs of real websites such as Google or those belonging to a bank, among other attacks.

“The recent situation raised is related to an on-the-box support certificate intended to provide a better, faster and easier customer support experience,” Dell said in a statement to Reuters. “Unfortunately, the certificate introduced an unintended security vulnerability.”

Dell declined to say how many computers or which specific models are affected. The software began getting installed on laptops in August, according to a spokeswoman. The company also said future systems would not contain the bug.

Dell said it would provide customers with instructions to permanently remove the certificate by email and on its support website, a process that will likely be highly technical.

Dell’s security flaw is similar to a so-called “Superfish” program detected on Lenovo computers earlier this year.

(Reporting by Dustin Volz in Washington; Additional reporting by Jim Finkle in Boston; Editing by Lisa Shumaker)

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Israel's Interacting Technology to upgrade Real Madrid mobile app

JERUSALEM Israeli tech firm Interacting Technology will collaborate with Real Madrid to upgrade the Spanish soccer club's official mobile app, they said on Wednesday.

The collaboration will be through Interacting Technology's Spanish subsidiary Sportech Interactech and could ultimately be worth millions of dollars.

Real Madrid's app was launched in May and offers fans premium content, match summaries, interviews and delayed games.

It said that through the app, the club seeks to add various types of online games and develop communication and interaction between fans, which would contribute to its monetization. These features would be available in 2016.

(Reporting by Steven Scheer)

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Google, Ford in talks on self-driving car partnership: source

WASHINGTON Google and Ford Motor Co are in talks about forming a partnership to develop autonomous car technology, a person briefed on the matter said on Tuesday.

The extent of a partnership between the second-largest U. S. automaker and search engine giant Alphabet Inc remains under discussion and the precise framework of any effort is unclear but it could include jointly building and developing cars.

The two sides have been talking for months, the source said.

A partnership between a major automaker and Google could speed the introduction of self-driving vehicles by giving the car company access to Google's wealth of software development while Google would benefit from the industrial and automotive know-how of a firm such as Ford.

Fully autonomous cars could eventually prevent thousands of crashes, deaths and injuries, reduce oil use through better traffic management and extend personal mobility to people unable to drive.

Ford Chief Executive Mark Fields met with Google co-founder Sergey Brin earlier this month in California to discuss the status of the talks, the source, who was briefed on the matter, said.

Google says it is in talks with many automakers. It is not clear if the talks with Ford have progressed beyond discussions with other automakers.

"We're not going to comment on rumor or speculation about specific conversations," Google said in a statement.

Ford declined to confirm or deny talks with Google.

"We have been, and will continue working with many companies and discussing a variety of subjects," Ford spokesman Alan Hall said.

Google has logged more than 1.3 million miles of autonomous driving. It has developed a prototype pod-like self-driving car that could be driven without a steering wheel and pedals.

Automotive News reported Monday the companies are in talks to have the automaker build Google's next-generation autonomous cars.

Yahoo Autos reported the two firms will create a joint venture to build self-driving vehicles with Google's technology. Both said an announcement on the partnership could be made at the Consumer Electronics Show in early January.

Ford shares were up 3.4 percent, or $0.47 a share, to $14.20 on news of the potential partnership. Google rose 0.3 percent, or $2.23, to $750 a share.

Karl Brauer, senior analyst at Kelley Blue Book, said both partners could benefit. "An alliance between the two industries could make everything happen much quicker," Brauer said.

Ford's former CEO, Alan Mulally, is a director at Google, while Google named John Krafcik as chief executive of its self-driving car project in September. Krafcik worked at Ford for 14 years in a number of positions.

(Reporting by David Shepardson; Additional reporting by Bernie Woodall in Detroit and Alexandria Sage in San Francisco; Editing by Alan Crosby)

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Apple allows long-term shareholders to nominate board members

n">Apple Inc on Tuesday became the latest U. S. company to amend its bylaws to allow long-term shareholders to nominate members to its board.

The iPhone maker in a filing said a shareholder who owns at least three percent of its outstanding shares continuously for at least three years were eligible to nominate directors.

Other companies who have agreed to adopt new "proxy access" rules this year include Microsoft Corp, Staples Inc, Big Lots Inc and Whiting Petroleum Corp.

"Proxy access" is shareholders' ability to nominate directors to run against a company's chosen slate of director nominees using its annual meeting materials.

The debate of proxy access has gained momentum through the year, with pension funds led by the New York City Employees' Retirement System and Calpers putting more than 100 resolutions at shareholder meetings in the U. S. demanding proxy access.

Under Apple's new bylaws, a group of up to 20 shareholders are eligible to nominate up to a fifth of the board, the company said in a regulatory filing on Tuesday.

The Apple board currently has 8 members, including Chief Executive Tim Cook and Walt Disney Co CEO Bob Iger.

(Reporting by Devika Krishna Kumar in Bengaluru; Editing by Shounak Dasgupta)

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Smartphones may have role in rise of U.S. traffic deaths

WASHINGTON The number of deaths from traffic accidents in the United States jumped 8.1 percent in the first half of 2015, suggesting smartphones and other driving distractions could be making America's roadways more dangerous, officials said on Tuesday.

Preliminary government statistics, released during a Thanksgiving holiday week known for heavy traffic congestion, showed deaths rising to 16,225 in the January-June period at a rate more than double an increase in overall driving spawned by falling gasoline prices and a growing economy.

"The increase in smartphones in our hands is so significant, there's no question that has to play some role. But we don't have enough information yet to determine how big a role," said Mark Rosekind, who heads the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, the federal government's auto safety watchdog.

The jump in 2015 fatalities follows a decline in annual traffic deaths to 32,675 last year, for a record low of 1.07 deaths per million vehicle miles traveled, according to NHTSA statistics. The 2014 data included 21,022 passenger vehicle deaths, the lowest since record-keeping began in 1975.

The increase in the first half of 2015 was the biggest six-month jump in traffic deaths reported since 1977, according to statistics. But officials cautioned that semi-annual results can be subject to major revisions and noted that a comparable 7.9 percent increase in early 2012 led to a 4 percent rise for that year as a whole.

Officials said it was too early to identify contributing factors. But Rosekind told reporters that officials are looking at likely causes including distracted driving and the possibility lower gas prices have encouraged more driving among "risky drivers" such as teen-agers.

Rosekind also criticized an absence of effective state laws that prohibit hand-held smartphones by drivers or require the use of seatbelts and motorcycle helmets.

The auto safety agency expects to unveil a program next year to target $500 million in federal safety grants at human factors that are responsible for 94 percent of motor vehicle crashes.

(Reporting by David Morgan; Editing by Andrew Hay)

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Foursquare near funding round that values it at $250 million - Re/code

SAN FRANCISCO Foursquare, which makes apps that let users find restaurants and stores and "check" into them, is discussing a funding round that would set its value at $250 million, less than half its worth two years ago, tech news site Re/code reported on Tuesday, citing sources.

The site also said the company had talked to potential buyers.

Re/code said the funding round would raise between $20 million and $40 million and would include one new investor, which it did not name.

Foursquare raised $35 million in a fundraising round in 2013. The Wall Street Journal reported at the time that round valued the company at $650 million, citing people familiar with the transaction.

Foursquare has been the subject of takeover speculation, with Yahoo Inc being reported more than once as a potential buyer.

Foursquare declined to comment on the Re/code report.

(Reporting by Sai Sachin R in Bengaluru; Editing by Stephen R. Trousdale and Sandra Maler)

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Palantir Technologies raises $880 million from investors

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Hyatt Hotels attacked with payment-card stealing malware

n">Hyatt Hotels Corp said on Wednesday that its payment processing system was infected with credit-card-stealing malware in an attack discovered three weeks ago, the latest in a series of breaches at hospitality firms.

Company spokeswoman Stephanie Sheppard said in an email late on Wednesday that the attack was discovered on Nov. 30.

She did not say if the attackers succeeded in stealing payment card numbers, how long its network was infected or how many of the chain's 627 hotels were affected.

"Customers should review their payment-card account statements closely and report any unauthorized charges to their card issuer immediately," she said.

Hyatt, controlled by the billionaire Pritzker family, is the fourth major hotel operator to warn of a breach since October.

Hilton Worldwide Holdings Inc and Starwood Hotels & Resorts Worldwide Inc last month disclosed attacks on payment processing systems. Donald Trump's luxury hotel chain, Trump Hotel Collection, also confirmed the possibility of a data security incident.

FireEye Inc said that Hyatt had hired it to help the company investigate the attack. FireEye's Mandiant unit is one of the biggest providers of response services to companies that are victims of cyber attacks.

Representatives at a Hyatt call center set up to handle inquiries about the breach said the malware was programmed to collect payment cardholder names, card numbers, expiration dates and internal verification codes.

"We have taken steps to strengthen the security of our systems," Sheppard said in the email. "Customers can feel confident using payment cards at Hyatt hotels worldwide."

Hyatt did not disclose the type of malware used in the attack.

The company said that customers should look for information on the attack at www.hyatt.com/protectingourcustomers.

Cyber intelligence firm iSight Partners in late November warned merchants about a new strain of payment-card-stealing malware dubbed ModPOS that it said evades almost all security software.

iSight held briefings with dozens of firms, including hospitality companies and retailers, to provide them with information on how to uncover ModPOS infections.

(Reporting by Radhika Rukmangadhan in Bengaluru and Jim Finkle in Boston; Editing by Sriraj Kalluvila and Sandra Maler)

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Chinese-backed electric car venture to build first plant in Nevada

n">Faraday Future, an electric car venture with backing from Chinese billionaire Yeuting Jia, announced plans Thursday to invest $1 billion to build its first manufacturing facility in Las Vegas to make what it touts as "cars of the future."

The plant is expected to create 4,500 jobs and is contingent on the approval of a $250 million incentive package by the Nevada state legislature, which would include tax abatements and tax credits.

"This is a new era for the state of Nevada," Governor Brian Sandoval said at a press conference to announce the investment.

Sandoval said his administration estimated the plant would bring benefits to state coffers of around $760 million over the course of 20 years and would create a total of 13,000 jobs, including 3,000 in construction. He said Faraday had committed to ensuring 50 percent of the workforce would be residents of Nevada.

Dag Reckhorn, Faraday's vice president for global manufacturing, said the plant would cover an area of 3 million square feet and be environmentally friendly, but he did not provide a timeline for its completion nor any estimates for how many cars it should produce.

"Our vision is for the future needs and expectations of the customer because we don't feel today's cars meet today's needs," Reckhorn said.

The announcement comes more than a year after Nevada's legislature approved $1.3 billion in incentives and tax exemptions for electric car maker Tesla Motors Inc to build a $5 billion lithium-ion battery plant in the state.

These factories are key to efforts by Nevada, best known for Las Vegas' glittering casino industry, to revitalize and diversify its economy, which was hard-hit by the mortgage meltdown and the Great Recession.

Faraday is one of several startups in China and the United States focused on building electric cars to rival Tesla's.

In September, Beijing Electric Vehicle Co, an affiliate of government-owned BAIC Motor Corp Ltd, said it opened a technology research center in California's Silicon Valley and is teaming with U. S. electric-car startup Atieva to develop electric vehicles for China and global markets.

State-owned Chinese automaker SAIC Motor Corp is also setting up a research facility in Silicon Valley and is developing electric and self-driving cars.

(Reporting by Nick Carey; Editing by Leslie Adler)

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Wal-Mart adds to mobile wallet frenzy with 'Walmart Pay'

n">Wal-Mart Stores Inc (WMT. N) launched its own mobile payment service Walmart Pay on Thursday, potentially dealing a sharp blow to the ambitions of a mobile wallet the company had been co-developing with a consortium of retailers.

The mobile payments space in the U. S. has seen a flurry of new launches and partnerships in the past year but has failed to gain traction as customer and merchant adoption have been sluggish.

CurrentC - whose developers included Wal-Mart, Target Corp (TGT. N) and Best Buy Co Inc (BBY. N) among others - was likely to prove strong competition to Apple Inc's (AAPL. O) Apple Pay because it was developed as a single payment solution that could be used at many retailers and integrate their loyalty programs.

But years of delay, a data breach and management changes hurt its prospects. An increasingly bigger worry for CurrentC is the end of its exclusive partnership with most of its members, which means they can now accept other mobile payment options at their stores.

Best Buy (BBY. N) and Rite Aid (RAD. N) already accept Apple Pay and Alphabet Inc's (GOOGL. O) Android Pay. Target accepts Apple Pay in its mobile app and a company spokesman said it is exploring additional mobile wallet options without giving details.

A spokesman for CurrentC said that despite the launch of Walmart Pay, Wal-Mart, the world's largest retailer, continues to be a "strong and supportive partner" and they are working on a national launch of that service with the retailer as its partner.

A survey released by data firm InfoScout found Apple Pay use to be at its lowest rate since the firm started tracking it. Shoppers used it this past Black Friday for only 2.7 percent of eligible transactions.

"There has been a lot of hype and advertising in this space but there are no clear winners . market share is still up for grabs," said Kevin Grieve, partner and head of the North American cards and payments practice at Strategy&, part of PricewaterhouseCoopers.

Walmart Pay, which will be a part of the retailer's mobile application, will be available on Apple and Android devices and allow payments with any major credit, debit, pre-paid or Walmart gift cards, the company said.

Walmart Pay requires customers to choose the payment option within the retailer's mobile app at a checkout counter, activate their phone camera and scan the code displayed at the register after which an e-receipt will be sent to the app.

Walmart Pay was introduced in select U. S. stores and is expected to be available nationwide by the first half of 2016. The service will also allow adding other payment options such as mobile wallets in the future.

(Reporting by Sruthi Ramakrishnan in Bengaluru and Nandita Bose in Chicago; Additional reporting by Subrat Patnaik in Bengaluru; Editing by Maju Samuel and Alan Crosby)

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Exclusive: Three Goldman bankers leave for Uber as tech world raids Wall Street talent

NEW YORK/SAN FRANCISCO Three mid-level bankers in Goldman Sachs Group Inc's (GS. N) technology investment banking group in San Francisco have left to take positions at ride service company Uber Technologies Inc in recent months, people familiar with the matter told Reuters.

The bankers are the latest to leave Wall Street banks for Silicon Valley startups, where the lure of more flexible hours - and in some cases stock options and share grants - can be hard to resist. For tech companies, having bankers on staff can help smooth the path to an initial public offering and other capital raisings.

Uber, currently valued at around $51 billion, said in August that it expected an IPO within 18 to 24 months. It has already raised $7.4 billion from multiple financing rounds, and is the biggest so-called "unicorn" - the term for privately held tech startups worth $1 billion or more - that has yet to go public.

Goldman does not disclose attrition figures, but it has lost enough employees to startups, private equity firms, and other companies in recent years that it announced earlier this month a series of changes designed to help it retain more junior employees at the analyst and associate level, including promoting them faster. It has also set up a task force to help it retain mid-level employees who hold the vice president title.

Spokespeople for Goldman and Uber both declined to comment. The increasing attraction of other fields for Wall Street bankers underscores how increased regulation after the financial crisis has weighed on employees' potential earnings from careers in the sector.

There is a lack of publicly available data documenting how many people have left the big banks, but there have been a series of high profile exits, including Ruth Porat, former chief financial officer at Morgan Stanley (MS. N), who earlier this year took a similar role at Google parent Alphabet Inc. (GOOGL. O), and Michael Evans, former vice chairman and head of Asia at Goldman, who became president of China e-commerce company Alibaba Group Holding (BABA. N) in August.

A vice president in Wall Street investment banking can get paid $500,000, including bonus, while a mid-level corporate development employee at a technology company like Uber might earn closer to $200,000, recruiters said. The banker's salary will often fluctuate depending on how the deals and capital raising areas are doing in a particular year. Bankers may take pay cuts to move to Silicon Valley, but there is often the appeal of a better work-life balance and the opportunity to work at fast-growing private companies that can offer shares or stock options, and therefore the possibility of big IPO paydays for senior staff. Those gains can sometimes more than make up for the reduced salaries.

HARVARD PIPELINE

Some younger workers who would have been expected to head to Wall Street in the past are avoiding banks altogether. At Harvard Business School, for example, 20 percent of graduating students from the class of 2015 said they were taking jobs at technology companies, up from 11 percent in 2011, according to the school’s employment report.

While 31 percent of students said they were going to work for financial services companies, about three quarters of that group went into venture capital, private equity and leveraged buyout firms. The numbers going into investment banking and sales and trading, the traditional focus of firms like Goldman, halved to 5 percent, from 10 percent in 2011.

Banks may not like losing employees, but they would rather lose them to clients than to competitors, said Noah Schwarz, a senior recruiter at headhunters Korn Ferry. A banker that goes to a client is "viewed as a 'good leaver,'" Schwarz said.

The three Goldman employees who joined Uber - Ian Kleinfield, Prabir Adarkar, and Chris Lapointe – did not return emails and LinkedIn messages seeking comment.

Uber has hired a number of senior employees from Goldman’s technology investment banking group before, including finance chief Gautam Gupta and corporate development head Cameron Poetzscher.

The ride service company often hires bankers for corporate development. They focus on plotting the company's strategy and handling financial transactions including capital raising. Some of the bank's employees would know Uber's finances well as Goldman helped it to raise $1.6 billion by selling convertible securities to Goldman wealth management clients this year.

Former Goldman employees on the engineering side have also played key roles in creating the formulas that Uber uses to determine how much it should charge for rides at any given time based on demand, recruiters said.

Uber has relationships with a number of other Wall Street banks. They include Morgan Stanley, which was the lead arranger of a $2 billion line of credit for the company, also this year.

BANKERS OR CONSULTANTS

Uber is growing very rapidly, and now has about 5,000 employees, up from only about 550 at the beginning of 2014. The company has expanded to dozens of new cities in the past two years, and now spans 68 countries.

Chelsea Cooper worked at Goldman for four years before leaving the banking world behind during the financial crisis for a career in technology. She was hired at Uber in 2012 as general manager of the company’s United Kingdom operations, where she launched the service. For employees on the business side, "Uber really hired from two pools: from bankers or consultants," said Cooper, who left Uber in 2013 and is now head of technology at recruiting firm Hired. Goldman ranks in the top 10 companies that Uber recruits from, ahead of even large technology firms like Twitter Inc (TWTR. N), Oracle Corp (ORCL. N) and Intel Corp (INTC. O), according to LinkedIn. Tech companies like Microsoft (MSFT. O) and Facebook (FB. O) are bigger sources for hiring than Goldman.

Other Silicon Valley companies have also been hiring former Goldman employees. The bank is one of the most sought-after for technology companies, who believe that Goldman screens and trains its employees rigorously, recruiters said. "If someone has made it through the Goldman Sachs process, you know they are a high-caliber hire," said Dave Carvajal, founder and CEO of Dave Partners, a tech recruiting firm.

Goldman’s expertise in technology banking helps too. Its technology team, which is one of the bank’s largest investment banking groups, has advised technology companies on more merger deals than any other bank in the world so far this year, according to Thomson Reuters data.

(Reporting by Olivia Oran in New York and Heather Somerville in San Francisco; Editing by Dan Wilchins and Martin Howell)

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Toshiba to brief on Westinghouse impairment charges on Friday

TOKYO Toshiba Corp will brief analysts on Friday on impairment changes at its U. S. nuclear power unit Westinghouse.

Chief Executive Masashi Muromachi and Westinghouse chief Danny Roderick will both attend the briefing, Toshiba said.

The conglomerate this month reported that Westinghouse had booked charges of $930 million in fiscal 2012 and $390 million in fiscal 2013 as the Fukushima disaster reduced demand for new nuclear power plants. [nL3N1372RN]

That increased speculation long held by analysts that the value of assets and goodwill related to Toshiba's 87 percent stake in the nuclear unit has been overstated.

(Reporting by Makiko Yamazaki; editing by Jason Neely)

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Chinese tech company Qihoo 360 latest to be taken private

n">Qihoo 360 Technology Co (QIHU. N) said it agreed to be acquired by a group of investors in a deal valued at about $9.3 billion, joining a long list of U. S.-listed Chinese technology companies being taken private this year.

Executives at several Chinese companies have been betting on higher valuations back home, but the economy that accounts for much of their business has been slowing.

Shares of Qihoo, which listed in the United States in 2011, were up 2.7 percent at $73.78 in premarket trading on Friday, below the offer of $77 for each American Depositary Share.

The offer represents a 16.6 pct premium to the stock's closing on June 16, the day before the company said it had received a buyout offer from a consortium led by Chief Executive Hongyi Zhou at $77 per ADS.

The company said on Friday entities controlled by Zhou and Chairman Xiangdong Qi agreed to vote all their shares in favor of the deal. Their combined stake represents about 61 percent of the voting rights attached to the outstanding shares.

It was not immediately clear whether Zhou was part of the consortium that is taking Qihoo private.

In deals collectively worth $40 billion, some 33 mainland China companies have unveiled plans this year to be taken private and delist from the United States as of mid-November, according to Thomson Reuters data.

Chinese firms that have been taken private include Shanda Games Ltd and medical R&D services provider WuXi PharmaTech.

Online dating service Jiayuan.com, dubbed the 'Match.com of China,' is in the process of being taken private.

In November, e-commerce giant Alibaba Group Holding Ltd (BABA. N) offered to take Youku Tudou Inc (YOKU. N), popularly known as "China's YouTube", private for about $3.7 billion.

The Qihoo deal, which is currently expected to close during the first half of 2016, includes about $1.6 billion of debt.

The consortium taking the company private includes Citic Guoan, Golden Brick Silk Road Capital, Sequoia Capital China, Taikang Life Insurance, Ping An Insurance, Sunshine Insurance, New China Capital, Huatai Ruilian, Huasheng Capital or their affiliated entities.

J. P. Morgan Securities (Asia Pacific) Ltd is the financial adviser to the company's special committee. Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom LLP is U. S. legal counsel to the committee.

Huatai United Securities Co Ltd is the consortium's financial adviser and Kirkland & Ellis LLP is the U. S. legal counsel.

(Reporting by Sruthi Ramakrishnan and Devika Krishna Kumar in Bengaluru; Editing by Sriraj Kalluvila)

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Tim Cook calls notion of Apple avoiding U.S. taxes 'political crap'

SAN FRANCISCO/BENGALURU Apple Inc Chief Executive Tim Cook dismissed as "total political crap" the notion that the tech giant was avoiding taxes.

Cook's remarks, made on CBS' 60 Minutes show, come amid a debate in the United States over corporations avoiding taxes through techniques such as so-called inversion deals, where a company redomiciles its tax base to another country.

Apple saves billions of dollars in taxes through subsidiaries in Ireland, where it declares much of its overseas profit.

"Apple pays every tax dollar we owe," Cook told 60 Minutes' Charlie Rose, according to excerpts from the interview released on Friday. (cbsn.ws/1NtLSHA)

Cook said bringing profits back to the United States would cost him 40 percent. "I don't think that's a reasonable thing to do," he said.

The Senate Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations probed Apple's tax strategies and found that Apple in 2012 alone avoided paying $9 billion in U. S. taxes, using a strategy involving three offshore units with no discernible tax home, or "residence."

The press office of the subcommittee did not immediately return a request for comment on Cook's remarks.

Apple holds $181.1 billion in offshore profits, more than any other U. S. company, and would owe an estimated $59.2 billion in taxes if it tried to bring the money back to the United States, a recent study based on SEC filings showed.

The current tax code was made for the industrial age, and not the "digital age," Cook said.

"It's backwards. It's awful for America. It should have been fixed many years ago."

Rebecca Lester, assistant professor of accounting at the Stanford Graduate School of Business, thought Cook's colorful language might reflect frustration about the lack of movement on tax reform in Washington.

"Companies and the government are in a game of chicken, waiting to see which one moves first," she said. But so far, corporations are unwilling to bring overseas money back because of the tax implications and want Washington to act.

"It sounds like Tim Cook is getting even more frustrated," Lester said.

Apple shares closed down 2.7 percent on Friday at $106.03.

(Reporting by Sai Sachin R in Bengaluru; Editing by Sayantani Ghosh, Stephen R. Trousdale and Tom Brown)

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Alphabet mulls expanding Fiber internet service to LA, Chicago

n" readability="37">Alphabet Inc said it would consider bringing its Fiber internet service to Los Angeles and Chicago, the two biggest cities the tech giant has worked with so far for the super-fast web service.

The Google Fiber service, which promises Internet speeds of up to 1000 megabits per second, is currently available in Kansas City; Austin, Texas and Provo, Utah. (fiber.google.com/about/)

Alphabet, formerly Google, is moving into a new corporate structure that will provide more visibility on projects such as Fiber.

(Reporting by Sai Sachin R in Bengaluru; Editing by Savio D'Souza)

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Mexico telecoms regulator backs AT&T and Telefonica spectrum deal

MEXICO CITY Mexico's telecoms regulator on Thursday said it had approved swaps of frequency blocks and a spectrum rental deal between AT&T Inc and Telefonica SA, the main competitors to the country's dominant player, Carlos Slim's America Movil.

The Federal Telecommunications Institute (IFT) said it had authorized the swaps and the rental deal that would allow AT&T to use spectrum in the range of frequencies in the 1.7/2.1 GHz band in some regions, and for Telefonica's local unit to use it in the frequency ranges of the 1.9 GHz band.

In 2013, Mexico launched a reform to loosen billionaire Slim's hold on the country's telecoms market. The IFT was created as a tougher regulator to spur greater competition.

(Writing by Dave Graham; Editing by Lisa Shumaker)

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