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Gerald Hussen

Financial Blog Corliss Online Group: Two Systems, One Country - 1 views

The brutal attack on the former chief editor of a major Hong Kong newspaper has appalled and shocked this city, where violent crimes are rare. Kevin Lau Chun-to, a veteran journalist who had just s...

Financial Blog Corliss Online Group Two Systems One Country

started by Gerald Hussen on 10 Mar 14 no follow-up yet
Gerald Hussen

Corliss Group Online Financial Mag Hong Kong 5 Can't Miss Investing Stories Last Week - 1 views

Corliss Group Online Financial Mag Hong Kong 5 Can't Miss Investing Stories Last Week Let the good times roll! The S&P/TSX Composite Index (TSX:^OSPTX) continued its month-long winning streak las...

Corliss Group Online Financial Mag Hong Kong 5 Can't Miss Investing Stories Last Week

started by Gerald Hussen on 06 Mar 14 no follow-up yet
Gerald Hussen liked it
Gerald Hussen

Financial Blog Corliss Online Group: Another deficit of clear thinking among Hong Kong'... - 1 views

Philip Bowring is appalled by the report on fiscal planning(http://www.scmp.com/comment/insight-opinion/article/1443828/another-deficit-clear-thinking-among-hong-kongs-fiscal) that seeks to preserv...

Financial Blog Corliss Online Group Another deficit of clear thinking among Hong Kong's fiscal planners

started by Gerald Hussen on 12 Mar 14 no follow-up yet
Yeoseff Kent

Eric Schmidt declares Android more secure than iOS - 3 views

I like your post ,and like to read your post. I will focus on it all the way.

Eric Schmidt declares Android more secure than iOS

Gerald Hussen

Corliss Group Online Financial Mag, The Morning Ledger: Retailers Get Grim Warning on C... - 1 views

http://blogs.wsj.com/cfo/2014/01/24/the-morning-ledger-retailers-get-grim-warning-on-cyberattacks/ The FBI is warning retailers to expect more cyberattacks. The agency distributed a confidential r...

The Morning Ledger: Retailers Get Grim Warning on Cyberattacks Corliss Group Online Financial Mag

started by Gerald Hussen on 30 Jan 14 no follow-up yet
margiee yunis

Corliss Group Financial Magazine Online Reviews : Beskatta fraga som globala foretag ut... - 1 views

Kalla lank: http://www.theaustralian.com.au/opinion/columnists/taxing-question-as-global-firms-exploit-the-gaps/story-fn7078da-1226738517004 JOE Hockeys varning pa onsdagen att Australien kommer a...

Corliss Group Financial Magazine Online Reviews : Beskatta fraga som globala foretag utnyttja luckorna

started by margiee yunis on 15 Oct 13 no follow-up yet
Sabina Dupras

Financial Blog Corliss Group: From Corporate Giants to Main Street, Fraud is on the Rise - 1 views

Investors, analysts and corporate directors rely on external audits to keep companies honest. But a new study says audits are woefully ineffective at uncovering fraud. In fact, more than twice as m...

Financial Blog Corliss Group From Corporate Giants to Main Street Fraud is on the Rise

started by Sabina Dupras on 27 May 14 no follow-up yet
britneypearce

Americans have limited financial knowledge, survey says - 1 views

A new survey authorized by the Fifth Third Bank and performed by Research Now, reveals that Americans have limited financial knowledge and stability, based on The Corliss Group online magazine repo...

Americans have limited knowledge survey says Financial Review Corliss Group online magazine

started by britneypearce on 23 May 15 no follow-up yet
martaakerman

Financial Blog Corliss Group Cybercrime Could Cost Global Economy Over $500 Billion - 2 views

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    McAfee report paints grim picture of lucrative industry, despite incomplete data. Cybercrime could be costing the global economy as much as $575 billion annually, according to a new report from McAfee. The Intel-owned security company based its estimate on a range of sources, from government agencies to NGOs and academic institutions, counting both direct and indirect costs. The report, Estimating the Global Cost of Cybercrime explained the methodology as follows: "This study assumes that the cost of cybercrime is a constant share of national income, adjusted for levels of development. We calculated the likely global cost by looking at publically available data from individual countries, buttressed by interviews with government officials and experts. We looked for confirming evidence for these numbers by looking at data on IP theft, fraud, or recovery costs. In addition to a mass of anecdotes, we ultimately found aggregate data for 51 countries in all regions of the world who account for 80% of global income. We used this data to estimate the global cost, adjusting for differences among regions." However, the vendor cautioned that "differences in the thoroughness of national accounting", as well as underreporting of incidents and the difficulty of valuing IP all make calculations an imprecise art. High income countries lost more as a percentage of GDP, which could be because they have better accounting systems in place and/or that their IP is more valuable and therefore a bigger target for criminals. The $575bn figure therefore comes from extrapolating a global total from high loss countries. It could be as low as $375bn if McAfee had extrapolated from "all countries where we could find open source data".
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