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Karl Wabst

StreetView killed Bambi, but it fights crime too | NetworkWorld.com Community - 0 views

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    With all the attention Google StreetView's clash with a baby deer evoked, it can be easy to overlook the tool's crime-fighting good side. Not too long ago, StreetView was instrumental in returning a kidnapped Massachusetts girl safely to her home, and just recently, it helped a Swiss police team detect a 1.2-acre marijuana field and nab the gang responsible. As with all things Google, you have to take the bad with the good. And the good can be pretty good, as reported in the Worcester Telegram. When 9-year-old Natalie Maltais was kidnapped by her grandmother and taken to a motel in rural Virginia, Athol police were able to track her down using her cellphone and Google StreetView. The cellphone's GPS data focused on a 300-foot area in Natural Bridge, Va. Using StreetView, the Worcester cops plugged in the coordinates of the area, navigated around a bit and saw a nearby motel that looked promising. When they sent Virginia police to the site, they found the grandmother along with the girl, and returned her safely to her legal guardians. A happy ending. Similarly, the AP yesterday reported that Swiss police used Google Earth to discover the pot field and make several arrests. While working the case, the police used Google Earth to zero in on a suspect's residence, only to stumble upon the field. Although it had been camouflaged by corn planted all along its perimeter, the weed field couldn't hide from Google's Earth's piercing satellite gaze. The find led to the arrest of 16 suspects who have allegedly sold up to 7 tons of hashish and marijuana, with an annual turnover of 3 million to 10 million francs (or $2.5 million to $8.64 million) per year. So yes, while Google can be insensitive at times, especially when it comes to images uploaded by StreetView, it's also a proven force for good in the world. In other words, a tool is only as good (or bad) as the person using it. Google doesn't kill Bambis, people do.
Karl Wabst

GenevaLunch » Blog Archive » Switzerland accepts OECD standard on tax help... - 0 views

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    The Swiss government Friday noon announced that it will adopt the OECD standard on administrative assistance in tax matters, which is part of the OECD's Model Tax Convention. As a result Switzerland will exchange information with other governments in individual cases where "a specific and justified request has been made" for any form of tax offense. Accepting the standard will require renegotiating existing bilateral treaties. Requests from other governments, made according to the standard, will be honoured once new treaties go into effect. Ed. note: it was widely reported Friday that Switzerland has agreed to assist other governments in cases of tax evasion, not just fraud. While this may be the result of the 13 March announcement, Switzerland specifically states that it intends to adopt the convention "in accordance with Art. 26 of the OECD Model Tax Convention."
Karl Wabst

Facebook surfing while sick costs woman job | Oddly Enough | Reuters - 0 views

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    A Swiss insurance worker lost her job after surfing popular social network site Facebook while off sick, her employer said Friday. The woman said she could not work in front of a computer as she needed to lie in the dark but was then seen to be active on Facebook, which insurer Nationale Suisse said in a statement had destroyed its trust in the employee. "This abuse of trust, rather than the activity on Facebook, led to the ending of the work contract," it said. The unnamed woman told the 20 Minuten daily she had been surfing Facebook in bed on her iPhone and accused her employer of spying on her and other employees by sending a mysterious friend request which allows access to personal online activity. Nationale Suisse rejected the accusation of spying and said the employee's Facebook activity had been stumbled across by a colleague in November, before use of the social network site was blocked in the company.
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