Herbal meds to be studied via big data

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Herbal meds to be studied via big data

Breaking News August 25, 2018 10:19

By The Yomiuri Shimbun
Asia News Network
Tokyo

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The government plans to use big data to examine the efficacy and side effects of Chinese herbal medicine, known as kampo in Japanese, as early as next year, collecting information on about 1 million recipients per medication for analysis, according to sources.

It intends to establish a scientific basis for the effective use of these medications without side effects, they said.

The Cabinet Secretariat will include the project’s related expenses in its budgetary request for fiscal 2019.

Kampo herbal medicines combine various crude drugs made by drying plant roots, stalks and leaves. They can be consumed as they are or dissolved in hot water. Popular treatments include kakkonto, which is used for colds, and yokukansan, for insomnia and other symptoms. About 150 types of kampo medication are covered by public health insurance.

Medical treatments based on kampo form Japan’s traditional medicine. It is said that there are tens of thousands of types of herbal medications, if traditional Chinese medicine and India’s Ayurveda — both of which kampo originates from — are included.

Kampo treatments are prescribed based on patients’ experiences using them, and the effectiveness of many herbs and any mechanisms that may cause side effects still have not been confirmed scientifically, according to the sources.

The government’s Headquarters for Healthcare Policy and the Health, Labor and Welfare Ministry will play a major role in conducting the verification work. They will seek cooperation from hospitals, clinics and nursing care facilities across the nation, collecting information regarding the usage and efficacy of kampo treatments from patients’ examination records and diaries at nursing care facilities into a big data server.

An enormous quantity of data will be anonymized before being processed into statistics. The statistics will then be used to verify the efficacy of kampo herbs and examine whether the duration, method and frequency of taking them as medications are effective in curing a disease without causing side effects.

The government also aims to use the data to find ways to prevent disease and promote health. In addition, it will examine effective combinations with Western medical science, which aims to remove the causes of disease through procedures such as surgery.

The government is considering installing a data server at Keio University Hospital in Tokyo, which houses the Center for Kampo Medicine where kampo-based treatments are carried out.Speech

Spraying drones could be coming to a farm near you

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http://www.nationmultimedia.com/detail/Startup_and_IT/30352935

Spraying drones could be coming to a farm near you

Tech August 25, 2018 00:17

By The Nation weekend

An agricultural drone will be coming to Thai farms in September after being introduced at the recent Agri Technica Asia Exhibition in Bangkok.

DJI, a commercial drones and aerial-imaging technology company, introduced their Agras MG-1P agricultural drone at the fair. The Agras MG-1P is a powerful and intelligent aerial platform designed to aid the agricultural sector in multiple ways.

Drones have emerged as a critical tool for the next-generation workforce around the world and especially in the field of agriculture, says Jiadong Sun, head of agriculture business for DJI Asia-Pacific,

“As the world population continues to grow, food demand is on the rise,” said Sun. “The industry is also faced with labour shortages and traditional practices that are less efficient, costly and may pose health risks. We believe that drone technology can play a bigger role to help tackle some of the fundamental challenges we are facing.”

Boasting more than a decade of knowledge and experience developing best-in-class aerial technology and together with its ecosystem partners, DJI aims is to provide comprehensive solutions that could support and bring tangible benefits to the farming community in Thailand, said a company press release.

Thailand will see Agras MG-1P  drones available by the end of September.

The model features DJI’s flight-control system and integrated high-precision radar to ensure stability and accuracy. It includes a durable four-in-one radar system with an IP67 protection rating which functions during daylight and low-light operations. It is unaffected by light, dust or small particles.

During the flight, the drone scans the terrain below in real-time, automatically maintaining its height and distance from plants to ensure application of an optimal amount of liquid.

Users can select automatic, semi-automatic or manual operation modes, depending on terrain, with uniform spraying carried out via the drone’s nozzles.

The drone has four replaceable, metal nozzles, each placed directly below a motor. Downward airflow generated by the rotors increases spraying velocity, allowing the agent to reach plant stems and leaves near the soil.

The Agras MG-1P works together with the MG App 2.0 and is compatible with the PC-based software PC GS Pro, a mapping and waypoint software solution that uses aerial images of the mapped area to enhance efficiency during a spraying operation.

China’s Ping An links with Grab in healthcare venture

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China’s Ping An links with Grab in healthcare venture

Tech August 25, 2018 00:16

By The Nation weekend

ChinESE healthcare services platform Ping An Healthcare and Technology,  also known as Ping An Good Doctor, has joined with Grab Holdings to set up a joint venture company to deliver online healthcare services in Southeast Asia.

The joint venture, the first of its kind to operate regionally, aims to transform health services in the region. It will provide an array of integrated medical services such as artificial intelligence (AI), assisted online medical consultations, medicine delivery and appointments booking through an online platform.

The joint venture will work with governments, hospitals, doctors and other key stakeholders and seek partnerships to ensure local market needs are met, according to a company press release.

The joint venture will utilise GrabPay, a leading digital wallet serving Southeast Asia, to complete transactions. The service will launch in select countries in the first quarter of next year.

Ping An Good Doctor (PAGD) is the top online healthcare player in China, according to the release. With more than 200 million users, Ping An Good Doctor delivers healthcare solutions through its online platform using innovative AI technology that efficiently guides the online medical consultation process. Together with Grab’s geographic footprint, deep local market knowledge and broad reach as evidenced by over 100 million downloads, the joint venture hopes to address the burgeoning healthcare needs of Southeast Asia.

By 2030, Southeast Asia will become the world’s fourth largest economy, and faces rapidly growing healthcare needs and accompanying challenges. Challenges include a lack of adequate medical infrastructure in some countries, a rural-urban divide when it comes to the accessibility of doctors, and inefficiencies on the consumer end when needing to see the doctor. For example, in Indonesia, there is only one physician for every 5,000 people, which is significantly lower than high-income countries who enjoy three or four physicians per 1,000 people.

Efficient and timely healthcare solutions delivered digitally have the potential to transform the industry and improve medical outcomes.

Anthony Tan, co-founder and group CEO, notes that this move is Grab’s first venture into online healthcare. PAGD is an industry leader in online healthcare and has developed a proven business model around a complex challenge in China, he says.

Opening up access

“We believe everyone should have access to high-quality and affordable healthcare. Together with PAGD, we will deliver affordable healthcare through technology. This has the potential to make a huge impact in the lives of our families and communities we serve across Southeast Asia,” said Tan.

Wang Tao, chairman and CEO of Ping An Good Doctor, predicts that Ping An Good Doctor will become a globally influential Internet healthcare ecosystem platform.

“It will replicate our successful model in the Chinese market to the overseas market and export its mature technologies and services, resolving medical issues worldwide,” he said.

“We are excited to work with Grab to tap the growth potential of Southeast Asia, providing outstanding one-stop medical health services to hundreds of millions of local users,” added Tao.

Ping An Good Doctor is the latest partner to join GrabPlatform, launched in July 2018. The platform boasts a suite of technologies that enable partners to access components of Grab’s technology including transport, logistics and payments.

Through GrabPlatform, Grab’s strategic partners can leverage Grab’s user base, offline distribution network and technology solutions customised for Southeast Asia to more quickly and efficiently expand across the region.

By working with partners, Grab aims to provide users more relevant and valuable services. Today, users across 225 cities in eight countries, can use the Grab app to order food, hail a ride, send a parcel, order groceries or read news.

Grab will be the first mobile technology start-up in Southeast Asia to hit US$1 billion (Bt32.75 billion) in revenue this year. Grab has over 7.1 million micro-entrepreneurs, including drivers and agents, on its platform.

How to grow your own LIGHT

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  • Pages of the classic literary work “Paradise Lost” are illuminated with nanobionic light-emitting watercress plants that were developed at MIT. /Photo Courtesy of MIT
  • Michael Strano, an American chemical engineer from MIT, presents his research into using nanoparticles to give plants new capabilities in Bangkok.

How to grow your own LIGHT

business August 25, 2018 00:13

By Jintana Panyaarvudh
The Nation weekend

3,698 Viewed

GLOWING TREES THAT SERVE AS LAMP POSTS ARE SOME OF THE BRIGHT IDEAS ENVISAGED FOR THAILAND with help from US experts

SOME engineers are always thinking about how to extract more food production from plants, but for American chemical engineer Michael Strano, plants are something more than just a source of food – they are the starting point of technology.

Calling himself a nanotechnologist, the professor at Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) began asking the question a few years ago whether engineers should start to look at living plants in the same way as he does.

“It’s a very new thing for engineers [to think about plants that way]. And it’s very different from what we are dealing with in living plants,” Strano told The Nation Weekend  in a recent interview in which he explained how he began his interest in bionic plants almost a decade ago.

Strano is a renowned carbon nanotube scientist who is ranked among the top 1 per cent of the most cited researchers and is known for his groundbreaking findings.

He set up Strano Research Group with a laboratory at MIT. His research focuses on biomolecule/nanoparticle interactions and the surface chemistry of low dimensional systems, nano-electronics, nanoparticle separations, and applications of vibrational spectroscopy to nanotechnology.

Plant nanobionics, a new research area pioneered by Strano’s lab, aims to give plants novel features by embedding them with different types of nanoparticles.

The group’s goal is to engineer plants to take over many of the functions now performed by electrical devices as Strano realised living plants possess many inherent advantages.

Plants can harvest energy through photosynthesis, store energy, gain access to low- energy waterflow or transpiration, adapt to harsh environments, and perform autonomous self-repairs, according to the professor.

“Plants collect a lot of information from the environment and this came as a surprise to me as an engineer,” he said.

He said plants know a lot about the environment and keep the information inside and that it’s very interesting for him to try to tap into this realm.

“With the techniques we have developed at MIT, we can bridge the gap between what the plants know and what the human can know,” he said.

The research conducted by Strano and his team at MIT studies include light-emitting plants. They have made watercress glow by embedding them with specialised nanoparticles.

He has also helped embed spinach with carbon nanotubes to detect explosives and wirelessly relay that information to a handheld device similar to a smartphone.

Another research project involves developing sensors that can be printed on plant leaves to provide alerts on water shortages.

Late last year, the team created glowing watercress through luciferase, the enzyme that gives fireflies their glow. The enzyme makes a molecule called luciferin, which causes the watercress to emit the light.

Another molecule, known as co-enzyme A, helps the process along by removing a reaction byproduct that can inhibit luciferase activity.

The plants can give off dim light for nearly four hours and the brightness equates to around 6 per cent of an LED light.

“The vision is to make a plant that will function as a desk lamp – a lamp that you don’t have to plug in. The light is ultimately powered by the energy metabolism of the plant itself,” Strano said.

The researchers also demonstrated a crucial part of turning the light off and on through promoters and inhibitors. In daylight, the plant could stop emitting light.

“What needs to be done is we have to wire the switch to something in the environment. It could be temperature or sunlight,” Strano added.

This technology could be used to provide low-intensity indoor lighting, or to transform trees into self-powered streetlights, he said.

And his ultimate goal is to make a light source that is powered by nature itself.

“I’ll be honest. It would create something beautiful in its function. It is the value of the plants,” the professor said.

His interest in illuminating plants was inspired by Avatar, an American epic science-fiction film. The 2009 blockbuster was about an alien world with alien plants that generated their own light, otherwise known as bioluminescent plants.

“The idea has been making its way into popular consciousness for a long time. Making illuminating plants is a pride that society is eager to see happen,” Strano said.

Michael Strano, second from right, Thippaporn Ahriyavraromp, group CEO of DTGO Corporation Limited, second from left, and Singh Intrachooto, the chief adviser to Research & Innovation for Sustainability Center, far right.

Thai collaboration

Strano was in Bangkok on Monday to present his research into using nanoparticles to give plants new capabilities at the Research & Innovation for Sustainability Centre (RISC) as part of a collaboration between property developer Magnolia Quality Development Corporation Limited (MQDC) and US-based MIT Energy Initiative (MITEI). The partnership aims to slash greenhouse gas emissions from Thai property developments.

After his success in making a watercress shoot glow as a prototype for a living desk lamp, the professor and the centre will work together to research and develop trees that can operate as self-powered streetlights.

Strano has proposed four species of trees for this kind of experimentation — teak hardwood, mango plum, Burmese grape, and Dipterocarpaceae.

They will together conduct a study into which ones are the most suitable, as different leaves have different qualities. Some leaves are very waxy and others have surfaces that make it easier for water to penetrate.

They hope to develop illuminating trees that will be used as lamp posts at The Forestias, a 119-acre green development in Bangna, on the outskirts of Bangkok.

Developed by MQDC, The Forestias is a mixed-use project being advanced under a concept of “sustainable happiness” that integrates natural ecosystems into communities.

Currently, Strano’s glowing watercress is treated at the MIT Lincoln Laboratory, but it is his ultimate goal to develop illuminating trees to serve as lamp posts at the new property when it is scheduled to open in about five years.

“You could say there will be direct and indirect lighting. Light would come from plants both indoors and outdoors. You do not need as much direct lighting with indirect lighting. So you could say we are making ultimate lighting,” Strano said.

For a future generation of this technology, Strano hopes to develop a way to paint or spray the nanoparticles on to plant leaves, so that trees and other large plants can be transformed into light sources.

Also, he aims to develop single treatments that last the lifetime of the leaves.

Strano plans to come back to Bangkok in November, when he hopes to bring a prototype of second generation of the technology to present or treat plants at the RISC lab.

If the research comes to such fruition, light from trees is certainly more economically because it has no energy cost, he said.

“You now have a light source that neither needs to be plugged into the electricity system nor needs a battery. It’s a century of light that does not need energy input anymore,” he said.

Singh Intrachooto, the chief adviser to RISC, which was established by MQDC, said Strano’s work has opened up exciting possibilities for further integrating natural ecosystems into residential communities.

“Making trees glow might sound like science fiction but it may soon become a reality based on what Strano has already achieved,” Singh said.

Lighting accounts for about 20 per cent of worldwide energy consumption, so luminous trees could have vast applications with huge environmental benefits, he added.

WhatsApp rejects India’s demand to track origin of messages

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Union IT Minister Ravi Shankar Prasad with WhatsApp CEO Chris Daniels, in New Delhi on August 21, 2018. (Photo: Twitter/@rsprasad)
Union IT Minister Ravi Shankar Prasad with WhatsApp CEO Chris Daniels, in New Delhi on August 21, 2018. (Photo: Twitter/@rsprasad)

WhatsApp rejects India’s demand to track origin of messages

Tech August 24, 2018 15:05

By The Statesman
Asia News Network
New Delhi

WhatsApp is leant to have turned down India’s demand for a solution to track the origin of messages on its platform. It has said building traceability will undermine end-to-end encryption and affect the protection of user privacy.

The Facebook-owned firm said the messaging platform was used for all kinds of “sensitive conversations”, adding that its focus now was on educating people about misinformation.

Union Information and Technology Minister Ravi Shankar Prasad had met WhatsApp CEO Chris Daniels earlier this week during which they held talks on how to curb the spread of rumours and fake news on the platform, which have lead to several cases of mob lynching and rioting across the country.

After the meeting, Prasad had told reporters that the government given three suggestions to the company — appoint a grievance officer, set up a local corporate entity in India and find a technology solution to trace the origin of fake messages circulated through the platform. He had said WhatsApp could face abetment charges if it did not take action to tackle the issue of fake news.

Daniels had declined to comment on the proceedings after the meeting.

The government has been pushing WhatsApp to find a technology solution to trace the origin of messages being circulated on its platform, which it believes can help curb crimes such as lynching.

“Building traceability would undermine end-to-end encryption and the private nature of WhatsApp, creating the potential for serious misuse. WhatsApp will not weaken the privacy protections we provide,” PTI quoted a WhatsApp spokesperson as saying.

IT Ministry sources told PTI that the government had asserted that WhatsApp should continue to explore technical innovations whereby the origin could be ascertained in case of mass circulation of provocative and nefarious messages inciting violence and crime.

Having invited severe criticism over its use in spreading fake news that have led to incidents of lynching in various parts of the country, WhatsApp has of late initiated a few measures to check recurrence of such events.

In a full-page advertisement in some newspapers last month, WhatsApp listed 10 points for its users to go through to tackle misinformation.

From July 10 midnight, WhatsApp messenger application stared a new feature of labelling as “Forwarded” messages being received by a user if it has not been created by the sender. Users now know if the WhatsApp messages received by them are original posts sent by their contacts or just forwards.

To check the spread of misinformation though WhatsApp forwards, the Facebook-owned messaging platform is testing another new feature. It’s going to limit the number of messages and media you can forward. In India, WhatsApp will test a lower limit — five chats at once — and also remove the quick forward button next to media messages.

In another update, the messaging platform has limited forwarding to five chats at once, and also removed the quick forward button next to media messages.

This means if a message containing media is forwarded five times from the same account, WhatsApp will disable the option to forward it further.

With Lok Sabha elections slated to be held next year, the government is taking a stern view of the use of social media platforms such as Facebook, Twitter and WhatsApp for spread of misinformation.

With a base of over 200 million users, India is the largest market for WhatsApp that has global user base of over 1.5 billion.

In response to the two notices sent by the government seeking details of actions it has taken to curb the menace, WhatsApp had told the government that it was also building a local team, and would have an India head.

Besides, the company is running an advocacy and education programme to help people spot fake news.

WhatsApp top executives, including COO Matthew Idema, met the IT Secretary Ajay Prakash Sawhney and other Indian government officials last month to outline various steps being taken by the company on the issue.

Meanwhile, Telecom Secretary Aruna Sundararajan said on Thursday the telecom department did not intend to impose blanket ban on messaging apps and platforms, but was seeking technical solutions to curb specific instances of misuse.

While the government, taking a stern view of false news circulated on social media platforms, had asked WhatsApp to take urgent measures, Sundararajan said: “… misuse is small part of it, we cannot go around blocking the whole platform. The idea is to evolve effective grievance redressal…targeted prevention or corrective action to be taken in those kinds of cases.”

On the sidelines of a conference in New Delhi, Sundararajan was responding to queries over the Department of Telecom (DoT) recently seeking industry’s views on technical measures that can be adopted to block mobile apps like Instagram, Facebook, WhatsApp, Telegram, etc in situations where national security and public order were under threat.

Samsung Electronics officially rolls out Galaxy Note 9 in 56 countries

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 A Samsung employee displays the new Samsung Galaxy Note 9 smartphone during a product launch event at the Barclays Center, August 9, 2018 in the Brooklyn borough of New York City./AFP
A Samsung employee displays the new Samsung Galaxy Note 9 smartphone during a product launch event at the Barclays Center, August 9, 2018 in the Brooklyn borough of New York City./AFP

Samsung Electronics officially rolls out Galaxy Note 9 in 56 countries

Tech August 24, 2018 13:18

By Sohn Ji-young
The Korea Herald
Asia News Network
SEOUL

Samsung Electronics on Friday officially launched the Galaxy Note 9 smartphone in 56 markets around the world, including South Korea, the US, Canada, China and India, as well as all of Europe and Southeast Asia.

Following this initial rollout, the South Korean tech giant plans to bring the Note 9 to 120 markets by early September, and embark on expanded marketing activities, the company said.

The ninth edition of the Galaxy Note series sports a 6.4-inch AMOLED display and the largest-ever battery volume of 4,000 milliampere-hours for all-day performance.

Its standout feature is the low-power Bluetooth-enabled S Pen that serves as a remote control for taking selfies and group pictures, presenting slides and more. It is also compatible with the Samsung Dex, which enables a desktop experience on the smartphone, and Bixby smart assistant.

The device’s intelligent camera is powered by deep learning-based capabilities, including Flaw Detection and Scene Optimizer, to deliver high-quality pictures.

The Note 9 is available in 128-gigabyte and 512GB models, with support for up to 1 terabyte of storage via expandable memory. It is available in three colors: midnight black, lavender purple and metallic copper.

In Korea, the 128GB Note 9 is priced at 1.09 million won ($970), while the 512GB Note 9 costs 1.35 million won. It is available through the country’s three major telecom companies as well as online retailers.

Top 10 most promising fields using robots

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Top 10 most promising fields using robots

Tech August 24, 2018 08:36

By China Daily
Asia News Network
Beijing

The Chinese Institute of Electronics issued a report on the most promising fields using robots after the 2018 World Robot Conference kicked off in Beijing on Aug 15.

Here are the 10 fields making the best use of our robotic friends.

1 Storage and Logistics

An automated transport robot moves goods in a storage unit at Suning logistics center in Shanghai on May 11, 2018. [Photo/VCG]

2 Manufacturing

A robot for the manufacturing industry on display at the World Robot Conference in Beijing on Aug 16, 2018. [Photo/VCG]

3 Medicine

A robot-assisted surgical system on display at the World Robot Conference in Beijing on Aug 17, 2018. The system can help doctors improve the accuracy and efficiency of surgery. [Photo/VCG]

4 Indoor delivery

A delivery robot on display at the World Robot Conference in Beijing on Aug 15, 2018. [Photo/VCG]

5 Companionship

A Sony Corp robotic dog ‘aibo’ on display at the company’s headquarters in Tokyo, Japan on July 27, 2018. [Photo/VCG]

6 Cleaning

A robot cleans glass at an expo in Taiyuan, Shanxi province on Oct 18, 2016. [Photo/VCG]

7 Emergency security

An intelligent robot used for security checks on display at the World Robot Conference in Beijing on Aug 15, 2018. [Photo/VCG]

8 Filmmaking

China’s first self-developed intelligent camera robot shoots a performance in Shenyang, Liaoning province on Aug 8, 2018. [Photo/VCG]

9 Energy

A mining robot on display at an expo in Tai’an, Shandong province on Aug 31, 2014. [Photo/VCG]

10 National defense

A robot completes a cutting task at the finals of the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency Robotic Challenge in Pomona, US on June 6, 2015. [Photo/VCG]

Singapore has the world’s fastest 4G Network

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http://www.nationmultimedia.com/detail/Startup_and_IT/30352857

Singapore has the world’s fastest 4G Network

Tech August 24, 2018 06:46

By DataLeads
Asia News Network
NEW DELHI

3,138 Viewed

Singapore has the fastest 4G network followed by South Korea and Australia in the Asia-pacific.

Singapore is also the fastest 4G country in the world, according to a report by Open Signal, a UK-based wireless technology company. The report compares 4G performance across 88 countries worldwide.

South Korea is the second fastest network in Asia followed by Australia and New Zealand. In Australia, Vodafone has jumped ahead of Telstra in the 4G speed metric, averaging LTE downloads of 40 Mbps.

Taiwan’s operators are quickly joining the global elite in 4G availability and it is the fifth fastest network speed in Asia.

It is followed by Japan and Vietnam at 25.39 and 21.49 mbps respectively.  As per the report Japan 4G network speed is by no means slow, but it is still well away from matching the LTE speeds of the elite countries.

Brunei Darussalam has eighth fastest network in Asia with 17.48 mbps speed. It is followed by Myanmar and Malaysia. Other countries below 15mbps are Sri Lanka, Cambodia and Pakistan.

India fares poorly in the report. Its operators are still focused on growing LTE’s reach rather than injecting more speed into their 4G services, according to the report.

According to the report through improved smartphone technology and new spectrum, mobile operators have elevated average 4G speeds first beyond 20 Mbps, then beyond 30 Mbps, and in the last two years, beyond 40 Mbps.

However now the industry seems to have reached a limit to what current technology, spectral bandwidth and mobile economics can support on a nationwide level.

The fastest countries average LTE download speeds have stalled at just over 45 Mbps, as per the report.  Speeds, however, remained stagnant, but that could soon change as the wave of consolidation clears the way for new high-capacity networks”.

Facebook to pull VPN app from App Store over data worry

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Facebook to pull VPN app from App Store over data worry

Tech August 23, 2018 15:09

By Agence France-Presse
San Francisco

Facebook will pull Onavo Protect virtual private network application from the App Store after getting word that it violates Apple’s data collection rules, The Wall Street Journal reported on Wednesday.

The free application creates an encrypted VPN connection that routes internet activity through computer servers managed and secured by Facebook. The app also alerts users when sites they visit might be malicious.

Facebook is able to gather information about how people use smartphones outside of the leading social network’s services, potentially gleaning insights about rivals or internet trends.

“We’ve always been clear when people download Onavo about the information that is collected and how it is used,” a Facebook spokeswoman told AFP.

“As a developer on Apple’s platform we follow the rules they’ve put in place.”

Facebook did not comment regarding whether it is removing Onavo from the App Store.

The Journal cited an unnamed person close to the matter as saying the VPN could be gone from the Apple digital content shop by the end of Wednesday.

Onavo has been in the App Store for several years.

Apple recently let Facebook know that the app violated updated data collection rules that bar gathering information beyond that relevant to the program or what was needed to provide advertising, the Journal reported.

Discussions between companies last week led to Facebook agreeing to voluntarily remove Onavo Protect rather than have it booted from the App Store by Apple, according to the report.

Onavo Protect’s description at the App Store included saying that it “helps keep you and your data safe when you browse and share information on the web.”

Versions of the app installed on iPhones will continue to work, but Facebook will no longer be able to update the program. Onavo Protect was to remain available on smartphones powered by Google-backed Android software.

China’s Huawei, ZTE blocked from Australia’s 5G network

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China’s Huawei, ZTE blocked from Australia’s 5G network

Tech August 23, 2018 15:06

By Agence France-Presse
Sydney

Chinese telecom giants Huawei and ZTE have effectively been banned from rolling out Australia’s 5G network, after Canberra said Thursday there were security risks with companies beholden to foreign governments.

Huawei — one of the world’s largest telecommunications equipment and services providers — has been under scrutiny in some countries including the United States and Australia over its alleged close links to Beijing.

Huawei was blocked from bidding for contracts on Australia’s ambitious national broadband project in 2012, reportedly due to concerns about cyber-security.

The company has long disputed claims of any links to the Chinese government.

The federal government said in a statement that the “involvement of vendors who are likely to be subject to extrajudicial directions from a foreign government that conflict with Australian law” posed a security risk.

Acting Home Affairs Minister Scott Morrison and Communications Minister Mitch Fifield added that there was “no combination of technical security controls that sufficiently mitigate the risks”.

Huawei Australia tweeted that the decision was an “extremely disappointing result for consumers”.

“Huawei is a world leader in 5G. Has safely & securely delivered wireless technology in Aust for close to 15 yrs.”

The move came amid tensions between Beijing and Canberra that has seen Australia refocus its foreign aid programmes to win hearts and minds in Pacific nations.

Beijing has been flexing its muscles in the Pacific and extending loans to the impoverished nations, with Australia raising fears some might get trapped with unsustainable debts, handing China influence.

Canberra in June said it would negotiate a security treaty with Vanuatu and also fund and build an underseas communications cable to the Solomon Islands and Papua New Guinea.

The Solomons arrangement came after the Pacific nation was convinced to drop a contract with Huawei.