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China to become biggest online market: study
by Staff Writers
Shanghai (AFP) March 21, 2013


Yahoo! buys maker of personal recommendation app
San Francisco (AFP) March 20, 2013 - Yahoo! on Wednesday announced that it has bought Jybe, the startup behind a smartphone application that makes local entertainment or dining recommendations based on what people like.

The Jybe team of five employees, all former Yahoo! workers, will return to the fold at the Sunnyvale, California-based firm, according to cloud platform group senior vice president Jay Rossiter. Financial terms were not disclosed.

The Jybe team will focus on targeting and personalizing results at Yahoo! websites, where online searches are powered behind the scenes by Microsoft's Bing engine.

"This will be a 'coming home' for the team," Rossiter said of the Jybe talent acquisition.

"While the Jybe app has closed, we're confident that their data- and science-driven experience will supercharge our efforts to built great products and experiences."

Jybe set out two years ago to create a mobile application that taps into people expressed likes and smartphone location-sensing technology to recommend local entertainment or dining options of potential interest.

"Three of us left Yahoo! to pursue our passion at Jybe, and two of us took a longer path via other startups and search-engine companies," the startup's team said in a blog post.

"This has been a fun and furious journey for our tiny startup, as we applied our various technology backgrounds to recommendation and mobile app design."

Former Google executive Marissa Mayer took over at Yahoo! in July 2012, as the struggling Internet search pioneer tries to reinvent itself as a "premier digital media" company after withering in Google's shadow.

Mayer has echoed the mantra of predecessors who maintained that the company could find prosperity by mining information about users to insightfully tailor online content and target money-making advertising.

China's online sales are forecast to exceed $420 billion annually by 2020, which will likely make the country the world's largest online retail market, a study showed Thursday.

Global management consulting firm McKinsey & Co said sales are expected to reach between $420 billion and $650 billion, driven by a growing consumer class and the world's largest population of Internet users, now more than 500 million people.

"China is poised to become the world's largest e-tailing market," McKinsey said, adding sales in 2020 would match the current size of the US, Japanese, British, German and French markets combined.

China exercises tight control over the Internet, censoring content it deems obscene or politically sensitive, through what is known as the Great Firewall, a system of online limits and restrictions.

But McKinsey said the government had allowed Chinese e-commerce to develop without a great deal of intervention so far.

China's online retail sales reached $120 billion in 2011 and surged further to an estimated $190 billion to $210 billion last year, the McKinsey report said.

That already put the country close to the United States, the current world leader, which had estimated online retail sales of $220 billion to $230 billion in 2012.

Online retail sales now account for five to six percent of total Chinese consumer transactions, slightly higher than the five percent in the United States, the report added.

"China could forgo the national expansion of physical stores commonly seen in Western nations and move directly to a more digital retail environment," the report predicted.

It said such a shift could help spur domestic consumption in China, where the government is trying to shift away from heavy reliance on exports and investment.

But McKinsey urged China to expand broadband Internet infrastructure, support investment in logistics and encourage innovation in technology to create a better environment for online sales.

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Singapore denies improper linkup with China's Huawei
Singapore (AFP) March 14, 2013
Singapore will allow US officials to inspect the work of a research institute linked to a Chinese telecoms firm which Washington suspects of espionage, the foreign ministry said on Thursday. K. Shanmugam, the foreign minister, told officials on a visit to the US capital this week that no improper transfer of technology took place between the Institute of Microelectronics (IME) and Huawei Tec ... read more


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