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Governator Orders Pay Cuts and Layoffs

Saturday, August 2nd, 2008 by admin

Governator, Orders, Pay ,Cuts, and ,Layoffs

Lots of people for the duration of in the Golden State are truly remarkably pissed off at the Governator!
California governor Arnold Schwarzenegger displays this 10,000 layoffs and 200,000 pay cuts are fundamental as of the state’s dire loan straits.
Other municipal supervisory officials argue overly it is all politics. Duh.
Sucks.
Times just now keep to get tougher!

China orders video Web sites to close

Tuesday, March 25th, 2008 by admin

China, close, orders, sites, to, Video, Web

HONG KONG - China will shut down or punish dozens of video-sharing Web sites for carrying content deemed pornographic, violent or a threat to national security under rules that tighten Internet controls, a regulator said Friday.
The announcement came as Chinese Web surfers were blocked from seeing foreign sites with video about protests in Tibet. The new order did not mention the anti-government demonstrations or China’s resulting crackdown.

One of China’s most popular video-sharing sites, Tudou.com, was among those penalized, the State Administration of Radio, Film and Television said. It gave no details of Tudou’s violation or penalty. Other major competitors such as Youku.com and 56.com were not cited.

Rules that took effect Jan. 31 ban Chinese sites from distributing online video that involves national secrets, hurts the reputation of China, disrupts social stability or promotes pornography. Web sites are required to delete and report such content.

Communist authorities have also tightened controls on Chinese media ahead of this summer’s Beijing Olympics in hopes of stopping content that might tarnish a national prestige event.

In the recent sweep, regulators ordered 25 Web sites to shut down and will punish 32 others following a two-month investigation, the administration said on its Web site. It gave no details of penalties and phone calls to the office were not answered.

The companies knew the penalties were coming, and they do not appear to be connected to efforts to block footage of the protests in Tibet, said Duncan Clark, managing director of BDA China Ltd., a Beijing consulting firm.

A Tudou.com vice president, Dan Brody, said the site received a warning. He declined further comment.

The industry has grown quickly as a source of news in a country where the government owns all newspapers and broadcasters and enforces the ruling Communist Party’s censorship guidelines. Some sites say they get 100 million visitors a day, an audience that rivals that of the biggest state television channels.

Chinese regulators see the profit potential for video-sharing and have tried to strike a balance between enforcing censorship and letting fast-growing sites compete for visitors.

“It’s niche no longer, so the party takes the view that it’s mass media, so it has to be subject to the same controls,” Clark said.

The government announced in December that all video-sharing sites had to be state-owned. But it backed off following warnings that would stifle the industry and said any properly licensed company already operating could continue.

Chinese Web surfers have recently been blocked from seeing YouTube after video about the Tibet protests appeared on the popular U.S. site. Foreign Web sites run by news organizations and human rights groups are regularly blocked when they carry sensitive information.

The potential for video-sharing sites to embarrass the government was highlighted in December when a sportscaster grabbed the microphone and accused her husband of adultery at a state TV event to announce Olympics coverage plans.

A video of the Dec. 28 event appeared on dozens of Web sites in China and abroad. Tudou said it was one of the site’s most-watched items.

Source:news.yahoo

China orders tighter controls on heparin

Tuesday, March 25th, 2008 by admin

SHANGHAI, China - In a reversal of its earlier stance, China’s drug safety agency is ordering local authorities to tighten controls on production of heparin, a blood-thinner linked to 19 deaths in the United States and hundreds of allergic reactions.
The State Food and Drug Administration issued the order in a notice, seen Friday on its Web site, that requires heparin producers to obtain the raw chemicals used to make the drug from registered suppliers.

Raw heparin suppliers, meanwhile, are required to improve their management and tests on their products, it said.

Earlier, the Chinese drug agency had insisted that ensuring the quality of exported chemicals like heparin was the responsibility of importers and importing countries.

Heparin is derived from a mucous obtained from pig intestines and other animal tissues, often processed by small, unregistered workshops.

Investigations following the reports of sometimes fatal adverse reactions in the United States, and of similar allergic reactions in Germany, prompted China’s new crackdown on unlicensed production.

Earlier this week, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration identified the contaminant in heparin batches from a Chinese supplier to U.S. pharmaceuticals company Baxter International Inc. as oversulfated chondroitin sulfate.

Baxter recalled nearly all its U.S.-sold heparin injections after some patients experienced extreme allergic reactions to the products. There have been similar recalls of Chinese-sourced heparin in Germany and Japan.

Drug safety officials say they have not confirmed yet if the contaminant, which chemically mimics heparin, caused the dangerous allergic reactions.

But both the U.S. and Chinese drug agencies said they were investigating how the oversulfated chondroitin sulfate, which does not occur naturally, got into the heparin batches.

The heparin probe, coming just a year after the toxic chemical melamine was found in a pet food ingredient from China, has refocused attention on various problems with safety and quality of Chinese-made drugs, foods and other products.

China’s drug agency has often failed to adequately regulate the country’s medicine supplies, and an explosion of production capacity has resulted in numerous reports of adulterated, counterfeit and otherwise unsafe pharmaceuticals.

Last year, China executed the drug agency’s director for taking bribes to approve unqualified medicines.

China so far has not reported any adverse allergic reactions to heparin products used in the country.

But the Chinese drug safety agency ordered heparin makers to closely monitor reactions to their products and immediately halt production and recall any products with safety problems.

Deerfield, Ill.-based Baxter International was buying its heparin through a Wisconsin-based producer, Scientific Protein Laboratories, or SPL, which in turn owns a Chinese factory — Changzhou SPL — and buys additional raw heparin from other Chinese suppliers.

SPL says that the contamination occurred earlier in the supply chain.

Source:news.yahoo