Monday, December 13, 2010

Google Domination

Before, Google was a simple search engine, now it is much more than that. Other online companies are afraid because Google is merging with a diversity of online companies which has gotten the attention of Antitrust enforcement. They are questioning whether or not Google is acting legally with each merge and whether or not a boundary is being crossed.
Critics say Google will have too much control over searches for flights if it controls ITA. In recent months a number of companies have told regulators that Google - which says it wants to build its own flight-search offering - could manipulate the results from its search engine to give its travel service a higher ranking than its competitors'. They point to the fate of such companies as AOL's MapQuest, which shriveled in the face of Google Maps, which regularly lands at the top of Google searches.
Google makes a valid point that ITA is not the only technology that is being used, but at the same time, the technology can be manipulated and over-marketed so that the competition will be choked. This case can be directly compared with the economic dependencies of a single country. Let's say that Google does take over company after company. They control phone service, internet, travel sites, networking sites, technological manufacturing, and television. Having controlled all versions of media and most technological advances, what would happen if Google collapsed abruptly? The Antitrust Acts were put in so that things of this nature do not happen, but it seems the company is too complex to be put under the magnifying lens. Congratulations to Google stock holders, but I foresee a bad outcome if Google continues to merge out of control.

Sunday, December 12, 2010

Tension Increases between North and South Korea

Despite the decrease in anxiety over the shelling of Yeonpyeong Island, it seems that the United States' support has angered North Korea. North Korea stated that South Korea's cooperation with the U.S. and Japan is a direct act of aggression.
That cooperation "is nothing but treachery escalating the tension between the North and the South and bringing the dark clouds of a nuclear war to hang over the Korean peninsula," Pyongyang's main Rodong Sinmun newspaper said in a commentary carried by the North's official Korean Central News Agency.
Personally, I see North Korea's 'quick to launch' campaign, as a way to make other countries relinquish anything that they request. A similar situation happened several decades ago, and countries take over by Hitler did not approve. I am in no way referring to North Korea as the next reich, but the act of appeasement is eerily similar. Considering the use of nuclear warfare, it is clear that the problem is not that simple, but the world cannot be expected to drop everything as soon as North Korea threatens to pick up the trigger.

Mental Health Break

Babies for Capitalism

Netflix Under Attack

So far in the entertainment world, Netflix was simply a small fish competing in a big pond, but as soon as the company incorporated internet access, it has been a major pain in the sides of the major corporations. Kids in high school, collegiate students, as well as older adults, are finding it easier to discontinue their cable or satellite programming if they can get all their favorite shows cheaper on the internet, rather than hauling out the big bucks every month. One flaw they overlooked, was that they believed the corporate giants would fail to notice their progress. Netflix has quadrupled in stock value since their advancements, but Time Warner will not have it.
Netflix has been a business partner to the movie and television studios through licensing deals, but increasingly it is seen as a partner with its hands far deeper in the pockets of the media companies than anyone thought. Through its success, the company has positioned itself at the center of the media universe — at the nexus of technology and content — and is now finding it a place increasingly under attack.
In this recession, of course customers will buy the same product if it is cheaper. The question is "How long will their reign last, if prices escalate from corporate pressure?". Owners of HBO are ready to create HBO GO which will only allow HBO customers to access the network. If the entertainment giants decide to make deals to squeeze Netflix out of business, then loyal customers lose out. This is a prime example of the cutthroat environment that big business has created in order to survive.

Everything on China

As the global economy continues to plummet, the favorite to pull the rest of us out of this recession is China. Having changed its overall economic structure, China has emerged as the greatest economic power since the United States' era before 2008. I find it extremely frightening that if one bad move by China were to occur, the global economy could be set into a tailspin. The biggest problem that China is currently struggling with is inflation.
“The money supply is too large,” said Andy Xie, an economist based in Shanghai who formerly worked at Morgan Stanley. “They increased the money supply to stimulate the economy. Now land prices have jumped 20 times in some places, 100 times in others. Inflation is broad-based. Go into a supermarket. Milk is more expensive in China than it is in the U.S.”
If China risks inflation, then their changes in currency will greatly affect trading and finance all across the board. Rather than looking at China as a competitor, countries must see them as a foundation from where supporters can enhance their own prosperity. My personal opinion is that complete responsibility on one nation's economy is incredibly unstable, but only so much can be moderated. As seen in the article, China reached their height because of their government influence on the market. All that is certain is that the next move could decide how the economy will either heal or tear itself apart.