Monday, January 23, 2017

China takes 5,500 porn, violent apps offline – Xinhua

Jan 24 China's internet supervisors have taken down more than 5,500 illegal apps for disseminating pornographic and violent content among other things, the official Xinhua news agency said on Tuesday.

The move is the latest step taken by Beijing to clean up its cyberspace, having launched a crackdown on virtual private network services that allow users to bypass censorship on Monday.

More than 1,600 mobile video apps circulating pornographic and violent content were taken offline, said the cyberspace administration in China's southern province of Guangdong on Monday.

Over 1,200 social apps had pornographic content, while others hacked users' private information, infringed upon other rights or charged malicious fees.

The administration said illegal apps had been available on app stores operated by Tencent, China Mobile and other smartphone producers like Huawei, ZTE, Coolpad, Meizu, OPPO and VIVO.

Tencent, China Mobile, Huawei, Coolpad, Meizu, OPPO and VIVO could not be reached for comment. ZTE declined to immediately comment.

The administration said the apps violated cyber laws in China and said it would step up supervision.

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Source: China takes 5,500 porn, violent apps offline – Xinhua

Sunday, January 22, 2017

ZTE BA602 Spotted on TENAA with 5.5-inch Screen, Quad-Core CPU, 3 GB RAM

A new ZTE smartphone with model number ZTE BA602 has been found listed on TENAA's website. TENAA is a telecommunication certification body from China. The ZTE Blade V8 Pro and Project CSX (Hawkeye), a mobile device that is completely crowdsource were showcased at the CES (Consumer Electronics Show) 2017 earlier this month and with the appearance of ZTE BA602 phone, it seems that the company is already working on its third device.

The TENAA listing of ZTE BA602 has revealed that it will be a budget-friendly smartphone. It features a 5.5-inch display that reportedly offers a resolution of 1280 x 720 pixels. It is powered by a 1.25 GHz quad-core processor, but the name of its manufacturer is not known.

The ZTE BA602 is listed with three RAM variants like 1 GB, 2 GB and 3 GB that respectively features storage choices like 8 GB, 16 GB and 32 GB. It is packed with an 8-megapixel rear-facing camera whereas its front-facing shooter is of 2-megapixel. It is expected to come preinstalled with Android 6.0 Marshmallow OS. It includes a 3,000 mAh battery.

ZTE BA602

Related: ZTE Reported to Be Cutting 5% of Its Global Workforce

As far as dimensions are concerned, the ZTE BA602 measures 153 x 77 x 8.6 mm and the photos of the device revealed through TENAA indicates that it will be arriving with a plastic chassis. Its weight is mentioned as 168 grams. The device seems to feature a fingerprint reader on its back panel.

Since it has been spotted on TENAA, the unnamed ZTE smartphone is likely to release in China. It is expected to be available in multiple colors such as Quicksand Gold, Galaxy Silver, Phantom Gray, Quiet Blue and Black. As of this writing, there is no confirmation on its availability outside the U.S. and the information on its pricing is also unavailable. The recently announced ZTE Blade V8 Pro is available in the U.S. with a price tag of $229.


Source: ZTE BA602 Spotted on TENAA with 5.5-inch Screen, Quad-Core CPU, 3 GB RAM

Saturday, January 21, 2017

How a S$50m investment spells hope

1. What do you think was the most significant thing that happened this week?

The story wasn't front page stuff. But the opening of two facilities in Yishun by Hong Kong-listed semiconductor giant ASM Pacific Technology this week was significant.

The firm, which calls Singapore its global headquarters, had invested more than S$50 million in the two new facilities. One is a new building to consolidate two major business segments together. Another is an innovation centre, the company's first outside Germany, for its customers to run tests, say on built-in electronics for cars.

ASM Pacific is a huge, or as a certain brash New York businessman-turned-politician would pronounce it, a yuuuge company. It is the largest semiconductor assembly, packaging equipment and surface-mount technology equipment supplier in the world.

The company made some HK$13 billion (S$2.4 billion) in revenue in 2015 and close to HK$1 billion in net profit. By 2018, the more optimistic analysts are projecting revenue to be HK$18 billion or more, and net profit to be HK$2 billion. The stock has enjoyed a significant rally in recent months.

If semiconductor jargon sounds gobbledygook to you, just try to take apart an old smartphone some day to see the circuits inside. ASM Pacific makes machines that print and inspect semiconductors, which other companies use to assemble end-products such as Android phones. In its Singapore factory, ASM Pacific makes wire bonders, the metal pieces that connect circuits to one another. It also makes the machines that make the wire bonders.

2. Why is this a big deal?

That a company like ASM Pacific continues to base itself here and can keep growing is something to cheer about. As a key supplier in the smartphone supply chain, ASM Pacific is an "old economy" capital goods manufacturer deeply connected to the "new economy" of technology.

The firm's staff count has grown from 50 in 1990 to over 1,400 today, including more than 300 research and development (R&D) engineers. The company's engineers in Singapore are reportedly also working with teams in the UK and China to develop manufacturing products for the solar and fuel-cell industry. It will hopefully be able to offer Singaporeans good jobs in the years ahead.

Singapore's transformation into one of the wealthiest nations in the world in the last few decades was partly because we let foreign multinational companies base themselves here, enjoy tax breaks and hire a well-educated labour force in a place with infrastructure that works. Looking ahead, this growth model might yet still remain relevant. Companies such as ASM choose to base their global headquarters here presumably because Singapore is a well-connected hub that is easy to do business and run corporate operations out of. We might not manufacture much anymore. But whatever higher value-added processes we get can still be a source of jobs and national pride.

3. Did you see it coming?

No. We're not omniscient.

But we try to be.

4. Should anyone be worried? Excited, maybe?

ASM Pacific is involved in some pretty exciting parts of the global economy, although Singapore will only reap the benefits indirectly. For example, think about those funky dual cameras that you now see at the back of some Android smartphones. ASM Pacific makes machines that make the image sensors that are needed in these cameras. Also think of LED lights and display panels, which are essentially light sources made from semiconductors. ASM Pacific is plugged into this burgeoning market, making the assembly equipment used by LED players such as China lighting giant MLS.

From what The Business Times understands, the firm's manufacturing operations in Singapore are relatively small, limited to final assembly and some high-end modules. But Singapore is its corporate headquarters, and the firm's customers in Asia will probably come here to interact with salesmen and test out new products. The continued existence of ASM Pacific in Singapore shows how we are, however indirectly, still involved in growth areas in the global electronics and technology space.

5. What happens now?

The future is not all about Internet services. Good old manufacturing has a role to play yet. And Singapore has to stay on top of things.

This article was first published on Jan 21, 2017.Get The Business Times for more stories.


Source: How a S$50m investment spells hope

Friday, January 20, 2017

China’s fintech industry shows where the rest of the world is heading

WeChat Pay, mobile payments, cashless payments

Paying for food with a messaging app. Photo credit: McDonalds.

"We need banking but we don't need banks anymore," said Bill Gates two decades ago, predicting the explosion in startups creating web and app-based financial services that we're seeing right now. With nearly US$11 billion last year invested into so-called fintech startups across Asia, the sector is rivaling online shopping and ride-hailing among the hottest tech arenas.

As this seismic shift takes place, nowhere is it more visible than in China.

At a Starbucks in Shanghai, a punter pays for coffee with a messaging app, waving their phone in front of a barcode scanner. At the sushi joint next door, a customer settles the bill with a mobile wallet app; after lunch, she pays an electricity bill with the same app, and then moves some of her salary into a high interest personal fund. No notes are counted out, no coins bounce and clatter into cash registers, no-one queues at the bank.

"The country leads the world when it comes to total users and market size," observed a McKinsey report last year about China's fintech boom, with people entrusting US$1.8 trillion in 2015 to online finance services of all shapes and sizes.

Data is for end of 2015.

China's overall fintech market is now worth up to US$2.2 trillion.

By looking at China's main fintech sectors, we can sketch a picture of how this will shape up around the rest of the world.

Scan me: the surge in mobile payments

China's shoppers pay with their phones more so than people in any other country – a record 195 million did so for in-store and online payments in 2016, rising to an anticipated 332 million in 2020, says Emarketer. Leading the way are WeChat, the turbocharged messaging app from Tencent, and Alipay, the wallet app run by Jack Ma's Ant Financial.

Apple, Huawei, Samsung, and Xiaomi have their own wallet apps, but they have few functions in comparison to WeChat and Alipay. They're all fighting over US$1.8 trillion in mobile payments, collectively accounting for 89.2 percent of the transactions in China's fintech space, according to McKinsey.

Alipay

Alipay app shown after being used to pay for coffee.

In China, mobile payments have proved to be a gateway drug for more hardcore fintech services, showing that getting people into wallet apps and giving them a real-world and convenient use case is the first and highest barrier.

WeChat and Alipay have exploited this best, using the muscle of their tech titan parents – Tencent and Alibaba – to build an array of financial services into their apps, which are used daily by hundreds of millions of people.

Alipay, being dedicated to payments, whips WeChat on sheer numbers. Indeed, Alipay is so huge that it makes Visa look like a laggard. Alipay recently hit a record one billion transactions in a single day, with a peak of 120,000 transactions per second – well above Visa's capacity of 24,000.

See: Here's how hot fintech got in Asia in 2016

Lend me a few bucks: the rise of peer-to-peer loans

The rise of WeChat and Alipay points to an irony of the supposedly disruptive fintech sector in China – it's largely dominated across the whole spectrum by multi-billion-dollar giants. Startups compete and endeavor to pick up the scraps, but to win they need a nuclear arsenal of funding or corporate backup.

Plus, China's traditional financial institutions have been quick to adapt – and to disprove Bill Gates' dictum that they're dinosaurs.

Hey, we're huge and you can trust us!

The leader in China's fast-growing online loans business is a spin-off from US$96 billion Ping An Insurance, which quickly set up three subsidiaries to explode into the fintech arena. Thanks to those quick moves, the massive firm now runs Lufax, China's biggest peer-to-peer lending platform. It's basically an Uber for loans, connecting people seeking a return on their savings with cash-strapped people in need of loans.

Valued at US$18.5 billion, Lufax is reportedly plotting an IPO to raise about US$5 billion.

But there's a Wild West side to it all.

Last year's US$7.6 billion Ponzi scheme scandal, affecting 900,000 people, in which the bosses of one peer-to-peer loans startup ran off with everyone's savings, initially seemed like a deadly blow to the burgeoning online lending industry. But it ultimately played into the hands of Lufax and the other tech giants moving into fintech, allowing them to say, hey, we're huge and you can trust us.

Shortly after the controversy, loans startup Dianrong, valued at around a billion bucks ahead of a possible IPO this year, resorted to billboards saying, "Honestly, we won't run away!"

Dianrong ad

The country had 1,778 "problematic" online lenders last year, stated the China Banking Regulatory Commission, so the peer-to-peer lending segment has not yet killed off all its bad actors.

And there's a seedy side as well. Some online loan sharks have forced college students to hand over naked selfies as collateral. Failure to pay back the loan will result in the nude photos being posted online or mailed to the students' parents.

nude selfie loans

A female college student sends a nude video clip of herself to an online loan shark as she agrees to the terms of the loan for RMB 10,000, approximately US$1,450. Image credit: Weibo, via Quartz.

But Dianrong, Lufax, New York-listed Yirendai, et al, have emerged largely unscathed – and their continuing growth shows that China's online loans space is still a hot sector. It's evolving, too, as authorities sketch out regulations.

Soul Htite, co-founder of Lending Club, the world's largest fintech startup in its niche, is also the creator of Dianrong. Rather than negating the need for banks, he's tapping two Chinese commercial banks to serve as the startup's custodians in a bid to boost credibility with consumers and avoid a repeat of the 2016 Ponzi fiasco.

Elsewhere in the new cash lending business, Chinese startups have been experimenting with online shopping via payments in installments. Two sites in this vein – Qudian and Fenqile – have collectively raised over US$1.2 billion to pursue this. As is always the case in China's tech landscape, there's the risk of being trodden on by a giant – which happened to these startups when Alibaba arch-rival JD rolled out its own installment payments option.

Check me out: fixing the credit history conundrum

A big cloud hangs over this glittering new boomtown – how to assess risk when China barely even has a credit rating system.

For a number of China's fintech startups, social media is the answer.

Loan applicants submit their main social media accounts, which the companies feed into their data-chomping machines in search of reckless behavior or credit card junkies. Some go further, monitoring the applicant's keystrokes on their phone as they fill in the form, casting an eagle AI eye on speedy copy-pasters or people who go straight for the largest loan amount.

For China's low-wage workers, this startup provides loans for iPhones

With over half a billion netizens and smartphone owners, much of the fintech action in China is on mobile. Photo credit: Jens Schott Knudsen.

Such social media spying is now being adopted by loans startups in India and across Southeast Asia.

Alipay is so huge that it makes Visa look like a laggard.

Alibaba's Sesame Credit, accessible within its Alipay app, does things its own way. It taps into Alibaba's own ecommerce empire to get a picture of safe or risky lenders. By looking at someone's shopping history within its own Taobao and Tmall stores, Jack Ma's firm is creating a credit rating system that forms the bedrock of its other financial products.

This kind of unconventional approach is spreading to business loans too. Dianrong recently started advancing cash to small business owners looking to grow their ventures, poking into the store's books via its digital cash register. It can collect cash digitally via the registers too.

See: New $1.5b fund fuels fintech boom

You can bank on me: the personal finance boom

In China, banks are not being made extinct – they're turning into online banks. Both the tech giants and the banks themselves are doing this, sometimes in tandem.

Baidu, China's top search engine, recently set up shop in partnership with CITIC Bank, a partnership that covers co-branded credit cards as well as online financial offerings.

China's two most valuable tech companies are instead going the online-only route. Alibaba opened MyBank mid-2015 ready to hand out loans up to US$800,000 – as well as the kind of smaller loans that banks normally wouldn't bother with. MyBank complements a number of other services from Ant Financial, Jack Ma's Alipay-oriented spin-off, aimed at China's savers, such as Yu'ebao, a personal fund that promises higher returns than the banks.

Jack Ma, Alibaba

Alibaba co-founder Jack Ma is China's second richest individual – and its wealthiest tech boss. Photo modified by Tech in Asia; original photo credit: UN Climate Change.

Tencent got there first, opening China's first major online bank at the start of 2015. Thanks to its social media clout, WeBank is easily accessible to the 846 million active users of WeChat, plus the 877 million on QQ. Not to be outdone by arch-rival Alibaba, Tencent has a personal wealth fund too, Licaitong, that's baked into WeChat.

China is encouraging these new institutions as part of a broader shake-up of the private banking system. "The government won't leave you in the cold. A warm spring will be created for the new private banks," said Premier Li Keqiang in attendance at WeBank's launch.

Watch over me: on-demand online insurance

Online insurance is the smallest slice of China's fintech pie, but it's still a tasty morsel.

It should be no surprise by now that heavyweights have this sector locked down too. Indeed, three of China's very biggest names – Alibaba, Tencent, and Ping An Insurance – came together in 2013 to set up an online-only insurer called ZhongAn.

"The year 2013 is widely regarded as Year One of China's Internet finance era, with a bunch of blockbuster activities such as the launch of Yu'ebao and WeChat payment," notes the McKinsey report.

It's grown massively in that time, with the US$2.2 trillion industry being marked by innovation – five of the top 10 trailblazers on a KPMG list are Chinese – as well as its pervasiveness in everyday life in the country.

Whatever comes next in fintech in China – blockchain technology? More AI and automation? – the rest of the world will be watching attentively and taking notes.

Converted from Chinese yuan. Rate: US$1 = RMB 6.84.


Source: China's fintech industry shows where the rest of the world is heading

Thursday, January 19, 2017

The Nokia P1 might be the ultimate Android smartphone you’ve been waiting for

While the mid-range Nokia 6 might never set the sails beyond China, HMD Global might soon unveil a Nokia flagship you've been yawning for. The handset in question is the Nokia P1 and according to leaks from Russian Publication Worket, all bets suggest it is launching just around the Mobile World Congress (MWC) in Barcelona this February.

The Nokia P1 is said to be based on the Sharp Aquos Xx3 with quoted figures suggesting it will retail for around $800 (UGX 2,880,000) for the 128GB model while the 256GB model will up that and command $950 (UGX 3,420,000).

These figures hint at the P1 being a premium device in the domain of the likes of the Galaxy S7 (Or the soon to launch S8) and the iPhone 7.

  • Android Nougat 7.1
  • 5.3 Inch FHD or QHD screen reinforced with corning Gorilla Glass 5
  • Snapdragon 835 SoC paired with 6GB of RAM
  • 22.6MP Zeiss-Certified primary camera
  • IP57 certified water & dustproof certified
  • 3500mAh battery
  • HMD Global, the licensed entity behind  the Nokia brand has already sent out invites to a February 26 reveal on which the Nokia P1 is expected to be unveiled together with a slew of other Nokia branded devices.


    Source: The Nokia P1 might be the ultimate Android smartphone you've been waiting for

    Wednesday, January 18, 2017

    Huawei Mate 9 Smartphone is Now Available to buy Via Third-Party Retailers – Check Price

    Huawei Mate 9 a new flagship Smartphone which was launched previously in the month of November 2016. At that time the company Launched 4GB of RAM version in Munich. Now the company silently released the 6GB RAM version of its Flagship Smartphone. It is Now Available to buy Via Third-Party Retailers. The Company recently launched Mate 9, Mate 9 Porsche Edition and Mate 9 Pro flagship smartphones. The Newly launched smartphone will be available in – Black, Silver and Gray colours. Check more details about this new Huawei Mate 9 Smartphone below.

    Huawei Mate 9 Smartphone is Now Available to buy Via Third-Party Retailers Huawei Mate 9 Smartphone

    Huawei Mate 9 Smartphone

    Huawei Mate 9 Smartphone

    Specifications: The New Huawei Mate 9 Smartphone is powered by HiSilicon Kirin 960 octa-core SoC with 2.4GHz four Cortex-A73 cores and 1.8GHz four Cortex-A53 cores. The Handset features a 5.9-inch Full HD 2.5D curved glass display with 1920×1080 Pixel resolution. The Handset supports Dual SIM with 4G connectivity and runs on Latest Android 7.0 Nougat operating system with company's EMUI 5.0 UI on the top.

    Now the New Mate 9 handset is available in Two RAM and Storage options – 4GB RAM with 64GB of Internal Storage and 6GB RAM with 128GB of Internal Storage. It is packed with a Massive 4000mAh battery pack. The New Huawei Mate 9 Handset sports a Dual Rear Camera Setup with a 20-megapixel monochrome and 12-megapixel RGB Primary rear cameras with Dual-tone LED Flashlight, optical image stabilisation capability and can record Full HD Video at 30FPS. It also includes an 8-megapixel Secondary front-facing camera with a f/1.9 aperture on board for better selfies and Video calling.

    Coming to the connectivity options the handset offers 2G/3G, Wi-Fi 802.11 a/b/g/n, 4G with VoLTE, Wifi hotspot, GPS, DLNA, Micro-USB 2.0, Bluetooth, 3.5mm Audio Jack, FM Radio, and NFC options. The Huawei Mate 9 6GB of RAM is presently listed on Amazon.com with a price tag of $899 or Approximately Rs. 61,200; GeekBuying.com priced at $819.99/Rs. 55,800 and TO2C.com at $764 or Rs. 52,000 INR as noted by Gizmo China as well as Phone Arena.

    Stay tuned for more news and updates and Press CTRL+D to bookmark this page: FitNHit


    Source: Huawei Mate 9 Smartphone is Now Available to buy Via Third-Party Retailers – Check Price

    Sunday, January 15, 2017

    Samsung Launches C7 Pro Smartphone in China with 16MP Selfie Camera & 5.7” Display

    After many rumors and leaks, finally South Korean smartphone manufacturer Samsung launched Galaxy C7 Pro smartphone in China. The smartphone will be available in Rose Pink, Arctic Blue and Maple Leaf Gold colors. The C7 Pro smartphone is bumped up version of company's Galaxy C7 smartphone which was released last year in June. The new C7 Pro is listed on Samsung website in China without price and will go on sale in the country on January 16. Earlier we told you that Samsung was planning to launch C7 Pro with C5 Pro smartphone in last year November month. But later we found out that company postponed the launch and scheduled it for January 2017.

    Talking about the specifications of the Galaxy C7 Pro, it comes with 5.7-inch full HD Super AMOLED display along with 1080 x 1920 pixel resolution. It measures 156.5 x 77.2 x 7.0 mm and weighs around 172 grams. It also comes with always on display and can show time, date, unread message and incoming calls. For payments, the smartphone also comes with Samsung Pay.

    On the photography front, it has 16MP front camera for selfies with f/1.9 aperture. There is 16MP autofocus rear camera as well on the back with f/1.9 aperture and LED flash. The rear camera can capture full HD videos at 30fps. It also comes with surround sound technology and can give rich audio experience. There is 3000 mAh battery in the smartphone along with Qualcomm Quick Charge 3.0 support.

    The smartphone powered by 2.2GHz Qualcomm Snapdragon 626 processor coupled with Adreno 506 CPU. There are 4GB RAM and 32/64GB internal storage option. The memory of smartphone can be expanded up to 256GB via an SC card. It runs on Android 6.0 Marshmallow operating system out of the box. The listing also says that the smartphone also comes with slim design and it optimized for power consumption.

    On the connectivity front, C7 Pro is a dual SIM smartphone with 4G LTE support. It has Wi-Fi, Bluetooth 4.2, NFC, 3.5mm headphone jack, GPS, GLONASS, WLAN. The smartphone is just launched in China, and there is no information about the launch of the same in other smartphone markets. Stay Tuned with Phone Radar for more.

    Related


    Source: Samsung Launches C7 Pro Smartphone in China with 16MP Selfie Camera & 5.7" Display