Britain accuses China of business bugs
(ChinaPost.com.tw) – Britain’s domestic intelligence service has accused China of bugging British business executives using memory sticks which provide access to users’ computers, The Sunday Times reported.
(ChinaPost.com.tw) – Britain’s domestic intelligence service has accused China of bugging British business executives using memory sticks which provide access to users’ computers, The Sunday Times reported.
Davos, Switzerland – Former United States president Bill Clinton appealed for big business to help Haiti “rise from the ashes” on Thursday as a rising Chinese leader made his biggest international appearance yet at the Davos forum.
(ChinaPost.com.tw) – Business groups told United States (U.S.) Secretary of State, Hillary Clinton, and other top U.S. officials on Tuesday they were “increasingly alarmed” by China’s moves to keep out foreign high-tech companies and urged a firm r…
From the Reuters, via wired.com:
A Google knock-off has surfaced in China to compete with the world’s largest search engine, while at the same time pleading with it to stay in the country despite censorship and hacking allegations.
Adding to China’…
Chinese software and game developer Kingsoft has established a new business department and the company [...]
China Eastern Airlines is set to decide which major world airline alliance it will join in mid-February, China Business News reported Tuesday.
China urged most central State owned enterprises (SOE) to leave the hotel business to strengthen their main advantages in different industries, nbd.com.cn reported today.
Chinese Vice Premier Li Keqiang shakes hands with Gerold Buehrer, president of Economiesuisse during a dinner party held by the Economiesuisse, the Swiss Business Federation, at Zurich on Jan.
As Google is negotiating with the Chinese government to keep parts of its business active in China, the New York Times continues its series on cybersecurity with a report on the hacking of Google’s networks in China:
What some participants in t…
The lucrative trade in newborns was fueled by an adoption frenzy that saw government-run orphanages paying for children who they then made available to Westerners.