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Syria appears to be losing control in north

'Dire conditions' in Syria

STORY HIGHLIGHTS

NEW: At least 40 people are killed in Syria, an activist group says NEW: U.N. focuses on humanitarian access, general assembly resolution A journalist is arrested in Damascus, an activist group says Northern Syria has been "out of government control" for months

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Inside Syria (CNN) -- Syrian security forces resumed their fierce shelling of opposition targets in Homs Thursday but appeared to be losing their tight grip in the northern region.

Government troops were stretched thin in their effort to control all fronts in the volatile country, while violence raged in the grass-roots anti-government uprising. The revolt has now entered its 12th month and the U.N. General Assembly prepared to take up a symbolic resolution condemning President Bashar al-Assad's brutal crackdown.

Syrian forces shelled the flashpoint city of Homs for a 13th straight day Thursday, targeting the opposition stronghold neighborhoods of Baba Amr, Inshaat and Khalidiya, according to the London-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, an opposition activist group. Heavy sustained bombardment that commenced around 5 a.m., and dozens of injuries were reported.

In Idlib province in the northwest, people appear to be preparing for the possibility of a military offensive. Much of the region is in open revolt with villages and towns in the north out of government control for months.

At least 40 people died across several provinces Thursday, according to the Local Coordination Committees of Syria, the opposition activist group. They include 21 in Idlib, 13 in Hama, two in Rif Damashq -- the Damascus suburbs, two in Daraa, one in Deir Ezzor and one in Homs.

Col. Malek Al Kurdi, deputy head of the Free Syrian Army, reported shelling by government forces in Hama and Daraa province. He cited civilian and FSA casualties.

Among the dead are 10 military defectors in Hama, activists say.

In Idlib, the bodies of 19 people who tried to flee to Turkey were found. The LCC said they were arrested and executed by security forces.

The LCC also said security forces and pro-government militias attacked mourners at a funeral in Damascus.

In central Damascus, the regime's security forces, backed by armed operatives, raided the office of activist and journalist Mazen Darwish, the director of the Syrian Center for Media and Free Expression, the LCC said. Darwish and 14 others at the office, including his wife, an activist and a blogger, were arrested.

CNN cannot independently confirm opposition and government reports of violence because the Syrian government has severely restricted the access of international journalists.

The uprising in Syria -- influenced by the Arab Spring movement that forced regime change in Egypt and Tunisia -- was sparked about a year ago in the southern city of Daraa with demonstrators angered by the arrests of young people who scrawled anti-government graffiti.

Their grievances and calls for reforms were met with a violent security crackdown, and the unrest there served to catalyze anti-government ferment across the nation.

Thousands have died in the crackdown -- well over 5,000, according to the United Nations, but the LCC puts the toll at well over 7,000.

Syria's actions have been strongly denounced around the world. But international powers have backed the Arab League's efforts to deal with the uprising and some countries and groups, such as the Arab League, Turkey, the United States and the European Union, have initiated sanctions against al-Assad's government.

But they have not been able to agree on strong action at the United Nations to rein in the government's onslaught.

U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon met Thursday with French Foreign Minister Alain Juppe. Ban said the top priority was to stop the violence and establish humanitarian access. He said all relevant U.N. agencies were coordinating efforts to provide humanitarian help to the people of Syria.

This afternoon, the U.N. General Assembly is scheduled to consider a resolution after China and Russia blocked the Security Council from approving enforceable measures aimed at curbing the violence.

The anticipated vote follows news that al-Assad has moved up a vote on a constitutional referendum touted by his government as an important reform initiative, a move critics say is nothing more than window dressing. That vote is set for February 26.

While a resolution adopted by the 193-member nation General Assembly would not be binding, it would mark the strongest U.N. statement to date condemning al-Assad's regime.

The draft resolution calls on Syria to end human rights violations and attacks against civilians immediately, and condemns violence by al-Assad's forces and the opposition.

For nearly a year, al-Assad has denied reports that his forces are indiscriminately targeting civilians, saying they were fighting armed gangs and foreign fighters bent on destabilizing the government.

But the vast majority of accounts from within the country say that Syrian forces are slaughtering civilians as part of a crackdown on anti-government opposition calling for al-Assad's ouster.

It is unclear what, if any, effect a resolution would have on what many world leaders see as a relentless campaign by al-Assad's forces to stamp out opposition.

The General Assembly's anticipated vote follows news that France is bringing another resolution before the U.N. Security Council.

"We are currently renegotiating a resolution at the U.N Security Council to see if we can persuade the Russians," Juppe told radio station France Info Wednesday.

Russia is seen as the linchpin in winning passage of a resolution that could force change in Syria because it could open al-Assad's regime up to U.N. sanctions as well as expose the president and his inner circle to possible prosecution by the International Criminal Court.

Syria is not a signatory of the Rome Statute that established the ICC's authority. The Security Council is on the only world body that can refer crimes against humanity to the international court.

Russia, a Soviet-era ally with trade and arms ties to Syria, has been adamantly opposed to a resolution that calls for al-Assad to step down, saying it amounts to a mandate for regime change.

But Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov indicated Moscow may be open to supporting a Security Council resolution that stipulates -- under certain conditions -- that peacekeepers could be deployed to Syria.

"If the issue is about stopping gunfire, everything is possible," Lavrov said at joint a news conference with his Dutch counterpart Uri Rosenthal, according to state-run RIA-Novosti news agency.

Russia has given mixed messages as to whether it would accept a U.N. arms embargo or economic sanctions, even though it has said it is concerned about the prospect of a Syrian civil war.

Meanwhile, China announced Thursday that it was sending an envoy to Syria in an attempt to help defuse the crisis, according to state-run China National Radio (CNR).

Vice Foreign Minister Zhai Jun is scheduled to travel to Syria beginning Friday for a two-day visit, CNR said. The report did not say who the minister would meet with, saying only "his detailed schedule is still in planning."

CNN's Ivan Watson reports from northern Syria. CNN's Arwa Damon reports from Homs. CNN's Saad Abedine, Joyce Joseph, Joe Sterling, Mick Krever, Salma Abdelaziz and journalist Mohamed Fadel Fahmy contributed to this report.

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Syria appears to be losing control in north

Velti’s Private Exchange Allows Premium Publishers to Have More Control, Generate More Revenue, and Maintain Higher …

SAN FRANCISCO--(BUSINESS WIRE)--

Velti (NASDAQ: VELT - News), the leading global provider of mobile marketing and advertising technology, today announced the availability of custom private exchanges for premium publishers. By allowing publishers to cherry pick their demand partners with valuable inventory from the Velti mGage™ exchange, this latest addition puts Velti at the forefront of the mobile marketing and advertising space as a leader in optimizing ad impressions and reach to improve campaign ROI.

“The Velti private exchange opens up a valuable strategic channel for premium publishers and platforms to increase their ad sales inventory and reach a broader target audience without commoditizing their inventory,” said Krishna Subramanian, Chief Marketing Officer at Velti.

Currently, premium publishers, including media companies and mobile carriers, may privately sell inventory to a select list of agencies, ad networks and brands, both directly and indirectly. With this enhancement, publishers now will have more control to sell their supply to specific demand sources, increasing inventory pricing and reducing conflict between direct and indirect sales channels for higher fill rates-- protecting valuable audience and business data from being exploited by remnant advertisers. The private exchange will enable premium publishers to expand their ad inventory, and extends the publisher’s audience through resale of exchange inventory.

For advertisers, it provides brand safety without sacrificing efficiency; marketers can bid on ad space at scale, while maintaining confidence in the quality of the inventory. By using real-time-bidding (RTB), marketers can strategically advertise to targeted audiences and enhancing the ROI for their ad buy. Ad buys are programmatically optimized across more than 20,000 publishers on the Velti mGage ad exchange.

“Premium publishers can benefit from the efficiency and liquidity of automated markets,” said Sunil Verma, GM of the Velti Exchange. “Agencies can work directly with premium content to create highly targeted and efficient buys.”

Velti’s private exchange is built on the mGage platform, which can reach more than 4.3 billion consumers and serves nearly 20 billion impressions per month. For more information, please visit http://www.velti.com.

About Velti

Velti is the leading global provider of mobile marketing and advertising technology and solutions that enable brands, advertising agencies, mobile operators and media to implement highly targeted, interactive and measurable campaigns by communicating with and engaging consumers via their mobile devices. The Velti platform, called Velti mGage™, allows customers to use mobile and traditional media to reach targeted consumers, engage the consumer through the mobile Internet and applications, convert them into customers and continue to actively manage the relationship through the mobile channel. Velti is a publicly held corporation based in Jersey, and trades on the NASDAQ Global Select Market under the symbol VELT. For more information, visit http://www.velti.com.

"Safe harbor" statement under the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995: This press release contains forward-looking statements including statements regarding Velti’s ability to become the leader in optimizing ad impressions, to enable customers to increase ad sales inventory and inventory pricing, to reach broader target audiences, and to enhance its customers’ campaign ROI. The achievement or success of the matters covered by such forward-looking statements involve risks, uncertainties and assumptions, and if any such risks or uncertainties materialize or if any of the assumptions prove incorrect, the company's results could differ materially from the results expressed or implied by the forward-looking statements we make. These risks and uncertainties include - but are not limited to - risks associated with our ability to achieve the benefits of the private exchange offered to premium publishers, generate additional revenue through the private exchange at expected costs and expand the customer base of the exchange, enabling Velti to continue to expand as the leading global provider of integrated, comprehensive mobile marketing and advertising technology and keep pace with technological and market developments and remain competitive against potential new entrants into our markets. Further information on these and other factors that could affect the company's results is included in our Annual Report on Form 20-F and our current reports on Form 6-K filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission and in other filings we may make with the Securities and Exchange Commission from time to time.

Velti assumes no obligation and does not intend to update these forward-looking statements, except as required by law.

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Velti’s Private Exchange Allows Premium Publishers to Have More Control, Generate More Revenue, and Maintain Higher ...

Media Decoder Blog: The Breakfast Meeting: Philadelphia's Hazy Newspaper Future, and Pinterest Gains Attention

The management of the Philadelphia Media Network — which publishes The Inquirer, The Daily News and Philly.com – has pitted itself against its newsroom leadership over coverage of a potential sale, Amy Chozick and David Carr write. Reporters and editors say they believe coverage has been steered to favor an investor group that includes the area’s most powerful Democrats – among them former Mayor Ed Rendell – and fear what might happen once they control the papers. The management, while conceding that an article and blog post related to the sale had been killed, said those were mistakes that would not be repeated.

The writer Buzz Bissinger, a former Philadelphia Inquirer reporter, has an Op-Ed piece on the issue: “If the sale goes through, Philadelphia will become the first major city in the country to actually cease to have a real daily newspaper.”

The scrapbook/social-networking site Pinterest is getting some mainstream media attention: The Wall Street Journal focuses on the question of how the company, which has 16 employees based in Palo Alto, Calif., will convert its fast-growing user base into a profitable business. (There are businesses like the online crafts marketplace Etsy.com that credit Pinterest with sending a lot of buyers their way – but how it gets a share is still being worked out.)

David Pogue reviews Pinterest and gives it high marks (starting with having a name that makes sense – “you pin things based on your interest), but for design and ease of use, too. Most significantly, it is a outward-looking activity, rather than a self-absorbed one like Facebook or Twitter can be.

Mitt Romney’s faltering effort to lock up the Republican presidential nomination has been hurt by his “distant, complicated relationship with many of the conservative media’s leading voices,” Jeremy Peters writes. Even as he has gone out of his way, at times, to meet with these conservative pundits, they report that he has failed to connect and take their advice to heart. Ann Coulter, for example, an early backer of Mr. Romney, says she has never had a conversation with him or his campaign.

A good excuse as any to include the recent all-purpose cable pundit sentence posted by Hendrik Hertzberg of the New Yorker: “At the end of the day, the game changer is a narrative that resonates going forward.”

Two media outlets were among the organizations awarded grants by the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation, Felicia Lee writes on the ArtsBeat blog. The Center for Investigative Reporting, which has a staff of 40 and is based in Berkeley, Calif., received $1 million. The Moth, a New York-based group dedicated to storytelling that has an influential radio show, received $750,000 to produce its show weekly.

 

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Media Decoder Blog: The Breakfast Meeting: Philadelphia's Hazy Newspaper Future, and Pinterest Gains Attention

Social networking redefined: Mardan boy develops SMS-based portal – Video

15-02-2012 03:48 As novel as it sounds, Mardan's 18-year-old Shahzad has developed a social networking portal that does not require an internet connection -- "Smile SMS". tribune.com.pk

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Social networking redefined: Mardan boy develops SMS-based portal - Video

EU court: Social networks shouldn't have to filter for copyright

BRUSSELS -- A European Union court ruled Thursday that social networking sites cannot be compelled to install general filters to prevent the illegal trading of music and other copyrighted material.

The decision is a victory for operators of social networking sites in the EU, but a setback for those who seek to protect copyrighted material from being distributed without payment or permission.

It also comes as protests are growing in Europe against ACTA, the proposed international Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement, which is meant to protect intellectual property rights.

In Thursday's decision, the EU Court of Justice, which is based in Luxembourg, ruled that requiring general filters that would cover all the site's users would not sufficiently protect personal data or the freedom to receive and impart information.

SABAM, a Belgian company that represents authors, composers and music publishers, filed the lawsuit leading to Thursday's ruling. In it, the company objected to the practices of Netlog NV, a social networking site, saying users' profiles allowed protected works to be shared illegally.

Michael Gardner, head of the intellectual property practice at London law firm Wedlake Bell, called the ruling a further blow to copyright owners because it appears to rule out forcing operators of social network sites and Internet service providers -- at their own expense -- to impose blanket monitoring and filtering aimed at stopping

infringements.

In November, SABAM lost a separate case in which it sought to require Internet service providers to install filters that would prevent the illegal downloading of files.

Gardner said the ruling would not stop copyright owners from seeking more limited injunctions against social networking sites or Internet service providers, but he said the injunctions would have to be more "proportionate" in scope and effect.

"Under EU law, there has to be a balance between the interests of copyright owners and the rights of privacy and freedom of expression," he said. "So far, the courts seem to have rejected the draconian solutions urged on them by the rights owners."

Mark Owen, head of the intellectual property practice at London law firm Harbottle & Lewis, said the new ruling shows how difficult it can be to protect intellectual property.

"As clouds continue to gather around Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement and other attempts to control online use of copyright works, today's ruling from the European Court provides a useful illustration of the practical challenges enforcement poses," Owen said.

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Satter reported from London. Follow Don Melvin at http://twitter.com/Don--Melvin

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EU court: Social networks shouldn't have to filter for copyright