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PayPal stops payments to and from India

February 8th, 2010 · IT Industry

Popular online payment service PayPal shocked several Indians and rest of the world by suspending payment transactions to and from India for more than a week. Anuj Nayar, spokesman from communications team for PayPal,  posted on the official PayPal blog, that personal payments to and from India and the transfers to local banks in India have been suspended. This directly impacts several freelancers from various fields and businesses that depend on PayPal as a transaction gateway.

Though temporarily, PayPal has given a mini cardiac arrest to several India-based PayPal users by shunning payment transactions to and from India. Apart from that, these users can’t even transfer their funds to local Indian banks to withdraw their balance. All this was conveyed by a standard mailer that every India-based PayPal user received.

Here’s a standard mail sent to Indian users:

Hello USER,

Your payment of AMOUNT has been sent back to the sender of the payment.

We reversed this payment because we have stopped allowing personal payments to be sent to or from India.

If this was a payment for a purchase of goods or services, and not a personal payment, then you may contact the buyer and have him or her resend the payment as follows: (a) click the Send Money tab, (b) select Goods, and (c) provide a shipping address.

If this payment was a personal payment such as a gift, then we have requested that the sender find another payment method until we restore personal payments to and from India.

We are trying to resolve this issue as quickly as possible and we re sorry for any inconvenience.

Thank you,

PayPal

Nayar’s post indicates that the situation is temporary and the issue is to address the questions about the service that PayPal’s business partners and other stakeholders have.

Over the weekend, we met some bothered India-based PayPal users who were literally clueless on whether their funds would be recoverable ever. Advertising professional Kenroy Rodricks said, ” I’ve about $1,000 stuck in PayPal account which I can’t transfer or perform any transactions with. PayPal is my only gateway where I send and receive payments from clients abroad.” We’re sure that Nayar’s assurance to restore the payments as soon as possible will give a ray of hope to many such India-based PayPal users.

Let’s not forget a fact here that PayPal was acquired by eBay in 2002. Yes, it’s the same eBay that first bought Skype and 65 per cent stake of Skype to an investor group. We may not be surprised if PayPal undergoes the same process. What really freaks anyone out where books like ‘The Secret of Hacking’ Third Edition covers topics - How Hackers Hack Paypal account and credit card Hacking (fully untracable), are sold offbeing sold over the web.

With no intentions to scare or mislead anybody, we patiently wait till the issue between PayPal and its business partners as well as stakeholders get resolved.

Indian companies unfazed by Obama’s anti-outsourcing call

January 29th, 2010 · IT Industry

A day after US President Barack Obama reiterated his plans for creating new jobs, amid rising double-digit unemployment in the US, India’s nearly $60-billion outsourcing industry remained hopeful that its top export market will continue to grow with more companies seeking to cut costs by outsourcing work to low-cost locations.

On Wednesday, Mr Obama vowed in his first State of the Union speech that he will make creation of local jobs his top priority in 2010, and hinted that his government could end tax breaks for companies creating jobs overseas.

This is not the first instance of Mr Obama upping his anti-outsourcing rhetoric. In May last year, he had said American companies’ shipping jobs overseas will be required to pay more taxes, and that tax-deferral benefits for such companies will be ended. “It’s a tax code that says you should pay lower taxes, if you create a job in Bangalore, India, than if you create one in Buffalo, New York,” Mr Obama had said.

Som Mittal, president of Nasscom, the country’s association of software exporters, said Mr Obama has several short- and long-term pressures to cope with, but that does not mean any significant impact for the outsourcing industry. “We will be their solution and not the problem,” he said in an interview.

The proposed ‘jobs bill’, which is aimed at creating more local employment in the US, is focused at reviving manufacturing, retail and construction jobs. Last year, Mr Obama had suggested that his government would end tax incentives for American companies creating jobs overseas by removing ‘deferred tax’ on foreign income for these companies. However, no specific proposal has been brought forward to outline the execution of this move.

Mr Obama also mentioned that his government would double America’s exports and also work on the bilateral trade agreements. “These cannot be achieved by following protectionism,” said Mr Mittal.

Experts argue that such protectionist measures are short-sighted because many US companies derive significant revenues from outside the country, and any protectionist stance could lead to a backlash in other markets. Some of the top outsourcing customers, include Citigroup, GE and JP Morgan.

For instance, Citigroup in 2007 generated 52% of its revenues outside the US, and over 60% of its workforce operated from abroad, as its banking business spanned 100 countries. Citigroup’s international revenues stream kept pace through 2008, despite the financial crisis, and amounted to a whopping 74% of the total revenues. Outsourcing experts such as Rodney Nelsestuen, senior research director at US-based TowerGroup said with top US banks seeking to reduce their operational expenses outsourcing could rise, and not contract as feared.

“Outsourcing will increase as a measure to reduce operating costs to offset other cost increases such as a (still not approved but only proposed) new tax,” said Mr Nelsestuen. “The pass-through of an additional cost of business will likely be distributed throughout the customer and supply chain, resulting in higher cost financial services, lower margins, strategies to reduce operating costs, here is where outsourcers will see an expansion of outsourcing, not a contraction,” he added.

Indeed, when Mr Obama proposed that he will attempt to recover over $100 billion from top US banks by introducing new taxes, local sourcing experts said there was no clarity on such proposals to analyse any impact on offshoring. “Increased tax could lead to generally lower investment and greater cost reduction initiatives (such as offshoring),” said Andy Efstathiou, director of US-based research firm NelsonHall’s banking sourcing program.

“Actual bank behavior would depend on the nature of the tax, the administration has not stated how it intends to implement the tax, it has stated the tax would only last for a few years,” he added.

Web sites must support IPv6 by 2012, expert warns

January 23rd, 2010 · IT Industry

Corporations and government agencies must IPv6-enable their public-facing Web sites in the next 24 months or risk upsetting a growing number of visitors with lower-grade connectivity.

“The drop-dead deadline for external Web sites to support IPv6 is January 1, 2012,” warns John Curran, President and CEO of the American Registry for Internet Numbers, which distributes blocks of IP addresses to North American ISPs and other network operators. “When we get to the end of 2011, we’re going to have a lot of people connecting over IPv6 and that doesn’t bode well for the content providers who don’t support IPv6.”

IPv6 is the long-anticipated upgrade to the Internet’s main communications protocol, which is called IPv4.

IPv6: The essential guide

IPv4 uses 32-bit addresses and can support around 4 billion IP addresses. The Regional Internet Registries including ARIN announced Tuesday that more than 90% of IPv4 addresses have been allocated.

IPv6 is designed to solve the problem of IPv4 address depletion. It uses a 128-bit addressing scheme and can support so many billions of IP addresses that the number is too big for most non-techies to understand. (IPv6 supports 2 to the 128th power of IP addresses.)

Curran is urging Web site operators to deploy IPv6 following this week’s revelation that less than 10% of IPv4 addresses are available.

Industry experts predict the rest of the IPv4 address supply will run out in 2012.

“We’re down to the final 10% in the glass,” Curran says. “Most people understand that when you’re down to 10% of something, you’re pretty much running out. We’re there now.”

When IPv4 addresses run out, carriers will give IPv6 addresses to their new customers. Those IPv6 users are likely to favor IPv6-enabled content rather than traverse gateways in order to access lesser-performing IPv4 content.

“Unless you’re willing to have the path between you and one of your customers go through a third-party gateway that you don’t know and that you don’t have control over, you want to add IPv6 to your Web site,” Curran says. “Then when customers try to access your site, you have a straight path with IPv6 and with IPv4.”

Curran says it’s more important for U.S. CIOs to IPv6-enable their Web sites than it is for them to support IPv6 on their internal networks.

“The most important thing for enterprises is to make sure the content on the Internet gets IPv6 connectivity turned on in addition to IPv4. That’s the top priority,” Curran says. “Changing your internal network to support IPv6 is really based on when you see the benefits of making that transition, and that will vary by company. But your external, public-facing Web site affects many other organizations.”

Only a handful of popular U.S. Web sites support IPv6, including those operated by Google, Netflix, Limelight and Comcast.

Usage of IPv6 grew significantly in 2009, although it still represents a sliver of overall Internet traffic. Several carriers including Hurricane Electric and NTT America reported that IPv6 traffic on their networks doubled in 2009.

Gloom a Boom for Guj IT exports

January 19th, 2010 · IT Industry

Information technology in Gujarat was always seen as a marginalised industry, thanks to the absence of large companies. But when major IT hubs of the country were reeling under a slowdown in the West in 2009, Gujarat’s disadvantage turned into an edge. IT exports from the state have grown by an impressive 72% year-on-year in 2008-09.

Data available with Software Technology Park of India (STPI), a nodal agency set up by the Central government to promote software exports, indicates that while exports from Gujarat have consistently grown over the past three years by over 20 per cent, during recession-hit 2008-09, it skyrocketed from Rs 740 crore in 2007-2008 to Rs 1,270 crore in 2008-9, a jump of over 70 per cent.

“The meltdown helped Gujaratbased small players as many US companies chose to outsource work to reduce costs. These companies preferred smaller companies over biggies due to competitive rates offered by them. Most IT firms in Gujarat are SMEs,” said Ravi Saxena, principal secretary, science & technology. Exports have already crossed Rs 1,000 crore in the first three quarters of the current fiscal, says Ajay Sharma, director, STPI (Gujarat).

Large companies like TCS expanded their footprint in the state, which further augmented outsourcing business, said Nirav Shah, president of Gujarat Electronics & Software Industry Association.

And, it were not just firms in the space of Business Process Outsourcing, Knowledge Process Outsourcing and call centres that gained. “Gujarat companies are building good reputation in the field of Engineering Design Software (EDS),” said Chirag Mehta, managing director of a software company. A chunk of EDS business came from Australia, USA and UK companies.

Software export from Gujarat was mere Rs. 4.75 crore in 1996 and until 2000 exports remained below Rs 10 crore. “Software exports crossed Rs 450 crore in 2004-05 due to improved infrastructure,” said Sharma.

India becomes R&D hot spot as high-tech firms cut costs

July 22nd, 2009 · IT Industry

At Microsoft’s research center in a leafy lane in India’s tech capital, a new generation of researchers are being groomed half a world away from the software giant’s sprawling headquarters in Seattle.

Complete with beanbags and coffee served in steel tumblers, the center is helping change the perception that India is no place for top-end research and development. Staffed with about 60 full-time researchers, many of them Indians with PhDs from top universities in the United States, the center is at the cutting edge of Microsoft’s R&D. It covers seven areas of research including mobility and cryptography.

Its success, including developing a popular tool for Microsoft’s new search engine Bing, underscores the potential of R&D in India at a time when cost-conscious firms are keen to offshore to save money by using talented researchers abroad.

Showing off the Bing tool which enables searches for locations with incomplete or even incorrect addresses, B. Ashok, a director of a research unit at the center, said the innovation would never have taken root if the R&D had been done in the United States. “It was completely inspired by the Indian environment, but is applicable worldwide,” he said.

While India might seem like a natural location to expand offshoring into R&D, it is hampered by some serious structural problems that range from not enough home grown researchers to a lack of government support. India produces about 300,000 computer science graduates a year. Yet it produces only about 100 computer science PhDs, a small fraction of the 1,500-2,000 that get awarded in the United States, or China, every year. “Students here are not exposed to research from an early age, faculties are not exposed to research and there’s no career path for innovation because there’s a lot of pressure to get a ‘real’ job,” said Vidya Natampally, head of strategy at the Microsoft India Research Center.

With few government incentives and an education system that emphasizes rote learning, India lacks the kind of environment found in say, Silicon Valley, where universities, venture capitalists and startups encourage innovation.

“China has a policy in place for R&D; we don’t,” Natampally said, adding that India could move up the value chain faster if even a small percentage of its engineering graduates went into research. The small numbers of PhDs and the lack of government incentives for India’s fledgling R&D sector are blunting the country’s edge, analysts warn.

COMPETITION

Rival China has already pulled ahead with more than 1,100 R&D centers compared to less than 800 in India, despite lingering concerns about rule of law and intellectual property rights.

Aside from providing funding to encourage students to complete their PhDs, China also offers fiscal incentives such as tax breaks for R&D centers and special economic zones provide infrastructure for hi-tech and R&D industries. India is also losing out in the patent stakes. In 2006-2007, just 7,000 patents were granted in this country of 1.1 billion people, compared to nearly 160,000 in the United States.

“We’re nowhere near the U.S. or even Israel when it comes to innovations,” said Praveen Bhadada at consultancy Zinnov, which estimates the R&D sector in India is worth about $9.2 billion. “Our costs are low and our talent pool is ahead of China, Russia and Ukraine, but China gives specific incentives, and produces way more PhDs than we do.”

India is cheaper than China for R&D, those in the industry in Bangalore said. But salaries in India have been rising by about 15 percent every year and may soon reach parity with China. R&D centre costs in Shanghai are currently just 10-15 percent higher than in India.

BEYOND CODING

Microsoft and other firms have been working around the government’s indifference. Cisco, IBM, Intel, Nokia, Ericsson and Suzuki Motor have all gone beyond low-end coding and tweaking products for the local market, with hefty investments and recruitment. Their success shows India’s potential if the government starts supporting such ventures and building high-tech parks and incubators. “If Paris asks for some work, it’s not because they think it’s cheaper but because they want inputs from India,” said Jean Philippe, chief designer of the Renault India Studio, which competes with the French carmakers’ five other global studios. Texas Instruments and San Jose-based Cadence Design were among the first to set up R&D in India in the mid-80s, drawn by the legions of English-speaking software engineers who could be hired at about 20 percent of the cost of engineers in the United States.

The opening of the economy in the early 90’s and the establishment of the software services industry drew more foreign firms looking to cut costs and tap emerging markets. “From when a few companies offshored non-critical design work, we have seen India emerge as a preferred destination for design and development of chip, board and embedded software,” said Jaswinder Ahuja, managing director of Cadence India.

Firms first focused on the ‘D’ in R&D, but research has grown in importance in recent years, and many of the facilities in India are now the largest outside their home base. Half of Cisco’s core R&D work, including innovations in WiMAX and optical networks, and about 40 percent of SAP’s ideas for processes and product development come from India.

“The Indian units are more tuned to the needs of customers in emerging markets. Besides, Bangalore is only a 5-hour flight away from three strategic regions: Southeast Asia, east Asia and the Middle East,” said Aravind Sitaraman, vice president at Cisco.

IBM’s India Research Labs do a “fair share of patenting”, helping swell the parent’s record numbers every year, said director Guruduth Banavar in Bangalore. Its new $100 million-mobile communications research, Mobile Web, is the first time a big project has been driven from outside the United States, he said. “For a research lab it’s the best environment to be in: you can see the problems and the opportunities,” said Banavar, who was previously at IBM’s lab in Boston and has, like several of his peers, returned to India to oversee operations here.

Source: The Economic Times

Job Lay off or Salary Cut

June 21st, 2009 · IT Industry

The salary cuts are accepted to stave off job losses and help the stretched finances. Bharat Forge Managing Director Baba Kalyani has taken a 20 percent salary cut after his company reported a consolidated loss of Rs.36.56 crore in the third quarter which ended in December, reports The Economic Times.

In the midst of this circumstance people often get in ambiguous state of mind by some stunt resolutions where there is only confusion. If we see the present IT market world wide, it is in a state of descending order and the resources are trying to find a gap where they can take a relax breath. But condition is not like to have a confirmed place of work but the results are forwarding to capture truth of reality.

The cloud is now very dark as it has been submerging the hope of the IT employees all over the world.  However,  global rescission is emerging to the highest peek crossing certain height in the IT market. Now debate comes upfront that what should be the right step for the companies particularly in India for their employees?  Should they just simply cut off the salary their employees or lay off them? Well, answers are not so easy to reiterate for this uncertain consequence.

Let us think about some logical points

  • IT market gets down frequently (happened earlier in year 2000)
  • We can not deny the needs of the IT as it has entered to the core of our life even in fourth world countries too.
  • It is a process of everlasting requirements to be fulfilled in ease.
  • The world is entering the super modern age because of IT. So there is no chance disappearing the requirement of  IT at any cost.

Well, these are the facts everyone knows but the point is to find out the reason of uncertainty in the minds of people working under the roof of IT market. Fear has no limited boundary and it comes to human minds without prior alarm. It is common but if you want to have a fearless comfort in your job particularly in the IT then you need to be confident.  I mean to say you should have that caliber for survival even in drought condition.