ΑΛΙΑ ΠΑΠΑΓΕΩΡΓΙΟΥ. Μια απο τις 'πρωταγωνίστριες' των Βρυξελλών, που απο τον Μπαρόσο και όλους τους αξιωματούχους της ΕΕ ως τον Κινέζο και Αμερικανό πρέσβη αν τη συναντήσουν στο δρόμο θα την καλημερίσουν με το μικρό της όνομα -βρίσκεται απο προχτες βράδυ στα Τρίκαλα..
Και ποια ήταν η πρώτη της κίνηση; Ένα φραπέ στην ΑΣΚΛΗΠΙΟΥ!!!!
Lithaios River, dusk, a statue of Asklipios and the mountains way in the back there #Trikala
Love that on the right, on the water's edge there's a little goose ladder for them to walk up and down on! Too cute #Trikala
"A Greece Without the Euro is a Greece with no unemployment" - From the far left and a candidate for MEP.... Morning! Trikala, Greece.
Η Αλία ήρθε στα Τρίκαλα για να παραστεί στους σημερινούς γάμους της φίλης της Γεωργίας Ράγκα,αλλά και να δεί τούς συγγενείς και χωριανούς της στη Χα'ι'δεμένη Τρικάλων (γενέτειρα του πατέρα της Δημ. Παπαγεωργίου) και τους πολλούς φίλους της στα Τρίκαλα.
Φυσικά και θα ψηφίσει στις αυριανές εκλογές,δημοτικές και περιφερειακές εκλογες πριν αναχωρήσει για Θεσσαλονίκη και Βρυξέλλες. Τις καλύτερες ευχές Αγλαία,για καλή παραμονή στην πόλη του Ασκληπιού,,Τσιτσάνη,και αμέτρητων μεγάλων και καλορίζικοι οι νεόνυμφοι..
Και στην Αυστραλία η Αλία (κέντρο) σε μια παλαιότερη φωτογραφία με το Παύλο Κόκκοβα (Τρικαλα )και την σύζυγό του Σουμέλα .Φωτό της στο ΦΒ
Η Αλία δίνει συνέντευξη για την Ευρώπη στο Πεκίνο, κανάλι 13 της Κίνας ..!!
Taming a search titan: A deep dive into the Google-EU antitrust pact
Google has reached a settlement to end the EU’s three-year antitrust probe after it improved an offer to display results from rival search services. Alia Papageorgiou spells out what all this means.
Η γνωστή μηχανή αναζήτησης Google,μετά απο 3ετή διαπραγμάτευση κατέληξε σε συμφωνία με την Ευρωπαική Ένωση (ΕΕ) για την αντιμονοπωλιακή πολιτική της.
Alia Papageorgiou
Η Ελληνίδα δημοσιογράφος,εκδότρια και πτυχιούχος των Πολυμέσων Κοινωνικής Ενημέρωσης στις ΒρυξέλλεςΑγλα'ί'α Παπαγεωργίουκάνει μια βαθειά ανάλυση της όλης συμφωνίας που ο κ Αλμούνια παρουσίασε και απογυμνώνει τους "διευθύνοντες" της Ευρώπης.
Το άρθρο της στην Αγγλική έχει ως εξής
Taming a search titan: A deep dive into the Google-EU antitrust pact
Google has reached a settlement to end the EU’s three-year antitrust probe after it improved an offer to display results from rival search services. Alia Papageorgiou spells out what all this means.
Formerly a managing editor of a Brussels-based newspaper, Alia is a European affairs and social media expert. She's the organizer of the first Personal Democracy Forum in Brussels and runs the BRUTwestival.
Four years ago, if you would have asked Joaquín Almunia what he knew about the search engine market, he would have probably asked you to repeat the question.
The 65-year old Spanish politician who entered the European Commission – Brussels’ executive arm – in 2010, will be ending his tenure later this year as Commission Vice President and Commissioner for Competition as a self-described “expert in the search engine field”, widely waited on and listened to as “three years, six months and some days” passed between negotiations with Google (and one supposed NSA hacking of his cellphone) . The subject of which was what the Commission said was anti-competitive behaviour on Google’s part following complaints from the search giant’s rivals, based on Article 9 of the EU’s antitrust regulation.
Fine dodging
The result: Google is not having a possible five billion euro fine placed upon its business (10 percent of profits has been usual recompense in such cases) and the compromise reached will suffice to close the case or not inspire further fines for five years – once the decision is final, and they comply with the changes promised in this particular field … Or will it ?
This remains to be seen, as the next steps may take months, and by that time Commissioner Almunia will be gone. You see, this year is both a European election year and the year that the Commission changes its staff (once every four years). These two things are co-dependant, depending on who gets voted in the European Parliament impacts who gets placed in the European Commission.
Almunia mentioned that the decision will take some months; the legal path is to now reply to the complainants (rivals of Google, as Almunia refers to them), and also processing the decision internally in the Commission. He didn’t seem too concerned with the transference of power to another Competition Commissioner, while most reported the pact as a fait accompli.
Google’s Kent Walker, Senior Vice President and General Counsel, released a quote through the Brussels office underlining that the company will be making significant changes to “the way Google operates in Europe”.
“We have been working with the European Commission to address issues they raised and look forward to resolving this matter,” Walker said. Quite the understatement, compared to the stresses the Brussels’ Google office has gone through the last three years to arrive at such a point, sighing audibly across Leopold Park at the announcement I’m sure.
“After a careful analysis of the last proposals we received from Google last month, and intense negotiations that managed to further improve what Google sent to us in mid-January, I believe that Google’s new proposals are capable of addressing the competition concerns I set out to them. Therefore, from now on we will move forward towards a decision based on commitments,” Almunia said at the press conference held on February 5 at the European Commission’s daily mid-day briefing.
Google’s new guard dog
Google’s compliance with this package of commitments is now to be supervised by an independent monitoring trustee who would play an active role in advising the Commission in how Google would implement the measures, Almunia stated on February 5, but what does this actually mean?
“Once the decision is adopted we will be extremely careful in choosing the best monitoring trustee possible, the best requirements possible; the body which will develop this team will hold a very very important function in this kind of decision,” Almunia said.
When Tech.eu asked Google, ICOMP (the group representing the complainants) and Almunia’s office to comment on whether this would now be another agency/person/institution and the journalists present in the press room asked what the budget for such a monitoring body would be – none of us got any real answers to those vital questions.
The monitoring authority, it seems, has not been predefined and will most likely be so following the final legally-binding decision that the anti-competitiveness negotiation has been accepted with the latest terms from Google.
In selecting the monitoring trustee, the European Commission will make sure that they will be able to fulfil responsibilities (which are not small), a regular report and an obligation to send reports every time they receive information about a possible breach of commitments.
“Certain stakeholders consider that Google should not automatically be in the results it shows. I disagree, our objective is not to interfere in Google’s business. Google should not be penalised, but rivals should have equal access,” Almunia said.
Why did it take three years?
The Commission stated that it was not the legal means it used which were so time-consuming but rather the ‘innovative nature’ of the market they had to deal with.
“Three years ago, these search results would have looked completely different,” Almunia said.
In the United States, the Federal Trade Commission also had a similar case looking at the competitiveness of Google, and came up with a similar statement on innovative business creating the market share instead of anti-competitive behaviour.
“Google is of course not going to stop innovating, and no one would ever want it to,” the Commissioner said.
The immensity of the search engine market was portrayed quite poetically by Almunia, who noted that every user receives different search results, others outside the EU see different results, and the nature of the services flow and change constantly.
“It’s in the nature of their quality” that they change, the Commissioner noted.
“Tomorrow, in one week, in one year, services will be presented in a new way, new services will be created and served by Google,” Almunia added.
Competitors up in arms
ICOMP’s statement following the decision was non-belief that Google has, “any intention of holding themselves to account on these proposals, and given the catastrophic effects on the online ecosystem that a proposal that doesn’t hit the mark will have. We would implore Commissioner Almunia to allow a full third party review of their submission as the very least the Commission can do in this landmark case.”
Michael Weber, director of German mapping provider hot-map, said in response to this decision that Commissioner Almunia’s announcement sounds like there might be “a move in the right direction, but the two previous Google proposals were only rejected once the public could see them, and any concerned party was able to analyse and comment them. The details and possible loopholes of the proposal will be crucial, so this again calls for a formal market test.”
“So far, the European mapping companies have been left without a clear commitment that Google Maps’ preferential placement falls under any Google proposal. Also, many issues outside of the Commission’s four initial concerns remain unaddressed, most notably the cost free dumping syndication of Google Maps on millions of websites,” Weber added.
The second slide shows how this would change with Google’s proposal the European Commission specified. There are now links to three rivals next to the three Google specialised results. These now have pictures of the same size and quality as Google’s own. Furthermore, the rivals would have full control of how their links look and where they take the user. This is therefore a significant improvement.
The third slide shows what would happen under Google’s new proposal on mobile. The size of the screen obviously constrains how many results can be shown overall. Nevertheless, you can see that next to Google’s specialised search results, there is now one rival link which is displayed directly with a picture.
There are also a number of additional Google and rival results if the user chooses to scroll across the screen. This is a significant improvement compared to Google’s previous proposal where rivals were only accessible after going through an intermediary screen and where even at that point, they did not have the possibility to display a picture, the commission said.
First, given the importance of the choice of visual formats in attracting user clicks, it is essential that the presentation of rival links is comparable to that of the Google services.
Secondly, given the speed with which Google develops its services, that comparability of presentation of rival links has to be ensured dynamically over time. This means that if Google improves the presentation of its services, so must the presentation of rival links.
Finally, in a fast-moving market, any commitments must retain their relevance throughout their lifetime. This means that any new vertical search services developed by Google must also be subject to the commitments the commission underlined.
What happens next
To address these concerns, Google has finally accepted to guarantee that whenever it promotes its own specialised search services on its page, the services of rivals will also be displayed in a comparable way.
In practice, this means that when Google promotes one of its own specialised search services, there will be three rival services also displayed prominently on the page, in a way that is clearly visible to users.
These alternatives will also be attractive: for instance, if Google has a picture to promote its services, which is a key element in attracting users, rival services will also have such a picture. The experiments we received during the market test showed the importance of pictures in attracting user click-through.
And this principle will apply not only for existing specialised search services, but also for future ones: if tomorrow Google decides to display videos, rivals will also be able to display videos.
For relevant specialised search services, Google will display prominent links to three rival specialised search services in a format which is visually comparable to that of links to its own services. For instance, if the Google links have images, the rival links will have images as well, including on mobile devices.
Rivals will have control of how they want to present their offerings, and hence their business model.
In instances where Google does not charge for inclusion in its specialised search service, rivals will not be charged to participate in the rival links. The three displayed rivals will be chosen from a pool of eligible specialised search competitors using Google’s normal web search algorithm.
In instances where Google charges for inclusion in its specialised search service, the three rivals will be chosen from a pool of eligible specialised search competitors based on a dedicated auction mechanism.
The second concern relates to the way Google uses content from competing specialised search services in its own offerings. Google uses on its own specialised search sites material such as user reviews from the websites of its competitors, thereby benefiting from the investments of competitors without their prior authorisation – and sometimes even against their explicit will.
The Commission has not expressed a concern about the appropriate remuneration for copyright-protected material.
To address this concern, Google proposes to allow third parties to opt out from the use of their content in Google’s specialised search services without undue impact on their ranking in Google’s general search results or on their ranking in Google’s AdWords programme.
A general opt-out will be open to all web sites, on a subdomain by subdomain basis. A more specific opt-out with finer granularity and more control over content will be accessible to news publishers only, for the control of the use of their content in Google News.
The third concern relates to Google imposing exclusivity requirements in agreements with publishers for the provision of Google search advertisements displayed on their web sites. Google’s agreements with publishers result in (de facto) exclusivity.
This means that these agreements require publishers to obtain all or most of the search advertisements displayed on their web sites from Google. Google’s competitors therefore have only limited access to those publishers.
To address this concern, Google proposes no longer to include in its agreements with publishers any written or unwritten obligations that would require them to source online search advertisements exclusively from Google.
The fourth concern relates to the portability of online search advertising campaigns from Google’s AdWords to platforms of competitors. Google does not allow software developers to offer software tools that make it easy to manage and transfer search advertising campaigns across AdWords and other search advertising platforms such as Microsoft’s AdCenter.
To address this concern, Google proposes no longer to impose obligations that would prevent advertisers from porting or managing search advertising campaigns across competing advertising platforms.
Απο τις Βρυξέλλες πληροφορούμαστε ότι η γνωστή Ελληνοαυστραλέζα δημοσιογράφος Αλία Παπαγεωργίου οργανωνει στις 28 Νοεμβρίου 2013 το πολυ γνωστο και ενδιαφέρον φεστιβάλ που φερει τον τίτλο TWESTIVAL BRUSSELS .Διαβάστε την ανακοίνωση ,όπως τη λάβαμε στα αγγλικά και μεταφραστε την με το Google και στα Ελληνικά αν σας είναι απαραιτητο.Ευχόμαστε καλη επιτυχία στην συμπατριώτισσά μας αν και είμστε βέβαια ότι θα τα πάει θαυμάσια όπως και σε όλα τα προηγούμενα σεμινάρια όπου κερδισε τα συγχαριτηρια του πολιτικού και επιχειρηματικού κόσμου της Ευρωπαικής Πρωτεύουσας..
BRUTwestival 2013 edition focuses on Storytelling and the Hashtag and supports free Tunisian journalists
Returning to Brussels for a fourth edition on November 28 2013, the Brussels Twestival will be focused on storytelling and will take place in the newly re-opened MuntPunt for a full afternoon of presentations, readings and workshops exploring all things twitter.
Charity festival
A charity festival lauding the use of online communications, through short text messages ontwitter.com, it will raise funds in support of Nejiba Hamrouni, a journalist and President of the Tunisian Journalist Union, which the International Federation of Journalists describes as “a leading light in the fight for press freedom in Tunisia”.
Social media for helping others
“Spending so much time on social media eventually you start wanting to use your time for helping others. The twestival grew out of this idea, bridging the gap of the online with an offline event, promoting a good cause and donating to charity as the final goal, it’s a rewarding experience,” says BRUTwestival organiser Alia Papageorgiou.
Storytelling and the hashtag
The theme of this year’s festival will focus on storytelling and the hashtag, and highlights of the day will include the presentation of the European Council’s Greek Presidency social media team, Live Listen & Tweets with international storytellers; a session on how to create "happenings" around hashtags with Richard Medic, founder of SoonFeed, a Google+ Hangout with Damien Van Achter talking Storify..
@Muntpunt
The Muntpunt Library offers a remarkable space to host the festival, bringing Brussels’ more knowledgeable users together for workshops and discussion for all. Traditional storytelling will meet digital formats such as blogging and new media, how to use twitter more effectively for politics, promotion, learning and social good.
INFORMATION: BRUTwestival Muntpunt – Munt 6, 1000 Brussel November 28th from 14:30 - 20:30 For further information: http://brussels.twestival.com/ BRUTwestival Twitter account Brussels Twestival Facebook page CONTACT Twestival Organisers Alia Papageorgiou - eurocentrique@gmail.com - +32 484 807 418 Sarah Basha - bashasarah@gmail.com - +32 477 707 534 Muntpunt Eva Drees – eva.drees@muntpunt.be - +32 472 79 42 00 ABOUT TWESTIVAL Twestival is the largest grassroots social media fundraising initiative in the world. It is a global movement that uses social media for social good, empowering communities around the world to organise one of a kind offline events in support of a great local cause of their choice. All events are 100% volunteer run, and all ticket sales and donations go directly to the projects they support. ABOUT MUNTPUNT You´ll find Muntpunt on the Muntplein, in the heart of Brussels. The communication house is the home of a capital information centre, an experience library, but above all for everyone and everything in Brussels. Here you can find information on life and city life experience. The public spaces, from auditorium to café, are meeting spots that Muntpunt fills throughout the year with its own programmes and offers. Muntpunt connects people - to Muntpunt, to one another and to other Dutch-language Brussels initiatives - in order to help you to really discover the city. An organisation with a heart for Brussels. Muntpunt is a joint initiative of the Flemish Government and the Flemish Community Commission.