Ed Koch remembered as quintessential New York City mayor






NEW YORK (Reuters) – Former New York City Mayor Ed Koch was memorialized on Monday as an in-your-face, wisecracking leader who helped transform the city from a symbol of urban decay to the vital, glittering metropolis it is today.


As Koch’s casket was led out of Temple Emanu-El, a soaring Fifth Ave. synagogue opposite Central Park, an organ played Frank Sinatra’s “New York, New York” while mourners including former U.S. President Bill Clinton and a who’s who of New York politics stood and applauded.






Koch died on Friday at the age of 88 in Manhattan — the only place other than heaven he could imagine living, as he was known to say.


“I come today with the love and condolences of 8.4 million New Yorkers who really are grieving with you at this moment,” said the city’s current mayor, Michael Bloomberg.


Speakers joked about the famously attention-loving Koch’s obsession with stage-managing his passing. His grave-stone, complete with an epitaph and a bench bearing Koch’s name, has been ready since 2008, and his friends said he had been planning the funeral for years.


“We started talking about his death in the ’80s,” said his former chief of staff Diane Coffey.


As mayor from 1978 to 1989, Koch, with his trademark phrase “How’m I Doin?”, was a natural showman and tireless promoter of both himself and the city. He helped repair the city’s finances as it teetered on the edge of bankruptcy, and later led a building renaissance that would see 200,000 units of affordable housing erected or rehabilitated in some of the city’s most crime-infested areas.


He could also be a divisive figure. His determination to shut Sydenham, a poorly-performing Harlem hospital that was one of the only city hospitals employing black doctors, angered black New Yorkers. And AIDS activists said he was too slow to react to the epidemic that ravaged the city’s gay population in the 1980s.


Tall, nearly bald and speaking with a high-pitched voice, Koch was an unmistakable presence. He was famously argumentative, and rarely walked away from verbal jousting.


His friend James Gill remembered Koch’s response to someone who had written a letter criticizing the former mayor.


“You are entitled to your opinion of me and I am entitled to my opinion of you,” Koch replied. “My opinion of you is that you are a fool.”


His nephews and grand-nephew and grand-niece remembered Koch, who never married, as devoted “Uncle Eddie” – eager to hear what they thought of his appearances on talk shows but also happy join his 11-year-old grand-niece for a manicure.


Clinton read from a stack of letters Koch had sent him over the years and said Koch had “a big brain, but he had an even bigger heart.”


Koch remained relevant in politics long after 1989, when he lost the Democratic nomination to David Dinkins for what would have been a record fourth term as mayor. But when asked if he would run for office again, he liked to say, “The people threw me out and the people must be punished.”


His endorsement was coveted by candidates decades after he left office. And his unwavering and loud support of Israel made Koch “one of the most influential and important American Zionists,” said former Ambassador Ido Aharoni.


At Monday’s memorial, Bloomberg noted the synagogue Koch had chosen for the funeral stood just a few blocks from the midtown bridge that had been renamed to honor him. Last year, the city released a video of Koch standing at the bridge’s entrance ramp, calling out to approaching cars: “Welcome to my bridge! Welcome to my bridge!”


“No mayor, I think, has ever embodied the spirit of New York City like he did. And I don’t think anyone ever will,” Bloomberg said. “Tough and loud, brash and irreverent, full of humor and chutzpah – he was our city’s quintessential mayor.”


(Reporting By Edith Honan; Editing by Paul Thomasch and Alden Bentley)


Celebrity News Headlines – Yahoo! News





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Adult diabetes drug may work in very obese youths






NEW YORK (Reuters Health) – A drug originally approved to treat adults with diabetes may also help severely obese youths lose some weight, according to a new study.


“We’re encouraged by these trial results because there is potentially a role for this class (of drugs) to be useful in terms of weight reduction and cardiovascular risk control,” said Aaron Kelly, the study’s lead author from the University of Minnesota Medical School in Minneapolis.






Exenatide, which is marketed by Amylin Pharmaceuticals Inc. as Byetta, was approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration in 2005 to boost production of the hormone insulin in adults with type 2 diabetes. People with the disease do not produce enough of the hormone, or their body is resistant to it.


The drug, which is injected in a person’s belly twice a day and costs about $ 2,000 per year, was also found to reduce body weight by slowing down how quickly food moves through the body, which gives a person the feeling of being fuller longer.


The researchers write that there are few treatments available for severely obese children outside of lifestyle changes and surgery, and they wanted to see if the weight loss seen in adults would also happen in children.


For the new study, Kelly, who also works at Amplatz Children’s Hospital, and his colleagues recruited severely obese participants between 12 and 19 years old from around Minnesota, and separated them into two groups.


Between 4 percent and 6 percent of American youths under 18 years of age are severely obese, according to the authors, who published their study in JAMA Pediatrics on Monday.


Severe obesity in children is classified as a body mass index (BMI), a measurement of weight in relation to height, of 35 or more on the adult scale. That’s the BMI of a 12-year-old girl who is five feet tall and 155 pounds.


One group of 12 youths injected themselves with exenatide before breakfast and dinner every day for three months. The other group of 10 youths injected themselves with an inactive placebo.


At the start of the study, the participants in both groups had an average BMI of about 43. But, at the end of the three months, the BMI of the youths in the exenatide group fell to about 41, while the BMI of the placebo group fell to about 42.


That meant that on average, the group taking exenatide lost about 7 pounds more than the placebo group.


The researchers then started giving exenatide to all of the participants for another three months. After that time, the group that started out taking the drug ended up with a 4 percent lower BMI, compared to those who started out taking the placebo.


NOT APPROVED FOR CHILDREN


While the results were modest, Dr. Ronald Williams, head of the Penn State Hershey Children’s Hospital Weight Management Program in Hershey, Pennsylvania, said the weight loss could stack up over a few years.


“If that is a sustained effect over a few years, that’s great,” said Williams, who was not involved with the new research.


Kelly, who’s received research funding from Amylin, which supplied both exenatide and the placebo for the study, told Reuters Health that the results of the new study jibe with an earlier trial they conducted. They are also in line with other obesity drugs, including orlistat (marketed as Xenical and Alli) and metformin.


Kelly said the most common side effects from exenatide were headaches, diarrhea and vomiting.


But both Williams and Kelly said parents and their children should not expect to get exenatide right now, because it is not approved for use in children for weight loss and will most likely not be paid for by insurance.


“We’re really viewing this as preliminary evidence for this general drug class. We wouldn’t recommend this medication to be used (for weight loss in youths) at this point,” said Kelly.


SOURCE: http://bit.ly/Ms92Cy JAMA Pediatrics, online February 4, 2013.


Medications/Drugs News Headlines – Yahoo! News





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Lloyds bonuses ‘will be lowest’







The chairman of Lloyds Banking Group, Sir Winfried Bischoff, has said that employees’ bonuses this year will be the “lowest undoubtedly of any bank”.






He appeared before Parliament’s banking standards committee alongside chief executive Antonio Horta-Osorio.


The pair also backed the chancellor’s call for the break-up of banks that did not implement the ring-fence properly.


They used the question-and-answer session to portray the 40%-state-owned bank as in tune with public opinion.


“We are very conscious of the point,,, that as a taxpayer-owned company we should, perhaps more than others, be very much aware of the public sentiment in relation to [bonuses] and we will be,” said Sir Winfried.


Mr Horta-Osorio would not be drawn on whether he himself would receive a bonus this year, saying that it was wrong to speculate on something that had yet to be discussed by the bank’s board.


Two other bank bosses have waived their bonuses this year follow scandals: Antony Jenkins following Barclays’ admission of its involvement in rigging the multi-trillion-dollar Libor interest rate and Royal Bank of Scotland’s Stephen Hester after a massive computer failure caused payments into customers’ accounts to be delayed by several days.


‘A different view’


The two Lloyds executives threw weight behind Chancellor George Osborne’s announcement earlier in the day that the forthcoming Banking Reform Bill would “electrify” the ring-fence, as recommended by the banking standards committee.


The ring-fence will require banks to put their High Street banking activities – such as taking deposits and lending to UK businesses – into a separate subsidiary from their riskier investment banking operations.


In contrast to most other bank bosses, Mr Horta-Osorio supported the ring-fence when it was first proposed.


He and Sir Winfried have also now come out in favour of Mr Osborne’s decision to give regulators the power to force a complete separation of any bank that fails to respect the spirit of the ring-fence.


“If we think that for society as a whole it is important to have ring-fencing, both from a financial stability point of view and from a cultural point of view, I absolutely agree it should have strong enforcement and strong incentives in order for this to happen,” said the chief executive.


In doing so, the bank again parts company with its peers, represented by the British Bankers’ Association (BBA), which has opposed the electrification.


“There are two views and one view has been expressed. We have a different view,” said Sir Winfried.


New mis-selling bill


However, the banking duo did join the BBA in calling for a deadline on payment protection insurance (PPI) compensation claims.


Lloyds, along with all the other main High Street lenders, has had to set aside billions of pounds to cover the cost of payouts to home-buyers who had been mis-sold PPI along with their mortgage.


They agreed that a deadline of April 2014 should be imposed on claims in order to avoid the cost of investigating false claims brought by claims management companies.


While PPI mis-selling has already cost Lloyds over £5bn, Mr Horta-Osorio said the bank had so far only set aside £90m to cover claims by small businesses for the mis-selling of interest rate hedging products.


The figure, which is considerably less than at some of Lloyds’s rivals, may however be set to rise.


Last week, the Financial Services Authority announced that all of the big four High Street banks had agreed to start a complete review of all such interest rate products sold to unsophisticated business clients.


The Lloyds chief executive said that so far it had only investigated the most egregious cases of mis-selling, involving the most complicated versions of such products, which had been at the centre of the FSA’s original investigation, and it had only identified 60 victims.


However, the new review ordered by the financial regulator would also look at clients sold even the most simple version of the product.


“The new scope of the review is significantly wider than it was in December” said Mr Horta-Osorio.


BBC News – Business





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Israel suggests responsibility for Syria airstrike






MUNICH (AP) — Israel‘s defense minister strongly signaled Sunday that his country was behind an airstrike in Syria last week, telling a high profile security conference that Israeli threats to take pre-emptive action against its enemies are not empty. “We mean it,” Ehud Barak declared.


Israel has not officially confirmed its planes attacked a site near Damascus, targeting ground-to-air missiles apparently heading for Lebanon, but its intentions have been beyond dispute. During the 22 months of civil war in Syria, Israeli leaders have repeatedly expressed concern that high-end weapons could fall into the hands of enemy Hezbollah, the powerful Lebanese militants.






For years, Israel has been charging that Syrian President Bashar Assad and Iran have been arming Hezbollah, which fought a monthlong war against Israel in 2006.


U.S. officials say the target was a convoy of sophisticated Russian SA-17 anti-aircraft missiles. Deployed in Lebanon, they could have limited Israel’s ability to gather intelligence on its enemies from the air.


Over the weekend, Syrian TV broadcast video of the Wednesday attack site for the first time, showing destroyed vehicles and a damaged building identified as a scientific research center. The U.S. officials said the airstrike hit both the building and the convoy.


In his comments Sunday in Munich, Barak came close to confirming that his country was behind the operation.


“I cannot add anything to what you have read in the newspapers about what happened in Syria several days ago,” Barak told the gathering of top diplomats and defense officials from around the world.


Then he went on to say, “I keep telling frankly that we said — and that’s proof when we said something we mean it — we say that we don’t think it should be allowed to bring advanced weapons systems into Lebanon.” He spoke in heavily accented English.


While Israel has remained officially silent on the airstrike, there seemed little doubt that Israel carried it out, especially given the confirmation from the U.S., its close ally.


Israel has a powerful air force equipped with U.S.-made warplanes and has a history of carrying out air raids on hostile territory. In recent years, Israel has been blamed for an air raid in Syria in 2007 that apparently struck an unfinished nuclear reactor and an arms convoy in Sudan believed to be delivering weapons to Hamas.


Israel has not confirmed either raid, but military officials routinely talk about a “policy of prevention” meant to disrupt the flow of arms to its enemies.


In the days preceding the airstrike, the Israeli warnings were heightened. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu issued a series of dire comments about the threat posed by Syria’s weapons.


Israel considers any transfer of these advanced weapons to be unacceptable “game changers” that would change the balance of power in the region.


Israel has grown increasingly jittery as the Arab Spring has swept through the Middle East, bringing with it a rise of hostile Islamist elements. While Assad is a bitter enemy, Israel’s northern front with Syria has remained quiet for most of the past 40 years.


If Assad is toppled, the threat of al-Qaida forces operating along Israel’s frontier with Syria would pose a new and unpredictable threat. Israel has been racing to reinforce its fences along its northern frontiers with Lebanon and Syria.


In addition, Israel fears that its archenemy Iran, the close ally of Syria and Hezbollah, is moving closer to developing a nuclear weapon.


Israeli leaders have vowed to prevent Iran from obtaining nuclear arms, making veiled threats to use force if international diplomacy and sanctions fail.


Israeli defense officials tried to play down Barak’s comments, saying that he was voicing a general policy that Israel is ready to defend its interests and not discussing a specific incident. They also noted that he was not speaking in his native Hebrew.


Even so, it seemed that Barak, a former prime minister, military chief of staff and regular participant on the world stage, was sending a message that Israel’s warnings are not hollow and that further military action should not be ruled out.


“There is a real danger now that seriously problematic weapons will reach Hezbollah, and Israel is trying to prevent this,” said Reuven Pedatzur, a defense analyst at Tel Aviv University. He said the threat has reached the point “where weapons are actually being loaded on trucks and sent on their way. That is new.”


Pedatzur said the decision by Syria to try to move weapons to Lebanon could indicate that Assad’s days are numbered. Assad may fear that he won’t be able to secure the weapons for much longer, or may be under pressure from Iran to transfer the arms to Hezbollah before he is toppled.


Israel and Hezbollah fought a monthlong war in mid-2006 that ended in a stalemate, and Israeli military planners believe it is just a matter of time before another war breaks out.


Israel says Hezbollah has already restocked its arsenal with tens of thousands of rockets and missiles, and that obtaining chemical weapons or the advanced Russian-made anti-aircraft missiles would severely hinder Israel’s ability to operate in Lebanon.


In Beirut, the Lebanese military issued a statement saying that six Israeli flew over different areas of the country on Sunday.


In Syria, Assad said during a meeting with a top Iranian official that his country would confront any aggression, his first comment on the airstrike.


“Syria, with the awareness of its people, the might of its army and its adherence to the path of resistance, is able to face the current challenges and confront any aggression that might target the Syrian people,” Assad was quoted as saying by the state news agency SANA.


He made the remarks during a meeting with Saeed Jalili, the head of Iran’s National Security Council. Iran is Syria’s closest regional ally. Jalili, on a three-day visit to Syria, has pledged Tehran’s continued support for Assad’s regime.


Jalili, who also serves as his country’s top nuclear negotiator, condemned the Israeli raid, stressing that it has proven the “aggressive nature of Israel and its threat of the region’s security and stability.”


The chief of Iran’s powerful Revolutionary Guards said Sunday that Tehran also hopes Syria will strike back against Israel.


Syrian opposition leaders and rebels have criticized Assad for not responding to the airstrike, calling it proof of his weakness and acquiescence to the Jewish state.


The Syrian defense minister, Gen. Fahd Jassem al-Freij said Israel attacked the center because rebels were unable to capture it. Al-Freij called the rebels Israel’s “tools.” He told the state TV, “The heroic Syrian Arab Army, that proved to the world that it is a strong army and a trained army, will not be defeated.”


Ahmad Ramadan, an opposition leader, said Syria’s claim that the rebels are cooperating with Israel “is an attempt by the regime to cover its weakness in defending the country against foreign aggression.” He spoke by telephone from Turkey.


____


Federman reported from Jerusalem. Associated Press writers Bassem Mroue in Beirut and Ian Deitch in Jerusalem contributed.


Europe News Headlines – Yahoo! News





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Take-Two delays launch of Grand Theft Auto V video game






(Reuters) – Take-Two Interactive Software Inc said on Thursday it has pushed back the launch of the latest game from its hit “Grand Theft Auto” franchise to September 17 from its previously announced release window of spring 2013.


Shares of Take-Two were down six percent at $ 12.31 in early afternoon trading on the Nasdaq.






The delay was to allow Take-Two’s Rockstar Games studio, which develops “Grand Theft Auto” games, additional development time, the video game company said.


Grand Theft Auto V” will be released worldwide for Microsoft Corp‘s Xbox and Sony Corp‘s PlayStation3 game consoles on September 17, the company said.


The action-adventure game lets players complete criminal missions in urban settings. The franchise’s last title “Grand Theft Auto IV” has sold over 25 million units since its release in 2008.


Grand Theft Auto V is set in a fictional city inspired by present-day Southern California.


The delayed launch pushes earnings from Grand Theft Auto V sales from June to September, Sterne Agee analyst Arvind Bhatia said. The new title of the massively popular franchise has the potential to rake in close to $ 1 billion in retail sales and sell 15 to 20 million units, according to Bhatia.


“It adds to their development cost and it’s launching closer to what we think is going to be a period where new consoles will be coming out and there will be more competition from other titles,” Bhatia said.


The video game industry has been struggling to cope with flagging sales over the last year. Analysts say consumers are holding back from buying hardware and software as they wait for rumored next-generation versions of Sony Corp’s PlayStation and Microsoft Corp’s Xbox, expected later this year.


The delay could mean Take-Two is possibly creating a “cross-generation” title that could work on current and next-generation consoles, said analyst Mike Hickey of National Alliance Capital Markets.


“Remember, Xbox signed an exclusive deal with Rockstar at the beginning of the prior cycle for episodic content, and Sony provided exclusive resources for the completion of Grand Theft Auto IV,” Hickey said.


(Reporting by Malathi Nayak in San Francisco; Editing by Leslie Adler and Alden Bentley)


Gaming News Headlines – Yahoo! News





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Keys sings national anthem on piano at Super Bowl






Alicia Keys performed a lounge-y, piano-tinged — and live — version of the national anthem ahead of the Super Bowl on Sunday.


The Grammy-winning singer played the piano as she sang “The Star Spangled Banner” in a long red dress with her eyes shut. Her publicist said the performance was live, days after halftime performer Beyonce admitted singing along to a prerecorded track at the Inauguration.






Keys’ version was soft and featured additional lyrics: She added “living in the home” before belting “home of the brave” as she finished the song.


Before Keys hit the field, Jennifer Hudson performed “America the Beautiful” with the 26-member Sandy Hook Elementary School chorus, a performance that had some players on the sideline on the verge of tears.


The students wore green ribbons on their shirts in honor of the 20 first-graders and six adults who were killed in a Dec. 14 shooting rampage at the school in Newton, Conn.


The students began the song softly before Hudson, whose mother, brother and 7-year-old nephew were shot to death five years ago, jumped in with her gospel-flavored vocals. She stood still in black and white as the students moved to the left and right, singing background.


Keys and Hudson warmed up the field for Beyonce, who is set to perform at the half-time show.


___


Follow Mesfin Fekadu on Twitter at http://twitter.com/MusicMesfin


Entertainment News Headlines – Yahoo! News





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Obama: more tax revenue needed to address deficit – CBS






WASHINGTON (Reuters) – President Barack Obama said on Sunday more tax revenue would be needed to reduce the U.S. deficit and signaled he would push hard to get rid of loopholes such as the “carried interest” tax break enjoyed by private equity and hedge fund managers.


Obama, who won re-election in November largely on his promise to raise rates for the wealthiest Americans, pushed through a legislative package at the beginning of the year that raised rates for individuals making more than $ 400,000 a year and households making more than $ 450,000 a year.






In an interview with CBS, Obama said the United States could reduce the deficit and invest in education without raising rates again if it enacted “smart spending cuts” that trimmed government waste, reformed expensive healthcare programs, and closed lucrative loopholes.


“I don’t think the issue right now is raising rates,” Obama said in the interview, broadcast live before the Super Bowl football game.


“There is no doubt we need additional revenue, coupled with smart spending reductions in order to bring down our deficit. And we can do it in a gradual way so that it doesn’t have a huge impact,” he said.


Obama indicated he would seek to end deductions that are not available to all Americans, singling out “carried interest,” which refers to the tax rate paid by many private equity managers, venture capital and real estate partnerships.


Obama and many Democrats have repeatedly criticized the tax break as unfair and called for carried interest to be taxed as ordinary income. The tax break was the key reason for the low tax rate paid by Obama’s 2012 Republican presidential challenger, former Massachusetts governor and private equity executive Mitt Romney.


“We just want to make sure that the whole system is fair, that it’s transparent, and that we’re reducing our deficit in a way that doesn’t hamper growth,” Obama said.


CARRIED INTEREST, STRONG GROWTH


Individuals who benefit from carried interest took a hit in the year-end budget deal that averted the “fiscal cliff” set of spending cuts and tax increases.


For incomes above $ 400,000 per individual, or $ 450,000 per family, capital gains and dividend taxes were increased to 20 percent from 15 percent.


“Given the 58 percent increase in taxes paid on capital gains as part of the recent deal to avert the fiscal cliff, it is our hope that any tax reform effort in 2013 will be about crafting policies that incentivize economic growth,” said Steve Judge, president and chief executive of Private Equity Growth Capital Council, responding to Obama’s comments.


The budget law permanently extended ordinary tax cuts for incomes below $ 400,000 per individual, or $ 450,000 per family. Income above that level is now taxed at 39.6 percent, up from 35 percent.


Asked about the unexpected contraction of the U.S. economy in the fourth quarter, Obama said a dramatic cut in defense spending because of fears about the “fiscal cliff” had overshadowed strong manufacturing and a rebounding housing market.


He blamed dysfunction in Washington for the hit.


“Washington cannot continually operate under a cloud of crisis. That freezes up consumers. It gets businesses worried,” Obama said.


“There is a way for us to solve these budget problems in a responsible way through a balanced approach that the vast majority of people agree with. If we do that, there’s no reason why we can’t have really strong growth in 2013.”


(additional reporting by Patrick Temple-West, Alina Selyukh and Greg Roumeliotis)


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Will Brain Injury Lawsuits Doom or Save the NFL?






55539  cover06 202x269 Will Brain Injury Lawsuits Doom or Save the NFL?


When Gene Locks led Princeton against Columbia on Oct. 7, 1957, it took the Tigers quarterback only a few plays to discover “that the middle of the Columbia line was paper thin,” according to the Daily Princetonian. In the Tigers’ single-wing offense, Locks served as a blocker, leaving “gaping holes” in Columbia’s defense on the way to a 47-6 wipeout.






Fifty-six years later, a grayer, wider Locks sits in his Philadelphia law office behind piles of client files. Black-and-white gridiron photos of his svelte younger self look down from a shelf. In the 1970s he brought some of the first lawsuits on behalf of pipe fitters exposed to asbestos insulation. His firm eventually represented more than 16,000 asbestos clients in 20 states. In the late 1990s he helped lead the Fen-Phen diet drug litigation, which culminated in a $ 6 billion settlement. Now 75, Locks has earned a fortune in fees. In 2011 he had planned to spend more time with his grandchildren. “Then these concussion cases started coming in,” he says. “I remember what it’s like to get your bell rung.”


Even as an expected 110 million Americans take to their couches for the 47th Super Bowl on Feb. 3, Locks is waging a legal battle that represents the most serious threat to the viability of big-time football since an outbreak of fatal skull fractures back in the leather-helmet days. Locks and a group of allied plaintiffs’ lawyers are suing the National Football League on behalf of more than 4,000 former players and their wives who accuse the $ 9.5 billion-a-year business of covering up life-altering brain injuries.


Despite—or perhaps because of—its inherent brutality, football remains America’s most popular sport by far. Not only is the NFL the country’s single most lucrative sports enterprise, the league and its 32 teams also provide an atrophying television industry with its most profitable programming and an ideal vehicle for selling cars, beer, and erectile-dysfunction remedies. (The teams evenly share broadcast and licensing revenue. Ticket sales are split in a manner favoring home teams.)


441e6  feature football06  02  inline304 Will Brain Injury Lawsuits Doom or Save the NFL?Photograph by Lee Towndrow for Bloomberg BusinessweekLocks won big for asbestos clients and helped lead the $ 6 billion Fen-Phen case


This pecuniary feast is what makes the NFL so attractive to legal predators like Locks, although he and the other plaintiffs’ lawyers say they have no interest in putting the NFL out of business. “I love football,” Locks says. “No attorney ever said, ‘I love asbestos.’ ” So there’s reason to believe the ex-players’ lawsuit could produce a reasonable settlement.


And yet the litigation could still metastasize and become life-threatening to the game if the NFL chooses to draw out the court fight rather than seek a swift resolution. A protracted battle could provide the plaintiffs’ lawyers with an opportunity to reveal sordid details about a period during which they allege the NFL intentionally obfuscated evidence of the long-term brain damage suffered by its willing gladiators.


If this is true, and if the ugly particulars are played out in depositions, internal documents, and court testimony, such a legacy could alienate fans already uneasy about the suicides of former players such as Dave Duerson, Andre Waters, and Junior Seau, all of whom suffered from neurodegenerative brain disease linked to concussions.


“I’m a big football fan,” President Obama told the New Republic in an interview, “but I have to tell you, if I had a son I’d have to think long and hard before I’d let him play football.” Obama, who roots for the Chicago Bears, predicted that “those of us who love the sport are going to have to wrestle with the fact that it will probably change gradually to try to reduce some of the violence.”


Beyond the present litigation, the NFL faces a more ominous longer-term question. New research suggests the peril players face may not be limited to car wreck hits. It may extend to the relentless, day-in-and-day-out collisions that are the essence of the game. If science one day determines that merely playing serious tackle football substantially increases the danger of debilitating brain disease—as smoking cigarettes makes lung cancer much more likely—it’s conceivable that the NFL could go the way of professional boxing.
 
 
In 1903, before the NFL existed, the New York Times compared college football, then the top of the line, to “mayhem and homicide.” The following year, 18 campus players died from head injuries. In 1905, President Theodore Roosevelt summoned college representatives to the White House to demand reform; rules began to change. Introducing the forward pass and the 10-yard first down led to a more fluid, less dangerous contest. Over time, protective equipment improved.


Football remained savage, though, and from time to time honest observers wondered aloud whether the entertainment was worth all the human wreckage. In 1978, Sports Illustrated warned: “As football injuries mount, lawsuits increase, and insurance rates soar, the game is headed toward a crisis.” Sixteen years later, in 1994, SI again sounded the alarm about “disturbing statistical and anecdotal evidence that concussions are the silent epidemic of football.” Head injury has never been a secret to anyone who played, or even closely watched, the game. Dallas Cowboys quarterback Roger Staubach retired after suffering 20 concussions, the SI piece said. Ex-Philadelphia Eagles passer Ron Jaworski counted 30.


The NFL finally responded in 1994 by forming the oddly named Mild Traumatic Brain Injury Committee (MTBI) to study the issue. For years, though, NFL Films continued to glamorize head-banging hits in videos such as Moment of Impact (2007). “Suddenly you’re down, and you’re looking through your helmet’s ear hole,” the DVD’s ad copy reads. “Pain? That’s for tomorrow morning.” (NFL spokesman Brian McCarthy calls the promotional language “a mistake.”)


441e6  feature football06  01  inline605 Will Brain Injury Lawsuits Doom or Save the NFL?Photograph by Paul Sancya/AP PhotosFormer NFL linebacker Seau committed suicide in 2012


The MTBI, chaired by a rheumatologist who was not a recognized authority on head injury, published a series of research papers that on the whole minimized the long-term dangers of head injury. The league’s complacency was captured in a pamphlet provided to players in 2007: “Current research with professional athletes has not shown that having more than one or two concussions leads to permanent problems if each injury is managed properly. It is important to understand that there is no magic number for how many concussions is too many.”


Having punted on the brain injury issue, the NFL seemed to hope it would go away, but it didn’t. To a surprising degree, that was because of one college-player-turned-activist.


In late 2003, Chris Nowinski, a former All-Ivy defensive tackle at Harvard, sought help from Dr. Robert Cantu, a neurosurgeon in suburban Boston. After graduating in 2000, Nowinski made the unusual career choice of joining the ranks of World Wrestling Entertainment (WWE). At 6 foot 5 and 250 pounds, he played “Chris Harvard,” who performed with an “H” emblazoned on the backside of his polyester crimson tights. His promising WWE career stalled in 2003, however, when a chin kick by 300-pound Bubba Ray Dudley left him badly dazed and led to persistent headaches and depression. Based on Nowinski’s history, Cantu determined he had suffered at least a half-dozen concussions.


A concussion, Nowinski learned, occurs when the brain slams into the rough inner surface of the skull. It does not require a direct blow to the head. Symptoms may include loss of consciousness, confusion, blurred vision, and nausea. Nowinski was once hit so hard his vision turned orange. Since the early 1900s, medicine had connected head trauma in sports to lasting cognitive trouble only in “punch-drunk” boxers. In an illustration of how science can operate with blinders, physicians saw dementia pugilistica as unique to a sport dominated by up-from-the-street fighters willing to risk mental impairment for a shot at fame. Gridiron concussions were viewed as time-limited events, requiring rest only until a player’s head “cleared” and presenting little risk of long-term harm.


Medicine’s constrained view of football concussions began to change in the 1990s. By 2000 a study presented at the American Academy of Neurology’s annual meeting reported on findings from a survey of 1,094 former NFL players. Fifty-one percent had been knocked unconscious more than once, 73 percent of those injured said they were not required to sit on the sidelines after head trauma, and 31 percent subsequently had difficulty with memory. “The evidence,” Cantu says, “was starting to suggest something much more serious.”


Diagnosed with post-concussive syndrome, Nowinski decided to make brain injury awareness his life’s work. “The big change,” Cantu says, “occurred when Chris came on the scene.” Nowinski says, “I just got injured at the right time.”


In 2005, Nowinski contacted Dr. Bennet Omalu, a Pittsburgh pathologist, who diagnosed the late Steelers Mike Webster and Terry Long as having suffered from an obscure disease called chronic traumatic encephalopathy, or CTE. Webster died of heart disease at 50 in 2002 after suffering dementia. Long killed himself at 45 in 2005 by drinking antifreeze. CTE, which to date has been confirmed only by autopsy, results from repeated jostling of the brain. It involves formation of abnormal protein tangles and may include cell death. CTE interferes with memory and anger control; it can cause dementia and death. Its symptoms can mimic those of Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s diseases, and it’s now considered the functional equivalent of dementia pugilistica.


After a year of poring over Cantu and Omalu’s research, Nowinski published Head Games: Football’s Concussion Crisis From the NFL to the Youth Leagues in 2006. The book condemned “the NFL’s tobacco-industry-like refusal to acknowledge the depths of the problem.” Later that year, following the suicide at 44 of Waters, a former Philadelphia Eagles defensive back who once said in an interview that he had lost count of his concussions after 15, Nowinski persuaded Waters’s family to allow Omalu to examine the dead man’s brain tissue. CTE, once again. Nowinski connected Omalu with the New York Times, which then ran a series of articles on the issue. In May 2007, HBO (TWX) aired a profile of Nowinski. He and Cantu spent the next year starting the Sports Legacy Institute, a nonprofit devoted to head injury advocacy, and the Boston University Center for the Study of Traumatic Encephalopathy, which maintains an ex-athletes brain bank.


In the face of all this activity, the NFL urged calm. Without conceding a connection between concussions and long-term disorders, the league started a program in 2007 that grants former players with brain ailments $ 88,000 a year if they require institutionalization. And for an additional 18 months, the league continued to play down even the research it funded, including a study by the University of Michigan, as incomplete.


In October 2009, Nowinski and Cantu testified on CTE before the U.S. House Judiciary Committee. Six weeks later, the NFL abruptly switched its position. For the first time, a league spokesman told the New York Times: “It’s quite obvious from the medical research that’s been done that concussions can lead to long-term problems.” In December 2009, NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell, who had worked for the league since the early 1980s and rose to the top job in 2006, ordered that players with concussion symptoms could no longer return to play or practice until they were cleared by a neurologist not affiliated with their organization. The NFL also pledged $ 1 million to the Boston University brain center for CTE research. The tide had turned.
 
 
The NFL’s belated willingness to acknowledge long-term brain injury didn’t come soon enough to forestall that other great American sporting event: the lawsuit. Repair to the courts was hastened by the drumbeat of player tragedies. In February 2010, Duerson, the 50-year-old former Chicago Bears safety, killed himself with a gunshot to the chest. After enduring intense headaches and deteriorating memory, he left a note asking that his brain go to the lab at Boston University, where it was determined that he had CTE.


In 2011, Ray and Mary Ann Easterling contacted Larry Coben, a plaintiffs’ lawyer in Scottsdale, Ariz., who specializes in catastrophic head and neck injury. Ray didn’t know how many concussions he’d suffered during the 1970s when he played for eight years with the Atlanta Falcons’ vaunted “Grits Blitz” defense. He retired in 1979, his annual salary having topped out at $ 77,000, and started a financial-services firm in Richmond, Va. By the 1990s he was suffering from insomnia and depression. He got lost on neighborhood jogs. In the 2000s, while still in his 50s, Ray sank into dark moods and then the early stages of dementia. “It was a total reversal of the loving man I married,” says Mary Ann.


The Easterlings discovered they had all too much company. Coben’s firm, Anapol Schwartz, was already talking to other debilitated former NFL players who had suffered concussions.


Almost simultaneously, Coben’s old friend Gene Locks was contacted by another group of former players. In Washington, D.C., Michael Hausfeld, a class-action attorney known for representing Holocaust victims seeking return of assets from Swiss banks, began talking to ex-players his firm had been representing on benefits issues. By December 2011, more than a dozen suits had been filed around the country, and the plaintiffs kept flocking to an expanding corps of attorneys.


For Locks, the claims struck a chord. As a 170-pound, 5-foot-10 quarterback at Princeton, he says, he once got up so dizzy from a tackle that he walked to the wrong huddle. “You just kept playing. Today the players are twice the size, and the hits are twice as hard.”


Seeking unspecified damages and long-term medical monitoring of former players, the suits, now consolidated in federal court in Philadelphia, make two central accusations. The NFL, according to the plaintiffs, should have known decades ago that repetitive head collisions created a danger of permanent brain injury. “In a superior position of knowledge and authority,” the league negligently failed to fulfill its legal duty to protect its players, the suit says.


The potential weakness with the negligence contention is that until the 1990s, medical science was murky on the long-term risks associated with concussions. Moreover, even under the skilled guidance of an attorney like Locks, many former NFL players would have difficulty proving which collisions contributed to their later problems: the ones from pee-wee play, high school, college, or the pros? “You definitely have questions of causation to sort out,” says Kenneth Feinberg, a Washington lawyer who specializes in negotiating settlements of mass injury cases (and who isn’t involved in the NFL litigation).


The plaintiffs’ potentially more explosive claim is that “the NFL voluntarily undertook the responsibility of studying head impacts in football, yet fraudulently concealed their long-term effects.” Beginning in 1994 the league purported to study concussions by means of the MTBI. What were the panel’s actual marching orders? Did the league conceal what it knew and try to undercut the accumulating scientific evidence? A coverup, if one occurred, could eclipse tricky questions about causation, Feinberg points out. The conspiracy theory could also overshadow the plaintiffs’ problem with what lawyers call “assumption of risk”: professional players’ presumed knowledge that repetitive collisions could not have been good for them.


The league denies both negligence and fraud. “The NFL has long made player safety a priority and continues to do so,” spokesman Brian McCarthy says in a written statement. “Any allegation that the NFL intentionally sought to mislead players has no merit. It stands in contrast to the league’s actions to better protect players and advance the science and medical understanding of the management and treatment of concussions.” The league has hired a squad of prominent corporate defenders, led by Brad Karp of Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison in New York, which lists Karp’s specialty on its website as “bet the company litigations,” and Robert Heim of Philadelphia-based Dechert, who has represented the tobacco industry.


The suit also targets Riddell, the league’s official helmet maker, alleging that the gear fails to provide adequate protection. Riddell has denied the accusation, saying it’s “confident in the integrity” of its products. However, the Ohio-based company, the first to develop a plastic-shelled helmet and now a subsidiary of Easton-Bell Sports, may find itself defending marketing claims that its helmets reduce the risk of concussion.


In its preliminary legal papers, the league has asked U.S. District Judge Anita Brody to dismiss the consolidated civil action on procedural grounds. The litigation, the NFL contends, reflects a labor dispute, which ought to be resolved by an arbitrator under the terms of the collective bargaining agreements the players’ union has signed with the league over the years. Those agreements, the league maintains, “provide that the NFL’s member clubs and their medical staffs have responsibility for treating player injuries, including determining injury recovery times, deciding when players may ‘return to play,’ and advising the players of the risks of continued performance.”


Locks and his colleagues refrained from suing individual teams for the very reason they didn’t want to get enmeshed in thousands of labor grievance cases and the more limited remedies available in arbitration. Here, too, the fraud allegation could be critical. The need to sort out whether there was a coverup provides an intuitively more compelling basis for Judge Brody to keep the concussion litigation in her courtroom. The NFL points out in its papers, though, that in several injury lawsuits filed by individual former players, other federal judges have found that labor law governs. Brody is expected to rule on the threshold issues in the spring.


The legal uncertainties for both sides ought to encourage a negotiated settlement sooner rather than later, according to Feinberg. He has resolved numerous highly charged cases between multinational corporations and individual complainants. They range from litigation against Dow Chemical (DOW) and other manufacturers of Agent Orange, the Vietnam defoliant, to thousands of claims of victims’ families in the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks. If they end up in arbitration, the former players could see their claims bogged down for years in individual grievance procedures. From the NFL’s perspective, all the news from the scientific front reinforces the game’s harrowing nature—and creates an incentive to act proactively. In December, the Boston University center reported its latest grim findings in the journal Brain: 33 cases of CTE in former NFL players, 15 previously unpublicized. On Jan. 10, the National Institutes of Health added Seau, the former star San Diego linebacker who killed himself in May, to the CTE list, and his family joined the litigation.
 
 
As it tries to beat back the former players’ legal challenges and placate growing public concern about the sport’s violence, the NFL has sent conciliatory signals. The league has instituted some rule changes aimed at reducing concussions, but it also wants to place part of the burden for ensuring player safety on the players themselves. “We’re engaged in a cultural transformation that includes rule changes, tighter officiating, and, crucially, an attempt to persuade players to take responsibility for their health and come out of games when they’re hurt,” Jeffrey Miller, senior vice president for public affairs at the NFL, says in an interview at the league’s Park Avenue headquarters in New York. “The culture of the athlete is still too much of a play-through-it rather than player-safety mentality,” Commissioner Goodell said in a generally mollifying speech at the Harvard School of Public Health in November. “Many players,” he added, “have publicly admitted to hiding concussions and other head injuries.” Conversely, some players, such as members of the New Orleans Saints, have from time to time been accused of intentionally injuring foes—an unsavory practice Goodell has sought to punish severely and one the league would almost certainly highlight if the concussion suit went to trial.


Miller says the NFL now stresses player safety above all else. The 2011 collective bargaining agreement committed the league and the players’ union to set aside $ 100 million over 10 years to support research; that money will go to Harvard Medical School. In September, the NFL and its team owners agreed to make their largest-ever charitable donation: an additional $ 30 million pledged to the NIH for research on concussions and CTE. The NFL has even retained its occasional past critic, neurosurgeon Cantu, as a senior adviser. Cantu praises the league’s born-again attitude, saying his consulting has not compromised his integrity. He declines to discuss the litigation.


During the playoffs leading up to the Super Bowl, the league has been running an eye-catching TV ad on how the game is “evolving” toward a safer sport. Recent rule adjustments include restricting the number of off-season practices and full-contact regular-season workouts. Kickoffs were moved up five yards, to the 35-yard line, which leads to more touchbacks and fewer monster hits on runbacks. Trying to maximize maneuverability, many players avoid leg padding. Next season the league will require thigh and knee pads to reduce knee-to-head injuries.


Locks calls the NFL’s recent moves “commendable.” He acknowledges that players starting professional careers in the past couple of years have ample notice about concussion risks. In the suit, he says, “we’re talking about a fixed number of older players and former players.” That’s why he sees the case as eminently resolvable.


For the moment, team owners don’t face the threat of individual liability, as they’re operating collectively via the league and its outside lawyers. Even hypothesizing an impressive-sounding $ 5 billion settlement, the owners could handle the tab. Paid out over 25 years to cover players’ needs as they arise, such a settlement would work out to $ 200 million a year. Divide that 32 ways, and each team would face a hit of $ 6.25 million a year. That would be a meaningful tax—the current salary cap per team for active players is $ 121 million—but one the franchises could absorb without much distraction, particularly since the money could be paid out in installments.


The NFL’s TV network partners at Fox (NWS), CBS (CBS), and ESPN (DIS) likewise don’t face an immediate revenue drop. Indeed, decade-long, multibillion-dollar contracts the league signed with the networks in 2011 are one critical source of cash flow that could lubricate a settlement. “I’m a businessman,” says Locks. “You can make a business model for what this costs the league on an annual basis over the years and negotiate a reasonable payout to the former players who develop problems.”


As is the practice of any sophisticated plaintiffs’ attorney, Locks has begun to research the NFL’s insurance coverage—another potential source of financing for a settlement. Ancillary litigation has already erupted in state courts in New York and California between the NFL and more than two dozen insurance companies. The carriers, predictably, argue that they should not have to pay for suits over head injuries. While the insurance litigation is just getting under way, it provides yet another reason for the NFL to resolve its brain injury issues before potentially damning internal memos, if any exist, have to be disclosed in discovery. Evidence of a fraudulent coverup would provide insurance companies with their strongest basis for avoiding coverage.
 
 
Settling the litigation still might not resolve the conundrum facing football, its players, and, ultimately, its fans. A mainstream financial juggernaut, the NFL could, like boxing before it, drift toward the margins if researchers reveal that gridiron collisions are even more dangerous than we now know. “Thirty years from now, I don’t think [pro football] will be in existence,” Baltimore Ravens safety Bernard Pollard told CBS Sports, implying that new rules to discourage violence may diminish the NFL’s appeal.


Given the deep loyalty football engenders at all levels of play—a far more profound role than boxing ever enjoyed—it’s hard to imagine a comparable decline in popularity, let alone Pollard’s expectation of NFL extinction. Then again, smoking was once an essential rite of passage in America and a celebrated element of culture high and low. Today smokers are shunned, even in professional football stadiums.


On his cell phone heading into a meeting in Bethesda, Md., with NIH officials to discuss the NFL’s $ 30 million grant, Nowinski, the activist, points out that it’s still early days in CTE research. “We don’t know a lot about the disease,” he says. In the February issue of the American Journal of Geriatric Psychiatry, researchers reported that in a small preliminary study they used a new imaging technique to detect protein abnormalities in the brains of living retired football players; the abnormalities were consistent with those found during autopsies of deceased athletes with CTE. If the new diagnostic method proves reliable, it could point to potential treatments for what at the moment is an incurable disease. “What we do know,” says Nowinski, “is that this is not just a concussion problem.” The Boston University research indicates that CTE “is just as likely to be caused by routine head collisions as it is by one that leaves a player unconscious,” he says.


Nowinski knows the science. A co-author of the Brain article, he’s working toward a Ph.D. in behavioral neuroscience at Boston University. “I was having concussions all those years,” he says, “and I didn’t know it, so who knows how many other blows I took to the head?” He fears that he, and thousands of other former professional and college football players, could develop CTE.


Cantu shares his former patient’s concern. “We don’t yet know the significance of all those subconcussive collisions,” he says. As one precaution, he urges that children younger than 14 not be allowed to play tackle football.


The new awareness, litigation, and research came too late for Ray Easterling. On April 19, his wife of 36 years called police to their brick ranch house in Richmond. Mary Ann had found Ray, 62, dead, a handgun nearby. An autopsy found signs of CTE.


Despite the pain of losing her husband, Mary Ann had “some vindication” in the posthumous diagnosis. “I knew there was something wrong with his mind,” she says. “Ray knew.” Reading about CTE over the past couple of years, she figured that was it.


She’s staying in the lawsuit, she says. “If nothing else, we need to make sure the players and their wives know what they’re getting into,” Mary Ann says, “so they can think whether it’s worth the price.”


Businessweek.com — Top News





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23 killed in Taliban attack on Pakistan army post






PESHAWAR, Pakistan (AP) — Taliban militants wearing suicide vests fired automatic weapons and rocket-propelled grenades at an army post in northwestern Pakistan in a pre-dawn raid Saturday, killing 23 people, including 10 civilians, officials said.


Twelve attackers also were killed in the assault.






The raid came a day after a suicide bombing at a Shiite Muslim mosque elsewhere in the northwest that killed 30 people, police said. The blast at the mosque was the latest in a rising number of sectarian attacks in the country.


The Pakistani Taliban claimed responsibility for both attacks. The group has been waging a bloody insurgency against the government for years and sometimes targets the country’s minority Shiites.


The Taliban and allied militant groups have stepped up the pace of attacks in Pakistan in recent months, an indication of their strength despite numerous army operations against their strongholds in the northwest.


The raid on the army post in Serai Naurang town of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province began around 3:45 a.m. local time and lasted for several hours, said senior police officer Arif Khan Wazir. The militants fired automatic weapons and rocket-propelled grenades, he said.


Two security officials said the militants killed 10 civilians, including three women and three children, in a nearby house. In addition to the civilians, nine soldiers; four members of the Frontier Constabulary, a force that polices parts of northwestern Pakistan; and 12 attackers also were killed in the fighting.


Both officials spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to talk to the media.


Pakistani Taliban spokesman Ahsanullah Ahsan claimed responsibility for the attack in a telephone call to The Associated Press from an undisclosed location. He said four suicide bombers were involved in the attack. He said that three of them were killed and the fourth was still resisting as of his call at around 9:20 a.m. local time.


Ahsan said the attack was in retaliation for the recent deaths of two Taliban commanders in U.S. drone strikes. He accused the Pakistani army of helping with the attacks. Pakistani officials often criticize drone operations as a violation of the country’s sovereignty, but are known to have assisted some U.S. strikes in the past.


A police official, speaking on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to brief the media, said he saw the bodies of three attackers with their suicide vests intact. Their features suggested they belonged to a group of Uzbek militants allied with the Taliban, he said.


He said other attackers detonated their explosives during the battle with security forces — one inside the house where civilians were killed. He did not say if this caused the civilian deaths.


The attack on the mosque Friday took place in Hangu town, also in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province. The town has experienced previous clashes between the Sunni and Shiite communities there.


Six people wounded in the bombing died on Saturday, raising the death toll to 30, said local political official Tahir Zafar Abbasi.


Shiites in Pakistan have increasingly been targeted by radical Sunnis who consider them heretics, and 2012 was the bloodiest year for the minority sect in the country’s history. According to Human Rights Watch, more than 400 Shiites were killed in targeted attacks in Pakistan last year.


The Taliban are battling the Pakistani government because of its alliance with the United States and because it wants to impose Islamic law in the country. Pakistani’s military has launched operations against the Taliban in many of their sanctuaries in the semiautonomous tribal region along the Afghan border.


But one major area remains: North Waziristan, the main stronghold for Taliban and al-Qaida militants in the country. The army has resisted launching an operation there, despite intense U.S. pressure, for fear of a backlash from militants who so far have directed their attacks against U.S.-led troops in Afghanistan rather than inside Pakistan.


It’s unclear whether the recent surge of attacks in Pakistan will alter the army’s calculation. There also have been calls from some political leaders to hold talks with the Taliban in an attempt to end the violence. But others believe it is not possible to reason with the Taliban or trust them, and that the best option is to try to battle them into submission.


Also Saturday, a bomb exploded during a search of a compound in Ghunda Mela area of Orakzai tribal region, killing an army officer and a soldier and injuring two soldiers, according to a military statement. Orakzai is one of the tribal regions where Pakistan army is carrying out massive operations against Islamist militants.


___


Associated Press writers Ishtiaq Mahsud in Dera Ismail Khan and Zarar Khan in Islamabad contributed to this report.


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FTC issues guidelines for mobile applications






WASHINGTON (Reuters) – The Federal Trade Commission has issued a wide-reaching set of new guidelines for makers of mobile platforms and developers of applications for mobile telephones and tablets to safeguard users’ privacy.


The non-binding guidelines, published in a report on Friday, include the recommendation that companies should obtain consumers’ consent before including location tracking in software and applications, consider developing icons to depict the transmission of user data, and consider offering a “Do Not Track” mechanism for smartphone users.






The report also recommended that application developers have an easily accessible privacy policy, obtain consent before collecting and sharing sensitive information and consider participating in self-regulatory programs.


The FTC has been heightening its scrutiny of mobile devices, which are now the primary source of communication and Internet access for many users.


Among the companies who could be affected by the report are firms like Apple Inc., Amazon.com Inc. and Microsoft Corp.


(Reporting By Patricia Zengerle; Editing by Sandra Maler)


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