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Mark Zuckerberg becomes a home owner: report
San Francisco (AFP) May 5, 2011 A local newspaper on Thursday reported that Facebook co-founder Mark Zuckerberg is giving up life as a renter for a posh house a short drive from the social network's new Silicon Valley campus. The Bay Area News Group reported that Zuckerberg bought a home in Palo Alto, the northern California city he has lived in since dropping out of Harvard University to devote himself to Facebook after it launched in early 2004. Public records indicate that Zuckerberg, who will be 27 years old on May 14, paid $7 million for a home boasting a saltwater pool, a music alcove, and five bedrooms, according to the newspaper group. News of the house purchase came as Facebook prepared to move its fast-growing operations to a sprawling Silicon Valley campus once home to Sun Microsystems. Facebook has seen its ranks of employees increase by about 50 percent annually and is already cramped in the space it moved into in Palo Alto in early 2009. The former Sun campus in the city of Menlo Park, which borders Palo Alto, has nine buildings with a total of a million square feet (92,900 square meters) of office space set on 57 acres (23 hectares) of land, according to Facebook director of real estate John Tenanes. "We've been looking for a setting where we can plant some roots," Facebook chief financial officer David Ebersman said while unveiling the plan in February with city officials at Menlo Park City Hall.
earlier related report In total, more than 80 emerging economic players also including the likes of Morocco would lose from 2014 benefits gained under a special regime when exporting to Europe's single market of half a billion consumers, 20 million companies and major state buyers. The European Commission is discussing a plan to prune radically "to around 90 countries" its existing list of General System of Preferences (GSP) beneficiaries, which currently numbers 176 territories "not classified by the World Bank as high-income countries and which are not sufficiently diversified in their exports." Thousands of products enter the EU single market either duty-free or at reduced rates under the scheme, which dates back to the beginning of the 1970s. Later amendments offer additional incentives to states that commit to international norms on labour and human rights. But the source said the promotion over recent years of many countries through income league tables compiled by the World Bank meant it was "more and more difficult to justify" favours being granted on the grounds of combating poverty. The move comes alongside bids to nail down bilateral free trade deals with major markets led by India -- which otherwise would see billions of euros worth of exports hit with new charges -- along the lines of one just passed with South Korea. EU trade commissioner Karel De Gucht is facing some internal opposition from officials responsible for promoting development aid abroad as well as individual EU states that traditionally push a liberal trade agenda around former empires or colonies, another EU source said. A compromise may be offered to particularly vulnerable states, including Cape Verde, Botswana or Mauritius, according to this source, to "give them more time to adapt."
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China to US: Foreign firms enjoy equal treatment Beijing (AFP) May 5, 2011 China insisted Thursday that foreign companies receive the same treatment as domestic firms, after US Commerce Secretary Gary Locke hit out at what he said was a worsening business climate in the country. Locke, the nominee to be the next ambassador to Beijing, said Wednesday the US government and companies had "real frustrations" that would be raised during high-level talks between the worl ... read more |
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