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PayPal lets Facebook friends send cash
by Staff Writers
San Francisco (AFP) Nov 17, 2011


Online financial transactions powerhouse PayPal released an application on Thursday that lets friends send one another cash at leading social network Facebook.

A "Send Money" application tailored for Facebook by PayPal lets members of the online community tie money to occasions such as birthdays or send it in an unadorned online transfer.

"We are bringing the largest online payments company to the world's largest social network to make it even easier to send money to your friends and family directly from Facebook," PayPal marketing manager JB Coutinho said in a blog post.

"Our new Send Money application on Facebook allows users to turn those wall posts into actual gifts," she said.

Gifts of money sent to Facebook members through PayPal can be announced with digital greeting cards, videos, or pictures. Links in e-cards or messages are followed to culminate in cash transfers.

PayPal charges no fee for people to send money to Facebook members in the United States as long as transactions are done through accounts with banks or the eBay-owned online financial service.

"PayPal is going to where friends and family connect now," Coutinho said of the reasoning behind the application. "Imagine the smile when someone gets money for a cold beer and a message saying 'This one is on me.'"

The release of the PayPal application for Facebook came the same day that Skype improved its software to allow Facebook members to engage in video calls with one another using the Internet telephony service.

Skype, which was recently acquired by Microsoft, began powering video calling at Facebook in July.

Facebook is the world's largest social network with more than 800 million members.

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Kodak hopes to sell online photo-sharing unit: report
New York (AFP) Nov 17, 2011 - Iconic US camera maker Eastman Kodak is seeking to sell its online photo sharing website as the company teeters on the verge of bankruptcy, The Wall Street Journal reported Thursday.

The Journal cited someone approached for the purchase as saying Kodak was seeking "hundreds of millions of dollars" for Kodak Gallery, which has been losing users in recent years.

The 131-year-old company has tapped photo-sharing websites, competitors, private-equity firms and retailers about a possible purchase of the online business said to boast 75 million users worldwide. Users can store their photos on the website and then share them and print them.

Kodak, which ventured into the online photo sharing business in 2011 when it bought Ofoto for $100 million, has revealed that surviving another year could hinge on selling patents or borrowing money.

The firm has suffered losses since 2008 and said it could seek as much as $500 million in financing. In a Securities and Exchange Commission filing, it said the ability to continue operations in the coming 12 months depended on an infusion of cash from selling patents or taking on debt.



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'Made in Japan' brand at crossroads
Tokyo (AFP) Nov 16, 2011
The "Made in Japan" brand is at a crossroads as more firms face a tough choice over whether or not to move production overseas to escape the impact of the relentless rise of the yen, say analysts. According to the Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry, some 46 percent of large manufacturers it surveyed in August said they would move production bases abroad if the yen stays around 76 yen ... read more


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