Thursday, 8 July 2010

FT: 'Dutch footballers shed moral superiority'

This morning an editorial comment in the Financial Times (page 10, World news section) caught my attention:

Dutch footballers shed moral superiority
It was partly the sight of John Heitinga blindly thumping balls out of the Dutch penalty area. Partly it was Khalid Boulahrouz passing back to his keeper whenever he managed to find him. Even though the Dutch scored three goals against Uruguay on Tuesday and reached the World Cup final, they were again pretty dull.

Dutch football used to strive for beauty, but has now shed its moral superiority. Off the field, so has the Netherlands itself.

The Dutch newspaper De Volkskrant phrased it well on Wednesday. “Good football is apparently no longer necessary to reach the World Cup final,” it said, and dismissed most of the team’s playing as “repugnant and irritating”. “Really nobody played very well, and that’s not many for the semi-final of a World Cup.”

Yet as these words were being written Dutch people were cheerfully waving goodbye to their tradition of beautiful football.

The tradition began at the World Cup of 1974. Admittedly the coach at that tournament, Rinus ‘The General’ Michels, cared only about winning, but he won with gorgeous attacking “total football”. The Dutch, who had never done anything at World Cups, surprised themselves by reaching the final. There they lost to West Germany, but won global praise. So Dutch football’s founding myth was glorious defeat.

In the next World Cup final, in 1978, a moderately glorious team suffered another defeat, and the tradition was cemented.

Gradually the Dutch came to glorify glorious defeat. Johan Cruyff, the star of 1974, was arguing decades later that the Netherlands had actually won that World Cup. How so? Well, said Cruyff, people still talked about their glorious football, and that represented a victory. While other teams competed to win the World Cup, the Netherlands pursued moral superiority. They were the one just man who would have saved Sodom and Gomorrah.

The Dutch breached their own tradition by becoming European champions with glorious football in 1988, but otherwise they competed only for moral awards. Before playing Brazil in the World Cup semi-final of 1998, the Dutch coach, Guus Hiddink, proclaimed from his pulpit: “Brazil, sadly, is no longer swinging and flaming. I see defenders boot the ball away shamelessly. Holland must never play like that. If we did, people would murder me, and they would be right to do so.” Brazil won on penalties.

In these decades the Netherlands was pursuing moral superiority off the pitch too. A favourite phrase in Dutch political discourse from the 1960s was “Netherlands, guide land”. It expressed the idea that the most perfect democracy on earth should be a light unto backward countries. Paul Scheffer, a Dutch political thinker, notes that it is easier for a small country to be good than strong. So the Dutch tried to teach foreigners euthanasia and gay rights.

But from about 2000, moral superiority withered. In football the Dutch suffered a few too many glorious defeats, most recently at Euro 2008. Hiddink, who supplanted Cruyff as father of Dutch football, began advocating the revolutionary notion that winning was nice. Moral superiority crumbled off the field too. In 2001 many Dutch began voting for anti-immigrant populists. The ideals-free technocrat Jan Peter Balkenende has been prime minister since 2002. In the parliamentary elections of June 9, the “Ban the Koran” man Geert Wilders won 16 per cent of he vote.

Today’s Netherlands is just another country, and its football team just another team. The players retain the Cruyffian qualities of passing and positional sense, but now they mostly defend.

Their only aim here is victory on Sunday. They need to win, because otherwise hardly anyone will remember anything about this team.

Please note: Financial Times 2010, written by Simon Kuper, published in the FT on Thursday 8 July 2010, page 10, World News section, 'Dutch moral superiority is shed on and off the field'.

http://cachef.ft.com/cms/s/0/aa82ff1a-89e9-11df-bd30-00144feab49a.html


Thursday, 1 July 2010

Head coach orders Nigerians to stay at home

Can you imagine David Cameron suspending Wayne Rooney or John Terry for two years due to their bad performance, or Sarkozy ordering the French team to stay at home after losing a couple of games? Well, In Nigeria it is certainly possible. That is where Presidents are not leaders, they are still rulers, the Head Coach of the nation's national sport.

President Goodluck Jonathan has suspended the national players from international competition for the next two years after they performed so badly at the World Cup in South Africa. The ‘Super Eagles’ – who turned out to be everything but super – were eliminated in the first round, finishing behind South Korea, Greece and Argentina with just one point.

A Spokesman for the Nigerian President released a statement this morning, saying ‘the President has directed that Nigeria will withdraw from all international football competition for the next two years to enable Nigeria to reorganise its football. 'This directive became necessary following Nigeria's poor performance in the ongoing FIFA World Cup'. So how will these guys be fit and ready for action if they cannot participate in the Africa cup nor play any friendly matches? Perhaps Goodluck has given Nigerian football the final push by his decision today.



Tuesday, 29 June 2010

China confirms strict policy on internet use

The Chinese Government has published a White Paper reaffirming the need for strict policies aimed at limiting access to certain types of online content.

Although the report The Internet in China, published by the State Council Information Office on 8 June, highlights the importance of freedom of speech, the document confirmed the ‘continued need for the use of technology to stop illegal information dissemination’.

The Chinese Government will continue to prevent the spread of information that can ‘harm national security, upset public order or harm minors’ by using legal and technical measures. Internet service providers (ISPs) are responsible for the online content, the document said.

Since 1997, the internet in China is subject to strict regulation. Last February, the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology introduced rules to ban online pornography. In March, Google withdrew from the Chinese market after refusing to give in to demands to restrict its search engine results.

With an internet population of over 400 million users, China has become the largest online market in the world.

Tuesday, 8 June 2010

Cumbria massacre

My latest radio 1 show in Holland, about the recent shootings in Cumbria.
Click on - or copy/paste - the link and my item starts straight away:

http://player.omroep.nl/?aflID=11032949&start=00:06:27

www.radio1.nl
www.bnntoday.nl


Friday, 4 June 2010

Latest Radio 1 show

My latest Radio 1 show in the Netherlands, about the new BBC show 'Autistic Superstars'. Click on the link and my item starts straight away - in Dutch:

http://player.omroep.nl/?aflID=11009383&start=01:25:02

www.radio1.nl
www.bnntoday.nl


Wednesday, 12 May 2010

Chinese secrets

The Chinese Government has issued new rules defining when corporate data should be regarded as a commercial secret. 

The guidelines - published by the State-Owned Assets Supervision and Administration Commission (SASAC) on 26 April and aimed to protect Chinese businesses - classify information such as financial data, resource reserves, merger information and strategic plans as a corporate secret. A commercial secret is ‘information unknown to the public that can bring economic benefit to state-owned companies’, according to the SASAC. 

Additionally, under the rules commercial secrets can be classified as state secrets, which means commercial secrets could soon fall within the scope of the Law on Guarding State Secrets. 

On 26 April, an amendment to this law was submitted to the National People's Congress Standing Committee for a third review. The amendment would require telecom and internet service providers (ISPs) – domestic as well as international ISPs operating in China – to notify and cooperate with public security and state security authorities if they detect any disclosure or sharing of state secrets on their networks.

Michiel Willems - 2010


Wednesday, 28 April 2010

Latest radio 1 show

Latest radio 1 show in Holland, broadcast last Thursday - in Dutch. Click on the link, my item starts immediately:
http://player.omroep.nl/?aflID=10898901&start=01:31:00

www.bnntoday.nl / www.radio1.nl

Tuesday, 20 April 2010

The global solution for Cybercrime?


The Council of Europe (COE) has said it will present its Convention on Cybercrime as the global solution to cybercrime at the United Nations (UN) congress on crime prevention and criminal justice. The UN will hold its 12th congress on crime prevention in Salvador,  late April. 


"The UN Crime Congress in April 2010 will be an opportunity to reinforce our global response to the global threat of cybercrime and cyberterrorism,” said COE Deputy Secretary General Maud de Boer-Buquicchio. “I think we will have the best chance to succeed if we unite around one international instrument which already exists – namely the Convention of Cybercrime.” 

The COE - an intergovernmental organisation overseeing human rights in 47 countries - organised its own cybercrime conference last week in Strasbourg. bringing together 300 cybercrime experts from some 60 countries, the private sector and international organisations. Here, the COE called for a worldwide implementation of its Convention on Cybercrime to continue legislative reforms already underway in a number of countries. 

“The Convention should be implemented globally. Since [the COC] requires authorizing legislation in each member country, it puts an additional burden on each member country to pass the implementing legislation,” said Kevin A. Thompson, Attorney at Davis McGrath LLC. “With global implementation wrongdoers cannot hide beyond the reach of the law. It's time for the Internet to move beyond the ‘Wild West’ model.”

Participants also recommended that a global action plan should be launched by the COE and the UN to get a clearer picture of criminal justice capacities and how cybercrime should be tackled. “Internet knows no borders. Fraud and crime do not have a geographical address”, said Ivan Koedjikov, Head of the Department of Information Society and Action Against Crime at the COE. “The law of which country to apply? The only meaningful response to cybercrime is global. There must be a minimum understanding of all countries about cybercrime, about similar procedures to prevent, prosecute and punish such crime.” 

Participants to the Strasbourg conference also urged the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN) to strengthen its oversight role of the internet domain name registration process in order to allow the protection of private data of individual registrants, as well as the opportunity for law enforcement agencies to use the database to fight cybercrime and cyberterrorism.

The Convention on Cybercrime Treaty has been ratified by 27 countries so far, among them the US, France, Germany and Italy. Another 100 countries are using the treaty as the basis for their national legislation. The call for a global approach came in the same week American and Canadian researchers have traced an extensive cyber-espionage network back to China – which has not signed up to the Treaty. It targeted computers in several countries, including systems used by the Indian Government and army. Although the UK has signed but not yet ratified the Convention on Cybercrime, the Office of Fair Trading (OFT) has recently set up a new cyber enforcement team. “Online consumer protection is a key priority for the OFT”, said Heather Clayton, Senior Director at the OFT. “The enforcement team will be looking at the activities of a wide range of commercial websites and taking action in cases where consumers’ rights are being abused.”

Michiel Willems - 2010 - Published earlier in E-Commerce Law & Policy magazine

Thursday, 15 April 2010

Final steps for the UK Digital Economy Bill

The UK House of Commons approved the Digital Economy Bill (DEB) on 7 April, upholding measures destined to fight online copyright piracy.

The DEB will enable internet service providers (ISPs) to monitor the use of individual internet connections, and extend the remit of Ofcom – the UK telecommunications regulator - to cover telecommunication content and infrastructure. One of the most controversial aspects of the DEB is the ability for ISPs to cut off the internet connection of most serious infringers without a court order. The British Phonographic Industry’s Chief Executive, Geoff Taylor, said that “removing unfair competition from clearly illegal websites will encourage investment in legal online services”. Many in the industry have spoken out against the DEB. According to the Pirate Party UK, “[it is] a major attack on free speech and human rights”. Andrew Heaney, Director of Strategy and Regulation at TalkTalk, added: “oppressive and futile deterrents are not the solution”. Parliament is expected to finalise the DEB in a few weeks, in time for the general election on 6 May 2010.

Michiel Willems - 2010 - Published earlier in E-Finance & Payments magazine


Icelandic volcanic ash

All airports in the UK, Belgium, the Netherlands, Norway, Sweden and Ireland are closed today.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk/8621407.stm


Thursday, 1 April 2010

April Fools' Day

It's 1 April, April Fools' Day in the UK. Therefore, every major British publication is running a fake story today. Find an overview of those features here:

http://www.anorak.co.uk/244104/media/aprils-fool-day-media-stories-the-best-ones-of-2010.html


Wednesday, 31 March 2010

Embrace life

Embrace life - wear a seat belt. 

http://www.embracethis.co.uk

An amazing video of the Sussex Safer Roads Website: www.sussexsaferroads.gov.uk


Tuesday, 23 March 2010

Book returned 45 years late

It’s not uncommon to return a library book late, but by half a century? Staff at Dinnington Library, close to Sheffield in the UK, couldn't believe their eyes when they received a book through their mailbox that was 45 years overdue. Alison Lawrie, the principal assistant at Dinnington Library, says the Penguin first edition copy of Quartermass and the Pit, written by Nigel Kneale, was due back on 15 October 1965. 

The identity of the borrower remains a mystery because the library records do not go back that far, and there was no a letter or note attached to the book. Lawrie has made it clear the sender should not worry about a fine. She said in the Yorkshire Post: “If the person who returned the book wants to come forward, we would love to know the story behind it.” Anyone returned any books lately?






Friday, 19 March 2010

Launch of first virtual debit card in Japan

Credit card company Visa and the Japan Net Bank (JNB) have commenced a virtual debit card programme for online merchant payments, the country’s first.

The programme gives JNB customers the possibility to make purchases up to $1,000 at online merchants around the world that accept Visa. Upon customers’ request, JNB issues a unique 16-digit account number, which can withdraw money from a listed JNB account. The digital cards are only valid up to ten days after being issued - customers can then request a new virtual Visa Debit card number. No plastic cards will be issued. JNB, founded in October 2000, is Japan’s first internet bank, with over two million customers but no local branches. 

“Whether it is to search online or to spend online, Japanese consumers have named the internet as the number one item they could not live without”, said Brian McGrory, Head of Debit Products for Asia Pacific, Central Europe, Middle East and Africa at Visa. “Teaming their passion for the internet with this ‘buy now, pay now’  program taps into an existing demand for Japanese consumers.”

Published earlier in E-Finance & Payments Law & Policy magazine, London, www.e-comlaw.com

Thursday, 11 March 2010

Giant blaze in the City of London


This morning, while on my way to work, I noticed a huge fire was taking place and smoke could be seen all over the City. A number of streets were closed down (including City Road coming from Old Street station), causing massive traffic jams. Black smoke reached as far as the Bank of England and the Gherkin building after a fire broke out at a nightclub on the Shoreditch and City borders in the early hours. Fire fighters were called to the scene on Tabernacle Street (Shoreditch, just north of the City) at around 4.30am. The fire started at a building housing the Sosho nightclub and East Room, a private members club.