Thursday, 6 December 2012

Sutanu Guru: UNDERESTIMATING THE INDIAN VOTER AGAIN AND AGAIN A...

Sutanu Guru: UNDERESTIMATING THE INDIAN VOTER AGAIN AND AGAIN A...: I can only marvel and laugh at such malarkey and nonsense. For ages, the New Delhi-based mainstream media has utterly failed to read the intentions of the Indian voter. It has a habit of getting it wrong almost every time. And yet, it persists in such hogwash. Allow me to quote columnist Tavleen Singh who was a young reporter in 1977 when Indira Gandhi lifted the Emergency and called for elections. She writes:

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COMMON SENSE SIMPLIFIED: ATM PIN GOES PUBLIC

COMMON SENSE SIMPLIFIED: ATM PIN GOES PUBLIC:  It is often said that frauds with financial and personal details of customers in banking operations take higher dimensions when the service is outsourced to a third party. This new consumer hazard is becoming a way of fast money for call centre executives! It is especially gaining ground after the Standard Chartered and Citibank fraud revelations. Standard Chartered outsourced money laundering violations to third parties in US resulting in massive embarrassment for the company of having to deal with huge flow of cash entering Iran in violation of US laws. Although, it didn’t involve loss of personal funds of the consumers through their stolen information, but it did vindicate the vulnerability of the banking system and its pressing problem of outsourcing data. The disappointment was more direct to consumers in the Citibank case, which involved specifically to security issues. It was a classic case of credit card cloning that took place in April 2005 involving a sum of $350,000.

Read More: http://prasoonsmajumdar.blogspot.in/2012/12/atm-pin-goes-public.html

Typos: THE SWINGER'S CLUB

Typos: THE SWINGER'S CLUB :  My father grew up by the Ganges, in the streets of Varanasi. Summer dawns were spent in the lap of the river, diving off rooft ops, crossing the currents and racing with friends between the banks. The days and years rolled by and fate and fortune brought him to Delhi where my mother, a career and I happened to him.

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