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SEC warns public about more illegal and unlicensed investment companies

THE Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) has issued warnings to the public against investing in BitThroughCash/Bit2Cash Trading, Inc. and agriculture groups AVP88 Coturnix Egg Farm and AVP88 Trading, Inc.

In separate advisories posted on the SEC website Wednesday, the country’s corporate regulator said the groups have no authority from the commission to operate as investment corporations, therefore are illegally collecting investments from their clients.

BitThroughCash/Bit2Cash Trading, Inc. was identified by the SEC as being operated by a certain Jayson Saquing Pugiao from Tuguegarao City. While its Facebook group or page is no longer visible as of Wednesday, the SEC said it posted on the social media platform a supposed Certificate of Incorporation to earn the trust of investors, but this document is rather fake.

“[U]pon verification with the SEC database it turned out that BitThroughCash/Bit2Cash Trading, Inc. is not duly registered…,” it said.

The SEC said BitThroughCash/Bit2Cash Trading, Inc. is offering its clients two investment options to earn money: invest between P1,000 to P500,000 to earn a 50% weekly income within a one-month lock-in period, or refer others to invest to have a 10% direct referral bonus.

BitThroughCash/Bit2Cash Trading, Inc. is allegedly using the cash raised from investors as capital in casino, forex trading, real estate and online surveys. The SEC said this is illegal as the company is soliciting investments without the SEC-required license.

In the case of AVP88 Coturnix Egg Farm and AVP88 Trading, Inc., the SEC said these are operated by a certain Alberto Vargas Pascual and also operate through Facebook.

Citing a publicity material by the companies, the SEC said AVP88 Coturnix Egg Farm and AVP88 Trading, Inc. collect investments from clients in exchange of a 1.5% daily profit for 120 days including the capital.

It noted the companies’ operations are illegal as they do not have the authorization from the SEC to solicit investments from the public.

As penalty, salesmen, brokers, dealers or agents of BitThroughCash/Bit2Cash Trading, Inc., AVP88 Coturnix Egg Farm and AVP88 Trading, Inc. may be required to pay a maximum fine of P5 million, or endure 21 years of imprisonment, or both.

The SEC said it was submitting the names of all those involved to the Bureau of Internal Revenue for penalty and tax assessment. — Denise A. Valdez

They said order all you can, so we did

By Joseph L. Garcia, Reporter

OF COURSE we went to Ogetsu Hime, one of SM Aura’s Japanese restaurants, right when the Department of Health issued a statement discouraging the public from consuming raw food in light of the spread of Novel Coronavirus (2019-nCoV).

Still, we’re a sucker for seafood, and we trust Ogetsu Hime — they get their catch fresh from Japan. Furthermore, I’m not about to pass judgment on this restaurant (the SM Aura branch opened in 2014, and a second branch opened in SM Megamall in 2017), which shares an umbrella with the classic Japanese buffet Saisaki. Both Japanese restaurants are sisters under the Triple-V group, by Victor Vincent “Vicvic” Villavicencio, who passed away last year. Other restaurants under the group include Kamayan, Dad’s, Sambokojin, and Number 1 Barbecues.

As a concept from the late and missed Buffet King of the Philippines, there’s an expectation of our stomachs stretching. As a higher-end concept from the group, food isn’t laid out under heat lamps as in a buffet. Everything is prepared to-order, under the Order-All-You-Can Promo (priced from P988 for lunch and P1,088 for dinner and weekends), so you’re guaranteed freshness.

There was no rhyme or reason for our orders. We didn’t follow the rules governing the kaiseki, the traditional Japanese formal meal of seven to 14 courses. We just pointed at the menu and read the names aloud. We started with the Tenzaru Chasoba, a meal of green tea noodles immersed in ice accompanied by shrimp tempura. The cold, firm noodles proved a great contrast to the steaming, crisp shrimp, and was a delightful sensory experience. I could have stopped and filled myself on multiple bowls of that (I tried), but the call of the sashimi was hard to ignore.

I have to say though, that any restaurant willing to place “Best of Japan” near their name will have to prove themselves with a great slice of raw fish. Sashimi is sometimes a testament to the perfection of nature as aided by man when a chef slices then serves a piece of raw fish. The salmon was velvety, and the tuna was fatty — but it didn’t have the touch of perfection I was looking for, where there’s an initial firmness that yields to buttery softness. If you’re not too picky (and you really shouldn’t be), the sashimi is good enough.

Another observation on the sashimi: we asked for a bowl of chirashi (sashimi on top of sushi rice). We received a bowl of rice with a wonderfully creamy raw hamachi (yellowtail), slices of salmon, tuna, and octopus tentacles, and cucumber cups of salmon roe and uni (sea urchin). The textures in this bowl far surpassed the previous order of plain slices. What gives?

We ended the sushi and sashimi course(s) with two pieces of mackerel sushi, which retained the power of the sea in its flavor. It was also arguably the worst-looking of all our seafood choices that night, so it just goes to show that you shouldn’t judge based on appearance.

We then asked for a few pieces of enoki bacon skewers, which had a nice springy texture. We also asked for US Angus Beef teppanyaki, which has a great texture with just the right amount of resistance from the beef. Our other favorite was a Chawan Uni (egg custard topped with slices of sea urchin). Served in a celadon bowl, it was delicate in both taste and texture, and came with a broth that only had a faint whisper of saltiness. Don’t eat it too quickly, though; it might scald your tongue and might preclude you from enjoying anything else.

We kind of stopped counting after about eight servings, because we liked some items so much that we ordered them again. We’ll tell you that it’s a great place to bring family and friends for a treat, or else to show a date how much your stomach can take.

Call for reservations at 0917-809-6585 (for the SM Aura branch) and 0917-576-2377 (for the Megamall branch).

GMA seeks Supreme Court reversal of ruling on talents as regular employees

By Vann Marlo Villegas, Reporter

MEDIA company GMA Network , Inc. asked the Supreme Court to reverse the decision of the appellate court declaring more than 90 of its talents as regular employees.

In a 96-page petition, GMA said the Court of Appeals (CA) erred in affirming the findings of the National Labor Relations Commission (NLRC) which it claimed is not supported by ultimate facts, jurisprudence, and evidence on record.

“Petitioners urge this Honorable Court to take a look at the ultimate facts and totality of supporting evidence on record so that justice on the merits of the case ultimately be served,” it said.

It also said that the NLRC and the CA failed to consider the “history and peculiarity of the broadcast in the broadcast industry.”

The CA in February last year ruled that the 96 talents are considered regular employees as they are part of the necessary crew whose jobs are vital in operating the business.

The appellate court also said a “four-fold test” in determining employee-employer relationship was established, referring to selection and engagement, payment of wages, power of dismissal, and power to control employee’s conduct.

The motion for reconsideration of the network was denied in November last year.

The network said that there is no employee-employer relationship between them and the respondents based on the said four-fold test.

GMA said it did not hire the respondents as employees and the recitals in the talent agreement are “but common wordings used in any service contract.”

“In either method of engagement of their services, Petitioner GMA’s primordial consideration was Respondent’s peculiar skills, expertise and talents. It is by reason of Respondent’s unique skills and talents not possessed by ordinary employees that their services were engaged by Petitioner GMA. This is undisputed and undeniable!” it said.

It also said that it does not pay their wages as they receive “talent fees” and it does not have power or control over how they work.

The network added that if the respondents will be declared with finality as regular employees, they should be regularized, including them in their equivalent positions with its organizational structure to “avoid salary dislocation.”

In a statement, Talents Association of GMA Network said the petition is “full of misleading statements.”

They said, contrary to the petition, that they were hired by GMA and they had regular schedules and reported to the office everyday and any call time set.

“We applied for our jobs, took examinations as in the normal employment tests, we’re interviewed, and we’re hired, as in the usual process for a regular job,” they said.

They also said that they welcome the petition as an opportunity to present their case.

“We welcome this opportunity to present to the Supreme Court not only our arguments, but our hard realities that also reflect the realities of many talents like us, in the media industry and outside,” they said.

Kei restaurant’s Japanese chef wins 3 stars

PARIS — The French edition of the Michelin Guide, the bible of gastronomy, for the first time in its history awarded the highest rating of three stars to a Japanese-born chef.

The accolade, unveiled at a ceremony in Paris on Monday evening, went to chef Kei Kobayashi who, according to the guide, “is a virtuoso at marrying flavors and always spot-on with his conception of the dish.”

Japan has several dozen restaurants with Michelin stars, but Kobayashi is the first chef from Japan to be awarded the recognition for a restaurant in France, a country seen by some as the touchstone of fine dining.

Kobayashi was born in Japan’s Nagano province where his father was a chef in a traditional Japanese restaurant.

After being inspired, according to the Michelin guide’s biography of the chef, by watching a documentary on French cooking, he moved to France and trained under three-star chefs Gilles Goujon and Alain Ducasse.

He set up his Kei restaurant in the French capital nine years ago, and in the years since accumulated first one and then two Michelin stars, before achieving the highest accolade.

“How do you achieve it?,” he said after being presented at Monday’s ceremony with a chef’s white tunic with three stars embroidered onto the left breast.

“You need to progress, you need to reach new levels, that’s what it is. You need to look for great products and so on,” he said. “So you need emotion, you need to share the pleasure with the team.”

The guide said its reviewers were bowled over in particular by one of the dishes Kobayashi serves at his restaurant: a garden of crunchy vegetables, Scottish smoked salmon, a rocket foam, and a lemon emulsion.

Kobayashi was one of three first-time recipients of three stars in the French 2020 edition of the guide, while there were 11 new holders of two stars and 49 newly minted one-star restaurants.

The guide, which was first published in 1900, has been seeking to embrace innovative chefs, with a particular emphasis on sustainable cooking.

But that has irked some in the old guard of French cuisine, who accuse the guide of putting novelty before quality.

French celebrity chef Marc Veyrat sued the guide after it removed one of his restaurant’s stars, saying the downgrade was unfounded and tipped him into depression. He lost the court case. — Reuters

Cemex raises nearly P13 billion in stock rights offer

CEMEX Holdings Philippines, Inc. (Cemex) has completed its stock rights offering (SRO) last week and raised P12.77 billion from selling 8.29 billion common shares.

In a disclosure to the stock exchange Wednesday, the listed cement manufacturer said it successfully sold 8,293,831,169 common shares priced at P1.54 each in its SRO from Jan. 20-24.

The proceeds generated from the offer will be used to fund Cemex’s expansion of its Solid Cement plant in Antipolo, Rizal and to pay outstanding debt, specifically that of its subsidiaries Solid Cement Corp., through a November 2018 credit facility, and APO Cement Corp., through an October 2014 loan agreement, with Cemex Asia B.V. The rest of the proceeds will be used for other general corporate purposes.

“Post-SRO and subject to the approval from the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) of Cemex’s application for increase of authorized capital stock, Cemex would have a total of issued and outstanding 13,489,226,623 common shares,” it said.

The offer shares are targeted to be listed at the Philippine Stock Exchange (PSE) on March 4.

Cemex has 5,195,395,454 listed shares at the PSE as of Wednesday. Its market capitalization stood at P22.39 billion.

The company’s SRO plan was approved by the SEC and the PSE in December. When Cemex announced it at the time, it said the offer would be made to all eligible shareholders at a discount to the volume-weighted average price of Cemex’s listed common shares.

It had tapped Hongkong and Shanghai Banking Corp. Ltd., Singapore Branch as its global coordinator and BDO Capital & Investment Corp. as its domestic underwriter for the SRO.

Cemex is an indirect subsidiary of Mexico-based Cemex S.A.B. de C.V., which entered the Philippines in 1997 and listed at the PSE in 2016. Its board of directors announced in September last year the plan to do an SRO to increase the company’s authorized capital stock.

Cemex swung to a net income of P874.68 million in the nine-month period ending September from a net loss of P663.43 million in the same period a year ago. Its shares at the stock exchange slipped nine centavos or 5.42% to P1.57 each on Wednesday. — Denise A. Valdez

NY’s Spotted Pig restaurant is closing

THE Spotted Pig, the West Village multistoried hot spot that was party central for celebrities in the 2000s, is shutting down. The news comes after a sexual harassment case against owner Ken Friedman, brought on by former employees, was settled on Jan. 7.

Rumors about a potential close had been floating even before New York Attorney General Letitia James announced that Friedman would pay $240,000, as well as 20% of the restaurant’s profits, to the victims. The shuttering of the restaurant was confirmed by Spotted Pig chef Tony Nassif who posted on social media that the restaurant had closed. He says the Spotted Pig has stopped serving food but might serve drinks Monday night.

The Spotted Pig opened in 2004 as one of New York’s first gastropubs, and it was a hit from the beginning. The celebrity roster of owners included Jay-Z; Michael Stipe, the former frontman of R.E.M.; and Norman Cook, the English DJ and musician who records under the name Fatboy Slim.

The Spotted Pig also distinguished itself with notable food — then-chef April Bloomfield served one of the city’s best burgers, topped with Roquefort and accompanied by a pile of shoestring fries. The restaurant had a famous “no substitutions” policy, and it was awarded a Michelin star every year from 2005 to 2016. During that time it was the de facto after-party spot for everyone who was in town to perform, from Coldplay to Kanye West.

But in December 2017 multiple reports of sexual harassment by Friedman were reported by the New York Times, ranging from physical relationships with employees to text messages demanding nude photos. The restaurant’s private third floor, where top chefs would hang out with celebrities, was nicknamed “the rape room” by former employees. Disgraced chef Mario Batali, another Spotted Pig investor, was a regular on the third floor. He reportedly stepped away from his empire in late 2017 in part because of video from the Spotted Pig’s third floor that showed him assaulting an unconscious woman.

“This is a sad day,” said Friedman via text. “An iconic special place is gone. There will never be another place like it again.” He declined to comment further. Bloomberg

Yields on term deposits decline

BIDS FOR THE central bank’s term deposits declined from the previous week but still filled the offer volume as liquidity returned following the holidays, causing rates to inch down.

Total bids for the term deposit facility (TDF) of the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) amounted to P262.975 billion on Wednesday, higher than the P200 billion on offer.

However, this week’s bids dropped from the P298.656 billion worth of tenders seen last week.

“There was oversubscription in all three TDF tenors as liquidity continued to return to the system following the holiday season,” BSP Deputy Governor Francisco G. Dakila, Jr. said in a statement on Wednesday.

Bids for the seven-day papers hit P105.23 billion, going beyond the P80 billion auctioned off but lower compared to the P134.77 billion worth of tenders seen on Jan. 22.

Rates for the one-week deposits ranged from 4% to 4.05%, unchanged from the margin seen a week ago. The average rate for the papers was at 4.0233%, slipping by 0.68 basis point (bp) from last week’s 4.0301%.

Meanwhile, tenders for the two-week term papers clocked in at P94.08 billion, surpassing the P60 billion auctioned off by BSP and also higher than the P76.564 billion in bids last week.

Lenders asked for yields from 4% to 4.07%, a narrower margin compared to the 4% to 4.1% seen on Jan. 22. This brought the average rate for the 14-day papers to 4.0397%, dipping by 1.33 bp from the 4.053% seen last week.

On the other hand, the 28-day papers attracted bids amounting to P63.665 billion, higher than the P60 billion up for grabs but failing to beat the P87.322 billion in bids last week for the same amount on the auction block.

Banks sought returns ranging from 4% to 4.11%, a wider band compared to the 4.044% to 4.13% margin logged on the Jan. 22 offering. This caused the average rate for 28-day term deposits to settle at 4.0741%, down by 1.76 bps from the 4.0917% seen a week ago.

Rizal Commercial Banking Corp. Chief Economist Michael L. Ricafort said the lower yields came on the back of downward corrections in local interest rate benchmarks.

“BSP TDF yields have been mostly lower since the start of 2020, amid the first week-on-week downward correction in most local interest rate benchmarks since the start of 2020 PHP Bloomberg Valuation (BVAL) yields mostly corrected lower last week,” Mr. Ricafort said in an e-mail.

Lower TDF yields also came after external factors including the latest coronavirus outbreak that could slow global economic growth especially in China and in other affected countries, he said.

“[This] led to some increase in global risk aversion to lead to lower benchmark interest rates…thereby partly leading to the latest easing of the BSP TDF auction yields,” Mr. Ricafort added.

Reuters reported on Wednesday that the death toll from the Wuhan novel coronavirus rose to 132, with the first case in the Middle East already reported.

Chinese authorities said that confirmed cases have risen to a total of 5,974 from 1,459.

“With no end in sight just yet for the virus, we can expect a hit on the tourism sector in the near term as the Philippines may see a drop in its second most important market,” ING Bank NV-Manila said in a note sent to reporters on Wednesday. — Luz Wendy T. Noble with Reuters

Approval of NAIAx expansion expected in first quarter

THE Department of Public Works and Highways (DPWH) is expecting the approval of the NAIA Expressway (NAIAx) expansion project within the first quarter of the year.

San Miguel Corp. (SMC) proposed the project, which is awaiting the nod of the Investment Coordination Committee (ICC) of the National Economic and Development Authority (NEDA).

“The NAIA Expressway expansion, I think it is moving forward. So hopefully soon, I think within the first quarter we can expect NEDA [approval],” Public Works Secretary Mark A. Villar said in Malabon City Friday on the sidelines of the inspection of NLEX Harbor Link Segment 10 C3-R10 Section, when asked for an update regarding the project.

The DPWH chief said his office wanted the project to be extended up to Lawton Ave., including Imelda Ave.

SMC announced in 2017 that it had submitted to the government a three-year plan to expand toll roads in southern Metro Manila, as a way to address traffic congestion.

The expansion plan includes NAIAx along with South Luzon Expressway (SLEx), Skyway system, and Southern Tagalog Arterial Road.

SMC was also planning to extend the new NAIAx to Bonifacio Global City (BGC), which aims to reduce traffic on the Sales Bridge and cut travel time from the airport to BGC to 10 minutes. The project will include additional NAIAx ramps from the NAIA Terminals 1 and 2 to SM Sucat, where it can connect with the C-5 extension.

The NAIAx is a private-public partnership with SMC. — Arjay L. Balinbin

Spyware trade grows amid claims of targeting

THE alleged theft of data from the iPhone X used by billionaire Jeff Bezos has cast an unflattering light on the swiftly growing and highly secretive cottage industry of software developers specializing in digital surveillance.

NSO Group and Hacking Team are among the most well-known surveillance companies. Both have sold tools to law enforcement agencies that are used to covertly infect targeted mobile phones and computers with spyware, which can record calls, harvest text messages, take photographs using the device’s inbuilt camera and record audio using its microphone.

But many more companies, some of them not as well known to the public, are selling similar technology across the globe, as part of an industry that isn’t well understood and often subject to minimal regulation or oversight. The hack of Bezos’s phone has renewed calls from some officials for a moratorium on sales until more rigorous global controls are enacted.

“This industry seems to just keep growing,” said Eric Kind, director of AWO, a London-based data rights law firm and consulting agency. “Ten years ago, there were just a few companies. Now there are 20 or more, aggressively pitching their stuff at trade shows around the world.”

Spyware developers have maintained that they sell their technology to law enforcement and intelligence agencies to help catch criminals and terrorists. But as the surveillance trade has grown, it has been repeatedly criticized because its technology has been used to target activists, journalists and most recently, Bezos, the world’s richest person. Last week, it was revealed that the mobile phone of the Amazon.com, Inc. chief executive officer was allegedly compromised by spyware sent to him from a WhatsApp account belonging to Mohammed bin Salman, the crown prince of Saudi Arabia. The Saudi Embassy denied the allegation.

While investigators haven’t identified the spyware that they suspect was used on Bezos’s iPhone, they cited NSO Group and Hacking Team as developing malware capable of such an attack. NSO has denied involvement, as has Memento Labs, which acquired the Hacking Team last year.

“Companies and governments make the argument that they need spyware tools in order to address counterterrorism and other kinds of violent crime,” David Kaye, the United Nations special rapporteur on freedom of opinion and expression, said Thursday in an interview. “But the problem is you have no legal framework to ensure that when you sell and transfer the technology, it is actually used for those legitimate purposes and that it is used according to basic rule-of-law standards, such as surveillance only according to warrants issued by a court.”

Kaye and another UN expert, Agnes Callamard, the special rapporteur on summary executions and extrajudicial killings, said on Jan. 22 that the allegations involving Bezos’s phone were “a concrete example of the harms that result from the unconstrained marketing, sale and use of spyware.” Kaye described the current spyware trade as a “free for all” and, along with Callamard, called for a moratorium on the global sale and transfer of private surveillance technology.

Rory Byrne, co-founder of Security First, an organization that provides digital security advice to journalists and human rights activists, said he expected to see an uptick in episodes involving spyware as the technology spreads.

“The truth is, it’s becoming easier and easier and easier for governments to build the capability themselves or to just buy it off the shelf,” Byrne said.

Only a few countries — including the UK, Germany, Austria and Italy — have any kind of legal framework governing hacking by law enforcement, said Ilia Siatitsa, legal officer and director of the government program at Privacy International. In 2016, a new law in the UK expanded and defined how police and spies in the country could hack devices, which it termed “equipment interference.” The tactic must be approved either by a senior police chief or a government minister and then, in most cases, additionally authorized by a current or former high court judge, known as a judicial commissioner.

In the US, the Federal Bureau of Investigation has since the late 1990s been using forms of spyware to gather information on electronic communication. The FBI has since obtained expanded powers to hack computers across the US, as long as it has obtained a search warrant from a judge to use the method.

In most countries, however, “there is not a clear picture of what governments are permitted by law to do” in terms of hacking, said Siatitsa. “The fact is that we don’t even know which governments are engaging in this. It’s very problematic. It goes against the international human rights framework, which requires that if there’s interference with our privacy, it must be explicitly provided for by law.”

Demand for the technology has increased among law enforcement agencies, who have turned to hacking as a method of spying on encrypted messages sent using popular apps such as WhatsApp, Signal and Telegram, Kind said. But other factors have made the technology appealing, too. Hacking allows law enforcement and intelligence agencies to maintain constant surveillance on targets who frequently travel internationally, according to Kind.

“Hacking tools allow you to get access to all the communications on a device no matter where the target is in the world, no matter what platform they are using or who they are communicating with,” Kind said. “That’s why hacking is so attractive to governments. It’s a single tool that they can use to get access to all communications on your phone at one easy point of access.”

Italy’s GR Sistemi is among the companies that have marketed surveillance technology, offering government agencies a spyware system named “Dark Eagle.” Company marketing brochures, which were published by Privacy International, say the technology could be used to hack phones and computers, providing “full interception of Skype and other encrypted communication software.” The Dark Eagle system can covertly capture images from a person’s webcam, record sent and received e-mail, capture instant messenger conversations and monitor web traffic, according to the company’s documents. The company didn’t respond to a message seeking comment.

Israel’s Wintego Systems Ltd. has offered its customers a spy tool that it claims can intercept Wi-Fi traffic, steal their login credentials to their accounts, and extract “years of archived e-mail, contacts, messages, calendars, and more,” according to company documents. A Wintego representative didn’t return messages seeking comment.

India’s ClearTrail Technologies, meanwhile, has marketed a system named Astra, which it describes as a “remote infection and monitoring framework” and promises “non-traceable payload delivery,” according to documents published by Privacy International. Once ClearTrail’s spyware is delivered to a computer or mobile phone, it can gather data stored on the device, including location, screen shots, Skype calls and search history, according to the documents. The company didn’t return a message seeking comment.

Similar spyware tools have also allegedly been developed by Israel’s MerlinX, France’s Nexa Technologies, California-based SS8 Networks, Inc., according to company profiles and research reports, and Bloomberg News found at least a dozen other companies that appear to sell similar technology. MerlinX, Nexa and SS8 didn’t returned a message seeking comment.

In recent years, some spyware developers have come under fire because their products have been sold to authoritarian governments whose security agencies have used the technology to target political opponents and critics.

In 2012, for instance, Bloomberg News reported that a prominent human rights activist in Bahrain was targeted with spyware traced to the company FinFisher. In 2014, WikiLeaks used leaked documents to identify FinFisher sales worth €47 million ($52 million) to countries including Qatar, Bahrain, Pakistan, Vietnam, Nigeria, Singapore and Bangladesh. FinFisher, which didn’t return a message seeking comment, has previously said its technology is necessary in the fight against terrorism and serious organized crime.

Spyware sold by Israel’s NSO Group has been linked to hacks that have targeted human rights activists, journalists and politicians in countries including Morocco, Saudi Arabia and Mexico. Similar technology sold by Italy’s Hacking Team has been traced to hacks on activists and journalists in countries including Morocco, Ethiopia and the United Arab Emirates. Both companies have said they sell their equipment to law enforcement and intelligence agencies to fight crime and terrorism.

“Our products are only used to investigate terror and serious crime,” a NSO spokesman said in a statement last week. Memento Labs, which acquired Hacking Team, didn’t respond to a message seeking comment. But in a post on its LinkedIn page, the company said, “Memento Labs underlines its position in condemning any misuse of hacking technologies and capabilities, having always acted in compliance with all the relevant international laws.”

Governments that possess hacking technologies are more likely to use them to target high-profile individuals than ordinary citizens, according to Byrne, of Security First.

“You have to understand who is likely to target you,” Byrne said. “It’s important not to panic and become too paranoid.” — Bloomberg

Web threats detected locally increase in the 4th qtr.

THE Philippines was seventh in the world in terms of the number of web threats detected during the fourth quarter of last year.

“Nearly 4 million Internet-borne threats were detected in computers of Kaspersky users based in the Philippines who surfed the web from October to December in 2019,” cybersecurity company Kaspersky said on Monday.

Kaspersky said the Philippines climbed “six notches” from 13th spot in the same period of the previous year.

Latest data from the Kaspersky Security Network (KSN) showed that 3,906,410 web threats were detected in the computers of Philippine-based Kaspersky users during the last quarter of 2019.

Mary Grace V. Sotayco, Kaspersky’s territory manager for the Philippines, said: “Being one of the world’s top Internet users, I think there’s no stopping the Filipinos from utilizing the web as a part of their modern way of life. We’re hoping that as they completely embrace this technology, so too will their practice of cyber hygiene as long as they go online.”

As for the malware attacks from USBs, CDs, DVDs and other removable media, Kaspersky said: “The Philippines is currently at 64th place globally with only 8,998,044 detections in Q4 of 2019 which is a significant drop from its 74th place with 11,757,863 detections in Q4 of 2018.”

Incidents of malware being shared from servers in the Philippines went down to 76,000 in the fourth quarter of 2019. Compare this to the 453,788 incidents recorded in the fourth quarter of the previous year, Kaspersky said.

Kaspersky’s General-Manager for Southeast Asia Yeo Siang Tiong said: “The significant drop in local threat infections tells us that there’s good news here. Filipinos are slowly understanding the risks, which the numbers reflect. We recognize the challenges which are almost similar across the region. Shifting the mindset is a collective effort and we’ll continue doing our part in sharing our threat intelligence and expertise to the public and to our partners in the government and private sectors.” — Arjay L. Balinbin

Make a Valentine promise

JUST in time for Valentine’s Day, one can now send a message of love through the new Cadbury Dairy Milk Promise Pack. The limited edition special packaging enables the giver to make a simple promise to make time for one of the choices provided on the pack: movie night, dinner date, vacation, or make a unique one by writing it down. To make Valentine’s Day even more memorable, Cadbury Dairy Milk is giving away the opportunity to be featured on a special billboard on Valentine’s week 2020. Each winner will also receive P5,000 worth of gift certificates for a sponsored date for two. To be one of the 10 winners, take a couple selfie with the Cadbury Dairy Milk promise pack and post it on Facebook publicly with a caption of your promise. Tag Cadbury Dairy Milk Philippines’ official Facebook page and use the hashtag #CadburyPromisePack. This digital promo is ongoing until Feb. 8. The Cadbury Dairy Milk Promise Pack is available at leading supermarkets and convenience stores nationwide starting. For details, head to Cadbury Dairy Milk’s Facebook page.

BDO raises P40 billion from bonds

BDO UNIBANK, Inc. raised P40 billion from its offer of 2.5-year bonds. — BW FILE PHOTO

BDO UNIBANK, Inc. raised P40.1 billion from the fixed-rate bonds it sold last week, over eight times its initial offer of P5 billion.

In a filing with the local bourse on Wednesday, the Sy-led lender said the oversubscription of the papers which were offered from Jan. 20 to Jan. 24 was backed by “robust demand from retail and institutional investors.”

The bonds have a tenor of 2.5 years with a rate of 4.408% per annum paid quarterly, calculated on a 30/360 count basis.

The issue date for the papers is set on Feb. 3.

The Hongkong and Shanghai Banking Corp. Ltd served as the sole lead arranger as well as a selling agent for the papers. Other selling agents include BDO and BDO Private Bank, Inc.

“The bond issuance is part of BDO’s continuing efforts to diversify its funding sources and support its lending activities, and follows the P35 billion of fixed rate bonds issued in February last year,” the bank said in the filing.

The offer is the second tranche of the P100-billion bond program launched by BDO in August 2018 which is meant to raise fresh funds for the bank’s businesses.

In February 2019, BDO offered the first tranche of the fund-raising program through the P35 billion worth of peso-denominated 1.5-year fixed-rate bonds which have a coupon rate of 6.42% per annum payable quarterly until June this year. The interest for the said tranche is also calculated on a 30/360 count basis.

BDO’s net income climbed by 43.35% year on year to P11.967 billion in the third quarter of 2019 from P8.348 billion on the back of higher recurring core revenues.

This brought the bank’s bottom line for the first nine months of 2019 to P31.1 billion, 49.3% higher than the P21.5 billion it earned in the comparable period in 2018.

The bank’s shares closed at P154 apiece on Wednesday, up by 0.33% or 50 centavos from the Tuesday finish. — L.W.T. Noble