Wednesday, November 26, 2014

Center for Hemispheric Policy-University of Miami- Forecast 2015-

  Latin America Forecast 2015
 Panelists

Energy Outlook
Jed Bailey
Managing Partner
Energy Narrative
Cambridge, Massachusetts

Trade Outlook
Gary Clyde Hufbauer
Reginald Jones Senior Fellow
Peterson Institute for International Economics
Washington, D.C.

Political Risk Outlook
Riordan Roett
Sarita and Don Johnston Professor and Director of Western Hemisphere Studies
The Paul H. Nitze School of Advanced International Studies (SAIS)
Johns Hopkins University
Washington, D.C.

Global and Regional Economic Outlook
John Welch
Executive Director and Emerging Markets Macro Strategist
CIBC World Markets
Toronto, Canada


Tuesday, December 9, 2014

Location:
Conrad Miami
Time:
8:00 –  8:15 a.m. - Registration and Continental Breakfast

Lisbon Room B
1395 Brickell Avenue

8:15 – 10:30 a.m. - Presentations and Discussion 




Supporting Organizations:
CAMACOL, Enterprise Florida, Inc., Georgetown University Club of Miami, Global Ties Miami, Greater Fort Lauderdale Alliance, Greater Miami Chamber of Commerce, Haitian American Chamber of Commerce of Florida, Interamerican Institute for Democracy, OWIT (Organization of Women in International Trade) - South Florida, Oxford University Society of Florida, University of Miami Center for International Business and Education Research (CIBER), Uruguayan American Chamber of Commerce (Florida) Inc. and Venezuelan American Chamber of Commerce

Media Partners: 
AméricaEconomía, Hispanic Target Magazine, Latin Business Chronicle, LATIN TRADE, Latinvex and WorldCity

                                                               

Program Fee:  $30; Academics and students – free admission with valid ID
Two ways to register:

1)      To register and pay by check, cash or as a guest (academics and students with valid I.D.):
Email registration form to chp-rsvp@miami.edu or fax registration form to (305) 284-9871.
Payment by check:  Make check payable to Center for Hemispheric Policy. Mail check with registration form to:
Center for Hemispheric Policy; P.O. Box 248297; Coral Gables, FL 33124-6535.
Cancellation Policy: By email, fax or telephone, by 12:00 p.m., Monday, December 8, 2014.

2)      To register and pay by credit card:  Submit your registration and credit card information by clicking on the “Register and Pay with Credit Card” link for this program listing on the CHP website.
Cancellation and Credit Card Refund Policy: Registration fees are refundable by sending the “Cancellation Request Form” by email or fax by 12:00 p.m., Monday, December 8, 2014. No refunds will be issued after that time. Credit card refunds are processed within two weeks.

For more information, please call Michael Graybeal at (305) 284-9918, or visit our website at www.miami.edu/chp.


Registration Form

(275B) Latin America Economic Forecast 2015— Tuesday, December 9, 2014

Name                                                                                                Title  

Company

Address 

City                                                                                                  State                                    Zip

Telephone                                                                                       Fax                                       Email

Payment method:                                                                           by mail                                 at door            


Monday, November 3, 2014

FTC Sues Dating Site Over Fake Profiles (PCMagazine)

JDI Dating created fake profiles and contacted free users in order to get them to sign up for premium accounts.
The Best Dating Sites
The Federal Trade Commission is dipping its toe into the online dating pool—but only to sue an English company for creating phony profiles to lure users into paying more.
According to a settlement with the FTC, JDI Dating Ltd. must pay a $616,165 fine, and is now prohibited from using fake, computer-generated profiles to trick users into upgrading to paid memberships. The England-based company is also barred from charging members a recurring monthly fee without their consent.
"JDI Dating used fake profiles to make people think they were hearing from real love interests and to trick them into upgrading to paid memberships," Jessica Rich, director of the FTC's Bureau of Consumer Protection, said in a statement. "Adding insult to injury, users were charged automatically to renew their subscriptions—often without their consent."
JDI Dating Fake Profile
The company operates a worldwide dating service via 18 websites, including cupidswand.com, flirtcrowd.com, and findmelove.com.

Once users set up a profile and surf the site on the free plan, they receive messages from members living nearby, expressing a desire to meet. But in order to respond, they had to upgrade to a paid plan, ranging from $10 to $30 for one to 12 months of service.
But according to the FTC, those profiles were bogus - Virtual Cupids developed by JDI. A tiny "v" encircled by a "C" on the profile page was the only indication that the profiles were fake, the agency said, though users were unlikely to notice it, let alone understand what it meant.
So, folks ponied up the cash for a subscription, unaware that their dues would be renewed automatically, and their account charged, until they canceled. The automatic renewal feature was buried, the FTC said, in multiple pages of densely worded text inside the Terms of Conditions—which most people don't read, anyway.
Once the Commission got wind of JDI's practices, it sued, arguing that JDI Dating and owner William Mark Thomas violated the FTC Act by "misrepresenting the source of the communications from fake profiles and failing to disclose the automatic renewal terms."
JDI Dating did not immediately respond to PCMag's request for comment.
Classmates.com faced a similar lawsuit back in 2008. A San Diego man sued Classmates.com for lying in order to get him to pay for a subscription. He signed up for a free profile in 2007 and subsequently received e-mail alerts that said former classmates were trying to find him. But Classmates.com would not reveal who was looking for him until he signed up for a paid "gold membership" account. When he did—no messages. Classmates.com settled for $9.5 million in 2010.
Stephanie began as a PCMag reporter in May 2012. She moved to New York City from Frederick, Md., where she worked for four years as a multimedia reporter at the second-largest daily newspaper in Maryland