Tuesday, December 20, 2011
agreement $ 300 million has caused some alarm, but this member of the royal family is much more progressive than their families
last February, the riots spread to other Arab countries - helped in part by the use of social media - a story circulated that King Abdullah, the Saudi monarch, had offered $ 150 billion cash to buy Facebook and probably close "to end the Arab revolt."
The original story was a parody, but oil-rich regimes are characterized by splashing your money around as a means of suppressing dissent that there was a ring of credibility and others before regurgitated as fact. The Saudi government does not see the joke and made a face direct denied saying. "The report has no basis" While some caution is in order when it was learned Monday that the Saudi prince has acquired $ 300 million on Twitter. This time, however, the story is true and that caused some alarm in the Internet. A fairly typical comment, said: "A billionaire one of the most backward, repressive regimes in the world now own a piece of one of the channels of communication the most critical social / worldwide. Who and what claims to be censored in exchange for their huge investment? " the prince in question, Alwaleed bin Talal, a nephew of Saudi King, but the two have little in common than real blood. Alwaleed is known for his progressive views and, thanks to its privileged position, which is capable of pushing the red lines, without going into too much trouble.- It caused a sensation in 2004, for example, by paying the formation of a female Saudi pilot and then hire private planes to fly their businesses - despite the Saudi custom prevented from driving a car in the soil.
- In an article for The New York Times earlier this year, called on Arab countries to accept "unbreakable, lasting and sincere" reform.
A reform that sought to promote in Saudi Arabia is the reintroduction of the film face of opposition from conservatives, including his own brother, Prince Khaled.
two years ago, one of his companies, Rotana, has sponsored a film festival in Jeddah, which was banned by the authorities, a few hours before it is due to open. Some have suggested that the ban was inspired by his brother, which took place shortly after the Prince Khaled was accused of "spreading depravity and lust" with their "projects of corruption."
Rotana is also the largest producer of Arabic music - that the Saudis consider the most traditional immoral. Cynics might point out that the media business Alwaleed certainly benefit from the liberalized rules for movies and music, but that does not seem to be their main motivation.
Find best price for : --Saudi----Twitter----Alwaleed--
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Blog Archive
-
▼
2011
(551)
-
▼
December
(96)
- Islamic Insurance: A Modern Approach to Islamic Ba...
- Doctors Discover Copyright Law: Cognitive Screenin...
- 2011: the year in data, journalism (and charts) | ...
- Power Failure: New York City Politics and Policy s...
- Parrot AR.Drone Quadricopter Controlled by iPod to...
- Police sacked for Facebook posts
- Johnson & Johnson Refuses To License Three HIV Dru...
- CrunchDeals: Get Yourself A Thing-O-Matic For $999
- Online Shoppers Call Best Buy The Grinch After Ret...
- Latest HondaJet test aircraft lifts-off
- Primary school teachers resign after Facebook insu...
- Brazil's Copyright Reform Draft Bill: The Good, Th...
- Taking a chance on prayer via text | Andrew Brown
- Cafes embrace age of connectivity
- Star Wars: The Old Republic - review
- Lucia Etxebarria: truly an extraordinary author | ...
- Court Indicates Facebook May Be Violating Your Pub...
- LoveFilm signs streaming deal with Sony Pictures T...
- Engadget HD Podcast 279 - 12.20.2011
- Apps Rush: Discovr Movies, Stiktu, Taptu Guardian ...
- DailyDirt: Commercial Space
- Apple buys Anobit in $500m deal
- Touch Press talks digital publishing,
- Linpus Lite Desktop Edition 1.6 Has New Dock
- YouTube: 'talking' dog is top video of 2011
- New Anti-SOPA Song & Crowdsourced Video From Dan Bull
- Open Access Is Spreading -- But Is It Really Open ...
- Twitter sells stake to Murdoch-linked Saudi prince
- Alwaleed bin Talal: from Saudi prince to king of T...
- Android's Facebook app overtakes iPhone's
- Untangling the web: attention
- 'Craigslist killer' case highlights the plight of ...
- Dizzy: Prince of the Yolkfolk - review
- OnLive app - review
- Facebook 'has $3.5bn cash pool'
- Zynga IPO values firm at $7bn
- Apple launches iTunes Match in UK
- EU cookie laws could cause unwary firms to get the...
- North Sails unfurls game-changing new sail technology
- Facebook has $3.5bn cash pool, leaked figures show
- Verizon accidentally tests mobile alert system wit...
- Google crowns the royal wedding as the fastest-ris...
- No Copyright Intended: The Coming Generation Who I...
- Click to download: Spotify's next step
- HTC v Apple patent ruling delayed
- Paul Allen And Burt Rutan Launch Stratolaunch Syst...
- Coby announces five new Android 4.0 tablets to deb...
- Windows Phone division head shifted
- Will Android apps be worth the effort in 2012?
- Futuristic bridge planned for Wuxi Xidong Park, China
- Highly resonant wood could be commercially produce...
- Baby owls are the new LOLcats
- Games take lion's share of Android downloads
- Constitutional Scholars Explain Why SOPA & PROTECT...
- Spotify shows that doing one thing at a time is ne...
- Could the desert sun power the world?
- From the Vaults: The Day Billy Idol Turned Rapper
- Full Circle: Official Minecraft Legos on the Way
- South Park RPG coming in 2012. Is the world ready?
- Twitter hashtags that dominated 2011
- Gove: schools should teach computer science
- Invest the 4G auction windfall in British science ...
- Why artists and indies shouldn't write Spotify off...
- MPAA Tries Its Hand At Comedy With A Top 10 List I...
- UltraViolet service offering digital locker of fil...
- OnLive comes to iPad and Android
- From Fukushima to Charlie Sheen - the Twitter hash...
- India asks Facebook, Google to screen content
- China cracks down on microblogging rumours that ar...
- South Korea discovers downside of high speed inter...
- The Megaphone horns in on iPhone amplification duties
- Facebook buys location app Gowalla
- Google antitrust inquiry: Eric Schmidt meets Europ...
- UP, the bracelet with a healthy app-etite for your...
- WWE '12 - review
- Mario Kart 7 - review
- The Guardian launches Spotify app
- The best photo apps for smartphones
- Dyson seeks to block copycat manufacturers in China
- Scientists create real photons from virtual ones
- The Hard Sell: Call Of Duty - Modern Warfare 3
- This week's new games releases
- Drake samples success with YouTube rips
- The Pirate Party Effect: German Greens Scramble To...
- Royal Society Claims 1671 Copyright On Newton Lett...
- How BioShock Infinite will be prescient
- The dark side of our gadget addiction
- Review: HTC Rhyme
- Sony Bravia TVs updated with Twitter, YouTube HD a...
- Scientists create real protons from virtual ones
- Mercedes Benz showcases its Aero Trailer concept i...
- Court lifts injunction against Galaxy Tab sale
- Hard drive shortage pushing up prices
- Spotify launches its own apps platform
- Apps Rush: Infinity Blade II, Nasa Ringtones, Crea...
- Clarkson's just Clarkson - would you have cared, p...
-
▼
December
(96)
0 comments:
Post a Comment