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Cover story

What next?

by Carl Gebeily November 5, 2000
written by Carl Gebeily

A bude Omari is known· for his charm and pit-bull mentality:

When he has an idea between his teeth, he might be pleasant

about it, but he will never let go. For the boyish-looking

entrepreneur, with his casual attire and winning smile, the world of the

Web is a natural fit. He always looks to the future, say colleagues, and

his sales pitches cany a New Economy resonance. Striking a chord with

the general public, he calls his e-venture, “Internet for everyone” and

describes his concept as “the next breed in portals.”

As co-founder of Cyberia along with college roommate Walid

Fakhry, Omari has experienced the adrenaline highs and the growing

pains that accompany the transformation and sifting of ideas into

a cohesive business. The main pressure, bigger than earnings in a

topsy-turvy environment, is to build organizations – fast- before opportunities slip away.

His breakthrough idea? ‘There is no single

idea,” says Omari. “Cyberia doesn’t operate

with a unique selling proposition.” Instead, by

strapping on a family of value-added services

such as voice services – still in beta testing

phase – webmail and news, the company hopes

to move away from its position as purely an ISP.

“Our approach is not generic,” says Omari.

“From the start, we looked specifically at what

would make _a Lebanese customer go out and

start using the Internet.”

It took barely a year for Cyberia, launched

in September 1996, to climb to pole position, and it soon became

clear that the charismatic entrepreneur had tapped into the mindset

of the New Economy. Investors were drawn to his idea of a “Net

for the people.” And why not? Lebanese consumers flocked to his

user-friendly startup kits and were able to replenish their online credits

from a large distribution of resellers – both Cyberian innovations

that were later emulated by other ISPs. Omari had already signed

up some long-term investors, including Lebanon Invest, financier

Elias Hallak, founder of Invest Corporation, and Chase

Manhattan, whose names added cachet to the venture.

So what are the payoffs? The exact answer is safely guarded in

some Cyberian high-encryption electronic vault. However, the average

growth in revenues has been of the order of 64% over the past

two years, and by estimates gathered from both the local ISPs and

independent market research, Cyberia commands as much as

42% of the 200,000 dial-up access market, compared with

lnconet’s 29% and Data Management’s 19%.

None of the companies would divulge revenue or profit figures. But

it’s unlikely that any are profitable with their ISP services and questionable

whether they’re making money on anything else -just look

at the poor track record in that regard of Internet companies in the West.

Revenue is offset by Cyberia’s high operational costs. Other than

the overhead charges, the large office spaces in Hamra and the 54

employees, are the astronomical charges incurred by the ministry

of post and telecommunications (MPT) who have a monopoly on

phone lines and prices. Bandwidth is leased at the monthly rate of

$59,000 per 2mbs, which is split as a $27,000 fee for connection

to the Internet backbone, a further $27,000 in licensing fees and

$5,000 in charges to the international gateway. ‘The MPT still doesn’t

have a clear policy toward regulating the private sector in terms

of charges and frequency allocations,” complains Omari. “The

monthly charges hit you like a brick wall.”

This discomfort is shared by ISPs across the board, particularly when

they look with envy at the palatable US rate of $4,000 per 2mbs.

Cyberia’s Internet service runs on 8-10mbs, requiring monthly

charges in excess of $250,000. This expense is quite aside from the

$13 charge per phone – the company has some 3,000 lines nationwide.

If the company’s finances remain somewhat opaque, what is more

apparent is Cyberia’s corporate evolution from ISP to all-in-one portal

– an evolution that has its parallels and differences with other

ISPs. With mobs of new users logging onto the Net and annual growth rates of some 150%,

the future was looking bright for ISPs in

1997. Until they had the rug pulled out from

under them that is.

That year the number of ISPs peaked at over

20. Today there are just a handful of players. First

came an attack from an unexpected quarter.

Banque Audi entered the ISP market in August

1999, with a free dial-up service to win over consumer

Internet users. Offered in conjunction with

Inconet, the usual access charges were paid by

a monthly account-handling fee ofLLl0,000-at a time when unlimited access charges were

still about $30. Not wishing to be outdone by the Audi/Inconet

alliance, Byblos Bank teamed up with Data Management in a

PC/unlimited-internet package. The entrance of the bank Net accounts

spelled disaster for small ISPs and big trouble even for ISPs

like Cyberia, who hadn’t chosen a bank partner.

Barely a month later, Omari announced to a surprised Internet

community that his company had adopted a $12.99 unlimited

access price – slashed from $29 – in a desperate maneuver to consolidate

his electronic ground. The fallout was severe. The price cut

effectively signed the death warrant for many smaller ISPs.

“Many ISPs fell by the wayside,” recalls Jacques Hakimian,

Internet analyst with Dialog. “The ones who survived were forced

to differentiate in any way shape or form.”

ISPs have responded on several fronts. While some complain they

can’t survive if prices go any lower, others continue to use the access

charge as a key trump card. (Terranet has maintained a monthly $9.99;

and Libancom, having dropped its access charge to an unprofitable

$6.66 is back on $11.99.) Others still are concentrating on adding Web

services, such as website hosting, or are trying to lure customers with

promises of better service and access with less downtime.

A case in point is US-based PSINet, which entered the Lebanese market

by purchasing Lynx, a local ISP in its death throes. It is the only local

ISP with a direct fiber-optic link from Lebanon to North America. And

since about 85% of all Internet activities run on the American backbone,

this translates into significant cuts in delay – typically 53% on

the 30kpbs norm of a copper cable. This is an important selling point

in a cutthroat market that looks for added benefits. Mike Mansour, IT

consultant for PSINet Lebanon believes that speed, not ISP content,

is the way to survive. “We offer a super-carrier service that cuts out all

the middlemen,” he says. “That’s what will count in the future.”

Data Management adopted a different strategy to widen its revenue

base. Keen advocates of Web hosting, the ISP turned its focus

into helping startups find their footing such as E-comlebanon, a B2C

venture that was launched by entrepreneur, Karim Saikali. “Data

Management’s expertise was key in implementing my project,” says

Saikali. That expertise brings with it a startup fee of $25,000 for

average-sized Web ventures.

Data Management also launched Yalla! in 1999, a homegrown

Yahoo!, proving that their corporate focus had already shifted to

services, content and e-commerce. “In the Internet world, no one

is willing to invest in a company that grows slowly,” says Antoine

Haddad, advertising and marketing manager of Data

Management. “Go find an Internet company that said it was going

to be methodical.” Yalla! carries some 570 Web pages, ranging from

news and business to computing and kids, that are updated daily

or weekly and register a total 3 million hits a month.

“It’s not that ISPs are no longer providing Internet service,” says

Dialog’s Hakimian. “But they are having to evolve and cater to

niche markets.” Omari is more succinct in his assessment of the

changing ISP model: “Access will become more and more of a commodity

while content will become more and more relevant.”

Cyberia’s e-magazine was launched in July 2000 with sections

on news, business, arts &entertainment and sports, bringing to

fruition over a year of planning. Is the result another homegrown

Yahoo!? Not quite, says Wadad Awam, Yalla!’s editor-in-chief. “In

essence, we’re more of a portal than Cyberia,” she says. “Our content

is collected from various sources just like Yahoo!. Cyberia, on

the other hand, is more of an e-magazine, like CNN: that is, a one source

media.” Cyberia has four sections to Yalla!’s eight, but rather

than resorting to wirefeeds, the majority of their news and features

are written in-house by a newly hired staff of reporters and editors.

Independence comes at a cost. Cyberia’s news center carries a

running tag of about $30,000 a month- and with no significant post publication

boost to the roll of subscribers, the online magazine has

so far added little in terms of returns. With all the

other expenses, that’s quite a cash burn

rate. How long can it last

without having to

take austerity measures

that might

include staff or salary

cuts for instance?

Revenues from the online

news, if there are to be any, will come at a later stage. “For instance, a customer who reads a movie

review in the arts and entertainment section, and is interested in the film,

will want to know where it’s playing,” says Omari. ‘The next stage will

be to allow that customer to reserve and buy his ticket online- and that

becomes commerce that can generate profits.” And, reasserting its move

away from the original ISP model, Cyberia launched chat rooms and

message boards in October in a bid to drive more traffic to the site.

But some analysts believe Cyberia has done too much, too soon.

“They got going too fast,” says Sam Lutfallah, general manager of

Inconet. “They got unfocused.” The changes are draining cash, he

believes, and are wiping out any chance of profitability. “It may be

only a matter of time before they burn out.” Whereas he does see

the need for ISPs to play more of a portal role in today’s e-landscape

lnconet itself is working on plans to reposition – he maintains that

Cyberia is rushing headlong, almost impulsively. “The name of the

game is to hold on to your subscribers,” says Lutfallah – Inconet has

some 50,000 subscribers, about 45% of whom are signed up on Audi

Net-accounts. “Cyberia seems to be in the process of putting the carriage

before the horse’s head.”

Omari is certainly a young man in a hurry. But, for the time being

at least, he has a solid following among the mouse-clicking voters.

Cyberia registered some 13 million hits for the month of September

2000, an increase of roughly 450% from September 1999 and some

10 million more hits than Yalla!. And according to an inside source,

the arts & entertainment page has grown by more than 300% in hits

in the last two months.

The jury is still out on whether this new whiz kid on the media block

will meet with success. But traditional Lebanese newspapers are

extending their print operations to the Web to counter Cyberia’s

foray. Both An-Nahar and L‘Orient-Le lour have consolidated their

content into bright Internet portals that blends news with entertainment

listings and other local information.

So what next? Cyberia ‘s territorial ambitions aren’t limited to a home

turf. Plans are already afoot to expand into the relatively untapped e-markets

of Jordan and Algeria. The coming five years foresees expansion

throughout the Middle East- an e-market of roughly 2 million.

Given this pan-Arab goal, Omari can expect more competition – not

only with local rivals like Yalla! but also with such regional players as

Arabia.com, AiwaGulf and

California-based Planet Arabia.

It’s a strategy that has the support

of his shareholders. “Our outlook is

that there’s a great potential in

Cyberia’s future,” says Nicole

Gebara, assistant general manager at

Lebanon Invest. “Given the falling

prices of access charges, it makes

economic sense to extend the revenue

base by incorporating a portal

within the ISP model.” Through its

venture capital fund, the financial

house bought into Cyberia in 19% to

the tune of $1.1 million – or 15.4% •

of the ISP’s $7 .2 million value at

the time – and sold about two-thirds

a year later for about $3 million.

“Going regional is a logical progression,”

she says.

It’s a gamble that may just pay

off. In Lebanon, as in the West, the

gold-rush mentality has all but

gone, and it’s apparent that just

select dot-corns will strike the mother lode. However, in contrast

to the tortoise-like speed of development in brick-and-mortar

industries, capitalists with stars in their eyes might be more willing

to finance the handful of homegrown companies that they

believe will become the region’s eBays and Yahoos.

And why eBay or Yahoo!? ”The concepts that have the best chance

of surviving on the Web,” says Hakimian, “are those whose content

and services are not portered from traditional media and retailing, but

are purely Internet or interactive services.” Companies that fit best into

this slot are those that let consumers negotiate their own price, and the

best of these are auctions. The biggest online auction site, eBay, used

the Web’s technology to bring together an audience that had previously

been fragmented by geography. A collector of nargileh pipes, for example,

no longer needs to peruse every bazaar and souk in the Middle East

to find the perfect hubbly-bubbly; he just needs to search online.

But venture capitalists will need a lot more than theoretical models

to be moved into signing checks: They will need practical reassurances.

“Foreign capital, most of it from America, is hovering overhead

waiting to dive into Lebanon’s Internet industry,” says Joseph

Hanania, general manager of Compaq’s Middle East and North Africa

division. “All they’re waiting for is a firm commitment from the

Lebanese government to the New Economy – dropping Net phone

charges would be a start.” Others warn that capitalists, despairing of

any easy exit through which to sell their investments, may move on

to neighboring countries, leaving Lebanon’s nascent Internet industry

gasping for cash. The money could also quickly vanish or move

elsewhere because of regional instability. Foreign venture capitalists

could decide Lebanon, and indeed the entire region, is not

worth the risk, leaving people like Omari stranded.

It’s a delicate situation – but not one without its silver lining. Most

insiders and market analysts predict that Cyberia will do well in the long

haul and that its share price will eventually reflect that success. Even

in the West, the growing list of dot-com deaths is mitigated by some

good tidings. A recent report by Forrester Research, based in

Cambridge, Massachusetts, has predicted that global Internet spending

by consumers could increase to over $180 billion in the next five

years, up from $20 billion last year.

The money earned off the Internet is not yet sinking very deeply into

Lebanon’s economy. Buses and billboards that have been taken over

by dot-com advertising hardly make for a Net nation. And Cyberia’s

battle cry of ”All you need is love” can only go so far to drive the New

Economy. As mercantile Lebanese know only too well, capital is power.

Omari and other young Internet entrepreneurs will need to hang onto

their assets and make them grow if they wish to emerge as a potent force

shaping Lebanon’s economic – and political – future.

November 5, 2000 0 comments
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Best Sellers

How sweet it is

by Natascha Schellen November 5, 2000
written by Natascha Schellen

0 nce their kids had grown Hanan

Faour and Dalal Turk, aka the

Tabbara sisters, began making silk

bridal flowers and fancy chocolate arrangements

– the type traditionally offered to

guests at births. “It started out as a hobby, as

favors for friends,” says Turk’s daughter

Reem Albanna. By word of mouth their reputation

grew and before long the hobby

developed into a small business. Their children

encouraged them to register the homebased

enterprise, Heart to Heart, in 1997.

Today business is growing by about 8% a

year, even though they’ve never advertised.

Well, that isn’t completely accurate. “Every

piece of chocolate that goes out of this store

is an advertisement,” says Albanna. The

chocolates, which are sealed with a sticker that

has the company’s name and phone number

printed on it, have gone far. Heart to Heart regularly

receives phone orders from Kuwait,

UAE, Switzerland, London and Paris.

Why the appeal? Big players in the field, like,

Paatchi and La Cigale, are more commercialized,

so their selection has standard designs. At

Heart to Heart all designs are unique. The

personal touch starts from the moment clients

enter the boutique. Customers enter a conference

area resembling an elegant living room,

where they explain what they’re looking for

while sipping coffee. Designs are suggested

based on the client’s preference and budget.

“We cater to all budget.5,” says Faour. A

piece of decorated chocolate starts at $2.

Elaborate designs can reach $20 apiece, in

rare cases $75. Likewise, the price of containers

varies tremendously. A small wicker

basket simply decorated costs $45. A genuine

wicker cradle bedecked with ribbons and

stuffed animals costs $120. Clients sometimes

bring in their own containers, which are then

decorated according to budgets.

Heart to Heart now caters to all occasions,

although chocolate arrangements for births

still constitute about 75% of business. The

company declined to reveal turnover, saying

only that profit margins are 10% to 15%.

Profits are reinvested, mostly into stock

Advertising gets a lift

N abil El-Chemaytelly can appreciate:

the adage that innovative ideas

are often inspired by the mundane.

He came up with a novel concept during a routine

elevator ride, after noticing a small bulletin about plumbing services. “I realized that it’s

a great way to advertise,” says El-Chemaytelly.

“The elevator is something

people use at least twice a day.” Last January,

he resigned from Kodak Lebanon and established

Pin Point Marketing on an initial

investment of $250,000. El-Chemaytelly

owns 51 % of the company.

Pin Point Marketing places advertisements

in elevators, which calls for securing

networks of elevators, largely in residential

buildings. In return the company provides elevator

maintenance valued at $500 annually.

“We’re trying to build networks by region,”

says El-Chemaytelly. The five regions outlined

are highly populated West Beirut, East

Beirut, Dahie, Metn and Kesrouan. “In each

network our initial target is 1,000 buildings,”

he says. ‘That’s about 17,000 households, or

68,000 consumers.”

Phase one concluded three months ago,

with Pin Point securing 1 ,000-plus buildings

in West Beirut. Two billboards, 30X40cm, are

placed in every elevator. The company offers

one package: 1,000 buildings for one week at

$2,900, printing included. ”Clients are receptive

to the idea because the approach is

unique,” says El-Chemaytelly. Pin Point’s

clients include such big names as Americana

and Kettaneh. Clients can buy weekly reports

from Stat lpsos, which was hired to monitor

the system’s effectiveness.

El-Chemaytelly says that profits aren’t

expected for two years. The second network

is progressing, with over 200 buildings

secured in East Beirut, although 5,000 buildings

are required for the project to be feasible.

“For the last ten months we tested the concept,”

says EI-Chemaytelly. “Now we’re

working on building the company.” That

• called for bringing in investors to finance a

$450,000 expansion plan. ‘The investment is

needed to reach our breakeven point.”

Pin Point eventually plans to introduce

market-specific packages, to sell clients

buildings most suited to their target consumers.

EI-Chemaytelly anticipates copycats,

but says he’s prepared for that.

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Best Sellers

In the freezer

by Hadi khatib November 5, 2000
written by Hadi khatib

The timing was hardly ideal.

Four years ago, the Samba

ice cream factory in the

Syrian city of Homs began operations,

rolling chocolate-covered ice

cream bars off its modern assembly

line. Samba’s aim was to be one of the first makers of premium ice cream in the country.

Production jumped from 600 tons in 1997 to 1,400 tons by 1999 with forecasts

at 2,500 for this year. The newly expanded factory is now working

around the clock. The firm’s national distribution network includes

35 refrigerator trucks and vans covering

7,500 points of sale with logistics and distribution

offices in Damascus, Aleppo, Al-

Jazira and Homs. Samba refused IP disclose its revenue. Using the official exchange

rate, sales for 1999 can be roughly calculated

at $4.5 million based on output and an

average price of SL10.

If the story sounds rosy, it’s not.

Expansion has not translated into big profits.

At about the same time that Samba went into

operation, no less than three other new companies

opened top-of-the-line ice cream factories

of their own: Muller, Carina and

Iceman. Carina, which enjoys a formidable

name in Syria. is a joint venture between Saeb

al Nahas and Hasan and Mohamed

Alameddine, the latter being owners of

Lebanon’s Cortina. Iceman, which entered

the market in 1995, produces about 3,000 tons of ice cream annually.

For Samba, the new arrivals meant that as production increased,

competition got stiffer. And with the onslaught of a nationwide recession,

reducing people’s purchasing power, the company had no choice

but to drop its prices. Profit margins shrank from around 15% to less

than 10% for ice cream companies, says Yihiya Talgabini, part-owner

of Muller. Iceman tried to counter that trend by increasing output,

while Samba shifted its production toward the lower end of the market.

When Samba started out, 60% to 70% of sales were in medium range

products (costing between SLI0 and SL15), whereas today

70% of sales are in low-range items (costing around SL5), says Imad

Rifaii, Samba’s vice general manager. “We had to reduce our prices

outside the city, where the purchasing power is lower,” he says, adding

that increased availability of other products created more competition.

“Of course, profits went down with falling prices.”

But there was even more competition for Samba at the low end of

the market. Ice cream has traditionally been produced for mass consumption

in Syria rather than for a premium

clientele. Hundreds of mom-and-pop

type operations manufacture mostly

Arabic ice cream manually. Few have bothered to upgrade their production line

but together they control 30% to 40% of

the market. Al Mees is one of the more

innovative of the traditional Syrian ice

cream companies. The firm started operations

in I %2, producing ice cream manually

until 1980, when it introduced new

machinery. Al Mees claims to have 5,000

points of sale and is planning to expand its

factory. ‘There are only about 10 factories

using machines and about 500 old factories

still making ice cream manually, 200 in Aleppo alone,” says Mohamed

Zoukeir, part-owner of Al Mees.

Focusing on the low end of the market

meant that Samba was forced to reduce the quality of raw materials

it imports such as milk, milk powder and sugar. “We use the same

suppliers but lower than premium quality without it much affecting

the taste for the consumer,” says Rifaii. The firm has also beefed up

its marketing effort. Samba spends about 10% of its sales each year

on advertising-60% on TV ads though the company also uses billboards.

Today, Samba offers more than 40 different ice cream products

in a wide range of flavors.

But probably one of the biggest challenges Samba faces is the limited

Syrian market. Ice cream consumption in Syria is among the

lowest in the region. The average Syrian licks up a mere one kilogram

of ice cream per year, partly because of the absence of large

supermarket chains. The Lebanese, by contrast, gorge themselves,

with a annual per capita consumption of about nine kilograms, which

is still just half the level in Europe and a third of that in the US.

Syria’s Muller recently tried to enter the Lebanese market. But the

venture proved unsuccessful after it became entangled in a legal battle

with a local company. Al Mees is also contemplating moving into

Lebanon. “Muller entered and is now out, but we will follow

Muller’s move next year at this time, and we will compete on both

quality and price,” says Zoukeir. As for Samba, Rifaii says that he has

no plans to move into Lebanon, because that would only increase his

overhead and distribution costs with little effect on profits.

Eitl1er way, the situation in Syria is likely to get worse before it gets

better. New president Bashar Al-Assad is seriously talking about

economic reform, which might mean opening the country to more

imports, including foreign ice cream brands. Perhaps the time has come

for Syrian ice cream companies to team up. “Merging is a sound policy.

We can buy out small factories, improve their production and take

advantage of their market, but we haven’t studied that option yet,” says

Rifaii. He better get busy; times are changing in Syria.

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Best Sellers

Taking the plunge

by Tania Avoukdjian November 5, 2000
written by Tania Avoukdjian

For most people, summer means lazy days lounging by the swimming

pool, catching rays. But for Salim Makhoul, summer is

time to make money. In 1969, he founded Aquarius, a company

that has built the swimming pools of such prestigious beach

resorts as Rimal, Portemilio and Halat-sur-Mer. But pools are just a

small part of Aquarius’ business activities. The firm also installs luminous

fountains, offers water treatment services for residential and industrial

areas, assembles desalination and sewage treatment systems and

supplies equipment to recycling plants and pumping stations.

Aquarius is an almost recession-proof business. Between 1995 and

1999, as the economy plunged into its current abyss, Aquarius’ overall

revenues actually increased about 20% to $50 million. Last year,

profits totaled more than $6 million.

In contrast, Emco Engineering, a competitor that does water and

sewage treatment projects for industries but not swimming pools,

saw revenues drop to $4 million between 1998 and 1999, a 30%

decrease. This year, however, Emco is expecting revenues to jump

to $8 million. Water Tech, a manufacturer of swimming pools, is

projecting a l 0% drop in revenues by the end of 2000, although sales

increased from $2.2 million in 1998 to about $3 million in 1999.

Aquarius has been able to ride out the hard times because 92%

of its business is outside Lebanon. In 1978, Aquarius became the

first Lebanese company to do water treatment projects in Saudi

Arabia. In 1999, the firm opened an office in Egypt, a market that

generated $1 million in sales during its first year.

Water Tech has not been as successful in foreign markets.

Although the company has completed a few projects in countries such

as Syria, Jordan, Egypt and Sudan, it has not yet opened an office outside

of Lebanon. “It isn’t as easy anymore to establish yourself

abroad,” says Charbel Yazbek, owner of Water Tech. “It’s too late for

that now.” Emco, on the other hand, has generated considerable revenue

from outside Lebanon. The firm has worked in Saudi Arabia,

Iraq, UAE and Egypt. “We don’t rely on Lebanon as a source of income,

” says Elie Shalhoub, Emco’s business development manager.

“Eighty-five percent of our business is abroad.” But Emco’s revenues

of $7-$10 million are only a fraction of Aquarius’.

Local waters have not been very inspiring for Aquarius. But even

at home, the company’s sales have not belly flopped. Demand for

swimming pools dropped by 50% in Lebanon this year and the number

of projects for Aquarius declined by l0%. Nonetheless domestic

revenues edged slightly upward, from almost $3 million in 1998

to $3.3 million in 1999. In contrast, Aquamania suffered a 30%

decrease in revenues this year, according to Jean Nakouzi, the firm’s

general manager. Aqua Pro has been having similar problems.

“We have 50% of the local market,” says Makhoul. But

Yazbeck believes that Water Tech is quickly gaining ground.

“We built 12 swimming pools more than Aquarius last year.”

One reason for Aquarius domination of the Lebanese market

is its strong maintenance and after-sales service department.

Eighteen employees attend to the needs of2,800 clients once or

twice a week. The company charges $15 to $75 per maintenance

visit, depending on the location. Emco, which hasn’t given as

much importance to this division, charges between $50 and

$150 for a service call, depending on the location and system complexity.

“We have not focused on services as much as Aquarius,”

says Shalhoub. “It’s very difficult to take a business away from

Aquarius, because they protect their clients. They have done that

very well.” Yazbek disagrees. ‘They don’t follow up on their customers

as much as we do,” says Water Tech’s owner. “Some clients

started working with Aquarius but ended up with us.” Water Tech ‘s

prices range between $25 and $100 per visit, if chemicals are not

used, and between $100 and $1,000, if chemicals are used.

Aquarius, however, has its shortcomings. Its prices are much higher

than its competitors’. While the firm charges $10,000 on average

for a six-by-12-meter swimming pool, Water Tech’s price is

around $8,000. Aquarius charges between $1,000 and $2,500 for

an automatic swimming pool cleaner while Water Tech charges

between $700 and $1,800. “We lost some of our market share due

to our prices, but we have kept our name,” says Makhoul,

adding that the company imports all the parts and equipment it needs and

assembles them locally.

Emco, whose prices are usually 5% higher than the rest of the market,

follows the same philosophy. The firm designs, manufactures and

assembles most of its equipment in its Byblos factory and only

imports certain items such as pumps and valves. This helps the company

cut costs. “A lot of customers call because we offer the best service,”

says Shalhoub.

Even its competitors

admit that Aquarius is a

firm to be reckoned

with. “Only companies

like Aquarius survive in

this fluctuating market small

ones are eventually

weeded out,” says

Shalhoub. Yazbeck concurs:

“I consider them

one of the best companies in Lebanon.” And 2

when your rivals say

you are good, who’s to

argue to the contrary.

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Money Matters

Technical focus United States

by Richard T. MeCabe November 1, 2000
written by Richard T. MeCabe

• The stock market’s major averages rose by 4% to 8% for the July-August

period, but the advance appears to be maturing. A fall correction

may be more severe in the technology sector than in the

market as a whole. We continue to favor accumulating issues in

the value areas of the market during an expected fall setback.

• Whether the market’s recent upswing is the start of a durable

advance from the major averages’ spring lows or merely an

interim recovery from those lows that will be followed by

renewed weakness may depend on the sector of the market to

which one is referring. In the case of the technology sector, we

continue to believe that its summer performance sequence was

an interim recovery, or B-wave, that will likely be followed by

a second phase of weakness, or C-wave decline.

• The non-technology/growth rest of the market consists primarily

of a wide array of mid-to-small cap value stocks,

although many large-cap basic-industry/capital-goods issues

could also be included. Those stocks, in general, have been out

of favor or correcting for the past two to three years, but now

appear to be stabilizing or recovering on a gradual or national

basis. The improvement in that wide array of stocks has

lifted the NYSE’s 25-week advance-decline ratio to its highest

level (1.27) since April 1998 and raised the percentage of NYSE

common stocks trading above their 200-day moving averages

to 63%, also the highest level since early 1998. Akey difference

between now and then: In 1998, those figures were

declining from higher preceding levels; now they are rising from

lower levels and showing improving momentum. Although a

market reaction during the next couple of months would certainly

have some effect on those stocks, it would be part of a

major uptrend rather than a reversal of it.

• Meanwhile, the recent catch-up in the previously laggard technology

sector may be the latest indication that the market’s

spring-summer recovery trend is in a mature stage. Moreover, if

that were to be followed by signs of a faltering in the recent leaders

(financial, energy, utility stocks), it would increase the evidence

that a fall pullback or corrective phase was unfolding.

• Against that background, we continue to recommend that trading

accounts raise cash reserves in coming weeks and that

longer-term investors buy on a price scale-down basis.

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Executive Living

Cool karate

by Natacha Tohme October 19, 2000
written by Natacha Tohme

A t the outset karate was a martial art – that is,

-unarmed techniques of self-defense aimed at

killing in combat. It originated on the island of Okinawa,

where the techniques were kept secret until 1922, when

Master Gichin Funakoshi, the founder of modern-day

karate, was invited to give a demonstration in mainland Japan.

Thereafter he developed it into a sport that has amassed a huge

international following. Lebanon is no exception.

Why the enthusiasm? Karate is an exciting sport and its

techniques improve physical skills like coordination, balance

and timing. Additionally, karate embraces philosophies

that govern practitioners’ personal conduct. “Karate is a discipline

– it’s a way of life,” says Fadi Aoun, a third degree

black belt instructor.

Karate practitioners adhere to five basic principles:

seek perfection of character, be faithful,

endeavor, respect others and refrain from violent

behavior. If the last sounds contradictory, Aoun,

a lawyer by profession, explains that the ultimate

aim of karate is to be self-confident. “And whenever

you’ re in control of your mind and body,

you’ re not afraid, so you don’t need to be violent,”

he says. “Violence stems from fear.” If one must

resort to fighting, he should do so with composure.

Karate literally means emptying the hand and soul

of violence and preconceived ideas. Fighting

with a calm mind allows one to discern an opponent’s

psychological and physical moves,

enabling shrewd reactions.

Building a strong character is achieved through

discipline, concentration, self-respect and respect

for others. It is for these reasons that three years ago

Hala Zoghby wanted her

daughter to learn karate. “I

was told that it would help

her concentration span,”

says Zoghby, who started

taking lessons herself.

Today Zoghby is a first

degree black belt and a committee member of I.S.K.F. Lebanon, the local arm of the

International Shotokan Karate Federation. I.S.K.F. Lebanon

offers classes for kids,juniors and seniors. Most clubs let kids

start from as early as four, and no age limit is imposed.

The Korean kick

There are a few legends about the origins of tae kwon do, an ancient Korean martial

art. According to one, when Japan invaded Korea the conquerors severed the arms

of all Korean male newborns, so that in adulthood they couldn’t use swords against the

Japanese. As a result, the Koreans developed a martial art based entirely on kicks. Another

legend has it that the impoverished Koreans, to knock Japanese soldiers off their horses,

would leap high and strike them with powerful kicks.

Like karate, today tae kwon do is a sport, and while it now includes some hand action,

“it’s still mainly leg technique,” says Gaby Abousleiman, a fourth-degree black belt.

Abousleiman is a lawyer by profession and teaches tae kwon do on evenings at The Racquet

Club. He explains that while the differences between the various martial arts are

technique-related, their philosophies are fundamentally the same. “Discipline, concentration,

self-respect, humility, generosity … these principles are taught in all martial

arts. Tae kwon do is a way of life,” says Abousleiman.

Participants learn “forms” – or hand and leg techniques representing imaginary fights.

Sessions also include free fighting, self-defense motions as well as kicking pads and

wooden planks. The latter should break on impact.

Worldwide only 10% of practitioners get into competing at tournaments, according to

Nabil Abou Zaraa, a seventh-degree black belt and international referee. Yet he

becomes animated talking about the competition aspect and the entrance of

tae

kwon do at the Olympic Games this year.

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Life

The Great Outdoors

by Natacha Tohme & Marwan Naaman October 19, 2000
written by Natacha Tohme & Marwan Naaman

Too much time spent in Beirut can leave the impression

that Lebanon, which prides itself as the

region’s greenest country, is a vast and unsightly

concrete jungle. Well, not yet, anyway. Head to either of the

country’s two nature camps, La Reserve in Mnaitra or

Sharewood Camp in Al Khalleh, and be reassured that

breathtaking landscapes still remain. The camps’ purpose is

to encourage appreciation of Lebanon’s unspoiled nature by

way of outdoor activities, such as mountain climbing, caving,

trekking, mountain biking, rappelling, archery and

horseback riding.

“Adventure travel is what we do here,” says Paul Ariss,

proprietor of La Reserve, which was established five years

ago. At an altitude of 1,400 meters, La Reserve has access

to 40 million m2 of impressive mountainous terrain. Sharewood,

which started operating last June, is at an altitude of

1,000 meters and has ample wilderness at its disposal. “We

want people to know how important nature is,” says owner

Rania Gholam.

Sports are an exciting way to explore the areas – and you

don’t have to be an athlete to participate. Excursions are categorized

according to aptitude. And activities are designed

for kids as well as adults, so sporting equipment, such as

bikes, is available in all sizes.

Entry is free, while fees are charged per activity. At La

Reserve each activity costs either $5 or $10 per person. The

one exception is horseback riding, which costs $20 an

hour. At Sharewood the price per activity ranges from $2 to

$10. AU rates include equipment, insurance and instructors.

Adventurers-cum-nature lovers usually choose to make

the most of it by partaking in a number of activities. In this

case the camps suggest package deals. La Reserve offers a

challenging two-day trail called Sports, Culture and

Nature at $55 per person, including meals and insurance.

It incorporates hiking across the Akoura heights, caving in

the Roueiss and Afqa grottos, camping and visiting the

 val1ey of Adonis and the temples of Ashtarout and Yanouh.

Guides explain the history and geography of the areas

explored. Sharewood has a two-day all-inclusive package

costing $40 for adults and $20 for kids.

Both outfits are equipped with tents for overnight stays.

They are readied with air mattresses, but participants are

asked to bring bedding, with sleeping bags recommended.

The use of tents cost $IO a night per person.

Visitors can enjoy the night sky at Sharewood ‘s observatory,

equipped with ten telescopes that offer a close-up

view of galactic wonders. There is also a STARLAB – a

mobile and inflatable planetarium for three-dimensional

astronomy presentations that is mostly used as an educational

tool for kids.

While the camps operate full swing in summer, things simmer

down in winter. Winter activities are gaining popularity,

however. Last winter La Reserve offered adventure

camping, which combines snow shoeing, rappelling, hiking,

caving and camping in igloo tents.

The two-day all-inclusive

package costs $50 per person. This winter will be

Sharewood’s first, but it’s already planning two-day survival

camps. Participants will be taught skills like map and compass

reading, starting campfires and cooking outdoors.

Adventure buffs take note – Sharewood organizes weekend

expeditions led by its X-Treme Team (not to be confused

with Mansour Mansour’s popular scuba diving club of the

same name). Activities include diving to discover archeological

sites, an event during which divers can learn underwater

photography and videography. The cost per person is

about $25 a day.

The non-athletic shouldn’t be deterred from visiting the

camps because participating in activities isn’t mandatory. The

camps offer refuge for those simply seeking to get away from

the hustle and bustle of city life. The Club House at La

Reserve offers Lebanese cuisine, with meals costing about $20

per person. On Sundays an elaborate buffet lunch is served.

The camps open daily from May to September, weekends only

in October and November. Reservations are required.

Camps for kids and incentive programs for companies are

available (see box).

Contact Lil Reserve (www.lareserve.comlb) at O l/498-774/5/6

or 03/727-484 and Sharewood Camp at 03/294-298.

By Natacha Tohme

A conquering of culinary palettes is coming from the Far East

A taste of Asia

The Asian cuisine craze that swept much of the

Western world has landed on Beirut’s Mediterranean

shores. Over the past few years, a number of

Asian restaurants have sprouted throughout the city,

promising to turn Beirut into the future culinary capital of

the Middle East.

The newest and trendiest of Beirut’s Asian restaurants is

undoubtedly Indochine. Conceived by hotshot Chinese American

designer Tony Chi, who was inspired by Vietnam’s

French colonial era, the restaurant is a visual feast of

soft ivory, pistachio and peach colors amidst a profusion of

verdant tropical plants. Princess Minh Kim, who manages

the restaurant, set her sights on Beirut after two successful

restaurant ventures in Paris and Brussels. Although

Indochine offers Vietnamese cuisine, the dishes – all based

on Princess Minh Kim’s secret recipes – are unique to the

restaurant. The most popular items include fondue of beef

with vinegar, shrimp fried on sugarcane sticks, banana flower salad and grille<!

seabass with turmeric.

Compared to other

Beirut restaurants, Indochine

is reasonably

priced. There are two

prix-fixe menus that

cost LL35,000 and

LL41,000 each, or the

slightly more costly a la

carte options. lndochine

also offers three-course

business lunches including

a glass of wine for

$25 per person.

The Blue Elephant

specializes in sophisticated

Thai cuisine.

Accessible via a wooden

staircase, and bathed in

appealing dark wood, the

restaurant is divided into

cozy alcoves best suited

for intimate conversation

or a romantic dinner for

two. Favorite dishes here

include spicy prawn

soup and a delectable

chicken curry. Make sure to save room for the Star of Siam,

a decadent blend of Thai sweets with mango, papaya and

other tropical fruit. Like Indochine, Blue Elephant offers a

three-course lunch for businesspeople that costs between $25

and $35. Dinner is a bit pricier at $35 to $45 per person. Tuesday

is Ladies’ Night, which means that each male-female couple

gets a 50% discount off their bill.

If Vietnamese and Thai are not your forte, try Jardins de

Chine. The six-year-old institution, owned and managed by

Fadi Abou Jaoude, continues to entice diners with its

exquisite Chinese cuisine. Open for dinner only, Jardins de

Chine offers mouthwatering

specials such as

beef with black pepper,

crispy chicken with yellow

bean sauce and even

dim sum (steamed or

fried dumplings). The

toffee cheese and banana

served with ice cream is a

perennial dessert

favorite. The prix-fixe

menu, which costs

LL45,000, offers eight

varied dishes and dessert.

There are also less costly

a la carte options.

October 19, 2000 0 comments
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Advertising

Shall We Cry ‘Forward’?

by Executive Editors October 19, 2000
written by Executive Editors

” If you cry ‘Forward!’, you must be sure to

make clear the direction in “‘Which to go,”

exclaimed Anton Chekhov. Timeless

advice, particularly appropriate for

today’s Information Age businesses.

Lebanese companies, from start-ups to

established multinationals, are beginning

to treat information as a chief asset.

Success of external communication with

clients, suppliers, and allied partners – as

well as internal communication among

managers and employees – depends on

the ability to create and use systematic

principles in organizing corporate

information.

In many cases, however, Lebanese

companies distribute information in print

or over the Internet with little regard for

whether its organization and content

make sense to target audiences. Even

worse, many corporate communications

are altogether disconnected from

business strategy.

The Emerging 21•1 Century Profession

The overriding goat of information

architecture, sometimes referred to as

information design, is to promote clarity

and human understanding. Quite

naturally, its origins have expanded from

architecture to integrated corporate

communications and marketing.

Professionals now realize that

systematically ordered information

reinforces and extends a company’s

image, vision, and goats. At the same

time, target readers readily find the

information most important to their

needs.

Examine the most basic corporate

information, your showcased corporate

mission statement. A simple, though

extreme, example of an actual case

demonstrates how one company reveals

nothing – albeit verbosely – about its

services:

“X Company provides a wide range of

fully-functional solutions to a broad

spectrum of forward -looking

organizations, to allow them to integrate

today’s dazzling opportunities with their

situational paradigms, while addressing

the needs of informed consumers

worldwide. “

This company could benefit from the

advice of Joseph Pulitzer, well quoted as

saying, “Put it before them briefly so they

will read it, clearly so they will appreciate

it, picturesquely so they will remember it

and, above all, accurately so they will be

guided by its light.”

Even so, it is not that simple. The

constant development of new

technologies enables Lebanese

companies to increasingly reach the

global market as easily as the local. The

process of designing information

architectures interrelates closely with –

and oftentimes exposes gaps in – basic

business strategy.

“Designing an information architecture –

defining what an organization is, what it

wants to communicate and to whom … is

ultimately about strategy,” writes expert

Lou Rosenfeld. Lasting competitive edge

is not found in the superficiality of

glamorous brochures or highly-animated

web sites but in content welt targeted to

users in specific contexts.

Business Strategy and

Internet (Non)Sense

The Internet is a relatively new business

context for corporate and marketing

communicators. International companies

have quickly taken advantage of the

borderless electronic marketplace to

extend business strategy in ways they

could not have foreseen. Opportunities

abound for creating innovative business

alliances, marketing and selling products

and services, and generating online

business-to-business and other

communities with attractive spending

capacities.

Fewer Lebanese companies today are

jumping on the Internet bandwagon with

the sole motivation of making an

impression. Further, the days of providing

web design agencies with disconnected

pieces of corporate information and

focusing solely on high-tech graphics and

animation are dwindling.

Through pain and considerable expense,

local companies which have paid recently

for massive redesigns of their sites have

learned a lesson of the age. A web site

can play an important role in defining a

company’s relationships with clients,

investors, and suppliers.

Justifying Your Internet Investment

In the process of redesign, companies are

forced to confront difficult questions they

likely avoided the first time:

“What is our purpose? What are our

short and long-term site goals? Who

are our audiences, and why will they

come to our site? What are our

competitors doing?”

“What categories of content must we

include in the site? And how do they

relate to functional requirements?”

“What is the best structure to

communicate these categories and

functionalities? What type(s) of

navigation systems will allow our

visitors to quickly access information

or online services?”

In asking these questions, the interactive

– symbiotic – relationship between

information architects and business

strategists emerges. Each influences the

other through .debate and healthy

feedback.

Perhaps more convincing to management

is an information architect’s long-term

savings of time and money. With properly

developed information · architecture

documents, managers can literally grasp

the foundation of their investment.

Information Architecture Workshop

Eyelearn’s Information Architecture Workshop refines the talents and capabilities of

marketing and public relations specialists, copywriters, and graphic designers

responsible for developing corporate communications.

This workshop focuses on the initial step of development or redesign of a corporate

web site: documenting the site’s strategic foundation through detailed specification

and design documents. The skills gained in this workshop can also be used to develop

offline corporate communications.

Corporate Web Site Specification Document

ESTABLISH SITE GOALS

DEFINE THE USER EXPERIENCE

• DEFINE CONTENT CATEGORIES

DEFINE FUNCTIONAL REQUIREMENTS

Corporate Web Site Document

rporate Web Design DocumenCorporate Web Design Document

SET OUT THE SITE STRUCTURE

FINALIZE SITE TEXT

GENERATE ALTERNATIVE NAVIGATION

SCHEMES

CREATE BASIC LAYOUT GRIDS

Sponsored By: EYELEARN

Abou Jaoudeh Street

200 Feghali Center

Bauchrieh, Beirut, Lebanon

Phone/ Fax: +961.1.879530

E-mail: [email protected]

Written By: The Write Choice

[email protected]

October 19, 2000 0 comments
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Tech Knowledge

The world wide web is watching you

by Carl Gebeily October 19, 2000
written by Carl Gebeily

Tell people that you’re going to

track their every move on a website,

store that information in files and

analyze it later, associating it with personal

data received earlier, and the response

might be, “Back off, Big Brother!”

But that is not a paranoid, Orwellian

vision of personal-data piracy. It’s simply

what happens when, as you browse the

Web, you (or your browser, without your

knowledge) accept a “cookie” – a short bit

of text that a website can store on a user’s

machine (see box: The way the cookie

crumbles). In other words, it happens every

day, millions and millions of times over.

In the West, fledgling Internet companies

take turns detailing for an eager audience

of electronic commerce executives

and venture capitalist technologies that

could more efficiently capture

information about people on line – making

their presentations without once mentioning

the infringement on privacy. For example,

online advertising companies DoubleClick

and Engage Technologies employ tracking

devices – electronic sniffer-dogs with a

particular nose for cookies – to follow Web

surfers from one site to another. By tracking

users’ movements, advertisers can personalize

advertisements to increase their efficiency.

Such events underscore the contention of

some that the main threat to privacy does not

arise from an Orwellian totalitarian state, but

rather from commercial interests. “Market

research has been transformed from almost

parochial telemarketing

models of the ’80s

and early ’90s to a

worldwide phenomenon with a

global reach,” says Najib Korban,

managing director and chief IT consultant of

Netcom Systems. “Tracking people’s surfing

and online shopping habits has, in

recent years, been equated to being

Internet-Savvy.”

The disturbing equation of advancing technology

and diminishing privacy is hardly

new. While most people consider privacy to be

a fundamental right, they willingly forego

small bits of it as a trade-off for small but

important conveniences – such as the use of

credit cards or automated teller machines.

And a growing number of people willingly

spend an increasing part of their lives connected

to the Internet, the most voracious

vacuum of personal data in history.

our privacy or anything else,” says

Korban. “It’s the people using this technology

and the policies they carry out that

create the violations.”

Others disagree. “By its very nature, technology

is intrusive,” says Georges Hindi of

Business Engineering Studies and

Technology (BEST), adding Pragmatically:

“But in this new and braver global village, all

concept of the private world has to disappear.

In the grand scheme of the Internet era, the

great benefits brought on by the electronic

revolution substantially outweighs the marginal

loss in people’s privacy.”

Jacques Hakimian of Dialog concurs.

“The true issue of privacy is not spamming,

which is harmless enough, but rather

security systems that need to be secure

beyond reproach in order to foster good

B2B and B2C transactions.”

However, much of the concern over privacy

springs from a new capability to correlate

previously anonymous information

with an individual’s email and street

addresses, which are sometimes reused or

even sold to third parties. This can simply

result in unwanted email messages or junk

mail. But more disturbing is the possible disclosure

of sensitive information.

A company with a banner ad on a Web

page might send an identifying cookie to

your browser, and it would be able to track

that browser if it

called up pages at other websites carrying

the company’s

ads. The advertiser

can, through an

agreement with a

commercial site, also

get a copy of personal

information you

gave to the shopping

site when making a

purchase and be able

to associate that

information with

your browser. Hindi

believes that the privacy policies posted on many, especially American, websites are

worthwhile and a conscious attempt to

appease the surfing community.

Korban takes a more pessimistic view:

“These policies are vague and often incomprehensible

and always subject to change.”

If you insist on perusing the policies, he

adds, watch for seals from business monitoring

groups that attest to the companies’

adherence to consumer privacy standards.

“The Internet is the only two-way media that

most people consume, and it’s very powerful.

You buy a TV, and no one knows what

you watch. You buy the newspaper, and

no one knows what section you read first.

Your computer, on the other hand, is telling

your secrets without your knowledge.”

Is it possible to browse without surveillance?

No, not completely, but it is possible

to move about the Internet in stealth mode.

“Some methods are in the hands of Web

users themselves,” says Korban, “others in

the growing number of companies that sell

privacy as part of their packages.”

In the West, there are hundreds of so-called

remailers. These intermediaries will remove

all revealing information, like your name or

email address, from your email messages

before sending them on to their destinations.

In the absence of a proper privacy

debate in Lebanon, the best information

may be gleaned from the US government’s

Electronic Privacy Information

Center (www.epic.org), which maintains a

list of reliable remailers, and if you follow

the links on its website to “privacy tools,”

it offers worthwhile

tips. There are also encryption programs

like Zero Knowledge Systems.

In addition you can

help safeguard your

own privacy. “One

of the most important

ways is to disclose

as little personal

information as

possible,” advises

Korban. “Don’t give

your identity online,

or, at the very least, minimize the sites at

which you register.”

And, one way to deal with the tell-tale

cookies is to say, “No thanks, no dessert for

me,” when a server offers your browser a cookie.

All the current versions of Web browsing software offer options in

their security preferences, or in a specific cookie-

setting panel, for automatically refusing

all cookies or for accepting them on a

case-by-case basis (see box: How to erase

your cookies).

Korban also advises consumers to maintain

separate email accounts: one for personal

messages, one for business and one for

ordering information or products. The last

is easiest to abandon if junk email messages

become intolerable.

The future promises more exotic inventions

with the potential to impinge on privacy.

In the meantime, though, there are

many steps that consumers can take to protect

themselves. Many of these measures

will prove useful to Internet shoppers even

if consumer privacy laws eventually do

become a reality. And if Internet sites were

ever to find that they were losing visitors

because of snooping cookies, the entire

business of Internet advertising might be

forced to change.

Korban argues that it is possible to stop,

or at least control, the policies that enable

abuses of the technology. Doing so

requires that we change our thinking and

laws to prevent a technologically induced

brave new world from turning into an

Orwellian nightmare.

The way the cookie crumbles

Computer scientists have used the term cookie for a long

time, but its origin is murky. According to Netscape,

cookies are a “general mechanism that server side connections

can use to both store and retrieve information on the client side

of the connection.” In English, that means cookies are small

data files written to your hard drive by some websites when you

view them in your browser. These data files – no more than

4,096 characters long but often as short as ten or 20 characters

contain information the site can use to track such

things as passwords, lists of pages visited, the date when a certain

page was last visited as well as any personal information disclosed during a website visit.

Cookies are not always bad. Benign ones make web-

sites run efficiently and help operate features like online shopping carts.

They let users avoid tediously typing in user names and passwords at sites that require them.

They are ubiquitous precisely

because they smooth the

unending stream of transactions

between Web browsers and Web servers that make up the constant

electronic chatter of the Internet.

When a user types in a Web address or clicks on a link, the Web

browser like Netscape Navigator or Internet Explorer sends a

request for the Web page to a Web server, another computer

with specialized software that receives and processes

requests for ‘{web pages, graphics, sounds and other elements.

 If no cookie is involved, each request for a document or

graphic is handled the same way each time. If a cookie is

involved, the site knows you’ve been there before and may know

your preferences. On a site that issues cookies, the software that

handles requests from browsers for pages and images can issue

a unique identifying number the first time a browser makes a

request for pages. That identifying number is sent to the

browser, which stores it as a cookie on the user’s hard drive.

The next time the user wants to go to the same site the brows-

er sends the identifying number as part of the request. That helps

the company that runs the Web server track the number of

different visitors to its site. It also means that a record can be kept

of all visits by that browser to the site. Virtually all major ecommerce

sites use cookies to send a browser a session identifier

that allows a user to drop items in a shopping basket and return

within hours or even days without losing any of those selections.

t may sound spooky, but it’s important to recognize cookies

limits. They’re not active spying programs, just plain text.

A cookie can’t suck information from a user’s machine and secretly

transmit it to a Web server.

Many discussions of cookies revolve around credit card

numbers. Because of security concerns, these are rarely

stored as cookies. A cookie might contain a credit card

number, but only if the user provided it as part of a transaction

 and the website was irresponsible enough to send it back

as a cookie. Any responsible site stores in a cookie only information,

like a name and password, that a user knows is going

into the cookie. And if a cookie is used by the website to call

up a database file with personal information, that information

stored at the website, not in the cookie.

The only information in a cookie is

what the user provides. If you

don’t give information about

yourself, a site has little or no

way to connect you, as an individual, with your surfing

expedition through its pages. This is not

entirely foolproof because a Web surfer can pick up cookies without realizing it from some advertising

companies (see box:

Look who’s watching).

Many people and

organizations in the

West, including the

Federal Trade Com-

mission, are voicing

concerns about what

websites might do

with the information

collected through cookies and are advocating

that sites adopt privacy

policies. In the mean-

time, wise surfers

should treat cookies

as they would a bar of

chocolate that’s been

left out in the midday

sun. Verify first, and eat later

An outbreak of media envy

0nline news is not the exclusive territory

of major daily newspapers anymore.

In the last year, local portals and

ISPs have been setting up websites and

getting into the online news business.

While many just sample the waters by

putting up a simple Web page with a few

local stories and a wirefeed from an international

news agency, others – such as

Cyberia – have hired extra staff members,

put display advertising online and set up

large community news operations.

Not wishing to be outdone by the new

whiz kids on the media-block, traditional

Lebanese newspapers are devising strategies

to capitalize on the booming demand for

accessing information from anywhere.

Both An-Nahar (www.annaharonline.com)

and L’Orient-Le Jour (www.lorientlejour.

com) have announced plans to consolidate

their content into Internet portals that

will blend news with entertainment listings

and other local information.

The media companies are forging ahead

despite mixed success by predecessors that

have tried to extend their print operations to

the Web. Still, industry observers say

newspapers must develop an Internet presence

or risk· losing readership to online

rivals. For their part, the newspapers tend to

agree that they need to do more online.

“We have to stop viewing ourselves as a

newspaper company and view ourselves as

an information company,” says a

spokesman for L’Orient-Le Jour.

But to be truly successful, say analysts,

newspapers will have to do much more.

For example, adding e-commerce

features and tailoring their content for

online readers will be essential. And

only then will that great divide –

between the once-a-day multicourse

meal of original material served up by

newspapers and the quickly changing

menus of original fare on the Web –

begin to narrow.

First fruits of Tuesday

It seems that everybody these days

across the Middle East wants to be a

start-up incubator. First Tuesday Beirut

(www.ftbeirut.com) was launched in

September with the stated aim of providing

“a platform for local Internet entrepreneurs

offering networking, resources and capital.”

Modeled after the UK-based First

Tuesday – so named because they meet on

the first Tuesday of every month – the

group gathers entrepreneurs and

investors under one roof to discuss business

plans and IT opportunities.

The potential partners meet like singles at

a bar: investors wear red dots; entrepreneurs

wear green dots. “We are a business

accelerator, focusing on speeding up

Internet companies on their path from idea

to full-fledged business,” says Antoine

Elhage, partner of the IT consultants,

Phoenicia Valley, which co-sponsors the

monthly event.

Fancy names aside, First Tuesday is in the

business of offering to a would-be Internet

entrepreneur one or all of the things

required to get started, from help in hiring

qualified employees or shaping a business

plan to so-called seed money – the first

investment that goes into the company.

Until earlier this year the level of entrepreneurial

activity in Lebanon ranged from

very low to non-existent. And while the

industry is not exactly shifting into overdrive

– September’s First Tuesday meet brought

little in terms of concrete deals – there have

never been quite so many would-be entrepreneurs

with bright ideas for an inventive

Web a-la-Leb. Perhaps that will help tum the

tide and have venture capital gushing rather

than dribbling into the local market.

Portal dominance

I ntenet business

models mutate

faster than a flu

virus. A case in

point: the “portal,”

a scheme whereby a

handful of mostly

money-losing enterprises

band together

to form a mega website

that combines searching, content, email, chat and

other services.

AiwaGulf.com, launched in March

2000, has reported a 120% increase in

number of unique hits from 9,000 to

20,000 a month. ”The growth opportunities

we have in the Middle East are stronger than

anywhere,” says Faisal e.1-Issa, founder and

managing director of AiwaGulf.

The company wants to battle to the top

of the Arabic-speaking Internet market,

with its stated goal to become the Yahoo!

of the Middle East. However, AiwaGulf is

still intrinsically a GCC portal and will

have to go some way to shed its khaleej

coat for a pan-Arab skin to prove that it has

the most momentum in region and can

beat off such rivals as Lebanon’s Yalla!

and California-based PlanetArabia.

Gradually, with trips and stumbles, the

Internet is coming of age in the Arab

world. And with that, the battle for

cyberspace supremacy has begun.

Beyond simply creating a hip, oriental

version of America Online, the idea

should be to make the portal site so enticing

that World Wide Web users will

make it their first stop, and so seductive

that they will not want to stray elsewhere.

Easier said than done.

October 19, 2000 0 comments
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Technology

Dead but not buried

by Carl Gebeily October 19, 2000
written by Carl Gebeily

I n computers, being safe can sometimes

lead to being sorry, as Oliver L. North

discovered in the Iran-contra

investigation during the Reagan

administration, when incriminating

files he thought had been deleted

were later resurrected from network

backup tapes. One of the ways investigators

can peer into the private lives of

their subjects is to peer into their computers.

What they are able to find, and the ease with

which they can find it, may prompt computer

users to re-evaluate their practices.

Word processing software, Web browsing

software and email have become integral to

communication, both professional and personal.

As a result, many people have files on

their hard disks that they wish to keep private,

like love letters, confidential business

documents or financial data.

Moreover, many have sensitive, confidential

and potentially embarrassing files in

their computers that they don’t even know

are there, either because they think the files

have been erased or are unaware that certain

common programs automatically keep a

log of what the user does.

“Recovering files that were deleted from

a computer directory is almost a trivial

process,” says Mihran Boudromian, computer

analyst with Expervision. A related

issue is the computer’s creation of sensitive

files that

the user often didn’t

know were there in the first place, according

to Boudromian. “The user’s Web

browser will create files, without the

knowledge of the user, that record all their

interactions,” he says. “Many people today

know about cookie files, but the browser

creates a history file as well that keeps a

record of the websites the user visits. And

then there’s a cache file that sometimes

keeps copies of the pictures that have been

downloaded.”

More obscure are the temporary files created

by word processors, for example, and

the so-called swap files that an operating

system creates as a way to manage computer

memory. These files often remain readable

even if the original files are erased.

Computer users in Lebanon have little

reason to believe that their computer files will

be scrutinized by law-enforcement agents,

corporate and government spies or even

special investigators.

But what about unscrupulous

co-workers? And what confidential

information resides on the hard disk of the

computer that was donated to a neighbor, or

sold to make way for an upgrade?

The rise in the number of computer thefts

and the increased sharing of computers in

the home are confronting consumers with

security issues that in the past were issues

only for big corporations, banks, the military

and government agencies. So how

does one keep confidential information

private? And when the information is no

longer needed, how does one make sure that

it is completely erased? “Both questions

involve a combination of good computer

security policies and good security software,”

advises Boudromian.

The software is the easy part. Creating and

sticking with good security habits is the

hard part. “Technology exists today to protect

individual privacy for as long as the

individual chooses to keep the information

private,” says Georges Hajj, of

Compudata. Computer users today have

access to inexpensive software tools that can

encrypt the contents of a fife, an email

message or even the entire contents of a

computer so that it can’t be read by someone

else. Other programs can shred

unwanted files so completely that no one

can recover them. But very few people use

such security tools. y

Computers are good at keeping· secrets.

Too good, in fact. The secrets can reside on

a computer, and on a computer network,

long after the user deletes them. The files are

forgotten, but not gone. Deleting a file

does not really delete the file. It merely

hides it from view so it no longer shows up

in a directory of files. “It’s like getting an

unlisted telephone number,” says

Boudromian. ‘The listing may not appear in

the phone directory, but the phone can still

ring if someone knows the right number.”

When a user deletes a file, the computer

stops listing it in the file directory and

marks the disk space as available for

reuse. Another file may eventually be

written atop the same space, obliterating

any traces of the original. But as hard

disk capacities swell into the gigabytes,

the space may not be

overwritten for a very long

time.

In that limbo period

when the deleted

file is undead,

any moderately

skilled

computer

user can

locate, restore and read the deleted file by

using such commands as “undelete” or

“unerase,” which are common features of

many software utilities.

The computer’s ability to remember

deleted files is most often a good thing,

especially when important files have been

deleted by accident. Every day, computer

technicians get frantic calls from people

who have inadvertently erased the big presentation

due the next morning, or whose

children have erased those boring ETRADE

folders to make room on the disk

for games. At times like these, being able to

resurrect the files from the dead is a lifesaver.

There are a number of utility programs

available that have an “unerase” capability,

 to be used both in emergencies and as a

precaution against accidents. An example is

Norton Utilities which, for $75, performs a

variety of password-protected security

functions. It can be set to blank the screen

and lock the computer if the user steps

away for a minute or to prevent unauthorized

users from booting the machine. But as

with most tools, “unerase” programs can be

dangerous in the wrong hands. To truly

erase a file and prevent it from being recovered,

one must write over it, or wipe it.

There are several utility programs available

that enable the user to overwrite a single

file or the entire disk, or anything in

between. Such programs typically have

apocalyptic names, such as Shredder,

Flame File and Burn. Similar disk-wiping

tools are often included in PC utility programs

and encryption programs, but others

are available for downloading without

charge from the Internet. These programs

typically hash over the designated disk

space with meaningless patterns of ones and

zeroes, instead of the meaningful patterns of

ones and zeroes that represent the original

information. That process renders the

deleted file unreadable in most cases.

The key phrase is “in most cases.” Just as

with encryption and writers of virus programs,

there are people working just as

hard to recover wiped files as there are

people working to wipe them. (These days,

spies have developed ways to reverse a

simple, one-pass wipe with ones and

zeroes and retrieve the original file.) It is

therefore, smart practice to wipe sensitive

files many times with random characters,

which, in theory, obliterates the original

file and makes it unrecoverable. Unless, of

course, the file has already been copied

onto backup tapes. In the digital world, the

original file may be shredded, while one or

more perfect copies can exist elsewhere.

An even more bulletproof way to render

files unreadable is to encrypt them.

Encryption scrambles a disk or file, including

pictures (or a telephone conversation, or

a credit card sent over the Internet), so it can

be opened and read only by the person

holding the proper key, or password. The

strength of the encryption is often measured

by the length of the key, which is in

tum measured in bits. In general, each

additional bit of key length doubles the

amount of effort needed for unauthorized

users to break the key.

Even weak encryption (with a 40-bit key

length, for example) is sufficient to deter

most casual snoops. Breaking a 56-bit key

requires computing resources that are beyond

the reach of all but the most determined code

breakers, and even then it can require days of

sustained attacks by a supercomputer just to

crack one email message. Some encryption

programs use 128-bit keys, which, according

to Jacques Hakimian, IT consultant at

Dialog, are “infinitely unbreakable, at least in

our lifetimes, even taking into consideration

the predictable advances in computing

power.” In other words, it is more secure than

the strongest physical vault ever built.

And then there is email. People type all

sorts of embarrassing, confidential or

intemperate words in email in the mistaken

belief that such messages are private. In reality,

messages sent by email are less secure

than messages scribbled on a postcard. The

way the Internet mail system works, an

email message passes through several

exchange points, or nodes, on its way to the

recipient’s computer. The system administrator

at each hand-off point can in theory

read the message, copy it, reroute it or tamper

with il. If the message originates or

terminates in a corporate computer system,

chances are high that a copy will persist

in the company’s backup tapes or disk

for days, at least.

In the end, there are only two ways to

keep information confidential in the digital

age. One is to use strong encryption.

October 19, 2000 0 comments
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Since its first edition emerged on the newsstands in 1999, Executive Magazine has been dedicated to providing its readers with the most up-to-date local and regional business news. Executive is a monthly business magazine that offers readers in-depth analyses on the Lebanese world of commerce, covering all the major sectors – from banking, finance, and insurance to technology, tourism, hospitality, media, and retail.

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