company:gibson

  • CES 2019 Show Guide
    https://hackernoon.com/ces-2019-show-guide-45544bf1d853?source=rss----3a8144eabfe3---4

    Talking refrigerators, flying taxis, supercute robots and more!Me hugging my favorite family robot last year, KeeckerThe Consumer Electronics Show aka CES is finally upon us, and for the 182,000 people about to descend upon the world’s largest #technology show, they’re in for a fun week. The show officially runs Tuesday, January 8 through Friday, January 11, but press begin arriving today to preview the hottest gadgets.Some mainstays are noticeably absent this year like Gibson who had a full roster of rock stars last year including Tommy Shaw of Styx and Iggy Azalea. It’s also not clear if anything is going to top Intel’s breathtaking reveal of drones hauntingly dropping down on the Bellagio fountains. It could very well be a quiet year where the major players sit this one out and leave room (...)

    #venture-capital #blockchain #bitcoin #crypto

  • Le fabricant de guitares iconiques Gibson connaît des difficultés financières
    http://www.konbini.com/fr/entertainment-2/guitares-gibson-bientot-faillite

    Gibson, le célèbre fabricant de guitares et de matériel audio est au plus mal financièrement. La faillite n’est pas encore là, mais semble inévitable.

    Qu’elle soit électrique, acoustique ou basse, il y a de forte chance que vous, si vous êtes guitariste, ayez déjà eu entre les mains, une gratte de la marque Gibson, et particulièrement son modèle phare, Les Paul. C’est en tout cas le cas pour une flopée d’artistes rock tels que B.B. King, Eric Clapton, The Edge, Slash, Bob Dylan, Keith Richards, Pete Townshend ou encore Mark Knopfler. Tant d’ambassadeurs qui pourtant n’empêchent pas actuellement la société basée à Nashville de souffrir de difficultés financières. Créée en 1902, la société basée à Nashville dans l’État du Tennessee serait en effet proche de la faillite après 116 ans de bons et loyaux services.

    La nouvelle nous vient du journal local Nashville Post qui a relevé le communiqué du patron de l’entreprise Henry Juszkiewicz. Conscient de la situation, il a affirmé qu’il voulait éviter la faillite à tout prix. Pour ce faire, il devra restructurer ses dettes et trouver de nouveaux investisseurs. Un redressement qui ne sera néanmoins pas une mince affaire puisque l’actuel PDG se heurte actuellement à un bras de fer avec ses créanciers au sujet de mauvaises décisions commerciales passées.

  • America manages to infuriate both Sunni and Shia — FT.com
    https://next.ft.com/content/aa1a17dc-3255-11e6-bda0-04585c31b153

    But the reasons for Iran’s disaffection are very different. Euphoria greeted the lifting of punishing international sanctions in exchange for Tehran agreeing to externally monitored curbs on its nuclear programme. Iranians saw the chance to re-enter the world and reintegrate with its markets. Foreign investors scented an emerging markets bonanza of a scale last seen when the Soviet empire collapsed.

    That optimism has largely evaporated, and the reason goes by the prosaic name of the Office of Foreign Assets Control, a branch of the US Treasury with extraordinary power and extraterritorial reach. International sanctions related to Iran’s nuclear programme have been lifted but #Ofac maintains in place robust “secondary sanctions” on individuals and entities the US accuses of “state-sponsored terrorism”, chief among them the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC), the regime’s enforcer at home and strike force abroad. Ofac’s sanctions brought Iran to the negotiating table but the economic dislocation they caused enabled the IRGC to build a business empire. Any foreign investor, or bank financing deals with even tangential ties to the revolutionary guard, risks being shut out of the US banking system.

    [...]

    As Adam Smith of Gibson Dunn, a leading US law firm, explains, Ofac’s power is greater than its formal regulatory role suggests, based on “ambiguity” that makes banks in particular do more than what the law strictly requires. “They have educated international banks to do this,” he says. “We don’t live in a purely legal world.”

    Part of that education has been through punitive fines for breaking Iran sanctions, such as the nearly $9bn on BNP Paribas or around $1bn on Standard Chartered. The risk of being cut off from US credit markets is a formidable deterrent to any contact with Iran. “There is no institution so big that it can’t be de-banked,” says Mr Smith.

    Some deals, such as Tehran’s plan to purchase more than 100 Airbus jetliners, are supposedly protected by the nuclear accord. Even that deal, requiring billions in credit, is on hold.

    Ofac staff, Mr Smith points out, are the “same people who have spent their entire professional lives trying to eliminate access to Iran … and the banks steer clear of them. It’s a dissonance problem as much as a policy one.”

    What makes the problem even more intractable is the number of actors, of which the US executive is just one (Ofac accounted for only about $1bn of the BNP Paribas penalty). Aggressive actors on Iran include the US Congress, different layers of the judiciary, state banking regulators, states that divest from companies with links to Iran — the list goes on. Iranian officials looking at Washington probably find their own famously convoluted structure of power straightforward by comparison. But if their leaders feel swindled by the historic nuclear deal, then its future is moot.

    #Etats-Unis #hors_la_loi #lois

  • Les guitares Gibson ont trop saigné le bois malgache - LeMonde.fr
    http://www.lemonde.fr/planete/article/2012/01/21/les-guitares-gibson-ont-trop-saigne-le-bois-malgache_1632729_3244.html#xtor=

    Avec l’ONG Friends of the Earth, elle mène campagne contre le fabricant américain de guitares Gibson, qui utilise, selon elle, du bois de rose abattu illégalement sur l’île de Madagascar.

    Le légendaire fabricant d’instruments de musique est aussi accusé de faire pression sur le Congrès américain pour qu’il annule certaines dispositions du Lacey Act. Cette loi, adoptée en 2008 pour prévenir l’importation de bois précieux illégalement abattus, impose aux acquéreurs de déclarer la provenance de leur marchandise et de prouver leur légalité. A défaut, ceux-ci risquent de lourdes amendes.

    #déforestation #bois_illégal #facture_instrumentale

  • Gibson Guitar becomes cause celebre for conservatives
    http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/nation/la-na-gibson-guitar-20110928,0,5477567.story

    This was a raid on Gibson Guitar.

    Annexe :
    http://unanimus.over-blog.com/article-petition-guitares-gibson-et-mafia-du-bois-precieux-music

    Gibson, le fabricant américain de référence pour les guitares utilise du bois de rose et d’ébène pour la fabrication de ses célèbres instruments. Les bois précieux utilisés, menacés de disparition, sont protégés par la loi contre le vol. C’est la raison pour laquelle Gibson achète celui-ci auprès de véritables mafias qui pratiquent la coupe illégale des arbres à Madagascar et en Inde.

    Tous à vos #Telecasters !