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‘Stay wary’ despite Comelec elimination of Smartmatic

PNA file photo of Comelec balloting dry run

“Remain cautious,” advocates of clean-elections alert Filipinos despite Comelec’s disqualification of their hated Smartmatic from any more Philippine balloting. They cite three reasons:

One, Comelec’s ruling shuns on mere technicality allegations of Smartmatic fraud in Election 2022.

Two, Smartmatic can tie up with another automated election system (AES) supplier to circumvent the blacklisting.

Three, the poll body continues to ignore calls for transparent hybrid AES.

Comelec junked Wednesday two of three anti-Smartmatic petitions. The first was filed in June by former information-communications secretary Eliseo Rio, ex-Comelec commissioner Gus Lagman and ex-Finance Executives Institute president Franklin Ysaac, nicknamed Truth & Transparency Trio.

TNT Trio cited breaches of the 2008 AES Law. Specifically, transmission of precinct results to a Comelec Transparency Server before printing, unsubstantiated flood of 20 million-plus votes (37 percent of those cast) within the first hour of counting and use of only one private Internet Protocol address instead of individual public IP addresses in 20,300 precincts as early as 1 p.m. on Election Day.

The poll body upheld its law department on this matter. Voting five to one with one absent, commissioners said Smartmatic’s eligibility was not at issue when TNT Trio’s petitions was filed because AES bidding for Election 2025 had yet to commence this month.

In eliminating Smartmatic, Comelec said it has already answered in various forums TNT Trio’s accusations. But Rio countered that the poll body should have formalized such replies in its resolution.

Elated, Lagman told this column: “There are more reasons [to remove Smartmatic] than already reported in the media.” While commissioner in 2011-2012 he pushed in vain for hybrid AES: manual precinct balloting and counting, followed by electronic transmission and canvassing.

Ysaac posted online: “We propose hybrid system to save billions [of pesos] and for election integrity. Comelec’s resolution also allowed opening of [2022] ballot boxes. We are prepared for [it] and will announce only if security and integrity of ballots are assured. Hindi pa tapos ang laban.”

The second petition concerns allegations that first lady Liza Araneta-Marcos had met with Smartmatic execs on 2022 Election Eve. In a September petition, former congressman Glenn Chong named two “technical men” – now a Cabinet secretary and a Malacañang undersecretary – picked to confer with Smartmatic president Roger Piñate. Chong cited dates of Piñate’s presence in Manila.

Chong, a lawyer, foresees legal maneuvers in the works. He said Smartmatic can get a court injunction in time for opening on Dec. 12 of 2025 AES bids. The Venezuelan is one of four bidders.

The poll body considered instead a third petition concerning public trust in elections. It cited a US justice department case against former Comelec chief Andres Bautista, presently in America seeking political asylum.

Bautista was charged September in Florida for $4-million bribery. Four unidentified Smartmatic execs supposedly conspired in foreign corrupt practices, money laundering and wire fraud for Bautista to open shell companies.

Comelec said it was cooperating in the exposé by Bautista’s estranged wife. Smartmatic repeatedly denies criminality, saying it has never been indicted in the US.

Retired Colonel Leonardo Odoño (PMA 1964) filed that third anti-Smartmatic petition. He said reports on Bautista’s bribery dent the credibility of Comelec and elections.

“The charges against Smartmatic and former chairman Bautista are of public knowledge and tend to cause speculation and distrust in the integrity of the electoral process,” Comelec acknowledged.

Chairman George Garcia and Commissioners Socorro Inting, Rey Bulay, Ernesto Maceda Jr. and Nelson Celis formed the majority. Marlon Casquejo is on leave. In dissenting, Commissioner Aimee Ferolino said the majority deprived Smartmatic the chance to answer the US charges and news reports.

Odoño told this column that he will closely observe Comelec’s bidding this December for a new AES provider: “I’ve been briefed about how bidders in government projects dodge blacklisting and other rules by secretly combining.”

Lawyer Melchor Magdamo, who has opposed Smartmatic since the first AES bidding in 2009, named a bidder that purportedly has no track record in AES anywhere. Magdamo resigned as Comelec officer when Smartmatic was picked for the 2010 election despite bidding anomalies.

Smartmatic was then selling for the first time the precinct count optical scanner, which its website previously bad-mouthed as having “unreliable results that could cause civil unrest.” The firm also sold or leased PCOS machines for Elections 2013, 2016, 2019 and 2022.

Former UP professor Rene Azurin remarked: “Disqualification may be just a ploy. Another entity may replace it, but the same actors in disguise. The power to manipulate elections is not something to be easily given up. Remember that Comelec officials have always been complicit in election cheating.”

In his book “Hacking Our Democracy,” Azurin detailed technical anomalies in the first three electronic polls.

Registered in Barbados before 2000, Smartmatic used to operate from the Florida home garage of founder Antonio Mugica’s father. Since 2010, Chong estimates it has earned P25 billion from voting machines alone, plus P5 billion in accessories and logistics. Under a new name, SGO Ltd., it now holds office in a nine story building in London.

* * *

Catch “Sapol” radio show, Saturdays, 8-10 a.m., dwIZ (882-AM)

            “Gotcha: An Exposé on the Philippine Government” is available as e-book and paperback. Get a free copy of “Chapter 1: Beijing’s Bullying and Duplicity”. Simply subscribe to my newsletter HERE. Book orders also accepted there.

Anim na kalagayang nagpapabigat sa buhay

Anim na kalagayang nagpapabigat sa buhay

HINDI lang karapatan kundi tungkulin pa nga ng tao maging maligaya. Pero may anim na kalagayang nagpapabigat sa buhay, noon pa sinuri nina Socrates, Plato at Aristotle. Sa librong “Life is Hard” pinapaliwanag ni modernong pilosopo Dr. Kieran Setiya ng Massachusetts Institute of Technology kung paano mapapaligaya ang buhay maski nabibigatan.

Isa-isa niyang tinalakay ang anim na sitwasyon:

0 Kapansanan at kirot – maaring mula pagsilang o dahil sa sakit, aksidente o labanan ang kapansanan. Mara­ming kuwento kung paano ito nilampasan ng bata man o matanda para mabuhay nang normal at kontento. Iba ang kirot na matagal nang pabalik-balik. Dapat lunasan.

0 Panglaw sa pag-iisa – Mabuti mapag-isa paminsan-minsan. Pero hindi dapat ito ginagawang parusa sa kapwa. Importante sa tao ang pagmamahal at pagkakaibigan.

0 Hinagpis – Huwag maliitin ang lungkot ng namatayan, nawalan ng mahal sa buhay. Alalayan ang nagluluksa para makabangon.

 

0 Kabiguan – masanay na hindi lahat ng plano ay makakamit at mapagtatagumpayan. Nakakatatag ng loob ang kabiguan.

0 Kawalan ng katarungan – Dapat labanan ang inhustisya sa sarili at sa kapwa. Ituwid agad kung ikaw ang gumawa nito. Magagalak ka sa resulta.

0 Kawalang-saysay – nagkakahalaga ang buhay at nagkakaroon ng pag-asa kung magapi ang unang lima, lalo na ang kawalan ng hustisya.

Pinagdiinan ni Setiya ang pakiramdam ng pag-asa. Lahat ng tao ay dumaranas ng isa o mahigit na kabigatan. Minsan sabay-sabay pa nga ang anim. Kung hindi maiiwasan ang naturang kabigatan, paano mapapaganda ang buhay? Sa pagtutulungan at pag-aalalayan, nagkakahawaan ng pag-asa. Sumasaya dahil bumubuti ang isa’t isa.

* * *

Makinig sa Sapol, Sabado, 8-10 ng umaga, DWIZ (882-AM).

Mula sa bank robbery ay leksiyon sa negosyo

Mahiwagang bank account

Mahiwagang bank account

stock image

Ipagpalagay na napanalunan mo ito sa patimpalak. Tuwing umaga ide-deposito sa banko mo ang P86,400 para gastahin. Pero may alituntunin:

(1) Babawiin lahat ang hindi mo magasta sa loob ng isang araw;

(2) Hindi mo maililipat ang pera sa ibang bank account;

(3) Maari mo lang itong gastahin;

(4) Paggising sa umaga, de-depositohan ka ng bagong P86,400;

(5) Anumang oras maari ihinto ang papremyo nang walang abiso.

Kapag sarado na ang bank account—game over—hindi ka na makakapagbukas ng bago. Ano’ng gagawin mo?

 

Ibibili mo ang sarili ng lahat nang nais, ‘di ba? Hindi lang para sa sarili kundi sa mga minamahal at inaalagaan. Gagastahan din ang mga taong hindi kilala dahil hindi mo naman kayang ubusin ang pera, ‘di ba? Sisikapin mong gas­tahin bawat sentimo kasi alam mong mapupunuan muli kinabukasan, tama?

Totoo itong patimpalak. Bawat isa sa atin ay ginantimpalaan na. Hindi lang natin batid.

Ang premyo ay panahon:

(1) Araw-araw meron tayong 86,400 segundong biyaya ng buhay;

(2) Hindi nadaragdagan ang premyong ‘yon sa pagtulog sa gabi;

(3) Naglalaho ang hindi magamit na panahon sa araw na ‘yon;

(4) Wala na ang kahapon;

(5) Tuwing umaga muli pinupunuan ang account, pero maari ‘yon isara ng banko anumang oras.

Ano’ng gagawin mo sa 86,400 segundo na mas maha­laga sa P86,400? Lubusin ang bawat sandali. Alagaan ang sarili, maging maligaya, magmahal nang lubos, namnamin ang buhay. Huwag umangal na tumatanda ka; maraming hindi nakakaranas nu’n.

(Mula sa internet. Hindi alam ang umakda. Isina-Tagalog ko)

* * *

Makinig sa Sapol, Sabado, 8-10 ng umaga, DWIZ (882-AM).

Mula sa bank robbery ay leksiyon sa negosyo

Volunteer campaigners repel traditional vote-buyers

Volunteer campaigners repel traditional vote-buyers

stock image

written on May 6, 2022

 

Huge sums will change hands these next few days. As campaigning ends, national candidates will deliver bags of cash to local counterparts. The latter’s task is retail cheating. A P1,000-bill or two will be given to the voter with instuctions on which names to shade in the ballot. Voters will be fed and bused to polling precincts. The uncooperative will be paid off too to stay home on Election Day, rather than vote for the opponents. Dirty money can also be sent online.

Politicos devise ways to ensure that bribed voters comply. The old “lansadera” scheme in handwritten ballots can be applied in voter receipts under the automated election system. The purpose of that receipt (Voter-Verified Paper Audit Trail) is for the voter to ascertain if the machine read his choices right. But in “lansadera” of, say, a hundred bribees, the first in line drops a fake receipt in the box on his way out of the precinct, pocketing the genuine one. This is shown to the paymaster as proof of compliance, and is then secretly marked and passed on to the next in line. That second paid voter will drop that marked genuine receipt in the box and hand over his new one to the paymaster. And so on till everybody has cast the command votes.

Another ploy is cruder. A corrupted poll watcher is trained to quickly spot which candidate the voter chose. If it’s the opponent, the watcher secretly will smudge or tear the ballot he is assisting the voter to feed to the machine. That ballot thus spoiled, the voter is given one spare to try again. Within the first few hours, the precinct can run out of spare ballots.

The Comelec will need to train precinct inspector-teachers to tell real voter receipts from counterfeits. And to closely monitor goings-on around the vote counting machines. The old modus of photographing the ballot with a camera-pen is difficult to pull off. Still, precinct officers must always be a step ahead of malicious politicos.

Some voters’ presidential choice is based on the father’s imagined golden legacy. Others even believe their candidate, if victorious, will hand out wealth. Hardships from pandemic lockdowns and social media disinformation must have magnified the allure of fool’s gold.

Old habits die hard. For local candidates, voters look for what they personally can gain. Hence the Three M’s: Matulungin (helpful), Malalapitan (approachable), Mapagbigay (generous).

In the city where I live, a mayoral aspirant abets those M’s. While falsely accusing the re-electionist incumbent of graft, he promises free medicines, free market stalls, free rides, free this, free that – picturing citizens as freeloaders. Forgotten is how his and 15 other rock quarries in the Marikina mountain watershed caused flash floods in November 2020. Lives were lost; homes and shops submerged; cars, furniture, appliances and personal records buried in mud in five cities. Overlooked as well is that one of his congressional bets and financiers had swindled the government of P12.5 billion in pricey pandemic supplies through a Chinese state agent in 2020-2021.

The Good Book teaches three other M’s in choosing leaders. Jethro counseled son-in-law Moses about “men who fear God, trustworthy men who hate dishonest gain.” May takot sa Diyos, Mapagtitiwalaan, Matuwid.

Being volunteer-powered, Leni Robredo’s campaign frees her from big spending and indebtedness to donors. People- and sector-centered issues are brought to the fore. Voters own the platform. It is a glimpse of a Leni administration: transparent, accountable, inclusive.

Leni’s candidacy is the tipping point in Philippine politics. It renews faith in government. Young advocates and old activists, mega-wokes and undecideds, even formerly apolitical folk, people of different social classes feel one in objective.

Volunteers intend to defeat organized money with organized people. A cultural revolution has sparked. National Artists, showbiz stars and local untapped talents freely join. Masterful storytelling; music and dance by doctors, lawyers, engineers; and reinterpretation of local customs highlight provincial rallies.

Leni’s volunteers reject vertical hierarchical politics, emboldening ordinary people to overpower traditional dynastic pols.

Sinovac safety efficacy and price still need clarifying

* * *

Catch “Sapol” radio show, Saturdays, 8-10 a.m., dwIZ (882-AM)

            “Gotcha: An Exposé on the Philippine Government” is available as e-book and paperback. Get a free copy of “Chapter 1: Beijing’s Bullying and Duplicity”. Simply subscribe to my newsletter HERE. Book orders also accepted there.

Sinovac safety efficacy and price still need clarifying

Christmas in our isles, a long enduring feast (First published 1978, TV Times magazine)

Christmas in our isles, a long enduring feast (First published 1978, TV Times magazine)

photo from Philippine News Agency

written on December 22, 2021

 

Despite eight petitions against Bongbong Marcos’ presidential run, his name will be in the ballot. Printing starts in five weeks. But Comelec proceedings and appeals to the Supreme Court will take months. A cliffhanger on Election Day, May 9, 2022, is if BBM’s votes shall be counted.

Preliminaries were slow. The Comelec Second Division allowed BBM’s lawyer’s delay despite the poll body’s “non-extendible” deadlines. As recipient of the first petition, it has yet to consolidate seven others, including those raffled off to the First Division. One petition, supported by a second, wants BBM’s certificate of candidacy (COC) nullified. Three aim to disqualify him for criminal past. Two seek to remove him as nuisance candidate. The eighth questions his party nomination.

Nullification of candidacy seems open and shut. BBM perjured twice in his COC, which voids it under the Omnibus Election Code, petitioners allege. First, BBM misclaimed under oath that he was “eligible for the office I seek to be elected to.” Second, he denied having been “found liable for any offense which carries the accessory penalty of perpetual disqualification to hold public office.”

Records show otherwise. BBM was convicted by the Court of Appeals’ final judgment in October 1997 of tax violation. He did not file income tax returns for 1982-1985 when he was Ilocos vice governor then governor. The CA inexplicably had deleted the lower court’s other verdict of tax evasion and penalty of imprisonment. Still it found BBM guilty of non-filing for four consecutive years. It ordered him to pay tax deficiencies, surcharges and fine of P2,000 per year for 1982-1984, and P30,000 for 1985.

The National Internal Revenue Code perpetually disqualifies convicts from public office. The Election Code debars candidacies of convicts of crimes involving “moral turpitude.”

Retired chief justice Artemio Panganiban quoted jurisprudence in his recent Inquirer column to define moral turpitude. It is “everything done contrary to justice, modesty or good morals; an act of baseness, vileness or depravity in the private and social duties which a man owes.”

The implication on BBM is stark. “If his COC is cancelled because of material misrepresentation, it is void from the start and he was never a valid candidate,” retired Supreme Court justice Antonio Carpio replied to a query from The STAR. “He cannot be substituted because he was never a candidate.”

Panganiban differentiated between disqualification of candidacy and COC cancellation. Disqualification is filed for offenses against the Election Code. It allows substitution by another candidate with the same surname from the same party. But “if the candidacy of BBM is cancelled or denied due course, he cannot be substituted because such cancellation or denial legally means that the COC never existed. Thus, BBM votes will not be counted.”

*      *      *

Crisis is opportunity for market endearment. Cebu Pacific fully refunded its customers for flight cancellations during the pandemic. It returned P8.2 billion cash, not vouchers or digital travel fund, from January 2020 to September 30, 2021. After completing refund requests and resolving all cases filed at the Civil Aeronautics Board, the airline views this as a competitive advantage.

The pandemic disrupted flights of all Philippine carriers. Complaints at the CAB skyrocketed in 2020 and continued to soar this year, according to a STAR special report. The 2,691 cases involving domestic flights in 2020 was more than three times the 712 in pre-crisis 2019. Nine in ten of the complaints in 2020 were for refunds. Cebu Pacific lost no time settling all its obligations.

Also despite the pandemic, Cebu Pacific won investors’ trust. It stabilized its future with fresh capital, $250 million from IFC and Indigo. It signed a P16-billion ten-year syndicated loan with domestic banks. A stock rights offer in March 2021 raised P12.5 billion.

Remaining liquid, Cebu Pacific continued to offer affordable service and made a digital pivot to make flying easy. This enhanced passenger trust and loyalty, said CEO Lance Gokongwei: “We recognize that we can contribute to a higher purpose. It is incumbent upon us to help uplift the lives of people.”

Sinovac safety efficacy and price still need clarifying

* * *

Catch “Sapol” radio show, Saturdays, 8-10 a.m., dwIZ (882-AM)

            “Gotcha: An Exposé on the Philippine Government” is available as e-book and paperback. Get a free copy of “Chapter 1: Beijing’s Bullying and Duplicity”. Simply subscribe to my newsletter HERE. Book orders also accepted there.

Sinovac safety efficacy and price still need clarifying

Admin, opposition both split 3 ways for president

Admin, opposition both split 3 ways for president

written on August 11, 2021

 

Going by early political posturing, both the administration and the opposition are split three ways for the presidency in Election 2022. But it won’t stay that way, as something’s gotta give.

Bandied as administration presidential candidate are Sara Duterte, Bong Go and Manny Pacquiao. For the opposition: Leni Robredro, Isko Moreno and Ping Lacson.

Varied factors will make them stay in the race or fall out. Plans hinge on local kingpins’ support, campaign machinery and money, pick of VP and senatorial running mates, platform, consistent survey ranking, even political convenience.

Present poll frontrunner Inday Sara has yet to declare intent. But “Run, Inday, Run” tarps have been posted in cities and sitios as early as Feb. The multimillion-peso cost and coverage entice politicos to join her bandwagon. Her Davao regional coalition has inked local alliances in Luzon and the Visayas.

Being paired off with Sara as VP are Martin Romualdez of the Visayas and Bongbong Marcos or Gilbert Teodoro of Luzon. Any one of them will bolster the geographic tandem for the mayor of Davao City in Mindanao. A complication: Marcos also ambitions to be president.

Sara’s father President Rody Duterte professes distaste for female presidencies. It may only be to soften resistance to his questionable VP run. Duterte desires the second highest position for purported “unfinished business” and continued immunity from suit, including drug war killings. Loyalists hijacked for Duterte the ruling Partido Demokratiko Pilipino-Lakas ng Bayan from day-to-day officers and longtime members. He was then endorsed as VP candidate with free choice of his anointed “presidentiable.”

The Duterte loyalists float non-member Sara’s name as the party’s presidential standard-bearer. An offspring-parent tandem for the two highest positions is unprecedented in the Philippines where the Constitution forbids political dynasties. Disdainful voters may junk both Dutertes for good measure. The loyalists are putting up Senator Bong Go as alternative standard-bearer. Posters of Go, Duterte’s longtime aide, have also proliferated since Feb. Marcos, meanwhile, has been invited into PDP-Laban; ironic since it was founded in 1983 to oppose his dictator-father and namesake Ferdinand Marcos.

Senator Manny Pacquiao, from whom the PDP-Laban presidency was wrested, is expected to fight back. He, too, has long planned a presidential bid; videos heroize him online. Duterte frequently belittles Pacquiao’s leadership ability; on cue, social media trolls bash the world boxing champion.

Senator Koko Pimentel, PDP-Laban executive vice chairman, supports Pacquiao. As heir to the party founder and his father, the late Senate president Nene Pimentel, he is said to hold its official accreditation. He had won a Comelec case for it. He can use it to contest as fake any nomination by Duterte’s loyalists during the filing of candidacies in Oct. 1-10.

Opposition factions know that unity is their only chance against the Duterte combine. Yet they ignore 1Sambayan’s plea for a common slate.

Senator Ping Lacson presents his candidacy as a third option, separate from the opposition and administration. The noontime tv variety show popularity of his VP runningmate, Senate President Tito Sotto, can boost his campaign. Lacson doggedly exposes corruption and abuse; but he has lost the presidential race once, in 2004.

Former Duterte ally and deposed Speaker Pantaleon Alvarez has offered Lacson chairmanship of Partido Reporma. Sotto is the highest sitting member of the Nationalist People’s Coalition, the second largest party. Together, Lacson and Sotto have the longest experience in public service. Their senatorial ticket consists of reelectionists and returnees, mostly independents and some aligned with the administration.

Vice President Leni Robredo has yet to choose between the presidency or a local position in Bicol. Her closest aides promote her as opposition standard-bearer. But her Liberal Party is in tatters. That ruling party in 2010-2016 was unable to put up a complete 12-man senatorial ticket in the 2019 midterm election; all its eight bets lost.

Leni decries Duterte’s failures: high joblessness, economic slump due to sloppy pandemic response, rising food prices and acquiescence to China sea aggression. But her amplification of issues is one thing. Allegedly, online bashing by administration troll armies in the past five years has pulled down her popularity. Why she did nothing about it is a big question.

Lacson has disclosed Leni’s rejection of his unity formula. Under that scheme they would both file candidacies for president, but one whose survey ratings subsequently falter should back out and support the other. Fair enough. But Leni reportedly said that once she enters, she will finish the race whatever the outcome.

Survey popularity buoys up Isko Moreno. Sensing congressmen-members’ leanings towards Sara Duterte, the Manila mayor has left the National Unity Party. He also wants to dissociate from the oligarch that finances NUP. His jump into Aksyon Demokratiko of the late senator Raul Roco supposedly fits his stand that “the presidency is not inherited.”

Sinovac safety efficacy and price still need clarifying

Sinovac safety efficacy and price still need clarifying

* * *

Catch “Sapol” radio show, Saturdays, 8-10 a.m., dwIZ (882-AM)

            “Gotcha: An Exposé on the Philippine Government” is available as e-book and paperback. Get a free copy of “Chapter 1: Beijing’s Bullying and Duplicity”. Simply subscribe to my newsletter HERE. Book orders also accepted there.

Sinovac safety efficacy and price still need clarifying

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3.2 (a)Be courteous. You agree that you will not threaten or verbally abuse jariusbondoc.com columnists and other jariusbondoc.com community Members, use defamatory language, or deliberately disrupt discussions with repetitive messages, meaningless messages or “spam.”

 

3.2 (b) Use respectful language. Like any community, the Feedback Sections will flourish only when our Members feel welcome and safe. You agree not to use language that abuses or discriminates on the basis of race, religion, nationality, gender, sexual preference, age, region, disability, etc. Hate speech of any kind is grounds for immediate and permanent suspension of access to all or part of the Service.

 

3.2 (c) Debate, but don’t attack. In a community full of opinions and preferences, people always disagree. jariusbondoc.com encourages active discussions and welcomes heated debate in our Feedback Sections. But personal attacks are a direct violation of this Agreement and are grounds for immediate and permanent suspension of access to all or part of the Service.

 

3.3 The Feedback Sections shall be used only in a noncommercial manner. You shall not, without the express approval of jariusbondoc.com, distribute or otherwise publish any material containing any solicitation of funds, advertising or solicitation for goods or services.

 

3.4 You are solely responsible for the content of your messages. However, while jariusbondoc.com does not and cannot review every message posted by you on the Forums and is not responsible for the content of these messages, jariusbondoc.com reserves the right to delete, move, or edit messages that it, in its sole discretion, deems abusive, defamatory, obscene, in violation of copyright or trademark laws, or otherwise unacceptable.

 

3.5 You acknowledge that any submissions you make to the Service (i.e., user-generated content including but not limited to: text, video, audio and photographs) (each, a “Submission”) may be edited, removed, modified, published, transmitted, and displayed by jariusbondoc.com and you waive any moral rights you may have in having the material altered or changed in a manner not agreeable to you. You grant jariusbondoc.com a perpetual, nonexclusive, world-wide, royalty free, sub-licensable license to the Submissions, which includes without limitation the right for jariusbondoc.com or any third party it designates, to use, copy, transmit, excerpt, publish, distribute, publicly display, publicly perform, create derivative works of, host, index, cache, tag, encode, modify and adapt (including without limitation the right to adapt to streaming, downloading, broadcast, mobile, digital, thumbnail, scanning or other technologies) in any form or media now known or hereinafter developed, any Submission posted by you on or to jariusbondoc.com or any other website owned by it, including any Submission posted on jariusbondoc.com through a third party.

 

3.6 By submitting an entry to jariusbondoc.com’s Readers’ Corner, you are consenting to its display on the site and for related online and offline promotional uses.

 

  1. ACCESS AND AVAILABILITY OF SERVICE AND LINKS

 

4.1 jariusbondoc.com contains links to other related World Wide Web Internet sites, resources, and sponsors of jariusbondoc.com. Since jariusbondoc.com is not responsible for the availability of these outside resources, or their contents, you should direct any concerns regarding any external link to the site administrator or Webmaster of such site.

 

  1. REPRESENTATIONS AND WARRANTIES

 

5.1 You represent, warrant and covenant (a) that no materials of any kind submitted through your account will (i) violate, plagiarize, or infringe upon the rights of any third party, including copyright, trademark, privacy or other personal or proprietary rights; or (ii) contain libelous or otherwise unlawful material; and (b) that you are at least thirteen years old. You hereby indemnify, defend and hold harmless jariusbondoc.com, and all officers, directors, owners, agents, information providers, affiliates, licensors and licensees (collectively, the “Indemnified Parties”) from and against any and all liability and costs, including, without limitation, reasonable attorneys’ fees, incurred by the Indemnified Parties in connection with any claim arising out of any breach by you or any user of your account of this Agreement or the foregoing representations, warranties and covenants. You shall cooperate as fully as reasonably required in the defense of any such claim. jariusbondoc.com reserves the right, at its own expense, to assume the exclusive defense and control of any matter subject to indemnification by you.

 

5.2 jariusbondoc.com does not represent or endorse the accuracy or reliability of any advice, opinion, statement, or other information displayed, uploaded, or distributed through the Service by any user, information provider or any other person or entity. You acknowledge that any reliance upon any such opinion, advice, statement, memorandum, or information shall be at your sole risk. THE SERVICE AND ALL DOWNLOADABLE SOFTWARE ARE DISTRIBUTED ON AN “AS IS” BASIS WITHOUT WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EITHER EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING, WITHOUT LIMITATION, WARRANTIES OF TITLE OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. YOU HEREBY ACKNOWLEDGE THAT USE OF THE SERVICE IS AT YOUR SOLE RISK.

 

  1. COMMUNICATIONS BETWEEN JARIUSBONDOC.COM AND MEMBERS

 

6.1 If you indicate on your registration form that you want to receive such information, jariusbondoc.com, its owners and assigns, will allow certain third party vendors to provide you with information about products and services.

 

6.2 jariusbondoc.com reserves the right to send electronic mail to you for the purpose of informing you of changes or additions to the Service.

 

6.3 jariusbondoc.com reserves the right to disclose information about your usage and demographics, provided that it will not reveal your personal identity in connection with the disclosure of such information. Advertisers and/or Licensees on our Web site may collect and share information about you only if you indicate your acceptance. For more information please read the Privacy Policy of jariusbondoc.com.

 

6.4 jariusbondoc.com may contact you via e-mail regarding your participation in user surveys, asking for feedback on the Website and existing or prospective products and services. This information will be used to improve our Website and better understand our users, and any information we obtain in such surveys will not be shared with third parties, except in aggregate form.

 

  1. TERMINATION

 

 

7.1 jariusbondoc.com may, in its sole discretion, terminate or suspend your access to all or part of the Service for any reason, including, without limitation, breach or assignment of this Agreement.

 

  1. MISCELLANEOUS

 

8.1 This Agreement has been made in and shall be construed and enforced in accordance with the Republic of the Philippines law. Any action to enforce this agreement shall be brought in the courts located in Manila, Philippines.

 

8.2 Notwithstanding any of the foregoing, nothing in this Terms of Service will serve to preempt the promises made in jariusbondoc.com Privacy Policy.

 

8.3 Correspondence should be sent to jariusbondoconline.com.

 

8.4 You agree to report any copyright violations of the Terms of Service to jariusbondoc.com as soon as you become aware of them. In the event you have a claim of copyright infringement with respect to material that is contained in the jariusbondoc.com service, please notify jariusbondoconline.com. This Terms of Service was last updated on November 7, 2020.