Use BBC.com or the new BBC App to listen to BBC podcasts, Radio 4 and the World Service outside the UK.

Find out how to listen to other BBC stations

Episode details

News,02 Oct 2015,49 mins

'F5' Protestors Bring Down Thai Sites

Big Boss Interview

Available for over a year

Internet freedom campaigners in Thailand have launched cyber attacks on state run websites. Noppatjak Attanon, a reporter for the Bangkok television channel The Nation, tells us about opposition to the government's single internet gateway, deemed by some as censorship. The scandal over emissions cheating now engulfing Volkswagen is casting a long shadow over Germany's industrial reputation. One of the most successful of German engineering companies is Miele, renowned for household appliances like vacuum cleaners, washing machines and ovens. The BBC's Lucy Hooker travelled to the company's home town of Gutersloh, to see how the business has been persuading consumers to stay loyal, in fiercely competitive markets. Plus, can coupons become a curse? A large US retailer reports a drop in profits due to customers always expecting a discount. We speak to Sarah Halzack, national retail reporter at the Washington Post. Presenter Roger Hearing is joined from Washinton DC by Bob Chapman, boss of the engineering multinational Barry-Wehmiller and advocate for caring workplaces, and by Angela Mancini of Control Risks, who's in Singapore. (Picture: The Thai censorship logo is pictured from a laptop in Bangkok. Credit: European Photopress Agency)

Programme Website
More episodes