Month: November 2022

  • Yeezy + more stuff

    Yeezy

    In 2020 Forbes magazine described Yeezy’s rise as “one of the great retail stories of the century”. Yeezy influenced and inspired a multitude of other fashion brands. Kanye West and the Yeezy brand has been a phenomenal power in street wear. West collaborated with BAPE early on his career and Yeezy took off with the famous Nike collaboration output: Air Yeezy sneakers. Adidas reached out to West, after

    The Adidas-Kanye West divorce bill is in: ending sales will cut expected profits at sportswear company by over a third | South China Morning Post 

    Adidas has a plan to sell Yeezy sneakers without YeBecause the company owns the designs it made with Ye, it can—and it probably will—sell the shoes, chief financial officer (and interim CEO until Dec. 31) Harm Ohlmeyer said on the company’s Nov. 9 earnings call. – They can’t use the Yeezy name though. Given that Yeezy is responsible for up to 40 percent of adidas properties according to some sources, this could end up being the best of both worlds for adidas. Kanye West was unhappy for a long time with the adidas deal, so unlikely to complain, and he may yet be able to use the Yeezy brand with another sneaker maker, for instance in China.

    China

    Nvidia hobbles A100 chip to meet US export control rules | EE Times 

    Opinion | How China Lost America – The New York Times – interesting piece by Thomas Friedman – the big take out for me is that China thinkers don’t realise that Xi Jinping doesn’t care due to his Marxist dialectic world view. Read also: The Return of Red China: Xi Jinping Brings Back MarxismChina is now breaking from decades of political, economic, and foreign-policy pragmatism and accommodationism. Xi’s China is assertive. He is less subtle than his predecessors, and his ideological blueprint for the future is now hiding in plain sight. The question for all is whether his plans will prevail or generate their own political antibodies, both at home and abroad, that begin to actively resist Xi’s vision for China and the world. But then again, as a practicing Marxist dialectician, Xi Jinping is probably already anticipating that response—and preparing whatever countermeasures may then be warranted – Kevin Rudd on China

    Consumer behaviour

    PR emails: I said yes to every single one for a day. Oof. | SlateCould it be possible that the publicists are on to something? Is the daily flood of hopeless pitches actually a secret window into American ingenuity, optimism, and desperation—not to mention a very interesting line of scientifically tested sex toys?

    In repressive Qatar, hotels are a haven for sex, booze and more | Financial Times 

    Design

    Really interesting commentary on how Adidas designed the mesh used in the 4DFWD running shoe that provides a similar energy transfer to the carbon fibre shank in  Nike Air Zoom Alphafly NEXT% shoes that completely changed long distance running

    Who Will Replace Evans Hankey as Jony Ive’s Successor as Apple’s Design Chief? – Bloomberg – this looks like a potential crisis for Apple. They don’t seem to have built up a design team culture in the way that Dieter Ram did at Braun

    Is CGI getting worse? Yes and no. The reason why it seems to be worse is down to worker exploitation

    Economics

    China unveils new policies to solicit foreign investments in manufacturing operations – implies a point of weakness in the Chinese economy. This also explains China slashes quarantine time for international arrivals to 5 days | South China Morning Post in the hope that senior executives will be bothered to turn up. These policies might be needed due to the multitude of down sides in sourcing from Chinese factories:

    • COVID-zero
    • Brand China
    • Coercive technology / process transfer
    • Restrictive outbound capital platforms

    Automotive supply chain saw component demand revival despite macro headwinds | DigiTimes 

    Morgan Stanley (MS) Cuts China Annual Inflow Estimate as Risks Mount – Bloomberg – slowing foreign investment

    Expect a global economic recession in 2023: Report: TSMC takes action in response to falling demand | EE Tiimes 

    Finance

    Sam Bankman-Fried is not very good at League of Legends | Financial Times – parody meets real life personified. Read in conjunction with What if crypto just…dies? – by Noah Smith – Noahpinion

    China given advantages in loan for Kenyan rail project, contract shows | South China Morning Post 

    FMCG

    ‘Grave of the Fireflies’ candy-maker goes bust as costs soar | The Japan Times 

    You need this instant Japanese curry rice if you hate cooking but want to eat a balanced diet | SoraNews24

    Gadgets

    Inoreader – Take back control of your news feed – new RSS Reader, though I find Newsblur better for my needs

    Germany

    Scholz in China | Franco-German tandem | Supply chains – Chancellor Scholz’ China visit has cost him dearly in every other arena but China

    Hong Kong

    38,600 Hongkongers under 18 have applied for Britain’s special BN(O) visa scheme, but most requests come from residents in prime working years | South China Morning PostNearly a third of 142,000 Hongkongers who have applied for a special visa that leads to British citizenship are under 18, while those aged 25 to 54 make up the majority – Hong Kong already has an ageing population. You will also find that the leavers are likely to skew much higher in certain professions and skills sets such as nursing, social work, business management, accountancy and teaching

    Health

    ‘I miss eating’: the truth behind the weight loss drug that makes food repulsive | Food | The Guardian – this is a mess for Novo Nordisk. (Disclosure: I worked on the global launch of Wegovy®)

    Innovation

    NTT claims it can stop the noise leaking from headphones • The Register 

    Bosch taps IBM quantum computers in hunt for new EV materials | DigiTimes and IBM think they’re on to something big: IBM sees 2023 as quantum inflexion point | EE Times 

    Infineon, X-Fab join Fraunhofer DNA memory project | EE Times 

    Japan budgets $2.4 billion for chip R&D hub with US, Europe | EE Times

    Eliyan raises $40m to shake up chiplet interconnect | EE Times 

    Japan

    Honda and Nissan move financial forecasts upward as Yen stays weak | DigiTimes 

    Germany finishes first again with Japan and Canada rounding out the top three nations | Ipsos 

    Japanese clothing chain Uniqlo now selling flowers online, they’re way better than we imagined | SoraNews24 – interesting brand extension by Uniqlo

    Luxury

    Hermès, L’Oréal bounce back in China despite ongoing lockdowns | Advertising | Campaign Asia 

    Marketing

    Life and work post Covid – production and post | shots 

    Materials

    Great video on how additive manufacturing’s unique properties can result in innovation. This heat exchange was printed from laser sintered aluminium alloy powder. The weight savings and increased thermal efficiency figures claimed are very impressive. The problem is using this technology at scale, or will it be niche like carbon fibre fabrication is now?

    Some machines combine CNC milling machines with additive manufacturing capability, this hybrid expertise makes a lot of sense.

    WFL additive manufacturing
    Tim Wantink – The WFL M80 Millturn with 10 kW laser-unit for additive manufacturing

    Online

    TrustCor Systems verifies web addresses, but its address is a UPS Store – The Washington Post 

    Deception Is a Weapon in Russia’s War in Ukraine – The New York Times 

    Retailing

    China’s Singles’ Day 2022 sellers aim for quality over quantity | Quartz – similar to what’s been said on Campaign Asia – I think it will be difficult due to platform power

    Security

    China Recalibrates Its Strategy in the Pacific Region – The China Story 

    Microsoft links Russia’s military to cyberattacks in Poland and Ukraine | Ars Technica 

    Australian police reveal Russians behind Medibank medical record hack | South China Morning Post 

    Software

    Signal >> Blog >> Reflections: The ecosystem is moving – interesting discussion on federated versus centralised systems

    Taiwan

    TSMC and UMC report double-digit October sales growth; no 3nm for Arizona yet | DigiTimes 

    Technology

    The US used shell companies during the Cold War to secure titanium from Russia. Now it seems that Russia has done similar things with electronics components for its smart weapons obtained from US manufacturers.

  • Brand proposition

    The brand proposition is what fires creative thinking in advertising and the bane of junior planners. In fact, the brand proposition is a topic of conversation for advertising planners, in the same way that the weather is for British and Irish people. It is a source of endless debate and discussion.

    Firstly, let’s discuss what’s a brand?

    Kit-Kat Japanese packaging

    How you define brand would likely come down to two camps. Those that broadly agree with either of two statements that branding:

    • Is the act of creating a name, symbol or design that identifies and differentiates a product or service from others
    • Is the art of aligning what you want people to think about your company, with what people actually think about your company

    The second option is closer to where my viewpoint would be, but neither are completely right or wrong. Brands have various attributes including:

    • Brand / customer relationships
    • Brand personality
    • Country of origin
    • Emotional benefits
    • Organisational associations
    • Self-expressive benefits
    • Symbols
    • User imagery

    Product specific attributes that affect brand

    • Scope
    • Attributes
    • Uses
    • Quality / value
    • Functional benefits

    JWT London’s seminal planning guide said that a brand’s appeal is built up over time by three different sorts of appeal

    • Appealing to the senses: feel, smell, tastes, sounds or looks
    • Appeals to reason: function, when would you use it, what does it contain, how does it perform
    • Appeals to the emotions: the brand style or nature, brand associations, what mood it evokes or satisfies, any psychological rewards for usage

    How does planning come into it?

    What’s a brand planner?

    “The account planner is that member of the agency’s team who is the expert, through background, training, experience, and attitudes, at working with information and getting it used – not just marketing research but all the information available to help solve a client’s advertising problems.” 

    Stanley Pollitt

    The JWT Planning Guide, which can be considered to be the stone tablets of account planning as a profession were handed down written in 1974.

    The planning guide said

    … any systemic approach to planning advertising has to do more than simply provide controls and disciplines. It must actively stimulate imagination and creativity too.

    PLANNING GUIDE (March 1974). United Kingdom: J Walter Thompson (JWT) London.

    Ok, that’s quite a big ask. But it didn’t stop there. The ideal advertising planning methods had to also fulfil four criteria

    • Realistic – based on ‘best practice’ and must be capable of being optimised and evolved.
    • Pragmatic – They must work to help people create advertising that is relevant and creative. Simple in nature, memorable and easy to follow
    • Fundamental – based on ‘coherent theories’ of how advertising benefits marketing, how communications works, how people collaborate productively and create new ideas
    • Structured – set a sand pit that imagination can work in. Chunking complexity down to simple elements and providing regular evaluation of work done
    Kit-Kat Japanese packaging

    Brand proposition

    Realistic, pragmatic, fundamental and structured dictate the shape and form of a planner’s tools and outputs. And sometimes we lose sight of this, which is very much the case with the brand proposition.

    A definition

    A brand proposition could be considered to be the foundational concept that highlights the unique identifying features of your brand.

    Attributes of a good brand proposition

    A good brand proposition will be:

    • Single-minded in purpose and being succinct – which can be a pain the 🍑
    • Almost, but not quite an endline
    • Interesting / thought provoking
    • An ongoing investment
    • Occasionally multiple – creative briefs are as much a dialogue with your creative director as they are the product of the heroic lone planner. Having multiple ways in is a good way of doing that, and there might be multiple insights that don’t easily reconcile with each other
    • Open to evolution – its more important to be interesting than correct, it is unlikely that you will get it right first time

    Rich nuggets, stimuli, creative brief delivery and post-brief discussion

    The brand proposition is a small part of the overall account planners contribution to the creative process. You could consider it a sub-set of the insightful ‘rich nuggets’ – the behavioural observations in a creative brief, which is about a quarter of the strategists contribution. Every bit of a brief that a planner writes should have these rich nuggets in it. Examples of rich nuggets that I have had in my career as a planner

    • Even in a digital world, people get annoyed and can be spurred into action when they find their mail has been opened
    • After mental health, consumers care most about having a healthy immune system. It came to fore during COVID and seems to have remained with us
    • Glow, the look of healthy skin due to a moist top layer of the skin can sell products in many markets. But it doesn’t work well in high-humidity tropical, and sub-tropical clients
    • A majority of Hong Kong beauty consumers would prefer not to interact with concession staff, they consider them to be closer to over-pushy sales people than trusted advisors
    • A majority of primary care practitioners (GPs) feel a degree of disgust when they see an obese patient
    • Chinese luxury hotel guests are likely to be younger and less formally dressed than the older western and Japanese clientele – with a dress sense that somewhat harks back to the mix-and-match approach of the Buffalo Collective

    The other three quarters are:

    • The quality of stimulus that the planner provides – Stimulus for consumer brands might be much more visual than say prescription medicines where science facts and sandboxes of regulatory restrictions could be much more important. There is usually a good deal of discussion that goes into help writing this brief that helps filter which stimulus makes the cut and the emphasis placed on it.
    • Quality of delivery on the creative brief
    • Post-brief discussion

    So the amount of ‘pain’ that junior planners have on the brand proposition is out of proportion to the brand proposition’s role in the planning process.

    Criticisms of the brand proposition

    Perceived solutions orientation

    The brand proposition puts the emphasis on a potential answer; rather than the initial problem. And I can understand how this occurs. Going back to the JWT London Planning Guide:

    Advertising involves producing a long series of unique solutions. Each piece of work requires innovation. Every script, every layout, every recommendation is Ian some way different from any that has gone before. Each client operates in a different market, and each brand in a market has different needs.

    I would argue that yes the brand proposition can be perceived to be solution focused, but I’d also argue innovation means reframing and looking at a problem in a different way – this is much of the success behind Eno & Schmidt’s Oblique Strategies.

    Brand proposition locks the planner in to a certain perspective

    The idea is that the very act of writing a brand proposition locks the planner in to a certain perspective and consequently starts making the process of developing ideas territorial and creates unhelpful barriers.

    I can see where the ‘lone heroic planner’ mode might kick in. I found it happened when I was freelancing in a team made up of freelance creative talent and there wasn’t any ‘connective tissue’ in the team.

    I think that a planner needs to be humble enough to recognise that:

    • They don’t have a monopoly on good ideas
    • They are humble enough to recognise better ideas were ever they may come from
    • They are constantly in searching mode

    Perceived traditional media focus

    Propositions are considered by some to encourage to think in ‘traditional media’ by asking what should we say rather than

    • What might we do?
    • What experience might we create
    • What interaction might we host

    My argument against this point-of-view is that its a very literal interpretation of ‘say’. If we think about person to person communication about 70 percent is non verbal cues. And I would argue that more experiential aspects fall into what we say.

    Secondly, it depends on where you are in the process. For instance in many of the assignments I worked on as a freelancer, the channel had already been defined by the client and or the media agency partner who was further upstream in the decision making process.

    A brief for Unilever’s Dove specified that they wanted a 30-second TV spot and online video clip. It has to contain an end ‘pour and pack shot’ which took another 5 seconds at the end of the video. For the online video clip you had to have the brand logo up front. This is very common when you are working on creating marketing assets for international markets.

    OK, why Japanese KitKats?

    They have one uniform brand proposition behind them, but a whole variant of different ways of solving it from a product and packaging design perspective. And, they’re really, really tasty. Japanese KitKats have the crispness I remember from my childhood eating Irish-made KitKats from the old Rowntree-Macintosh factory that was in Kilmainham, Dublin.

  • Thirtysomething & more things

    Thirtysomething

    I remember catching Thirtysomething in between working and DJing on a weekend and during my evenings. What caught my eye at the time is that the show felt ‘bigger’ than other shows on TV at the time. It was down to Thirtysomething having talented directors and really good script writers who managed to tease the drama and storytelling out of everyday life events. It was the first show where I watched and learned how it was being created rather than being merely entertained by it. I had already taken a similar attitude to film thanks to Alex Cox’s Moviedrome series.

    30something
    Promotional artwork for the series

    Thirtysomething dealt with issues like ‘selling out’, having career disappointment and becoming a ‘corporate being’. The storylines included episodes where cast members were killed off or had cancer. It was also unashamedly aspirational; they were all university educated. Two of the main characters ran an advertising agency together, that would be later bought out – which brought its own troubles. Others were a successful artist, a successful photographer and a college lecturer.

    In many respects Thirtysomething was a forerunner for the BBC’s This Life, which was the younger, hipper British cousin. There is something very ‘HBO’ about the feel of Thirtysomething despite the fact that it was shot for the network ABC.

    The people went on to work on big Hollywood projects:

    Looking back at Thirtysomething you realise that the problems that middle class America worry about have grown. Thirtysomething came from a middle class that was still striving and unashamedly white as was the later Friends. This Life had it easier being set in multicultural London rather than Thirtysomething which was set in Philadelphia. Thirtysomething had a limited release as a box set in the US. It is unavailable for streaming in the US or UK and doesn’t have the kind of following it would likely deserve, given the quality of the storytelling and the script writing involved. Much of this seems to be down to issues with music rights, which makes sense when you see tracks by The Who being replaced on the DVD releases of the original TV series of CSI.

    Tracker software

    In the early 1990s, tracker software packages that ran on the Commodore Amiga inspired a number of music producers, mostly bedroom producers. Some prominent producers used this set-up, notably drum and bass pioneer Micky Finn.

    Tracker software is the grandparent of modern DAW software like Cubase which has replaced most outboard studio equipment.

    Making Leatherman multi-tools

    This video looks at the Leatherman multi-tool factory and the legacy of engineer Tim Leatherman who founded the company in 1983. In a globalised world, Leatherman is unusual in continuing American manufacturing.

    Miles Davis covers Michael Jackson’s Why

  • Carl Schmitt + more stuff

    Carl Schmitt

    Carl Schmitt was a German jurist, legal theorist and political theorist. The common narrative around him is that he came up with the legal principles that justified most of Nazi Germany’s greatest excesses. His work has also been used to justify the Xi-era legal system in China with legal thinking leaning heavily on the work that Carl Schmitt did. But there is more to the Schmitt story than that.

    Conservative state theory

    While the current Communist Party of China thinkers see Schmitt as a like mind, the German legal system and Schmitt’s legal system would have appealed to China from the founding of modern China with the monarchy being deposed, through warlord era though to the leadership of the Kuomintang. Germany had consolidated into a modern nation and built an empire in a relatively short space of time thanks to its legal system and a conservative state theory.

    Cautionary tale of the Weimar Republic

    Post World War One, the Weimar Republic put checks and balances on the government through the courts, which was seen as a negative given the relative performance of the country. Into this political change came Carl Schmitt. Ryan Mitchell does a good job at bringing Carl Schmitt’s story to life and talk through his relevance to China through the years.

    Moving forward to Xi-era China, the Weimar Republic that Carl Schmitt lived in looks like a living nightmare in the the same way that German Empire looked like an exemplar. Secondly, socialism didn’t provide an appropriate legal system for Communist China, so they adapted the German system that the Kuomintang had used previously with Chinese socialist characteristics that Hitler would have approved of.

    Carl Schmitt comes across as a more complex figure than he has been recently portrayed.

    Consumer behaviour

    How to make friends as an adult | The Face – really interesting that The Face felt that they had to write this article. I made some of my long term friends in London during my late 20s and early 30s. Many of the readers will also have friends from college or university as well. It implies that they aren’t socialising at house parties, going to concerts, club nights or bars. Work also seems to be a spartan supply of friendships.

    Economics

    China’s Oct exports and imports contract, missing expectations | Reuters 

    Energy

    South Korea and Japan ask US to loosen EV tax credits requirements | DigiTimes 

    BritishVolt sits on the brink … | EE News 

    Ethics

    Machine-learning systems are problematic. That’s why tech bosses call them ‘AI’ | John Naughton | The Guardian 

    FMCG

    ‘China’s hottest woman’: the driving force behind crunchy chilli sensation Lao Gan Ma | China | The Guardian 

    Asahi now sells hot bottled water in Japan as an alternative to coffee or tea | SoraNews24 – the amount of my Asian friends who carry around a thermos drinking bottle of hot water makes so much sense. More combini related content here.

    Germany

    Chartbook #168: Germany’s economic entanglement with China recommend reading with: Germany Can Afford to Spurn China | Foreign Policy 

    Hong Kong

    HSBC strains reach breaking point | Financial TimesLast week, a row between HSBC and its largest shareholder, Chinese insurance group Ping An, spilled into the public arena after Michael Huang, chair of the insurer’s asset management unit, told the Financial Times the bank should break itself up and be “far more aggressive” in its cost-cutting. The extraordinary dust-up, brewing in private for several years, according to people close to the bank, first came to light in the spring when it emerged that Ping An had told HSBC management they should pursue a break-up. HSBC has largely sat on its hands in the interim, fuelling growing frustration at Ping An. “The global finance model that once dominated and shaped the global financial industry in the last century is no longer competitive,” Huang told the Financial Times. “Just divesting a few small markets or businesses” would not be enough to address the challenges. He urged the bank to “adopt an open attitude by studying the relevant suggestions carefully and prudently [ . . .] rather than attempting to simply bypass and reject them”. Ouch

    Ireland

    ‘There’s not many left now’: census shines spotlight on Britain’s dwindling Irish community | Immigration and asylum | The GuardianThe Irish came in waves that started in the 19th century and continued through the Great Depression, the post-war boom, the swinging 60s, the Thatcher era and into the 21st century, one of the great migrations. Many were unskilled labourers, or navvies; others were plumbers, teachers, nurses, dentists, writers and entertainers. Some became famous – Oscar Wilde, Fiona Shaw, Graham Norton – or had children who became famous – Shane MacGowan, Morrissey, Piers Morgan. However, last week brought confirmation that the Irish community, for so long Britain’s biggest source of immigration, is withering. Census figures showed the number of Irish-born people living in England and Wales last year numbered 324,670, a fall of 80,000, or 20%, from a decade ago, when they numbered 407,357. The UK’s Office for National Statistics says this is a long-term trend that started in 1961, when the Irish-born population peaked at 683,000, more than double the current number. Once the biggest group of those born outside the UK, the Irish are now fifth behind India, Poland, Pakistan and Romania

    Japan

    Japan to sign military pact with UK as allies eye China threat | Financial Times 

    Marketing

    The relationship between word count and engagement | Chartbeat BlogOur analysis shows that up to almost 4,000 words, the longer article, the more engaging it will be. If your articles are falling short of the benchmarks we’ve shared, a real-time optimization tool like our Heads Up Display can show you how far readers are scrolling and give you an opportunity to make changes at the point of exit. Beyond 4,000 words, variability in engaged time grows, but that doesn’t mean there’s a ceiling. As we see with our year-end list of the most engaging stories, unique topics can require more depth than daily reporting. This doesn’t mean you should shy away from covering them. It just means you’ll need to devote more attention to optimizing these pages for engaged time.

    Airbnb Says Its Focus on Brand Marketing Instead of Search Is Working – WSJAirbnb Inc. said its strategy of slashing advertising spending, investing in brand marketing and lessening its reliance on search-engine marketing is continuing to pay off. Its marketing spending is now low enough that it doesn’t anticipate drastic reductions even if economic headwinds worsen next year, it said.– some really interesting feedback that implies Google has lost its position as the front door of the web despite dominance in both mobile and desktop browsers

    Security

    $2.5 billion was stolen by blockchain attackers in the first three quarters of 2022 / Digital Information World 

    Technology

    Apple’s hope for record quarterly sales damped by Zhengzhou restrictionsApple continues to see strong demand for iPhone 14 Pro and iPhone 14 Pro Max models, and expects lower iPhone 14 Pro and iPhone 14 Pro Max shipments than previously anticipated, adding that customers will experience longer wait times to receive their new products. Apple said it is working closely with our supplier to return to normal production levels while ensuring the health and safety of every worker. According to Barclays’ research notes, the COVID outbreak in Foxconn’s Zhengzhou plant, which accounts for 70% of worldwide iPhone production, is estimated to affect the output of 10-12 million iPhone Pro models for the fourth quarter of 2022. Meanwhile, Deutsche Bank Securities said in a research note that according to Apple’s 10-K document filed on October 28, the company had manufacturing purchase obligations of US$71.1 billion for the third quarter, up 65% annually and 30% quarterly – a sign leading Deutsche Bank Securities to believe that Apple forecasts better iPhone growth than last year. Manufacturing purchase obligations represent non-cancelable purchase orders of components ahead of unit sales and typically covers periods up to 150 days

  • Indian hackers & more stuff

    Indian hackers

    The Bureau of Investigative Journalism have an interesting article on Indian hackers who work in the ‘hack-for-hire’ industry: Inside The Global Hack-For-Hire Industry. Indian hackers are typically used because their clients are unlikely to be prosecuted under their home country laws like the UK Computer Misuse Act. Indian hackers have gone after British journalists, businesses, NGOs and even politicians. Jay Solomon, a former journalist with the Wall Street Journal accused a US legal firm of using Indian hackers to steal emails between him and one of his sources. This was bundled up in a dossier used by the law firm to get Solomon fired from his job as a journalist.

    Phone hacking
    bin hacken | Flickr

    Business technology origins of blackhat hacking services

    India is known for its enterprise technology work. Most bank computing systems and telecoms billing systems in the UK are managed by Indian technologists out of India. The Indian hacker for hire business sprang out of a company called Appin that looked to sell clients services to help secure those services. Other companies engaged in cybersecurity for corporate clients also provide Indian hackers and tools for offensive computer work. Ethical hacking at the firm was the main business, but a lucrative sideline was blackout Indian hackers working for the highest bidder.

    Favourable environment

    Presumably the same factors that favour software programming and technology services in India also favour these blackhat Indian hackers:

    • Plentiful volume of talented software engineers
    • Relatively low cost compared to their counterparts elsewhere
    • Global connections via a diaspora for firms providing Indian hackers for hire
    • Lax or loosely enforced regulations
    • ‘Clusters’ of talent similar to the US Silicon Valley, notably Gurugram

    It’s interesting that much of the demand for Indian hackers has come from the Gulf states. Indian hackers have also worked on behalf of foreign governments including Cambodia, Egypt, Pakistan and Turkey – all of this government work was carried out with the approval and sometimes behest of the Indian government. Indian hackers working for Pakistan, with Indian government approval! For western corporate intelligence employees, who are clients of these firms, they’ve done foolish things like endorse the Indian hackers and their firms on LinkedIn.

    Beauty

    Estee Lauder cuts forecasts on China curbs, tightening inventories | Reuters 

    China

    China Gender Law: Country Tells Women to ‘Respect Family Values’ – BloombergAn amendment to the Women’s Rights and Interests Protection Law passed by the nation’s top legislative body on Sunday introduced a list of moral standards for women to observe. …“China is attempting to use laws to regulate and discipline women,” said Xiaowen Liang, a New York-based feminist and lawyer. “Why do you only need women to observe family values? What kind of family values are we talking about? These are very vague ideas.” – inching towards A Handmaiden’s Tale with Chinese socialist characteristics

    Biden froze out China’s ambassador. He may regret that. – POLITICOA Washington, D.C.-based diplomat familiar with Qin’s relations with the administration said Beijing’s apparent unresponsiveness to Qin fueled skepticism about his influence back home. “There were one or two issues where the U.S. wanted his help on some things, but he just wasn’t able to do it — he didn’t seem to be totally in the loop,” the diplomat said, declining to name the issues… “Somebody got this wrong in our system — either [Qin] was more influential than we appreciated and we should have known that or he somehow snuck onto the Central Committee without us understanding that was possible,” said the former administration official. “But either way, if we’d known what we know now, we probably would have operated a bit differently and put in a little bit more energy in trying to build some trust with him.” – To be fair to the Biden Administration, I think lots of people in the PRC system were also surprised with Qin’s selection for the Central Committee and likely promotion to be Foreign Minister. And even they thought it might happen, would being nicer to him change any of the fundamental policies? And how could they have managed the optics of giving Qin more access to US officials than Amb. Burns gets to PRC officials?

    Xi vowed “political, diplomatic, economic, & law” countermeasures against “long-arm,” but few noticed 

    Consumer behaviour

    Coronavirus: Hong Kong allows restaurants and bars to stay open all night, but step ‘too little, too late’, industry leaders warn | South China Morning Post – Residents have grown used to eating dinner earlier and cooking at home during the pandemic, industry leaders say. If this habit sticks it has negative implications for food services and entertainment, but positive opportunities for FMCG, food delivery and media sectors. When I lived in Hong Kong, one thing that I noticed was the ‘insomniac’ nature of the city with late night restaurants and take-outs together with late night mall shopping all of which added to the city’s ‘Blade Runner’ vibe

    Economics

    Finding Talent to Run New Fabs Might Be Challenging – EE Times – and a good deal of the problem is educational institutions not being run for the benefit of their countries and having perverse incentives. Related to that 4 Schools Seek to Help Intel, SkyWater Staff New Fabs – EE Times 

    China stops publishing data metrics of vast domestic apps market amid declining internet service revenue, faltering economy | South China Morning PostThe Chinese government has stopped reporting data metrics of domestic apps for the last three months without explanation, which makes it difficult for outside analysts to assess the health of this industry in the world’s largest internet and smartphone market. The Ministry of Industry and Information Technology (MIIT), one of the government agencies responsible for regulating apps, started omitting this market segment’s data metrics from its monthly reports from July, according to the latest information on its website

    Finance

    The Crypto Art Crash: What Remains of the NFT Hype – DER SPIEGELNFT Lose on Average 92 Percent of Their Value

    FMCG

    Everything you need to know about Spam — Quartz Weekly Obsession — Quartz“Spam became iconic in Asia because it was a taste of America without being in America. It’s like drinking Coke. While you can’t afford to travel to America, you can eat and drink America or enjoy a little piece of America in your life.” — Ayalla Ruvio, consumer behavior researcher and professor in the department of marketing at Michigan State University

    Germany

    Business As Usual: German Companies Ignore Major Risks in China – DER SPIEGELThe doctrine of “transformation through trade,” to which Germany adhered for decades, was exposed as an illusion by Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, a truth that even Germany’s president accepts. “We must become less vulnerable and reduce one-sided dependencies,” Frank-Walter Steinmeier told public broadcaster ARD, “and that applies to China in particular.” Germany has seen trade with the People’s Republic quadruple since 2005, but during that same period, China has developed into a full-blown dictatorship. The West’s hopes for further market-economy reforms have been dashed. President Xi Jinping, who had his power cemented  last week at the 20th Party Congress, is fully committed to a state-controlled economy. “Henceforth: Marx gets precedence over the markets,” says Jörg Wuttke, president of the European Union Chamber of Commerce in China – worthwhile reading in conjunction with: We don’t want to decouple from China, but can’t be overreliant – POLITICO – this op-ed by Chancellor Olaf Scholz is embarrassing

    Health

    Irreversible Contraception: Why Female Sterilization Is Both Widespread and Under Fire – DER SPIEGEL 

    Japan

    Govt. to create special budget category to develop air, sea ports for defense purposes – The Japan News 

    Materials

    How Graphene Is Innovating the Medical Device Sector – EE Times 

    Media

    The mystery of Biden’s deadlocked FCC – The Verge – media sector and telecoms lobbying BS

    Online

    Social media will never be the same | Yahoo Finance Tech with Daniel Howley  – interesting analysis on the business challenges of Meta and Twitter

    Security

    Beijing’s Long Arm: China’s Secret Police Stations in Europe – DER SPIEGEL 

    Japan considering hypersonic missile deployment by 2030 – Nikkei | Reuters 

    Hong Kong exiles in UK unnerved by ‘weak’ response to beating of protester | Hong Kong | The Guardian 

    Google proposes list of five principles for IoT security labeling – SiliconANGLE 

    Technology

    POSITs, CFA Tech Help Save Compute Time at JAXA – EE Times 

    Web of no web

    Yes the metaverse is a pile of hokum, but the buzz behind it in markets like Hong Kong and Singapore is palpable: HSBC | Tyson Yoshi x Serrini 《DuoVerse》Music Show 

    Polo Ralph Lauren does a collaboration with Fortnite – also has a good nod towards diversity.