Category: economics | 經濟學 | 경제학 | 経済

Economics or the dismal science was something I felt that I needed to include as it provides the context for business and consumption.

Prior to the 20th century, economics was the pursuit of gentleman scholars. The foundation of it is considered to be Adam Smith when he published is work An Inquiry into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth of Nations. Smith outlined one of the core tenets of classical economics: each individual is driven by self-interest and can exert only a negligible influence on prices. And it was the start of assumptions that economists model around that don’t mirror real life all the time.

What really is a rational decision maker? Do consumers always make rational decisions? Do they make decisions that maximise their economic benefit?

The problem is that they might do actions that are rational to them:

  • Reducing choice when they are overwhelmed
  • Looking for a little luxury to comfort them over time. Which was the sales of Cadbury chocolate and Revlon lipstick were known to rise in a recession
  • Luxury goods in general make little sense from a ration decision point of view until you realise the value of what they signal
  • Having a smartphone yet buying watches. Japanese consumers were known to still buy watches to show that they care about the time to employers when they could easily check their smartphone screen

All of which makes the subject area of high interest to me as a marketer. It also explains the amount of focus now being done by economists on the behavioural aspect of things.

  • Ukraine

    Its really hard to get your head around the situation playing out in Ukraine. One of the best set of videos that I have seen to try and make sense of what’s going on in Ukraine is done by Chris Cappy. He admits in the last video that his jocular tone is a way of dealing with the horror of it all and his analysis seems to be on point. I have embedded his Ukraine related videos here:

    Beyond the horror playing out with Russia’s invasion of Ukraine; what will be some of the global impact of the Russian invasion of Ukraine?

    I have put down some thoughts on the effects of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine into three buckets:

    • Short term effects
    • Medium term effects
    • Long term effects
    Ukraine

    Short term effects

    Bread riots and inflation

    The invasion of Ukraine will disrupt the country’s wheat harvest. Ukraine is responsible for 10% of all global wheat production and is a major exporter.

    Developing world consumers are already suffering from the rise in food prices. This might be felt especially hard in the Middle East, where the price of bread is often subsidised by the government to help prevent riots. It was one of the factors that drove the ousting of former Egyptian president President Hosni Murbarak as part of the Arab spring series of movements.

    There have been past bread riots in other countries like Algeria and Jordan at a time of massive civil disturbances. One of the first impacts of Russian actions in Ukraine may play out with disturbances in the developing world.

    Russia is also a wheat exporter, but ironically won’t benefit from the price rise due to long term contracts that it has with China. China previously leased land responsible for 5 percent of wheat production in Ukraine. China had also invested in Ukrainian pork farms.

    Oil and gas

    The impact on global oil and gas prices has been immediate. Oil prices had been high anyway as the oil industry ramped up and tried to match post-COVID shock supply chains struggle to get back in sync. Sanctions on Russian oil have been implemented by oil traders faster than western governments have implemented them. Taking Russia out as a supplier is likely to drive western customers in a number of directions in the medium and long term. In the short term we may have power and heating shortages. Russia currently doesn’t have pipeline capacity to ship oil and gas to China in the kind of volumes that would compensate for reduced Western demand. So you might see some of that oil being shipped in sanctions busting tankers, again the challenge would be finding ‘ghost boats’ that have capacity.

    Western inflation versus China inflation

    China has probably worked out the calculus of products that it loses in the short term, versus long term products from Russia as a pariah state at below global prices as Russia won’t have a choice. So we can expect China to benefit from lower inflation inputs than other countries in the short to medium term. It will be inputs from oil and gas to wheat or titanium foam. This gives some Chinese businesses a comparative advantage versus their competitors, particularly western countries.

    Western European concerns about energy, particularly running into winter are acute and energy transformation to lower carbon options will take time.

    Russian inflation

    The rouble has dropped in value by 30 percent as soon as sanctions went in. So one would think that the effect on inflation would be immediate. But you also have multinational companies withdrawing from Russia. In the short term, many products from fast moving consumer goods to clothing and home furnishings will quickly no longer be available. Even smartphone sales of Chinese brand smartphones have plummeted, which gives you and idea of what western sanctions don’t do, the plummeting rouble will do instead.

    Many of these multinational companies will no longer be manufacturing in Russia either, which will create a decrease in both supply and demand. So the impact on short term inflation may take a while to become clear. It is likely to impact unemployment as well.

    Russian banks and the central bank are extremely capital constrained which will not only affect monetary policy but providing sufficient credit to keep businesses going. What you will see is a brain drain of the educated and the talented as they don’t really have a future at home. Which is why Russian’s have been paying €9,000 for a railway ticket from St Petersburg to Helsinki. Talented Ukrainians are either engaged fighting the Russian army in Ukraine, are internally displaced in western Ukraine or have already left the country.

    If Russia goes to martial law then all bets are off in terms of financial damage because that would likely be the least of government’s concerns in terms of maintaining other aspects of control.

    Medium term effects

    CHIPS Act & strategic capability

    The US has looked to promote domestic semiconductor manufacturing through government investment. However inert neon and krypton gas, which is used in the semiconductor manufacturing process is supplied by Ukraine. Russia and the Ukraine were responsible for half of all global production of these gases. This will impact US national security and development of semiconductor manufacturing as a strategic capability.

    Neon mirrors shortages of critical materials for western countries that will impact high technologies and engineering using performance materials. Western countries will have to think about how they update their own strategic capacity to make these materials. This covers a wide swathe of materials including:

    • Lithium – something that Ukraine has large deposits of
    • Industrial and jewellery grade diamonds.
    • Uranium
    • Titanium foam. Titanium foam is the raw material that titanium alloys are made from. Currently two out of the top three producers are China and Russia. Given what has happened with Russia, the risk calculus will change around China.

    There has been a steady tempo of voices on the need to have strategic capability in critical areas like lithium and rare earth metals. This will likely be mirrored by China with its five year plans. The degrees of will to achieve strategic independence will dictate the amount of time that it takes to implement.

    Innovation

    Being cut off from western capability will place two problems on Russian innovation:

    • Access has been cut off to critical resources. Yandex has already expressed concern on how this will affect their business.
    • Over time, access will be reestablished through extraordinary means, but will incur additional costs. So Russian innovators might be able to acquire foreign critical materials with enough money. These will have to be funnelled through front companies in third countries in places like China and the Middle East. This is effectively a tax on Russian innovation.

    Russia has some semiconductor capability, but it is way behind modern manufacturing, so it relies on foreign manufacture.

    This all means Russia will be an ideal market for Chinese vendors. Huawei has already been helping Russia with their networking and information security needs. Other Chinese vendors will end up dominating other aspects of Russian technology from automation to smartphone apps. Over time Russia will fall behind and end up being a supplier of raw materials and source of skilled labour for Chinese enterprises. Having a Russian version of WeChat and Weibo with similar censorship would be attractive to the Russian government.

    Russia is already behind in semiconductor manufacture, but it might be helped by China’s similarly sanctioned semiconductor companies. Russia has been trying to get self sufficient in products like computer servers, but Chinese chips will be seriously behind the chips that they’ve already had made in Taiwan.

    Russia will probably do everything that it can to shield its defence industry from impact. Not only in support of its policy aims, but its one of the few value add sectors where Russia is a peer with China. Otherwise post-Ukraine, Russia’s negotiating position with China would be more akin to China’s relationship with sub-Saharan African countries or Sri Lanka.

    Maintenance

    Most of the civilian Russian aircraft fleet is of Boeing and or Airbus aircraft. The only access to maintenance parts will be the ones that they have on the shelves. Over time Russia might be able to reverse engineer and manufacture at least some parts. Electronics may prove harder. However Russian aircraft no longer have the amount of destinations that they can fly to with passengers or air freight, so they can likely cannibalise much of the fleet for spare parts. And since the majority of the aircraft are leased from Irish companies, there will be little blow-back that the Russian government would be bothered about at the moment.

    Maintenance will also need to be done on trains and the railway network, oil and gas extraction equipment, manufacturing production lines and even hospital medical equipment. A similar mend and make do approach will likely be needed for all these sectors, which will slow down economic activity and make it harder to climb out of recession.

    Rebuilding

    If the second Chechen war is anything to go by, rebuilding Ukraine will be a very costly endeavour that will need to be bankrolled by either Russia or the west. As the west found out in Iraq, winning the war is the easiest and cheapest part. Rebuilding and trying to a puppet government in power with an insurgency funded by western citizen direct contributions and government funding could be a real challenge. As would trying to integrate Ukraine into Russia. Even the most draconian of measures have a high financial cost as well as societal and moral related issues.

    Footage has also indicated that Russia will need to rebuild its military apparatus. The tyres were rotting off Russian and Belorussian vehicles for the want to proper care and maintenance programmes. In preparation of a future conflict with NATO, or further down the line China, Russia couldn’t afford to take those kind of losses. Wars are a shop window for the defence industries and this won’t be doing any favours for foreign sales of Russian armed vehicles, anti-aircraft systems or aircraft.

    The performance of equipment in Ukraine is in sharp contrast to the veneer of professionalism and technical excellence shown by Russian forces operating in support of, and on the ground in Syria.

    Russia will need to replenish ammunition supplies, maintain or replace artillery barrels and replenish field rations. Word will get around about the poor state of field rations. It will need to revamp its approach to logistics and supply chain management because everything that I listed was entirely preventable. All of this rebuilding will be challenging if Russia faces a sustained insurgency. China spends more on internal security than it spends on external facing military. NATO estimates that Russia would need to have a minimum 400,000 soldiers to maintain control of Ukraine. If Russia followed the same density of soldiers to population that it had in Chechnya, it would need 4 million soldiers.

    There are some terrible options to consider:

    Cull a proportion of the population, Russia is already a pariah state after all. Ignoring for morality of this for a moment which would be a huge issue in Russia, we know that this would represent tremendous logistical challenges as it did for Nazi Germany. But former Russian leaders, notably Josef Stalin killed a lot of Ukrainians including starving many of them to death and Mr Putin has proved himself to be a student of history

    • Internal exile. Stalin exiled the Cossack community of Crimea to Siberia. It decimated social cohesion and the ramifications of this exile is still felt by the Cossacks. Russia could do this to portions of the Ukrainian people. This would present a logistical challenge and an economic burden on Russia. If Russia thinks that sanctions are bad now, either of these two options would make current economic decline sound like paradise.
    • Paying for rebuilding will be challenging, if Russia manages to hold Ukraine, it might be able to exploit its rich natural resources like lithium deposits. But these will be sold at a considerable discount to the likes of China or India. We are unlikely to see Russia as a serious player in the lithium ion battery market.

    Russian recession

    When you take jobs, economic activity and capital flow out of an economy a recession will be inevitable. Many of the jobs that Russia will lose will be in middle class sectors including management, banking, the professions and business services. No matter what these companies do to try and mitigate the impact on their former staff, the impact will be felt economically in Russia.

    Add to that the obliterated economy in Ukraine that might be dragging Russia down even further.

    Over the longer term Russia will be selling their export products at a discount due to fewer customers and a more expensive route to market. So it will be harder for Russia to climb out of recession.

    Reshaping of supply chains

    Russian oil and gas has previously focused predominantly on selling oil and gas to Europe and Turkey and will be covered with sanctions. It will take a while to make alternative pipeline capacity to go east to China. Previously Russia has made use of foreign LPG terminals. Presumably these will cut access to transport by sea for Russia. Liquified natural gas tankers are expensive and Russia’s largest domestic LPG terminal is on the wrong side of the world, just down from St Petersburg on the Gulf of Finland. This would be the equivalent of drinking a venti mug of coffee with a teaspoon.

    Russia has been experimenting with shipping some LPG by train to Northeastern China. In terms of helping finance future projects, China isn’t likely to fund LPG projects that would give Russia to foreign markets other than itself. This would be one of the first areas where we see Russia clearly as the junior geopolitical partner beholden to China. So a gas pipeline to China is likely to be the preferred route to market.

    Russia is in a slightly better position with oil. its easier to ship by sea and for the right price, Russia could find customers beyond China.

    Consumer sanctions busting

    Russia will have already started thinking about sanctions busting, but doing this in a big way will take time, money and planning. At a consumer level, Russians will be looking to safeguard wealth through portable assets that are liquid, or can be easily made liquid. This means foreign currency, crypto-wallets, luxury watches, diamonds and precious stones. There has already been a run on the rouble at Russian banks as citizens look to obtain foreign currency and Russia has implemented capital controls on people leaving the country.

    Cybercrime

    It’s only a matter of time for Russia to tap its cyber criminal community and state hackers to come up with a source of foreign currency to help the Kremlin. These will be more capable than what North Korean state hackers have historically being doing. Ransomware payments will likely come over cryptocurrency. The problem with cryptocurrency is that the exchanges are becoming increasingly centralised, so criminals will be playing cat and mouse with the likes of Binance. The cryptocurrency sector in Hong Kong may be more fruitful. The COVID quarantine situation and regulatory uncertainty in Hong Kong won’t deter Russians keen to launder crypto into foreign currency and access to the global financial system.

    Finance

    Russia will try to get around foreign payments through a number of ways. Asianometry have done a really good exploration of this topic and I figure that you could do with a video break in this dystopian discussion of Russia and Ukraine. We have seen Russian banking systems sign up with Union Pay, which has limited acceptance in the west (usually big department stores that rely on the Chinese tourist trade like Selfridges in London and Brown Thomas in Dublin).

    Long term effects

    At the moment there isn’t a clear off-ramp for sanctions against Russia. One might see softening of sanctions in the developing world, for Russian products at the right price. The longer that sanctions remain, the harder it will be for Russia to regain its global economic standing once they are lifted. Russia hasn’t been a trusted partner at the best of times due to systemic corruption. Systemic corruption will be further fuelled as the country falls under Chinese influence, there won’t be a need to meet ESG driven checks and balances. It will face sustained cynicism in the west with regards its motives and will increasingly become less relevant.

    In addition it will be locked into draconian financial deals with China which would make it harder to kick start the Russian economy. Globalisation will have created alternatives for its higher value goods, so will need to rely its commodities. It will be a third line supplier for strategic materials like industrial diamonds, uranium or titanium because of the trust deficit.

    Russia declining, China rising

    Russia is already struggling for relevance in the Russian Far East. The economic gravity is moving away from Russia towards China. Chinese companies are leasing farm land and forestry. Russian financial distress will encourage this trend much faster. The Russian Far East is part of an ‘unfair treaty’ between Russia and China during the 19th century. While China tries to keep a lid on the discussion about this, it is on the radar of Chinese nationalists. The question of Russian sovereignty will come up at some point and Russia won’t be able to secure any foreign support.

    China will be Russia’s banker of last resort and given that the yuan isn’t transferrable, Russia won’t be able too disconnect at a later date. China will use favourable pricing to get hold of Russian resources, Russian expertise and privileged market access. All of this will come at the expense of Russian businesses, entrepreneurs and the Russian taxpayer.

    Russia will have been cleared off the map for sporting events, an area that China attaches great importance to for national pride.

    The fall against China will transform the China-Russia relationship in a coercive way, similar to what we have seen China do with African countries.

    Sanctions busting

    Taking apartheid era South Africa as an example. South Africa was able to buy arms from East Germany, despite the communist state’s support of the ANC. Chinese arms were purchased by South Africa and used to equip their allies fighting in Angola. If the price is right, Russian arms will still be sold abroad. We know that North Korea has serviced and refurbished Soviet-era equipment like T-55 tanks for a long time and Iranian arms pop up across the developing world including medium range missiles and drones. So there will be customers there for Russia, at the right price. What we might end up seeing is that Chinese arms are seen as ‘more premium’ due to superior technology. Russian private military contractors will be used to earn foreign currency, wherever there is money on the table.

    We can expect Russia to be able to obtain at least some material that it considers to be vital to its needs and there will be some strange bedfellows involved. This might be through convoluted and more expensive means. Countries that fully supported Russia in the UN are pariah states anyway, so they would be of limited use as conduits. But they are likely to be customers for Russian exports. For instance, North Korea could be enjoying more oil at a lower price, if the rail link across the Russian border would be able to handle a long tanker train. Or if Russian ‘ghost tankers’ manage to do transhipment.

    So they may use third parties countries that abstained from the UN motion

    • Algeria, Equatorial Guinea and Iraq. Russia presents an arbitrage opportunity for these countries. If Russia is desperate for foreign currency reserves, these countries could buy Russian oil at less than their own cost of production. Perform an offshore ship-to-ship transfer or fake paperwork for a full tanker and sell Russian oil as their own. Russia would be losing money this way but it offers an opportunity to get hold of foreign currency.
    • China is going to be Russia’s leading economic and development partner. This is likely the key conduit for foreign products into Russia. However, where China is restricted in key areas such as technology, Russia will need to look further afield.
    • Bangladesh and Pakistan. Pakistan has a lot of experience in sanctions busting and used to build their nuclear weapons programme over the past number of decades. It also has an ambivalent relationship with western countries, although its tight relationship with China might make its willingness to help Russia have limits.
    • Bangladesh and Pakistan are the number two and number three countries in ship breaking. When Russia needs ‘ghost tankers’, being able to buy ships that are due to be scrapped will be the easiest way of doing this. Having ships pirated in the straits of Malacca by corrupt Indonesian military or Filipino Islamic terrorist groups would be a higher risk, less reliable source of ‘ghost tankers’. If Russia wants to sell oil or arms, it will need access to shipping. Ghost ships are already estimated to represent about 10 percent of global oil tanker capacity. Prices have already been rising for older ships due to be scrapped prior to the Ukraine invasion as the demand for ‘ghost ships’ had increased.
    • South Africa and India. India and South Africa are long-time partners of Russia in the diamond trade and would be likely called upon to help Russia get its diamonds on the global market. India is responsible for most of the diamonds cut globally. Its diamond businesses also have a crisis of credit. Both South Africa and India are part of the Kimberley Process. Both of these factors make them ideal countries to launder Russian diamonds through if the price is right.

    The United Arab Emirates is in a unique position. It is an established Russian trading partner with an established Russian community and the kind of financial sector infrastructure to help build an offshore shell game to hide Russian sanctions busting. It has many of the benefits of London in terms of expertise, but none of the ESG related problems that ‘Londongrad‘ now has due to the invasion of Ukraine.

    Cultural impact

    Russia feels that it is linked culturally much more closely to the west in terms of music, literature and even sports. This will be unprecedented, even during the cold war, there were cultural and sports exchanges. Being cut off from these exchanges had a huge impact on apartheid-era South Africa. It is likely to impact how Russia sees itself, the sense of isolation due to its pariah status will be palpable. I can’t see Russia pivoting to China in those areas, they have too little in common from a cultural perspective.

    The rich and powerful who enjoy a global cosmopolitan lifestyle will feel this impact in a very acute way, the middle classes will also feel the impact but will be equally concerned with their reduced financial status.

  • Animoca Brands + more news

    Animoca Brands

    Animoca Brands: How a big bet on blockchain and NFTs minted Hong Kong’s latest unicorn | South China Morning Post and more here The Sandbox developer Animoca Brands sees private valuation surge to US$5 billion amid metaverse, NFT frenzy | South China Morning Post – Animoca Brands has come up fast with The Sandbox. NFTs have become a bubble in Hong Kong. I was chatting to a good friend of mine who is now based in Shanghai. We talked about people we used to know who worked at various technology vendors. All are now involved in NFT businesses. The South China Morning Post has partnered with The Sandbox themselves. And then there is the speculation in metaverse property by Hong Kong’s oligopoly: Hong Kong property tycoons, brokers snap up virtual land in metaverse as valuations soar | South China Morning Post and deals like: CSOP AM launches metaverse ETF in Hong Kong | Financial Times 

    Animoca Brands is the face of a NFT bubble that feels curiously like the dot com era. Will there be a place for NFTs? Possibly. Will Animoca Brands be its Amazon or its Pets.com? I don’t know. But I feel queasy about the Hong Kong NFT wave that Animoca Brands are the poster child for. Particularly when on most other economic and societal metrics Hong Kong is running the other way; with a brain drain and economic decline.

    Beauty

    Omicron hits Wuhan, centered on cosmetics staff training – Global Times – centred around a training event by western beauty brand and multilevel marketing firm Nu Skin Enterprises – disclosure I used to work on the NuSkin brand in China and Hong Kong

    China

    Indian Tax Authorities Raid China’s Huawei, Triggering Protest From Beijing – WSJ

    Games changer: How China is rewriting global rules and Russia is playing along – European Council on Foreign Relations – Beijing and Moscow are unlikely to rush to each other’s aid during a military escalation, be it in Ukraine or over Taiwan. But the enabling environment of their mutual diplomatic support matters greatly

    Design

    Shedding some light on “dark patterns” and advertising regulation – ASA | CAP – “dark patterns” encompass a range of misleading advertising practices that have long been regulated under the CAP Code, and some of which reflect practices that are banned in all circumstances under consumer protection law.  The CAP Code has long applied to online advertising (including companies’ own websites), and many of the common “dark patterns” align with issues that the ASA is well-versed in regulating

    Economics

    UK risks spending more on defence equipment than it can afford, warns watchdog | Financial Times – damning NAO report

    Ukraine conflict will have a significant impact on Asia – Nikkei Asia – Look for the crisis to consolidate alignment among Asia’s democracies

    China Loosens New Mobile Payment Rules to Put Small Businesses at Ease – Caixin Global – the benefits of mobile payment oversight is going to mean less small and medium sized businesses fiddling their tax returns than currently happens

    Energy

    Tesla’s reverse on battery cells signals shift for electric vehicles | Financial Times 

    Wind Industry Warns EU to Take Urgent Action as China Rises – Bloomberg – wind industry will get screwed over just like solar and telecoms have been

    Ethics

    Ronn Torossian Admits To “Ethical Lapses” Amid News Site ControversyPRSA-NY’s board of directors unanimously voted to condemn Torossian and 5WPR in response to the story. “In addition to being a cowardly and blatant violation of PRSA’s Code of Ethics, Ronn’s actions are a stain on our profession and undermine our role as guardians of facts and integrity for those we serve. We strongly condemn his and his firm’s direct role in perpetrating disinformation while pretending to be a legitimate industry news site,” said PRSA-NY’s board said in a statement. Torossian is no stranger to controversy, having been criticized over the years for his aggressive PR tactics, and is taking steps to remain in the public eye amid this one. Doing that has included issuing two press releases since the story broke — one offering Torossian’s list of “PR Rules” and another with marketing podcast recommendations. – so the lesson is basically break the rules while you’re small, apologise with no repercussions when you get larger

    EU to punish rights abuses in supply chains, with forced labour ban to follow | South China Morning PostBloc will require large companies to ensure their supply chains are free of human rights and environmental abuses, with fines for failing to comply. But the issue of forced labour, particularly complex for firms active in China, is not covered by the EU, which will address it with a separate ban

    Depicting older people in ads – ASA | CAPCommunicating about ageing and older people in a positive way can help to tackle negative perceptions of ageing, and older people, but negative and offensive stereotypes about ageing and older people are still common. Using stereotypes about age in advertising may breach the CAP Code, and our guidance is designed to help advertisers ensure that they do not include offensive depictions of, or references to age in their advertising. – but is this really going to change in the ad industry when ageism is endemic from the top down in the industry – from hiring policies and representation to board level views held by the likes of Mark Read

    FMCG

    Advertising zero alcohol products – ASA | CAPMarketers should, however, take care not to mislead consumers by implying that a product contains no alcohol at all if it contains any. For some consumers, whether for health, religious, or other reasons, the presence of a small amount of alcohol may be material information and therefore required to be present with reasonable prominence. Although the ASA has not formally ruled on such a circumstance, marketers are best advised to take a cautious approach when marketing a drink that is usually alcoholic (such as a non-alcoholic beer) but has been adjusted to bring it below the 0.5% ABV threshold. For instance, we would strongly recommend that ads contain a reference to the ABV alongside any ‘alcohol free’ or similar claims. – interesting that the ASA felt the need to put this notice out

    Hong Kong

    Hong Kong to allow in doctors from mainland China as Covid cases overwhelm hospitals | Hong Kong | The Guardian – its also got an ideal opportunity to build up a DNA data bank of every Hong Kong resident which will help matching against debris from the 2014 and 2019 protests

    Ideas

    Lecturers admit self-censoring classes with Chinese students | The Times – Academics are self-censoring to avoid causing offence to students from authoritarian states such as China, a new report has said. Two thirds said they believed that academic freedom was under threat in higher education and more than two fifths felt the same about their freedom to select teaching content. The survey of 1,500 social science faculty members across a range of British institutions was conducted by academics from Oxford, Exeter and Portsmouth universities.

    Innovation

    Tencent-backed academic network to launch ‘open access’ journals | Financial Times 

    Startup Turns “Unrecyclable” Plastic Into Giant, Indestructible Construction Bricks it reminds me of Timbuk2’s lamitron experiment and might run into the same legal issues: Target Shuts Down Timbuk2’s Recycled-Plastic-Bag Messenger Bag Project « Mission Mission

    Japan

    Sony Ventures Corporation hits first close of its $215M fourth fund  | TechCrunch

    China temporarily detains Japanese diplomat | The Japan Times – interesting that China is manufacturing a dispute with Japan

    Korea

    Toronto bakery is burnt by a cultural appropriation feud | Financial Times – it is interesting to read about how Chinese cultural appropriation of Korean intangible national treasures has spilled over on to the western social networks. Naturally Vancouver seems to be at the centre of this maelstrom

    Luxury

    Sports car maker Lotus explores IPO options to fund global expansion | Financial Times

    Materials

    Chinese Researchers Uncover Massive Lithium Mine in the Himalayas | Sixth Tone – the Russians did extensive geological surveys and the US did a similar survey using a lot of satellite technology in Afghanistan and the nearby areas

    Easy aluminum nanoparticles for rapid, efficient hydrogen generation from water — Nano Magazine – if this can be commercialised; this has a huge impact for the nascent hydrogen economy

    Media

    Inside Facebook’s $10 Billion Breakup With Advertisers – WSJ – Apple’s privacy settings have affected e-commerce advertising on Facebook and advertising sales have dropped. It would be interesting to see if there was a geographic breakdown on this. If this is people like the Chinese online direct to consumer commerce and drop shippers, thats a big issue for Facebook. It already has issues with big brands in terms of ad quality, brand safety and skepticism over the reliability of Facebook’s ad metrics that is based on past behaviour

    Online

    Google Search Is Dying | DKB – interesting discussion on the Google search experience for early adopters. It is the kind of things that I have complained to friends about. It also shows the relative power of Reddit – which brings us back to the Yahoo! ideas around knowledge search circa 2005/6

    Retailing

    John Menzies accepts sweetened takeover offer | Financial Times 

    Security

    Attack on Ukrainian Government Websites Linked to GRU Hackers – bellingcat 

    Technology

    Intel in Israel: A Semiconductor Success – by Jon Y 

    Web of no web

    TikTok Wants to Avoid Facebook’s Mess. Its Corporate Culture Could Complicate That — The InformationTwo years ago, a team of TikTok employees in China—where the hit video-sharing app’s parent company, ByteDance, is based—were excited to show their colleagues in the U.S. a preview of some new features they’d been working on. But the Americans were troubled when they saw one of them, which would let TikTok users darken or lighten their skin tone—a feature the U.S. employees feared would spur the creation of culturally insensitive videos featuring blackface, according to three people with direct knowledge of the matter. In another meeting, the China TikTok team showed their American counterparts a different feature that used an algorithm to scan users’ faces and tell them whether they were “beautiful” or not, according to one person who saw the presentation. After some employees raised concerns about the features, TikTok decided against launching them in the U.S.

    Web3: A Map in Search of Territory

    China introduces state-backed NFT platform unlinked to cryptocurrencies | South China Morning Post

    Tencent-led project becomes first UN-approved standards initiative on NFTs, known as ‘digital collectibles’ in China | South China Morning Post 

    Tencent quietly updates QQ with Unreal game engine in possible metaverse move | South China Morning Post 

    Chinese firms scramble to register metaverse trademarks despite Beijing’s warnings of risks | South China Morning Post 

    China’s growing market for NFTs, metaverse could foster new money-laundering schemes, central bank official warns | South China Morning Post 

    China plans to accelerate blockchain development and adoption in push to become a world leader in the technology by 2025 | South China Morning Post 

    Meta shows ad agencies metaverse—it looks a lot like Snapchat | Ad Age 

    Wireless

    Telenor investors scrutinise Myanmar sale | Reuters 

  • Ghost ships + more news

    Ghost ships tankering black market oil to and from sanctioned countries around the world

    Tanker companies warn of rise in armada of ghost ships | Financial Times – older ships are being bought and then used for sanctions running as these ghost ships. Ghost ships have safety implications due to their age. Given that these ghost ships are operated on the down low, they won’t have the same maintenance and you don’t know how their sailors are treated. What’s also interesting is the economic data implied by the ghost ships. Looking at this article black market oil (excluding pirate ships stolen in places like the Straits of Malacca) shipped by the ghost ships fleet is running at about 10 percent of all oil consumed worldwide. The fleet of ghost ships must have suddenly increased if the supply of ships being sent to be scrapped has dropped in the way it has. How have the operators of ghost ships managed to short circuit the ship breaking business? How are the ghost ships avoiding the world’s largest navies and surveillance networks? Will the number of ghost ships continue to grow?

    Here’s a picture of Chinese tanker vessel, just to give you an appreciation of how big each of the ghost ships must be.

    Chinese Oil Tanker

    China

    The myth of Chinese supremacy – UnHerd 

    China’s Self-Defeating Economic Statecraft | Foreign AffairsObservers routinely worry that by throwing around its ever-growing economic weight, the country is managing to buy goodwill and influence. During the COVID-19 pandemic, Beijing has exploited its dominance of manufacturing supply chains to win favor by donating masks and now vaccines to foreign countries. And it has long used unfair state subsidies to tilt the playing field in favor of Chinese companies. – the lesson that China seems to take away is that bullying works. Until China sees that bullying doesn’t work it won’t listen

    Enemies of My Enemy | Foreign AffairsThe strongest orders in modern history—from Westphalia in the seventeenth century to the liberal international order in the twentieth—were not inclusive organizations working for the greater good of humanity. Rather, they were alliances built by great powers to wage security competition against their main rivals. Fear and loathing of a shared enemy, not enlightened calls to make the world a better place, brought these orders together. Progress on transnational issues, when achieved, emerged largely as a byproduct of hardheaded security cooperation. That cooperation usually lasted only as long as a common threat remained both present and manageable. When that threat dissipated or grew too large, the orders collapsed. Today, the liberal order is fraying for many reasons, but the underlying cause is that the threat it was originally designed to defeat—Soviet communism—disappeared three decades ago. None of the proposed replacements to the current order have stuck because there hasn’t been a threat scary or vivid enough to compel sustained cooperation among the key players – until now China’s belligerence in East Asia and wider

    What Does Yahoo’s Recent China Exit Mean for American Companies? / Digital Information World

    Consumer behaviour

    Why the experts are losing – UnHerd 

    ‘Lying flat’: Why some Chinese are putting work second – BBC Newsthere are young rural migrants in Beijing or Shanghai, who now realise “how far behind they are, in terms of being able to make enough money to buy a house, or compete with the city kids who grew up speaking English and wearing sophisticated clothing”. Dr Johnston explains some of this group may now be thinking of returning to their home towns and taking lower-paid jobs instead to be with their families. On the other side, there are the children of richer, successful parents who are not “as hungry as the super-achieving kids from poorer families”. Dr Johnston thinks China’s so-called “tiger” culture is an added barrier, where parents feel under intense pressure to help their child achieve, that school on its own is not enough

    How Chinese Nationalism Hit Nike, Adidas After Western Brand Boycotts | Bloomberg – makes sense to pay less attention to these consumers and be less beholden to their needs. This is multi-sectoral with it already playing out in FMCG sectors

    The Pandemic Changed Youth Culture in the Asia Pacific – What Does that Mean for Brands?“proactively making fundamental life changes to shape a new future in a post-pandemic world which will never be the same again,” says Vice Media. ‘The Next Chapter – Re-Emergence’ is the latest from VICE Media Group’s ongoing series of youth culture tracking studies which monitors behavioural change to forecast the future of culture. The online quantitative study of 1,740 Gen Z and Millenials was conducted via VICE, Refinery29, i-D websites and social channels in Australia, India, China, Japan, Korea, Singapore, Indonesia, Malaysia, Philippines, Thailand and Vietnam. – it looks like they expect to change how they work. If that means greater balance it might go down badly with Chinese and Vietnamese authorities who would be concerned that this looked like ‘lying down’

    America Is Focusing on the Wrong Enemy by Brahma Chellaney – Project Syndicate

    The Metaverse Might Have a Serious Sexual Harassment Problem / Digital Information World

    Culture

    The Paris Review – Ray Bradbury’s Unpublished Essay, “The Pomegranate Architect”

    Design

    EU is preparing to legalize a single port for smartphones and other gadgets 

    Economics

    Pandemic triggers exodus of older people from UK workforce | Financial Times – interesting that businesses aren’t adapting to these new dynamics in the workforce, much of what is in the article is also echoes in this US IBM case. IBM Execs Call Older Workers ‘Dinobabies’ in Age Bias LawsuitInternal emails show IBM executives calling older workers “dinobabies” and discussing plans to make them “an extinct species,” according to a Friday filing in an ongoing age discrimination lawsuit against the company. The documents were submitted as evidence of IBM’s efforts “to oust older employees from its workforce,” and replace them with millennial workers, the plaintiff alleged. It’s the latest development in a legal battle that first began in 2018, when former employees sued IBM after the company fired tens of thousands of workers over 40-years-old. One high-ranking executive, whose name was redacted from the lawsuit, said IBM had a “dated maternal workforce.” “This is what must change,” the email continues, per the filing. “They really don’t understand social or engagement. Not digital natives. A real threat for us.”

    Used Car Prices Are Now Up 40 Percent From Just A Year Ago 

    Which London-listed Russian firms could be hit by sanctions? | Russia | The GuardianUnder the most extreme scenario, companies operating in the UK, US or EU – including most of the world’s major financial institutions – could be forbidden from any transactions with sanctioned entities. That could mean the indefinite suspension of their shares, and an inability to issue new debt or shares in London. Asked whether the UK was likely to impose sanctions that would damage the interests of big British companies, Bernardine Adkins, a partner at the London law firm Gowling WLG, said: “I’ll believe it when I see it.” “The modern way of sanctions tends to be very focused, and they’re not sweeping to hurt the economy,” she added.

    Apple: Thief | No Mercy / No Malice – interesting perspectives on what a trillion dollar turnover looks like

    Finance

    When you count users instead of dollars, the NFT world is tiny | Financial Times and more on cryptocurrencies here as well: DSHR’s Blog: EE380 Talk 

    Hong Kong

    Norton Rose directs Hong Kong office to make China pivot | Financial TimesNorton Rose, whose biggest clients include HSBC and AIG, is the latest international business to reconsider its Hong Kong strategy. Both the Mandarin Oriental hotel group and Pernod Ricard have asked executives to move temporarily out of Hong Kong in response to strict pandemic restrictions. Bank of America is reviewing whether to relocate some of its staff to Singapore. The head of a large recruitment consultancy in Hong Kong said similar changes were happening at other global companies. “As expats retire they are most likely to be replaced by Mandarin-speaking people,” he said. “The old set-up of having a local team who speak Mandarin doing the deal, but the guy at the top is white, that will change across the board.” – Hong Kong refocusing on being just another city in China – Chinese banks’ Hong Kong ranks on track to outnumber global rivals | Financial Times

    Next China: Hong Kong Elections Uncertain as Covid Crisis Spirals – Bloombergthere was little surprise this week when Tam Yiu-chung, Hong Kong’s sole representative member of China’s top legislative body, suggested postponing the election. His logic was simple: Some of those who might run will be too busy dealing with the outbreak to campaign. If more voices begin jumping in with the same line, a delay could very quickly become fait accompli. – way before COVID got out of control there were no candidates putting themselves out there. Even self publicist CY Leung hadn’t throw his hat in the ring

    Innovation

    How France’s Largest Semiconductor Company Got Nationalized in Plain Sight

    An Apple Patent Reveals more work on a Folded Camera Lens that will advance Zoom Capabilities for iPhones – Patently Apple 

    Japan

    Denso joins TSMC’s Japanese wafer fab club eeNews Europe | EE News Europe – I can understand the strong imperative of Japanese supply chains being managed domestically

    Mos Burger mascot retires to make way for new character in Japan | SoraNews24 -Japan News – Mos Burger changes mascot. Interesting that they are changing rather than getting rid of a mascot as a fluent device

    Is Japan’s “Hai, Cheese!” photo culture becoming obsolete? | SoraNews24 -Japan News

    Korea

    Why Are Luxury Labels Cheaper Online? – The Chosun Ilbo (English Edition): Daily News from Korea – Business > BusinessAccording to Statistics Korea, purchases through overseas online retailers last year surpassed W5 trillion for the first time ever and surged 26.4 percent compared to 2020. Clothing and accessories accounted for W2 trillion of the total. The Korea Consumer Agency said a survey last year showed consumers here believe products are around 25 percent cheaper from foreign online retailers than in Korea. Yet importers insist they have no choice but to slap huge margins on goods due to high operating costs as well as tariffs and delivery fees. One staffer with a major importer said, “Department stores charge 20 to 30 percent in fees to sell our products, plus we have to cover advertising and store overheads.” But industry insiders say big businesses and department stores in Korea compete fiercely for exclusive import deals with foreign luxury brands, which ends up costing them a lot of money. They end up agreeing to unrealistic volumes and expensive advertising to bring in popular luxury brands and pass the cost on to the customer. Another reason is simply that demand seems insatiable, so people will pay whatever is asked. The head of a foreign luxury brand’s Korean branch said, “The market is changing in Korea and China where the more expensive products are, the higher the demand is. For instance, handbags must cost at least W9 million and coats more than W4 million to be considered a ‘luxury’ product. That means lower-tier brand prices are also rising.” 

    Axios Login – 1 big thing: Both sides gear up for tech antitrust showdown – bipartisan approaches to big tech are very different. Both believe that antitrust regulation is needed, but to solve very different problems.

    EU accuses China of ‘power grab’ over smartphone technology licensing | Financial Times

    Luxury

    Louis Vuitton to raise price tags as costs climb | RTÉ 

    ‘Golden visa’ lawyers call for UK to rethink blanket ban | The super-rich | The Guardian

    Marketing

    Novo Nordisk wins over doctors with AI email subject lines — and a human touch – Endpoints News

    in two minds right now – by Rob Estreitinho – Salmon Theory – on scamps in strategy

    Materials

    China’s Shenghe to pick stake in Australian firm Peak Rare Earths

    Media

    British company found to be making slick propaganda films for China | Telegraph Online

    China Reviews Don’t Look Up: “A sharp sword piercing the heart of the American people” – fascinating interpretations

    Musicians like Neil Young lack the market power to force Spotify’s hand over Joe RoganIt’s a simple case of gigantic supply and relatively limited distribution. As the world turns to music streaming, only a handful of global players led by Spotify, Apple and Amazon control the market. Five companies represent 80% of the global streaming opportunity. Now, turn that around and think about it from an artist’s point of view. Spotify currently has 70 million songs and adds an additional 60,000 each and every day. These stupendous numbers have two implications. First, even when an artist like Young pulls his music from the service there are literally millions of potential replacements to fill the gap in a listener’s playlist. Second, artists cannot fuck with any of the big distributors of their music, because losing access to 31% of the market is the difference between success and failure for many of the record companies that run these artists

    Online

    A Personal Take on the Facebocalypse | Phil Gomes 

    Foreign money funding ‘extremism’ in Canada, says hacker | Canada | The GuardianA hacker who leaked the names and locations of more than 90,000 people who donated money to the Canadian trucker convoy protest has said it exposed how money from abroad had funded “extremism” in the country. In an exclusive interview, the hacker told the Guardian that Canada was “not safe from foreign political manipulation”. “You see a huge amount of money that isn’t even coming from Canada – that’s plain as day,” said the hacker, who belongs to the hacktivist group Anonymous. The leaked data showed that more than 90,000 donations were made via GiveSendGo, with most funds appearing to come from Canada and the US. According to the data, individuals in countries including the UK, the Netherlands, Ireland and Denmark also donated. Amarnath Amarasingam, a professor at Canada’s Queens University and an expert in extremism and social movements, tweeted that of the 92,844 donations, “51,666 (56%) came from the US, 36,202 (29%) came from Canada, and 1,831 (2%) came from the UK.” US-based donations totalled US$3.62m, while Canadians donated US$4.31m, he added.

    Hong Kong rights group says website not accessible through some networks | Reuters

    UK Home Office demands Big Tech block ‘legal but harmful’ posts | Financial Times and interesting changes in California California to adopt UK-style child data law in global push against Big Tech | Financial Times

    US accuses financial website of spreading Russian propaganda | Yahoo Finance – accusation against Zero Hedge

    Didi to layoff 20% of employees 

    Meta, Google, other American tech giants face EU data blackout as ruling looms on their contracts to transfer vast amounts of user information to US | South China Morning Post 

    Hong Kong Arrests Singer Tommy Yuen on National Security Grounds, Restricts Internet | Variety – interesting that this got covered in Variety

    Retailing

    Want to buy an Ineos Grenadier? Here’s how | CAR MagazineIn some very rural parts of the UK, for example, we will partner with companies whose franchises are agricultural franchises – JCB, Massey Ferguson, those kind of franchises. They are next to auction centres and livestock centres. Their neighbours are NFU regional offices, that kind of thing. Because that is where the customers go and they live and they work.

    Exclusive: Chinese fashion firm Shein on Singapore hiring spree as it shifts key assets there | Reuters and more here Shein shifts parent firm to Singapore | Techasia 

    Security

    Poland Army adds new cyber component with offensive capabilities – The Record by Recorded Future

    TikTok Can Circumvent Apple and Google Privacy Protections and Access Full User Data, 2 Studies Say (Exclusive) 

    Digital sovereignty: Commission proposes Chips Act 

    Lost SpaceX internet satellites show the power of solar weather — Quartz 

    Mozilla warns Chrome, Firefox ‘100’ user agents may break sites | Bleeping Computer

    How a Saudi woman’s iPhone revealed hacking around the world | National Post 

    How Roblox ‘Beamers’ Get Rich Stealing from Children | Vice – basically hacking accounts and stripping the virtual goods for resale

    MACAU DAILY TIMES 澳門每日時報 » Cyberattacks knock out sites of Ukrainian army, major banks

    Chinese naval vessel aims laser at Australian surveillance plane | Financial Times 

    Taiwan

    Taiwan to change law to prevent ‘economic espionage’ by China — Radio Free Asia

    Technology

    Intel is betting $5 billion on old semiconductor technology — Quartz 

    EETimes – A Big Week for RISC-V 

    Telecoms

    Chinese MI6 informant gave information to MPs about Huawei threat | The Guardian

    Web of no web

    Video games’ future is more than the Metaverse: Let’s talk ‘hyper digital reality’ | Playable Futures | GamesIndustry.biz 

    The metaverse is just a new word for an old idea | MIT Technology Review

    Raph Koster’s real talk about a real metaverse | VentureBeat 

    How SoftBank’s costly bet on the ‘internet of things’ backfired at Arm | Financial Times – having been in meetings with ARM pre-Softbank acquisition, I wasn’t surprised that things went horribly wrong

    Beijing and Shanghai welcome the metaverse as economy slows – Protocol and this time there is state money going in so that there aren’t independent businesses a la Tencent, Baidu, ByteDance etc: Chinese state pumps money into metaverse stakes | Financial Times 

    Americans are embracing QR codes. But the FBI says be careful Axios 

    Why you can’t have legs in virtual reality (yet) – CNN 

    Metaverse’s userbase has grown up to 300,000 users per month / Digital Information World

    Wireless

    Motorola and Verizon Announced 5G Neckband For AR and VR Headsets 

  • Burning NFTs + more news

    Burning NFTs

    Why brands are burning NFTs | Vogue BusinessBurning NFTs, which are tokens stored on a blockchain, is the process of permanently removing a token from circulation. This can be done to eliminate unsold or problematic inventory from an NFT drop, or it can be used to engage collectors and fans through “upgrades” that replace an original NFT with something else. For fashion and beauty brands, burning NFTs could offer a way to manipulate scarcity, and therefore price. It could also lead to more intriguing NFT projects, in which consumers must weigh risk and reward by burning an NFT in exchange for something else. These scenarios, among others, are already playing out among artists and gaming startups, paving the way for fashion. Already, Adidas is using a burn mechanism to change the state of its NFTs when NFT owners make a purchase. Apparel brand Champion recently partnered with Daz 3D’s NFT collection, Non-Fungible People, and will use burning to enable peoples’ profile picture NFTs to digitally dress in Champion gear, while Unisocks invites NFT owners to burn them in exchange for physical products. – burning NFTs sounds like a dangerous precedent

    China

    How China is using black sites in the UAE as they target Uyghurs abroad | Sky News – particularly interesting when one thinks about how much of a surveillance state that the UAE is. It is very hard to do anything like this there without the government knowing

    Consumer behaviour

    Environment | Gallup Historical Trends – interesting longitudinal data set. Environmental messaging effectiveness is proportional to consumer disposable income and financial security at the time

    Design

    Defining character: A Hong Kong font designer’s bold effort to preserve Cantonese culture – Hong Kong Free Press HKFP – based on the past toughness of Hong Kong…

    Economics

    Lithium price squeeze adds to cost of the energy transition | Financial Times – China has a lock on the world’s lithium supply through mining acquisitions, so this squeeze has been coming for at least five years

    UK engineer Renishaw expects chip crunch to last another 2 years | Financial Times – expects semiconductor supply chain problems until at least 2024

    When will the music stop? | Financial Times – bill being called due on financialisation and post-industrialisation of western economies and a move from globalisation to regionalisation

    Germany

    Mercedes accused of using cheat-devices with ‘500%’ higher NOx emissions | CAR Magazine – the interesting thing about this is that Mercedes is a more financially precarious position than Volkswagen is due to lower profit margins and less of a war chest to draw on if this case gets serious

    Hong Kong

    Australia denied access to dual citizen detained for alleged ‘subversion’ in Hong Kong | The Guardian – the interesting thing about this is that dual citizenship is no longer allowed in Hong Kong, which is at odds to the way things had been in the colony

    Ideas

    Twee fashion: will the revival bring back toxic body image? – The Face – intersectionality impacting nostalgia

    Chen Qiufan on Science Fiction as a Weapon of Storytelling – The Wire China – defining the future is exceptionally important (paywall)

    How Can We Talk about China and against Sinophobia without Feeling Guilty, Apologetic or Defensive? | British Journal of Chinese Studies 

    Ireland

    US embassy warns TU Dublin about risks of ties with Chinese university | Ireland | The Sunday TimesChina wants Ireland to host international campus of Harbin University. Ireland should be looking at the experience of Hungary who were made to foot the bill for a campus that only benefit Chinese students – In 2020 HIT was added to an “entity list” by the US Department of Commerce, which identifies people or organisations that it believes are involved in activities contrary to US security or foreign policy interests. Last week the American embassy in Dublin said it was still concerned about HIT’s ties with the People’s Liberation Army and its efforts to acquire foreign technology in support of its defence aim

    Online

    Mark Zuckerberg and team consider shutting down Facebook and Instagram in Europe if Meta can not process Europeans’ data on US servers 

    When scientific conferences went online, diversity and inclusion soared | Careers | Chemistry World

    Security

    China and Russia’s hypersonic weaponry threatens US early warning system | Financial Times

    China companies try to list in US in test for regulators after clampdown | Financial Times 

    British research ‘could help China build superweapons’ | News | The TimesThe number of research collaborations between scientists in the UK and Chinese institutes with deep connections to the country’s defence forces has tripled to more than 1,000 in six years, a figure that lays bare the scale of cooperation with the hostile state. The university funding includes £60 million from sources now sanctioned by the US government for supplying the Chinese military with fighter jets, communications technology and missiles. The article was published with this opinion piece: Is getting into bed with President Xi for science . . . or just sleazy? | News | The Times  – It is 1914 and our scientists, encouraged by government and big business, have been co-operating with their German opposites on machine-gun technology, ballistics and aeroplane design — all in the name of exciting new technology and with a rising country with an important market and close ties with the UK. Now return to the present, but with an eye to the future. As The Times reveals today, UK scientists are working closely with Chinese scientists from institutes intimately associated with weapons development

    Australia-China relations: US, allies ‘acquiesced and allowed’ China’s South China Sea expansion, Australian minister says | South China Morning Post 

    South Korea to track travel by chip engineers as tech leaks grow – Nikkei Asia – reading this made me think of the scientific brain drain in Len Deighton’s The Ipcress File. It also give you an idea of the lengths that the Koreans think China will go to

    US adds 33 Chinese companies to red flag list, unseals Hytera indictment | South China Morning PostBeing added to the Commerce Department’s ‘unverified list’ means a firm faces tougher rules on doing business with American companies. The Hytera indictment details a 13-year effort by the company and a group of former Motorola employees to steal technology

    Foreign Office hit by “serious cybersecurity incident” | The Stack – not much information on the nature of the breach or who was likely to be behind it

    Telecoms

    Morgan Stanley Technology, Media & Telecom Conference 2021 | Morgan Stanley 

    Web of no web

    Why gamers hate crypto, and music fans don’t – gamers feel that they are being ripped off, music fans look at NFTs like as if they are souvenirs or trading cards. This has important implications for mechanisms governing the metaverse

    Axios Login | Beijing Olympics in VR 

  • Esprit + more news

    Esprit

    The rise and fall of Esprit, SF’s coolest clothing brandEsprit appealed to the youth with a message of lefty, post-racial harmony. Wild prints, bright colors and baggy silhouettes reigned. Their tote bags and T-shirts hung from all the coolest shoulders, adorning fashion plates with the legendary Esprit logo. With the logo’s omnipresence at the time, it may as well have been Supreme for the teens of the late ’80s and early ’90s. – the article skips over some of the awful things that Esprit did to its Chinese emigrant workers in San Francisco.

    esprit
    Esprit Store in Gentings Casino, Malaysia by Ryan Lackey

    The success of Esprit was down to its ‘Europeaness’. It had a Benetton kind of vibe, because they shared the same advertising creative and a similar approach to interior retail space design and bright colours. Esprit eventually listed on the Hong Kong Stock Exchange but never got its mojo back. The clean logo was designed by John Casado, who had worked for Apple on the Macintosh icons and New Line Cinema

    China

    Chinese documentary prompts rare criticism of Xi’s anti-corruption campaign | Financial TimesAnalysts said the negative reaction to Zero Tolerance suggests the decade-long campaign has not sealed public confidence in the party’s ability to investigate itself for graft, which remains widespread….“Getting caught doesn’t mean you are more corrupt than others,” said a former official at the Supreme People’s Procuratorate, the highest government agency responsible for investigation and prosecution of criminal cases. “It just means you have bad luck.” – such a good read and reaffirms much of what I saw in China, prior to and during the early Xi premiership. The way it falls is arbitrary in nature and usually linked to power struggles

    Economics

    China’s ‘Common Prosperity’ to Squeeze Cash-Strapped Local Governments – WSJ – pledges on education, healthcare and public housing is expected to be funded by local governments whose main source of revenue is selling land to property developers, so you can imagine that’s going to work out well….. NOT

    Ethics

    For Olympic Sponsors, ‘China Is an Exception’ – The New York TimesAt the bottom of the slope where snowboarders will compete in the 2022 Beijing Olympics, an electronic sign cycles through ads for companies like Samsung and Audi. Coca-Cola’s cans are adorned with Olympic rings. Procter & Gamble has opened a beauty salon in the Olympic Village. Visa is the event’s official credit card. President Biden and a handful of other Western leaders may have declared a “diplomatic boycott” of the Winter Games, which begin next week, but some of the world’s most famous brands will still be there. The prominence of these multinational companies, many of them American, has taken the political sting out of the efforts by Mr. Biden and other leaders to punish China for its human rights abuses, including a campaign of repression in the western region of Xinjiang that the State Department has declared a genocide. – at the end of the day, brands are more afraid of Chinese consumers and the Chinese government than they are of western governments and activist consumers

    Instagram and TikTok pull ads from startup Cerebral linking ADHD to obesity | NBC News – the lesson of this is correlation and casuality are different

    Germany

    Latvia slams Germany’s ‘immoral’ relationship with Russia and China | Financial Times and this which is largely down to Germany: EU gives China a nudge rather than a slap over Lithuania – POLITICO. Let’s see what Germany does about: Slovenia latest EU nation hit by China for backing Taiwan | World | The Times – Slovenia provides more products and components to German industry

    Innovation

    A remote village, a world-changing invention and the epic legal fight that followed | Financial Times – interesting dispute with Ocado

    In Depth: New Zealand Fruit Giant’s Kiwi Battle in China 

    Online

    Implications of Revenue Models and Technology for Content Moderation Strategies by Yi Liu, Pinar Yildirim , Z. John Zhang :: SSRNWe show that a self-interested platform can use content moderation as an effective marketing tool to expand its installed user base, to increase the utility of its users, and to achieve its positioning as a moderate or extreme content platform. For the purpose of maximizing its own profit, a platform will balance pruning some extreme content, thus losing some users, with gaining new users because of a more moderate content on the platform. This balancing act will play out differently depending on whether users will have to pay to join (subscription vs advertising revenue models) and on whether the technology for content moderation is perfect. 

    We show that when conducting content moderation optimally, a platform under advertising is more likely to moderate its content than one under subscription, but does it less aggressively compared to the latter when it does. This is because a platform under advertising is more concerned about expanding its user base, while a platform under subscription is also concerned with users’ willingness-to-pay. We also show a platform’s optimal content moderation strategy depends on its technical sophistication. Because of imperfect technology, a platform may optimally throw away the moderate content more than the extreme content. Therefore, one cannot judge how extreme a platform is by just looking at its content moderation strategy. Furthermore, we show that a platform under advertising does not necessarily benefit from a better technology for content moderation, but one under subscription does, as the latter can always internalize the benefits of a better technology. This means that platforms under different revenue models can have different incentives to improve their content moderation technology.

    Has Instagram Lost its Organic Reach? What to expect for 2022  – Fanpage Karma Blog – treading that same like that Marshall and Whatley found for Facebook in their Ogilvy white paper Facebook Zero

    Security

    AUKUS: Strategic drivers and geopolitical implications – Britain’s World – as much about cyber capabilities, artificial intelligence, quantum technologies, and additional undersea capabilities as nuclear submarines

    What China thinks of possible war in Ukraine | The EconomistBoth see a world order being reshaped by American weariness and self-doubt, creating chances to test and divide the democratic West. Chinese and Russian diplomats and propaganda organs relay and amplify parallel narratives about the benefits of iron-fisted order over American-style dysfunction. Joint military exercises demonstrate growing trust – but China will be very cautious and nationalists want the Russian Far East back where it belongs as part of China

    FBI considered using Pegasus spyware for US domestic surveillance | AppleInsider

    Technology

    Will China dominate the world of semiconductors? | The Economist 

    The scramble for semiconductors is our era’s industrial Great Game | Financial Times