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Wednesday

Reddit is buying TikTok rival Dubsmash

 By Charles Riley, CNN Business


London (CNN Business)Message board juggernaut Reddit is accelerating its push into video, snapping up a sharing platform that is popular with young people and women.


Reddit said in a statement on Sunday that it has acquired TikTok rival Dubsmash. It did not disclose the financial terms of the deal.

Dubsmash allows users to create and share video content, and it's especially popular with young, diverse audiences. About 25% of Black teens in the United States use the app. Women make up 70% of Dubsmash users, and roughly 30% of users log in every day, according to Reddit.

The New York-based platform enables more than 1 billion video views per month, Reddit added.

Dubsmash's three co-founders, Suchit Dash, Jonas DrĂĽppel, and Tim Specht, will be joining Reddit with immediate effect. While Dubsmash will maintain its own platform and brand, its video creation tools will be integrated into Reddit, which is best known for its freewheeling message boards.


Reddit has allowed users to upload and share their own videos since 2017, and the segment has grown quickly. The number of videos posted to the platform has doubled in 2020, according to the company.


"We are excited to accelerate Reddit's focus on video, bringing our tools and technology to their passionate, rapidly-growing user base and sparking evermore forms of creation," Dash, DrĂĽppel and Specht said in a statement.

An earlier iteration of Dubsmash was launched from Berlin by DrĂĽppel, Roland Grenke and Daniel Taschik.

Social media platforms have in recent years invested heavily in short videos, spurred on by the success of TikTok and Snapchat. Facebook's (FB) Instagram and Google's (GOOGL) YouTube have launched their own products designed to compete with TikTok.


Source : cnn.com

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Apple's supply chain woes are adding up in Asia

 By Rhea Mogul and Michelle Toh, CNN Business


Hong Kong (CNN Business)Apple has placed a second major supplier in Asia on probation after finding that the company delayed payments to workers — a breach that apparently spurred vandalism at a factory in India earlier this month.


The Silicon Valley tech firm launched an investigation after local Indian media reported that workers vandalized an iPhone factory near Bangalore run by Taiwanese manufacturer Wistron. A local labor minister and a labor organization told CNN Business last week that workers there claimed they were not being paid their wages.

Apple (AAPL) said in a statement to CNN Business that an independent audit conducted in the wake of the violence found that payment for some workers was delayed in October and November.


"Our main objective is to make sure all the workers are treated with dignity and respect, and fully compensated promptly," Apple said, adding that it has stopped placing new orders with Wistron as a result of its findings. "We are very disappointed and taking immediate steps to address these issues."

Wistron did not respond to multiple requests from CNN Business for comment on Monday. However, the company has let go of an executive in charge of its business in India, according to Taiwanese media reports.

"We are removing the vice president who oversees our business in India," Wistron said in a statement, according to the Taiwan Times. "This is a new facility and we recognize that we made mistakes as we expanded."


Apple has had to grapple with serious labor concerns in Asia in recent weeks. Last month, it placed another big supplier, Pegatron, on probation for violating its labor code by having some student workers in China work nights and overtime.

Apple said at the time that Pegatron had fired an executive in light of the infractions. Pegatron also said that it had worked to increase oversight after the violations were discovered, including by arranging an external audit.

Allegations against Pegatron haven't gone away, however. Last week, hundreds of workers protested at Pegatron's facilities in Shanghai and the eastern Chinese city of Kunshan because they said they were owed bonuses and wages, according to human rights group China Labor Watch.

The organization estimates that up to 500 temporary workers, employed by local recruitment agencies in partnership with Pegatron, gathered outside the company's Shanghai factory to protest on Saturday, chanting: "Pay the workers, sweatshop!"

Agencies had promised the workers special bonuses if they worked for 55 days, but did not follow through upon completion of their work, according to China Labor Watch.

Pegatron declined to comment on Monday.


The riot at the Wistron factory in India, meanwhile, made headlines worldwide last week after footage circulated on social media that appeared to show people smashing glass panels and tearing down CCTV cameras. In a filing with the Taiwan Stock Exchange last Tuesday, Wistron estimated that the violence had caused as much as $7 million worth of damage.

In its statement Monday, Apple noted that Wistron had taken disciplinary action and was in the process of "restructuring their recruitment and payroll teams" in Narasapura, the Indian region where the factory is located.

The firm has also set up a hotline for workers at the facility to call in anonymously with any concerns, it said.

Apple has long faced criticism for how workers in its supply chain are treated. To improve practices, the US company regularly conducts audits, including surprise visits, of its suppliers' facilities around the world.


Source : cnn.com

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Twitter updates warning label for election misinformation to say Joe Biden won

 By Brian Fung, CNN Business


(CNN Business)Twitter (TWTR) has updated the warning labels it applies to election misinformation to reflect that Joe Biden is the president-elect, the company said on Saturday.


Previously, Twitter's labels said that claims of election fraud were "disputed."

The new labels say: "Election officials have certified Joe Biden as the winner of the U.S. Presidential election."

The fresh language is active now on President Donald Trump's tweet from Saturday morning undermining the election outcome, and will be applied to all future tweets that do the same.

"Following certification of the results of the 2020 US Presidential Election, we've updated our label to reflect thee latest information," Twitter spokesperson Nick Pacilio told CNN.

The change follows mounting criticism by democracy experts who said social media platforms' labels haven't done nearly enough in the post-election period.


While Twitter said last month that it labeled roughly 300,000 tweets for content that was disputed or potentially misleading during a two-week period covering the election, critics have said such labels are ill-matched for the torrent of false claims that continue to divide Americans.


Source : cnn.com

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Monday

Alibaba shares plunges about 8% for second straight session as China ramps up pressure

 Eustance Huang

@EUSTANCEHUANG


SINGAPORE — Shares of Chinese tech giant Alibaba in Hong Kong were in the spotlight once again on Monday, after Chinese regulators ordered Alibaba-affiliate Ant Group to rectify its businesses.


By the Hong Kong market close on Monday, shares of Alibaba listed in the city plunged 7.98%, adding to losses for the firm. The stock had also dived last Thursday following reports that Chinese regulators will probe the tech behemoth for suspected monopolistic behavior.


Shares of other Hong Kong-listed Chinese tech firms also declined sizably: Tencent fell 6.65% while Meituan slipped 6.88%. China’s largest chipmaker SMIC also saw its stock in Hong Kong drop 4.2%.


The broader Hang Seng Tech index shed 4.26% on the day to 7,795.78.


Asia markets mixed

Stocks in Asia were mixed on Monday as the final trading week of 2020 kicked off.


In Japan, the Nikkei 225 gained 0.74% to close at 26,854.03 while the Topix index advanced 0.54% to finish its trading day at 1,788.04. South Korea’s Kospi closed fractionally higher at 2,808.60.


Mainland Chinese stocks were muted on the day: the Shanghai composite was largely unchanged at 3,397.29 while the Shenzhen component gained 0.193% to 14,044.10. Hong Kong’s Hang Seng index declined 0.27% to close at 26,314.63.


MSCI’s broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan rose 0.09%.


Profits at Chinese industrial firms in November rose 15.5% as compared with a year earlier, according to data released by the country’s National Bureau of Statistics over the weekend.


Markets in Australia and New Zealand are closed on Monday for a holiday.


In coronavirus developments, U.S. President Donald Trump signed a Covid relief and government funding bill days after he suggested he would block it.


Currencies and oil

The U.S. dollar index, which tracks the greenback against a basket of its peers, was at 90.093 after declining from levels above 90.4 in recent days.


The Japanese yen traded at 103.46 per dollar after seeing levels below 103.4 against the greenback last week. The Australian dollar changed hands at $0.7613 after recovering from a plunge to levels below $0.75 last week.


Oil prices were higher in the afternoon of Asia trading hours, with international benchmark Brent crude futures up 0.18% to $51.38 per barrel. U.S. crude futures gained 0.25% to $48.35 per barrel.


Source : cnbc.com

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Behind China’s fastest-growing big city: Aviation, tourism and a potential housing bubble

 Evelyn Cheng

@CHENGEVELYN


BEIJING — The Chinese city of Xi’an remains a bright spot of growth in a country still recovering from the shock of the coronavirus pandemic.


Xi’an is best known to many for its Terracotta Warriors — an army of clay sculptures from ancient times. Located in central China well over 800 miles from the east coast metropolis of Shanghai, Xi’an is one of the last major urban areas before the poorer regions of the west.


The city’s GDP grew 4.5% in the first three quarters of the year, the fastest of all major Chinese cities, according to Wind Information. Beijing city grew 0.1%, while Shanghai contracted 0.3% during the first nine months of the year, the data showed. National GDP is set for roughly 2% growth this year.


Xi’an’s rapid expansion reflects how local governments are trying to boost growth, while revealing questions about sustainability.


Tech

High-value manufacturing in industries such as aviation and pharmaceuticals as well as the development of transportation infrastructure have contributed significantly to Xi’an’s growth, said Perry Wong, managing director of research at the Milken Institute.


In the institute’s ranking this year of China’s “Best-Performing Cities” released on Dec. 17, Xi’an rose to fourth place, up from sixth place last year and ninth place in 2018.


High levels of foreign direct investment are another factor behind Xi’an’s growth, Wong said.


In the first three quarters of the year, Xi’an said it utilized $6.58 billion in foreign capital, a 7.2% rise from a year ago. That’s a faster increase than the 2.5% increase to $103.26 billion in foreign capital used nationwide, according to official data.


Samsung has invested more than $10 billion in Xi’an, where the company’s semiconductor unit has facilities for research and manufacturing. The South Korean company is reportedly stepping up its investment and sent hundreds of more engineers to the city earlier this year, according to The Korea Herald.


Some of the Chinese high-tech companies located in Xi’an include aircraft parts manufacturer Chenxi Aviation, AVIC XAC — a commercial aircraft manufacturer tied to state-owned defense and aerospace conglomerate AVIC — and Western Superconductor, which manufacturers titanium products and researches applications in aerospace, medical and other industries.


Housing

Helping those high-tech companies attract talent, and the city to build its wealth, are government policies that make it easy for university graduates to settle in Xi’an and buy a home. People in China are tied to their place of birth through the hukou system, which makes it hard for migrants to the largest cities like Beijing to buy apartments or send their children to local schools.


Relaxing hukou restrictions is a strategy in a growth race among China’s up-and-coming urban areas, so-called “new first-tier cities,” said Yimin Zhao, an assistant professor in the urban planning and management department at Renmin University. “They’re competing with each other to attract not only capital, not only high-tech, but also talent.”


In China’s development system, a population increase allows the local government to extend the city limits, get more land allocated for construction and make money from property deals, Zhao said.


Reflecting high demand — and likely speculation — Xi’an’s house prices soared a cumulative 46% in the three years through 2019, according to the Sweetome Hurun Global Price Index. The annual report by rental vacation home operator Sweetome and wealth tracker Hurun Report found that Xi’an retained the third spot globally last year by price increase, up 19.7%.


The gains have continued this year, albeit at a slower pace.


Prices for newly constructed commercial housing in Xi’an rose 7.1% in November from a year ago, according to the National Bureau of Statistics. That’s among the 10 fastest paces for 70 large and medium-sized cities.


The city’s influx of buyers and high-rise developments has attracted too many speculators, causing an unsustainable price bubble, while creating traffic and safety issues for an overly crowded city, said Yuan Guoqian, president of Xi’an Xiaoyuan Technology. The company’s research advocates that cities pursue more sustainable expansion through two or three-story townhouses.


Yuan said the idea is beginning to find some traction, and that a project in the Weinan region on the northeastern outskirts of Xi’an has nearly completed phase one, thanks to support from local authorities. “They understand no one wants this kind of high-density living,” he said, according to a CNBC translation of his Mandarin-language remarks.


Growth challenges

Xi’an’s popularity among tourists — a selling point for developers — has also been a downside in the wake of the coronavirus pandemic.


The city remained one of the 10 most popular tourist destinations in China this year, according to booking website Trip.com.


But since June, new business registrations in Xi’an have plunged roughly 40% from a year ago, while other major inland Chinese cities of Chengdu and Chongqing have seen increases of 15% and 7%, respectively. That’s according to Chinese business database Qichacha.


“This year, the economy isn’t as good as prior years, so there’s a limit (on consumer spending),” said Mao Wei, general manager of the Zhonghua County tourism area that’s under development about an hour’s drive from Xi’an. That’s according to a CNBC translation of his Mandarin-language remarks.


He said the number of visitors has begun to pick up since April. But he doesn’t expect much return on the years-long project until people begin to stay more at its hotels, and more residential and commercial parts are completed.


Speaking broadly about the tourism industry, Mao said, “Overall 2020 is not as good as 2019 because everyone lost money in the first quarter.”


Source : cnbc.com

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