Out of all the Icarus stories in China tech, Luckin Coffee’s is one of the most spectacular. Founded in 2017, in under two years the delivery-focused company was the country’s second-biggest coffee chain, raising half a billion dollars in a US IPO. By the end of 2019, it had more stores in China than Starbucks—and had the larger chain beat on prices.
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It didn’t last. In April 2020, Luckin Coffee admitted to fabricating $310 million in sales, the most spectacular fraud admission we had seen in a while in China tech. As shares of the company plunged by as much as 75% in a single day of trading, the Chinese internet wrote it off with a snarky epitaph: “Hey Wall Street, thanks for the free coffee!” By May 22, 2020 shares hit $1.39, from a January high of $50.02.
The disgraced company faced multiple class action lawsuits from shareholders and was delisted from Nasdaq on June 29, 2020. Chairman Lu Zhengyao defaulted on a $518 million loan. In February this year, the company filed for bankruptcy.
But Luckin is still very much alive: despite some closures, its stores are still a ubiquitous presence in Chinese office districts, and this summer it even launched a new range of fruit drinks. On the over the counter markets—the largely unregulated home for stocks that can’t make into a traditional exchange, its stock has recovered to around $9 per share. It’s even reporting higher revenue despite cutting stores.
Is Luckin a comeback story?
It’s hard to say.
With high-profile marketing campaigns and steep discounts, Luckin changed habits for millions of Chinese consumers. It helped get office workers hooked on reasonably priced coffee, and it still dwarfs its closest competitors in size. But with hipper, low-priced beverage chains nipping at its heels, it’s not clear if Luckin will be the beneficiary of the coffee culture it built.
Luckin went into bankruptcy with a huge asset: a vast network of busy stores. With its meteoric rise ended, the company has promised to stop burning cash for growth, and raised prices in an effort to turn a profit with the business it has. Bankruptcy administrators Alvarez & Marsal have told the court they are “optimistic” the firm will survive and resume growth.
Price increase & less coupons: For consumers, the most obvious change is increased prices and fewer coupons. Luckin told Chinese media in May that store heads could apply to raise prices up to RMB 3 for each drink, amounting to a RMB 1 or RMB 2 rise considering discounts. Meanwhile, the company stopped giving free drink coupons to first-time buyers. Its current coupons offer around 50% discount, compared with the more aggressive 80% or 90% discounts at the peak of its marketing campaign before the scandal.
Wang Jia, a 38-year-old avid coffee drinker from Shanghai, told TechNode she still orders regularly from Luckin, but receives fewer coupons compared with one year ago.
TechNode staff in Beijing and Shanghai were able to order a black coffee with delivery for RMB 14 ($2.17), discounted from a notional standard price of RMB 26. In China, the most basic drink is an Americano, usually priced at RMB 20.
Fewer stores: To cut costs, Luckin also closed down about 609 of its self-operated stores, bringing the total from 4,507 to 3,898 at the end of November 2020. The chain is no longer bigger than Starbucks, but it remains a clear second. No other coffee chain has 1,000 stores.
“Luckin has made a decision to turn away from an expansion-at-all-costs approach and prune its network of coffee chains. From outward appearances and occasional company updates, this decision has reduced the number of under-performing stores.” Michael Norris, research and strategy head at institute AgencyChina.
Existing stores are operated thinly to manage staffing costs. A 40-square-meter Luckin store TechNode visited in downtown Shanghai depends on only one staff member to handle more than 700 orders per day, an employee told TechNode.
Franchise model: Luckin, which previously insisted on running its own stores, launched a franchise model in January. The company does not collect franchise fees from its partners, but becoming a Luckin franchisee requires an upfront investment of between RMB 35,000 to RMB 37,000 for storefront decoration, equipment, and a deposit. Luckin then takes up to 40% of the store’s profits once it reaches an agreed earnings threshold, depending on the size of the store.
Double down on existing users: Instead of spending heavily to acquire new users, Luckin focuses on getting value from regular customers, encouraging repurchasing by funneling them to a private user pool on social network tools such as WeChat Work. After scanning a QR code in a Luckin store at the request of a staff member, TechNode joined a WeChat group where the company sends discounts and coupons to nearly 100 customers. The tactic, commonly known as “private traffic,” is a popular marketing tool in China for increased user intimacy with brands and improved consumer retention rate.
Since delisting, Luckin has not published financial reports, so it’s hard to say whether the company is making headway on profits. In April, Luckin said it will publish corrected 2019 and 2020 earnings “as soon as possible.” But some figures have come out through the bankruptcy process.
When last seen, the company’s bottom line was in the red: in Luckin’s last financial statement, it claimed a loss attributable to shareholders of $324 million for the nine months ending September 2019. Of course, without the fake sales it would probably have looked worse.
Luckin appointed Alvarez & Marsal (A&M), a Cayman Islands-based consultancy which oversaw the liquidation of Lehman Brothers, to oversee its restructuring. The coffee chain owes millions to investors who bought into its January 2020 bond offering. The liquidators most recently released revenue information for 2020, reporting increased revenue despite a steep cut in store numbers.
Luckin scored revenue growth in 2020, A&M said. The auditor estimated the net revenue for 2020 to be between RMB 3.8 billion and RMB 4.2 billion, compared with RMB 3.0 billion net revenue for 2019. That’s a 27% to 40% year-on-year increase. Nothing significant compared with three-digit growth before, but healthy enough for a tumultuous year.
“It’s a reach to make predictions about the company’s current operating status based on last year’s data because there have been lots of developments in the market since then. But consumers and the market reckon that the company’s operations are getting better. The beverage industry is highly profitable. Avoiding large-scale store closures during the most difficult times in last year’s pandemic is obvious evidence that the company is doing well,” Mark Zhang, analyst from Tiger Brokers told TechNode (our translation).
Some of its stores managed to break even for the first time in August 2020, and in September 2020, 60% of Luckin’s self-operated stores were profitable on the store level, the liquidators reported. The company claimed $710.3 million in cash and cash equivalents as of Nov. 30, 2020.
New business focuses start to pay off
The company still faces debt trouble
Raising money: The company received new investments from Centurium Capital and Joy Capital on April 15. Centurium Capital put in $240 million and Joy Capital invested an additional $10 million in senior convertible shares. Both of the funders were early-stage investors of the company and sat on the original board of Luckin.
“The company’s original investors, a motley crew with ties to Lu Zhengyao, haven’t given up on the concept. Query, however, whether they believe in the company’s strategy and competitive position or whether they are clinging onto the prospect of a lucrative exit,” Norris said. Norris previously criticized the company’s reliance on the personal networks of its founder in a 2019 TechNode article.
Vending machines: In January 2020, Luckin announced $865 million in post-IPO fundraising to fund growth and “unmanned” vending machine strategy. Due the the turmoil caused by its fraud admission, the firm suspended all expansion of the vending machines business in May 2020.
Luckin admitted to bad corporate governance and simply inventing sales figures out of whole cloth. Has it changed enough to be trusted?
Luckin is alive, and so is the model it started. But the world is different now—in part because of Luckin’s success. Coffee shops and beverage chains mushroomed in China over the past year.
“Previously, Luckin was fighting to take shares from Starbucks. Now, Luckin is trying to complete the same objective, while grappling with Luckin-imitator coffee chains, such as Manner Coffee. It’s unclear whether the company has what it takes to fight a two-front war for coffee-drinkers’ wallets,” said AgencyChina’s Norris.
Local rivals like Manner Coffee (in Chinese) and Coffee Box have become new investor darlings in the coffee segment. Manner, which operates more than 100 mostly Shanghai-based stores, eschews discounts and deliveries, offering app-based pick up at a consistent price (RMB 15 for an Americano, with few to no discounts). Coffee Box, which started as a delivery service for Starbucks and Costa before setting up its own brand in 2014, shut down almost all of its brick-and-mortar stores to focus on online channels after setting up a joint venture in June last year with China’s largest gas station chain Sinopec. The joint venture plans to sell coffee in Sinopec’s Yijie convenience stores as “Yijie Coffee,” and targets 3,000 locations in gas stations and beyond by 2023.
Milk tea and fruity drinks chains also pose a challenge as the boundary between the coffee and tea fads is blurring. That means coffee chains also face competition from IPO candidates like Naixue’s Tea and Heytea, both of which now serve coffee. HeyTea operates more than 700 stores as of December, up from 390 one year ago, while Naixue’s Tea has nearly 500 stores as of 2020.
And, of course, Luckin faces international competitors. Starbucks is becoming more localized and online through a partnership with Alibaba. Fast food chains KFC and McDonald are increasing their coffee forays. Canadian coffee chain Tim Hortons is expanding its China operations after an investment from Tencent in February.
“There are too many beverage brands to choose from in big cities like Shanghai. Instead of constantly purchasing from one single brand, I buy from several brands, and will choose whichever brands that are most accessible or most affordable at the time,” said Wang Jia.
UPDATE: An interview has been rephrased to remove the implication that Seesaw is a Luckin imitator.
Additional contributions by Julia Lu and Louis Hinnant
]]>The crypto mining world remains in suspense about the future of Sichuan-based crypto mines after a regulators’ meeting on June 2. Two sources who know meeting attendees and asked not to be named told TechNode that Sichuan regulators have asked crypto mining companies to make plans to exit the province after September.
Following talk of a crackdown on bitcoin mining from top-level government officials, Sichuan officials met to discuss the effect of crypto mining on electricity consumption.
Regulators told crypto mining companies to make plans to move their operations elsewhere and not to add any more new rigs during this transition, two sources who know someone in the meeting told TechNode.
Industry insider Molly Mo first reported that the Sichuan meeting was positive towards the industry.
Local authorities don’t want any sudden shocks to the local economy, so they will allow miners to stay through the end of the rainy season, which usually lasts until the end of September, one source said.
At the time of the publication, no official statements or regulations have come out of the meeting, which took place on June 2.
Why it matters: The southwestern province is a major crypto mining hub, due to its abundance of cheap electricity from hydropower plants during the rainy season. A crackdown there would significantly disrupt global crypto mining operations.
READ MORE: Crypto miners start move to North America as China vows crackdown
Details: No policies have been officially released since the meeting. It was “inconclusive,” reported Chinese blockchain news outlet PANews (in Chinese).
Context: After the State Council’s Financial Stability committee discussed a crackdown on Bitcoin mining at a meeting on May 21, the global crypto community has been anxiously waiting for a decision from Sichuan provincial officials. The State Council is China’s cabinet of ministers.
READ MORE: INSIGHTS | A turning point for China crypto?
This story has been updated with more information.
]]>The team behind Chinese blockchain Nervos are building a cross-chain bridge to connect with Cardano, which users to use both chains’ native tokens interchangeably.
Why it matters: The bridge could be a major boost for Nervos user numbers. Cardano is the world’s sixth-largest cryptocurrency, with a $55.6 billion market cap, almost 10 times Nervos’s.
Details: The cross-chain asset bridge will allow users to use the two networks’ native tokens interchangeably across the two blockchains, using their existing wallets, Nervos said in a statement sent to TechNode. The bridge will use Nervos’s own cross-chain technology, Force Bridge.
Nervos: Hangzhou-based Nervos is building a fully-fledged public blockchain protocol, including a virtual machine.
Connect chains: Nervos is also trying to tap into the growing need for interoperability, connecting distributed ledgers to form a blockchain web.
News of Chinese officials signaling a crackdown on Bitcoin mining continues to ripple through China’s crypto world. Officials in Sichuan province will hold a meeting to decide whether they will increase crypto mining regulation. Meanwhile, crypto exchanges are closing off Chinese users from some of their services. One exchange, Binance, translated some website pages from simplified to traditional Chinese, a writing system unfamiliar to most mainland Chinese. A Chinese government official said that China’s digital yuan could one day be plugged into the Ethereum blockchain.
The world of blockchain moves fast, and nowhere does it move faster than China. Here’s what you need to know about China’s block-world in the week of May 26-June 1.
China’s crypto mining industry is anxiously waiting to see how local officials will carry out a crackdown on bitcoin mining ordered by a State Council committee meeting on May 21 led by Vice Premier Liu He.
READ MORE: INSIGHTS | A turning point for China crypto?
Crypto trading platforms continue to cut off service to Chinese users following the State Council’s announcement on a mining crackdown, particularly from derivatives trading like perpetual contracts.
READ MORE: Crypto mining armageddon? Blockheads
Yao Qian, Director of the Science and Technology Regulatory Bureau of the China Securities Regulatory Commission said at a late May speech that China’s digital currency could run on blockchain networks like Ethereum, which would enable better financial inclusion.
Before 2018, Yao was involved in the Digital Currency Electronic Payment (DCEP), the project under which the digital yuan is developed, while it was still in its early stages, when he worked at the People’s Bank of China.
“We can imagine that if digital dollars and digital yen run directly on blockchain networks such as Ethereum and Diem, then central banks can use their BaaS [blockchain as a service] services to directly provide users with central bank digital currencies without the need for intermediaries. Layered operations can enable the central bank’s digital currency to better benefit groups without bank accounts and achieve financial inclusion.”
—Yao Qian, Director of the Science and Technology Regulatory Bureau of the China Securities Regulatory Commission
Yao also said that the central bank’s motivation for working on the digital yuan is not to monitor people’s financial activities, adding that popular third-party digital payments apps such as Alipay and WeChat pay already “make all transactions transparent in real-time.” DCEP is the central bank’s attempt to keep up with the pace of digitalization, Yao said. (Sina Finance)
]]>China’s crypto mining industry is facing the biggest regulatory threat of the last three years.
On May 21, China’s cabinet of ministers, the State Council, explicitly discussed cracking down on cryptocurrency mining. It was the first time the government body explicitly targeted the industry.
Just four days later, Inner Mongolia proposed a set of eight measures that will likely stifle crypto mining in the province.
The crypto world is waiting with bated breath for regional authorities in China’s other crypto mining hubs—Sichuan, Xinjiang, and Yunnan—to write rules.
Many crypto mining companies are already packing their bags, filling them with their most precious productive asset; mining rigs. Crypto exchanges and other crypto companies are holding out.
So is crypto in China over?
Bottom line: It’s too soon to say, but things are not going to be the same. Many crypto mining companies are already moving their rigs out of the country. Crypto exchanges and other crypto-linked companies are still holding out. But blockchain isn’t all crypto, and the wider ecosystem is still in good shape, perhaps the best shape it’s ever been in.
A legal grey zone: Beijing has been suspicious of cryptocurrencies for a long time, but much crypto activity is tolerated. The Chinese government banned companies from issuing new tokens back in 2017. They also banned fiat to crypto conversion services, which led to the exchanges being kicked out of China, they stopped trading for Chinese mainland users, and moved their headquarters to other countries.
Vibrant community: China’s crypto industry may operate in a grey zone, but nobody is in hiding. Some parts of the industry are pretty swish, complete with fancy offices in central Beijing and lavish five-course dinners at private clubs. But the crypto industry is a lot more diverse than stereotypical tech.
Change in tone: The China crypto scene has been facing increased regulatory pressure in the last year. By all accounts, there’s two motivations behind the talk at the highest levels of the Chinese government against mining: environmental and financial.
Why the crackdown? It’s one part green: In the last year, China has accelerated its move towards a greener future. In the 14th Five Year Plan, it pledged big reductions in carbon emissions.
One part financial stability: At the same time, finance authorities have their own beef with Bitcoin. The May 21 statement that got crypto peeps worried didn’t come from China’s environmental authorities. It came from the State Council’s Financial Stability Committee, which said that “it’s looking to control financial risk.”
Not everybody likes the bull market: State bodies and media have been bashing cryptocurrency “speculation” in the last few months, as the bull market was raging, even as some officials have recognized Bitcoin as an asset.
Crypto financial services: More than the miners, in the last year, we’ve seen crypto financial services providers have been targeted.
Blockchain boom: Meanwhile, the non-crypto blockchain ecosystem has seen unprecedented support from the central and local governments. In 2019, the technology was endorsed by President Xi Jinping, and in 2021 the technology was mentioned by name in the national five year plan.
For regulators, crypto is out of favor in China, but blockchain is still in. But it’s often hard to figure out what that means. When I ask people “what is blockchain good for?” I often get a garbled response that includes something like “efficiency” and “transparency.”
That hasn’t convinced me. The very decentralized version of blockchain, known as a public chain, is not at all efficient (I’m looking at you, Bitcoin). The simple reason; it takes more work to coordinate a network of computers to do your bookkeeping than it does to keep a single book.
Blockchain isn’t all crypto: Companies are applying the basic ideas of Bitcoin to managing all kinds of data, often for very mainstream players. Blockchain is a good way to automate trust, particularly as you integrate data.
The supply chain application: Walmart works with a long supply chain of food producers, processing facilities, and logistics companies to put food on its shelves. Tracing a single item’s journey through this supply chain is a hefty task, not just because the chain is long, but because those suppliers keep their own ledgers of product information, invoices, orders, that aren’t necessarily compatible. Blockchain provides a relatively simple way to keep standardized and secure records across this entire chain.
Greasing the wheels: Corporate applications—and many of the blockchain the Chinese government is looking to implement—are typically “consortium” chains, running on computers controlled by a set of defined agents. In these cases, if you trust these agents, you trust the system.
Through tokens we trust: Public chains need to run on strangers’ computers—and if you’re going to make them trustworthy, you need a lot of strangers running a lot of computers to check each others’ work.
What’s to come? Crypto mining firms will increasingly face pressure from authorities, following the State Council committee’s meeting. It is also likely that authorities will crack down on companies bringing crypto trading to Auntie Meng—piling onto their moves on crypto financial services from last year.
But the rest of China’s blockchain ecosystem will keep going. Authorities have shown tolerance and even support for companies working on fundamental blockchain technology, be it public or consortium chains. These same firms issue cryptocurrencies to keep their public chain protocols going. As long as they don’t encourage Auntie Meng to take on too much risk by investing in crypto, they will likely be fine.
]]>Chinese crypto mining braces for regulatory headwinds after a top government body vowed a crackdown on the industry. The news came after a tough week for the industry, which saw power outages in Sichuan and calls for snitching in Inner Mongolia. A Hainan company completed the first cross-border e-CNY transaction for e-commerce.
The world of blockchain moves fast, and nowhere does it move faster than China. Here’s what you need to know about China’s block-world in the week of May 17-25.
Chinese blockchain stocks outperformed their international counterparts last week amid falling Bitcoin prices. (Bloomberg)
]]>Major Chinese crypto mining companies are moving their operations to North America in anticipation of a renewed crackdown on the industry in China, two industry insiders told TechNode.
One source within a Chinese mining firm told TechNode the company has made arrangements to ship thousands of mining rigs to facilities in Texas in the US and Alberta in Canada. The two regions are top destinations for Chinese mining companies looking to move overseas, the source added.
On May 21, the State Council’s Financial Stability Committee resolved to “crack down on Bitcoin mining and trading” to curb related financial risk at a meeting chaired by Vice Premier Liu He, according to a statement released late the same evening.
This is the first time China’s cabinet has explicitly targeted crypto mining.
China accounts for about 70% of the world’s Bitcoin hashrate, a measure of computing power in the network. The price of Bitcoin plunged 13% to $35,000 in the six hours following the statement.
China’s mining industry has flourished largely due to the wide availability of cheap electricity in regions like Sichuan, Inner Mongolia, and Xinjiang.
Electricity in Texas can cost as little as $0.02 per kilowatt hour (KwH), Ethan Vera, co-founder of a US mining firm told TechNode back in September 2020. The average price for electricity for industrial use in China is $0.084 KwH, but in Sichuan it has been reported to be as low as $0.01 per KwH during the rainy season due to abundant hydropower.
The crypto mining industry has been operating in a legal grey zone, and the central government hasn’t made previously taken decisive moves to embrace or crush it. A year ago, the government of Sichuan appeared to be opening up to crypto mining.
READ MORE: INSIGHTS | Markets, not floods, will drown bitcoin miners
But the 14th Five Year Plan’s sustainability goals spelled trouble for crypto mining in China.
Bitcoin mining has been widely criticized for using up a lot of electricity. By some estimates the network uses up more power than the entirety of Argentina.
Following the plan, Inner Mongolia, whose cheap electricity comes primarily from coal plants, proposed a ban on crypto mining citing environmental concerns. Chinese media reported earlier in May that miners in Sichuan have been expecting increased pressure from provincial authorities as they pursue sustainability goals.
However, the recent move came from financial, not environmental, authorities.
The rising popularity of infamously volatile cryptocurrency marketshas brought negative attention to digital currencies in the last few months. On May 15, state-owned news agency Xinhua published an op-ed criticizing the bull run and calling for more regulation.
Last week, crypto markets crashed briefly three financial industry associations issued a statement calling attention to a 2017 ban disallowing banks and payment institutions from providing crypto services.
READ MORE: Bitcoin crashes on minor news from China
Correction: A previous version of this article misstated the date of the State Council meeting.
]]>Cryptocurrency markets crashed on Wednesday night, with Bitcoin hitting $30,000 its lowest price since January. The abrupt sell-off came amid a plunging market and was widely attributed to a “ban” on crypto in China. As of writing, Bitcoin prices have recovered from the Wednesday drop, but are still far off their April peak.
So, did China crash Bitcoin?
The news that came out of China was very minor: Chinese authorities didn’t instate any new restrictions on cryptocurrencies this week. On Tuesday, three Chinese finance industry associations reiterated a 2017 ban on providing crypto related services. The effects on China’s crypto industry will likely be minor.
But the insignificance of the news didn’t determine the perception and consequent actions of already-skittish investors. It appears likely this minor news, in translation, really did set off a market crash.
The timing of the news breaking and the sell-off suggests that international traders were responding to news from China.
The statement was posted on the evening of May 18, while Bitcoin was trading at around $45,000, after falling 30% in the previous 30 days.
Stories on a crypto “ban” in China made the rounds in international media on the afternoon of May 19, meanwhile the price of Bitcoin started to drop faster, losing $2,000 in a couple of hours.
Google searches for the keywords “China,” “crypto,” “bitcoin,” and “ban” started increasing around 10:00 p.m. China Standard Time on May 18. Around 9:00 p.m. May 19, searches spiked, at almost the same time that Bitcoin spiked downward to $30,000 just after 9:00 p.m. the next night.
But the Chinese internet was not very interested in the associations’ statement.
Chinese state-owned TV channel CCTV reported on the statement a little after 10.00 a.m. on March 19. The news then circulated in Chinese social media. On China’s Twitter-like platform Weibo, related hashtags started picking up steam in the afternoon. As of the time of writing, they have been viewed at least 2.5 million times. That makes the news a mid-sized Weibo trend, garnering similar views as news on US artist Beeple selling a non-fungible token (NFTs) for $69 million back in March.
Only when Bitcoin entered freefall on the evening of March 19 did Weibo blow up. Related hashtags have been viewed at least 800 million times since Wednesday night. The hashtag “Bitcoin collapse” was Weibo’s number three trending topic last night.
The government didn’t do anything, but some industry associations reminded finance and payments providers that they are not allowed to offer crypto services.
Some in China’s crypto community have pointed fingers at Reuters for distorting the news.
The China Internet Finance Association, the China Banking Association, and the China Payment and Settlement Association said that financial and payments providers are prohibited from conducting business related to virtual currencies, reiterating a 2017 regulation on cryptocurrency activities. Their statement was posted on the People’s Bank of China official WeChat account.
The list of prohibitions for finance and payments providers is longer and more comprehensive, compared to the 2017 rules, but they broadly refer to the same types of activities. The associations’ words are not legally binding, unlike the 2017 regulations.
The 2017 rules essentially banned IPO-like initial coin offerings (ICOs) and exchanges. The rules prohibited exchange platforms from converting fiat currencies like the Renminbi to virtual currencies like Bitcoin, companies from issuing crypto tokens in initial coin offerings, and financial and non-bank payment institutions from offering crypto-related services:
Financial institutions and non-bank payment institutions shall not conduct business related to token issuance financing transactions. Financial institutions and non-bank payment institutions shall not directly or indirectly provide account opening, registration, trading, clearing, settlement and other products or services for token issuance financing and “virtual currency,” and shall not underwrite related tokens and “virtual currency.” The insurance business may include tokens and “virtual currency” into the scope of insurance liability. Financial institutions and non-bank payment institutions shall promptly report to the relevant authorities if they find clues about the illegality of token issuance financing transactions.
September 2017 statement from People’s Bank of China, Central Cyberspace Administration, Ministry of Industry and Information Technology, State Administration for Industry and Commerce, China Banking Regulatory Commission, China Securities Regulatory Commission, and China Insurance Regulatory Commission
In the four years since the 2017 rules, crypto exchanges have continued to offer their services and run massive offices in China, blockchain companies have launched ICOs, and most of the world’s crypto mining has been in China.
Last year, however, authorities cracked down on crypto exchanges and particularly over-the-counter traders.
The three industry bodies’ Tuesday announcement said essentially the same thing;: that financial and payment companies should not provide crypto services:
Financial institutions, payment institutions and other members must effectively strengthen their social responsibilities. They must not use virtual currency to price products and services, and must not underwrite insurance businesses related to virtual currencies or include virtual currencies in the scope of insurance liability. They must not directly or indirectly provide customers with other services. Services related to virtual currency, including but not limited to: providing customers with virtual currency registration, trading, clearing, settlement and other services; accepting virtual currency or using virtual currency as a payment and settlement tool; developing virtual currency exchange services with RMB and foreign currencies; develop virtual currency storage, custody, mortgage and other businesses; issue financial products related to virtual currency; use virtual currency as investment targets for trusts, funds, etc. Financial institutions, payment institutions and other member units should effectively strengthen the monitoring of virtual currency transaction funds, rely on industry self-discipline mechanisms, strengthen risk information sharing, and improve the level of industry risk joint prevention and control; if clues of violations of laws and regulations are found, they must promptly adopt restrictions, suspensions or procedures in accordance with procedures. Terminate relevant transactions, services, and other measures, and report to relevant departments; at the same time, actively use multi-channel and diversified access methods to strengthen customer publicity and warning education, and take the initiative to make warnings about risks related to virtual currencies. Internet platform corporate member units shall not provide services such as online business premises, commercial display, marketing and publicity, and paid diversion for virtual currency-related business activities. If clues of related problems are found, they shall promptly report to relevant departments and provide technical support for related investigations and assistance.
March 18 statement from China Internet Finance Association, China Banking Association, and China Payment and Settlement Association
An overblown story from China doesn’t explain all of the recent drop in crypto markets. In the last month, Bitcoin has lost 30% of its value, likely because investors are skittish amid looming environmental and regulatory concerns.
A further plunge crstarted after tech CEO Elon Musk tweeted that Tesla will not accept Bitcoin as payment on March 13, citing environmental concerns. The digital asset has lost 30% of its value in the week since Musks’s statement.
“This recent crash reflects the misunderstandings [of the effects of] Bitcoin mining on the environment in my opinion, but perhaps also has been driven by the ESG-minded companies that have been influenced by Musk’s latest stance on Bitcoin,” Flex Yang, CEO and co-founder of Babel Finance, a crypto financial services firm, told TechNode.
The associations’ statement probably won’t bring dramatic change to China’s rules on crypto, but concerns about environmental regulation are mounting for crypto miners in the country.
As the central government pursues carbon neutrality, local governments are increasingly hostile to crypto mining activities. Inner Mongolia has already proposed a ban on the industry, and crypto miners in Sichuan, which is usually more friendly, are expecting increased pressure in the coming months.
READ MORE: Losercoin, and a new crypto mining crackdown? Blockheads
]]>The Nervos Foundation and China Merchants Bank International (CMBI), a wholly-owned subsidiary of China Merchants Bank, launched a $50 million venture capital fund to invest in blockchain startups.
Why it matters: The fund will look for startups with plans to integrate in the Nervos ecosystem. This will help the blockchain network grow.
Details: The fund, dubbed InNervation, will invest in early and growth-stage startups globally, focusing on decentralized applications (dapps), decentralized finance (DeFi) protocols, distributed ledger platforms, and non-fungible token (NFT) marketplaces, according to a press release.
We’re not in this for quick returns so it’s difficult to say when we expect to see ROI on the projects we invest in. […] Many of the investments made will be strategic to the Nervos ecosystem, so we’re taking a longer-term approach.
Nervos co-founder, Kevin Wang
Context: Backed by major investors, Nervos is one of the most respected Chinese startups working on “layer one” blockchain technology. Layer one refers to basic architecture that can support a range of blockchain applications.
]]>READ MORE: Nervos launches new token standards, furthering Defi push
Authorities in Sichuan could put more pressure on crypto mining activities as they look to achieve sustainability goals set by the central government. A new token dubbed Losercoin tapped into retail investors’ feeling of always being left behind. Dalian pushes ahead with B2B applications for the digital yuan, while Hong Kong looks into cross-border transactions using the central bank-backed digital currency.
The world of blockchain moves fast, and nowhere does it move faster than China. Here’s what you need to know about China’s block-world in the week of May 11-18.
A new cryptocurrency looking to own failure is picking up steam in China. Losercoin, the native token of decentralized exchange LoserSwap, is a project initiated by a team that describes itself as “two poor guys” from rural China, who “lost a ton of money” in crypto trading, according to its website.
The founders appear to have tapped into a rich vein of Chinese investors who feel like losers, promising that they don’t plan on taking advantage of them through pump and dump tactics or rug pulls.
On Losercoin’s fan website, a post titled “How to know you are a loser” includes “loving cheap or free items such as LOWB,” and, “Always feel like you are not fitting in; you always lose money when everyone else is making money” (CoinDesk’s translation). LOWB is the ticker for Losercoin.
The hashtags “loser coin” and “LOWB” have been viewed 17 million times on China’s Twitter-like social media platform Weibo as of the time of writing, peaking around May 11. (CoinDesk)
But the losers’ wins were short lived: When the hashtags were trending on Weibo, the coin’s price rose, but has since dropped below its launch price, according to data from CoinMarketCap.
READ MORE: Digital yuan trials for Hong Kong, JD.com: Blockheads
Huobi Group, parent company of Huobi crypto exchange, launched a $100 million venture capital fund to invest in blockchain startups, particularly in the fields of decentralized finance (DeFi) and non-fungible tokens (NFTs). (Decrypt)
A WeChat article by Tencent’s Research Institute called on authorities to explore the inclusion of Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies in China’s foreign exchange reserves, China blockchain maven Colin Wu reported. The Institute deleted the article in less than 24 hours, Wu wrote on Twitter. (Wu Blockchain Twitter)
]]>Chinese investors flocked to memecoin Shiba Inu just after it launched on Huobi and OKEx. Alipay will start testing e-CNY use in the super app, the Qingdao government wants to use the digital RMB to incentivize kindness, and China passed two standards at the International Telecommunications Union (ITU). The Bitcoin hashrate is moving away from China and China’s OTC king is going on trial.
The world of blockchain moves fast, and nowhere does it move faster than China. Here’s what you need to know about China’s block-world in the week of May 5-11.
A joke cryptocurrency called Shiba Inu caught the attention of Chinese cryptocurrency investors following the meteoric rise of Dogecoin. Shiba, named after the Japanese dog breed, started trading on crypto exchanges preferred by Chinese traders. It began trading on OKEx and Huobi on Saturday, and on Binance on Monday.
Its price rocketed more than tenfold since Saturday, according to data from CoinMarketCap. The hashtag “Shiba rise” exceeded 100 million views on Chinese microblogging platform Weibo as of the time of writing.
The price of Dogecoin, a joke cryptocurrency or memecoin, rose 800% in the last month following repeated plugs by Elon Musk. After the Tesla founder on Saturday called it a “hustle” on the American comedy sketch show Saturday Night Live, the memecoin lost about 30% of its value. The hashtag “Dogecoin” in Chinese was viewed 130 million times on Weibo after Musk’s SNL appearance.
Shiba has surpassed Bitcoin and Ethereum to become the top token in terms of volume traded on Huobi and OKEx, data from CoinGecko showed. (CoinDesk)
Trading for Chia, a new crypto token by the inventor of BitTorrent, started on May 4. The token is poised to be a greener alternative to Bitcoin, and has been very popular with Chinese miners. Its popularity has led to hard drive shortages in China and Vietnam.
Just days after its launch, the Amazon Web Services Chinese site started advertising a cloud solution for mining Chia. The page has since been deleted.
Chia’s price dropped by about 29% since May 4, while volume traded has increased six-fold, data from CoinMarketCap showed. (The Block)
Zhao Dong, known as China’s over-the-counter (OTC) king, is scheduled for trial in Zhejiang province on May 12. He faces charges of illegal business operations and assisting in IT-related criminal activities. OTC trading is widely used by Chinese miners who want to convert their crypto assets to fiat currency to pay for ongoing bills, but the government cracked down on the practice last year. (Wu Blockchain, in Chinese)
Crypto lender Babel Finance raised $40 million in a Series A led by Sequioa China, Dragonfly Capital, and investors from outside Asia’s crypto world including Zoo Capital, Bertelsmann Asian Investments (BAI), and Tiger Global Management. (TechNode)
One of China’s state-owned big banks, CITIC Bank, posted a notice on its website prohibiting account holders from using their accounts to buy cryptocurrencies. The notice was dated April 22, but was only discovered last week. (CITIC Bank notice, in Chinese)
]]>Cryptocurrency financial service provider Babel Finance has raised $40 million in its Series A led by heavyweights within its own industry and beyond.
Why it matters: Babel has been trying to attract investors from the traditional finance world to invest in digital assets. The backing of fiat currency-based venture capital and private equity funds could boost its appeal to traditional investors.
The company: Founded in 2018, Babel’s investment prior to its Series A was $2 million, according to Crunchbase. The company has serviced 500 institutional clients, and the outstanding balance of its cryptocurrency-lending business was $2 billion as of February, according to a statement sent to TechNode.
“The alliance with our new investors from traditional finance is a critical step for us to offer more innovative products, strengthen compliance controls, and ultimately provide a full suite of reliable services to meet the growing demand from mainstream investors who are keen to allocate crypto assets in their portfolio.”
—Flex Yang, CEO of Babel Finance, in the statement
The investors: Babel’s Series A was led by Sequoia Capital China, Dragonfly Capital, Zoo Capital, Bertelsmann Asian Investments (BAI), and Tiger Global Management.
READ MORE: Huobi subsidiary launches Bitcoin, Ether, crypto mining funds in Hong Kong
A year ago, Ant Group was riding high. Since it was founded in 2014, it had become, by its own description, China’s dominant fintech company. It was set to raise $34 billion in blockbuster dual listings in Shanghai and Hong Kong in November 2020.
But it was not to be. Two days before its listing, Chinese regulators shut it down, citing changes to the regulatory environment that Ant hadn’t disclosed in its IPO prospectus. They made it clear, Ant would not be allowed to list in its current form.
The company, supervised by regulators, has since been negotiating its “rectification” behind closed doors.
Insights is a series of explainers on developing stories in China tech, published in the subscriber-only TechNode Premium newsletter.
It’s normally exclusive to TechNode subscribers, but we’re making this issue free as a sample of our work. Sign up here to get access to every issue.
The tech world has been in suspense for months. How much will Ant change? Will it be allowed to retain its data-driven core business, or forced to change into something much more like an online bank?
The answers depend both on opaque conversations between the business and government, and on an emerging body of fintech regulations.
On April 12, the company met again with regulators. In a readout, it said it had “completed the formulation of our rectification plan.” In another meeting readout on behalf of the regulators, one of the central bank’s deputy governors, Pan Gongsheng, a key figure in the government’s effort to oversee Ant’s revamp, confirmed that a plan was formed and added a little more detail.
So, is Ant Group’s future clear?
READ MORE: UPDATED: Ant Group IPO delay and Jack Ma’s ill-timed speech
Bottom line: Clearer. We know about the plan only from two very brief statements, from Ant Group and Pan. There’s a lot we still don’t know.
With a rectification plan in place, changes should accelerate across the company. It appears that the company will continue providing the same services, but will change how it is organized, accounted for, and regulated. The brief statements don’t tell us much about the key question of managing data flows between digital payments and microlending.
We don’t know much about Ant’s understanding with its regulators. Both statements agreed that there are five points in the rectification plan. But they don’t agree on what the points are. We can make some informed guesses based on areas of overlap, but some big questions are still hanging over the company.
Whatever will happen to Ant, it will set a precedent for the governance of platform companies.
The new information: Last week, we got a trickle of new information about these questions.
“We don’t know if it will mean sleeping in separate bedrooms or a full-blown divorce.”
The confusion: Ant and Pan both describe a five-point plan, but they do not agree on what exactly those points are, or how to order them.
So, we have three sets of five points that have some overlap but are not the same; a penta-triptych in an impressionist style.
What they said (in the order of appearance in the statements as published):
This is Ant Group’s first point, but only ranks third in Pan’s list. Ant will set up a financial holding company “in its entirety,” it said. This will affect how the company is regulated. Recently China has been making new regulations for financial holding companies, but we don’t know that much about how they’ll be applied yet.
Does it lend? Ant Group has always said it’s not a bank and it shouldn’t be regulated like one.
The same goes for investments and insurance: Out of the RMB 4.1 trillion of assets that go through its investmenttech platforms, only 33% of that is directly managed by Tianhong Asset Management, a company that Ant Group has a 51% stake in.
But regulators say “same industry, same regulation.” In his interview, Pan said that platform companies “should not make technology a ‘camouflage’ for illegal activities.”
Now what? The company’s operations likely won’t change dramatically, but the way it runs its books will: Rules for financial holding companies will require it to behave a lot more like a bank—which will likely drag on its profitability.
Correcting monopolistic behavior is Pan’s first point. In Ant’s statement, the issue is much less prominent, with only a mention of competition in a sub-points below the fifth point. Pan ties the monopoly issue to the “inappropriate links” we’ll see below.
Market dominance? According to iResearch, Ant Group accounts for more than 55% of the third-party digital payments market. By this measure, Alipay reaches the threshold to be classified as a dominant player in the sector, according to new regulatory definitions issued in January.
Playing fair: The fintech giant also has to “correct unfair competition in its digital payments business and give consumers more choice in payment methods,” Pan said.
Ant Group is hard to supervise, regulators have said. In part because its business cuts across different regulator’s territory, and in part because its operations are spread out across many subsidiaries. Reorganization will clearly define Ant’s different businesses to align with regulatory lines.
Another issue related to corporate reorganization is to bring Ant’s credittech operations under properly licensed subsidiaries. This is not directly addressed as a separate point in either of the statements, but both allude to it. Ant and Pan both mention a promise to set up a licensed personal credit reporting company. Ant also promises to place two major lending platforms in a consumer finance company.
What’s the issue? Ant Group is a very difficult corporate entity to wrap one’s head around, particularly its credittech operations. It does a lot of different things, both tech and finance, and has many corporate entities. It is very difficult to discern which company does what.
LISTEN MORE: China Tech Investor: Ant Group is really big, and really confusing
Now what? The plan will set up “clearer boundaries between different regulated entities under the financial holding company,” Jun Wan, a lawyer who specializes in fintech at Han Kun Law Offices in Shanghai, told TechNode.
Pan demanded that Ant “break the data monopoly.” Ant, in its own second point, offered a promise to return Alipay “to its origin… by focusing on micropayments,” which could mean less focus on data. Both referred to regulations on personal credit reporting companies, specifically in regards to data management.
In the pre-rectified Ant Group, data was like the family fridge: Alipay put food in, and other units like Huabei and Jiebei could take it out as needed. It was not clear to outsiders who was using what data for what purposes.
In its prospectus, the company said it limited access to personal data “based on necessity,” and that it maintained “strict control over access to personal data and strict assessment and approval procedures to prohibit invalid or illegitimate uses,” and “records of data access.” “We limit any access based on necessity and maintain records of data access.”
The rectified Ant will manage data more like a cafeteria: If Huabei is going to use Alipay data, it will have to track what it takes and get a receipt. There will be rules—overseen by regulators—about what data it can transfer, for what use, and how, but we don’t know much about what these rules will be.
Data management is a regulatory priority in general, and particularly for the regulators on Ant’s case. “The regulators keep focusing on personal information protection given Ant collects a huge amount of personal information. It may require Ant to follow the strict personal information protection laws and regulations when collecting the personal information,” Wan said.
Data mixing: Ant uses data from Alipay and Alibaba to assess the credit risk of potential borrowers for its microlending businesses. Regulators seem to be concerned both that the company’s monopoly on payments data gives it an unfair advantage over rivals, and that the way it uses the data threatens user privacy.
New rules on data soups: In his interview, Pan said that Ant will have to abide by the “’credit reporting industry management regulation’,” a 2013 regulation on the credit risk assessment industry. The 2013 rules were updated in January.
Data walls? Under most extreme reading of the administrative measures, it could be that Ant will no longer be able to use data from Alipay to perform credit risk assessments for its microlending products.
Porous walls: It’s more likely that the data flow will continue, with more oversight: This could have serious implications for Ant’s credittech business model: It likely means that it will have to pass through regulatory hurdles to use customer transaction data from Alipay to conduct credit risk assessment, experts told TechNode.
Some say Ant may have to share data. The 2013 regulation also proposed a nationwide data platform where credit reporting agencies contribute data. But the platform never got traction.
Under the monopoly issue, Pan also brought up “irregularities such as nesting credit business in the payment link.” Ant didn’t make any direct mention to “nesting” in its statement.
Embedding links: Alipay often advertises Ant’s microlending products on its payment success notices. It also gives users the option to pay using its native products, be it a microloan or a money market fund, as well as the user’s linked debit cards. But Alipay doesn’t give users the option of paying using other tech giant’s options.
No nesting: Pan specified that “nesting credit business in payment links” is an “irregularity” that will be rectified. This will likely stop, reducing Ant’s ability to market loans to Alipay users.
Finally, Pan called on Ant to manage liquidity risk, particularly in its money market fund (MMF) Yu’ebao. Ant said only that it would“strengthen risk prevention,” and did not mention Yu’ebao.
Does Yu’ebao have a cash problem? Liquidity for money market funds has been a regulatory issue for a while.
The liquidity plan: The company will “manage and control liquidity risk of its important fund products and reduce the balance of [its money market fund] Yu’ebao,” Pan said. Ant will need to raise liquid assets like cash, Li said, to be able to quickly meet short-term debt obligations.
The April 12 statements gave some clarity on what Ant will look like once it has been rectified: It will become a financial holding company with clearly delineated business operations. Alipay and Ant’s microlending platforms will be separated, but we don’t know if that will mean sleeping in separate bedrooms or a full-blown divorce.
Ant’s revamp is far from over. There will likely be more meetings and readouts, as changes to the fintech behemoth are negotiated and rolled out. Even the underlying laws and regulations are still in development. Basic issues are still undetermined, such as how will Ant’s credit risk assessment data practices change.
Whatever happens, it will set a precedent for other platform companies, especially in fintech.
As one banking and insurance regulatory official put it. The issues discussed in Ant’s meetings with regulators are “universal” to internet platforms. Other internet giants should watch closely.
]]>A flurry of digital yuan news came from the Digital China Summit in Fuzhou, as tech giants showed off what they have been working on. Standouts included JD.com’s e-CNY payroll, Ant Group’s digital RMB software announcement, and the Industrial and Commercial Bank’s walking cane equipped with digital yuan compatibility. Chia Network may overtake Filecoin as China’s hottest cryptocurrency, and hardware shelves have emptied in anticipation of its launch while regulators warn they watching virtual currencies as a possible tool for illegal fundraising.
The world of blockchain moves fast, and nowhere does it move faster than China. Here’s what you need to know about China’s block-world in the week of April 21 – 27.
A new cryptocurrency called Chia Network will begin trading on May 4, and China’s crypto community is getting ready. Chia uses a Proof-of-Space-Time model under which miners, or farmers as they are called in this case, reserve disk space for a certain amount of time to mine blocks and get rewards.
Prices of solid-state hard drives have surged in China online and offline as prospective farmers prepare to mine the cryptocurrency. Farmers favor using SSDs for Chia mining. (South China Morning Post)
Chinese reporter Colin Wu said that Filecoin is being overshadowed by Chia in conversations between miners. (Wu Blockchain, in Chinese)
Chia was founded by BitTorrent creator Bram Cohen as a way to limit the notoriously high electricity consumption required for cryptocurrency mining. It closed a $3.4 million seed round in February, which included US venture capital firm Andreessen Horowitz.
Ahead of the implementation of a new regulation on illegal fundraising on May 1, Guo Shuqing, chairman of China’s Banking and Insurance Regulatory Commission, warned that authorities would be paying close attention to “new risks” for illegal fundraising, such as blockchain and virtual currencies. (China Securities Journal, in Chinese)
A wholly owned Huobi subsidiary in Hong Kong launched four new cryptocurrency funds to attract institutional investors. (TechNode)
]]>Huobi Asset Management, an affiliate of the crypto exchange, has launched in Hong Kong four virtual asset funds for institutional investors.
Why it matters: Newly licensed Huobi Asset Management is one of several Chinese cryptocurrency companies looking to lure deep-pocketed institutional investors by taking advantage of favorable digital asset laws in Hong Kong and Singapore.
Details: Two of the new investment vehicles are passive funds that mirror the value of Bitcoin and Ethereum, according to a company statement shared with TechNode on Thursday. Another is an actively managed fund that invests in a basket of cryptocurrencies.
Context: The Hong Kong Securities and Futures Commission subsidiary granted Huobi Asset management in March a digital asset portfolio management license. Other companies like financial services firm Babel Finance are also looking to acquire asset management licenses in Hong Kong.
READ MORE: Chinese investors flocked to cryptocurrencies amid techwar
Correction: A previous version of this article misstated that Huobi Tech is owned by Huobi Global.
]]>The vice president of the People’s Bank of China said that cryptocurrencies are an “alternative investment” and that the central bank is trying to determine the best way to regulate them. Crypto mines in Xinjiang were closed down last week. Pilots for the digital yuan are ongoing, and Shanghai will soon get its first large-scale test. Bitmain teased its new Ethereum ASIC.
The world of blockchain moves fast, and nowhere does it move faster than China. Here’s what you need to know about China’s block-world in the week of April 14 – 20.
China’s central bank is “studying” to determine the correct regulatory framework for cryptocurrencies to be used as investment tools, Li Bo, newly appointed (in Chinese) vice president of the People’s Bank of China, said at the Boao Forum on April 18. The vice president said that crypto will be an important alternative investment tool in the future, but shouldn’t be used as currency. Li added that if stablecoins, a type of cryptocurrency pegged to fiat currencies, are to become widely used payment tools, strict regulation is necessary. (Wu Blockchain, in Chinese)
Cryptocurrency mines in Xinjiang were shut down on Friday for safety inspections, causing the hashrate of popular mining pools to fall more than 20%. The price of Bitcoin fell by around $3,000 on the day. The inspections follow a spate of accidents at coal plants in Shanxi and Guizhou provinces as well as the Xinjiang autonomous region in late March and early April, which also slowed the global Bitcoin hashrate. (CoinTelegraph, CoinDesk)
READ MORE: CHINA VOICES | DCEP class is in session, with Zhou Xiaochuan
Two weeks after a crackdown on imported console gaming products, it’s still easy to buy them in China. Games remain widely available in offline stores and online, and prices have returned to normal after a brief spike.
The tight supply led to an increase in prices across other online stores, but this was short lived, according to Daniel Ahmad, a senior analyst at Niko Partners, a firm that monitors China’s gaming market.
Prices for imported consoles and individual games have returned to pre-crackdown levels, which are slightly above international ones, TechNode has found on Taobao. The analyst said that on other online retail platforms such as JD.com, there wasn’t much of an impact.
Physical stores that TechNode visited in Shanghai in the last week seemed unaffected by the crackdown on console gaming. They were still advertising imported consoles and titles banned in China—including a US version of Animal Crossing, which was removed from Taobao last year, reportedly because of its use by protesters in Hong Kong.
Some particular games are still very hard to find on Taobao. These include Nintendo’s Animal Crossing, and The Last of Us, an intensely violent two-part series developed for PlayStation. Special edition Animal Crossing Switch consoles are still widely available throughout the online marketplace, but don’t come with the game.
China’s Anti-Smuggling Bureau said on April 2 that authorities in Guangdong had arrested 54 importers and seized RMB 78 million ($12 million) worth of Nintendo, PlayStation, and Xbox gaming consoles.
While such events are “not unusual,” this was the largest anti-smuggling operation in recent memory, Ahmad said.
“It’s not really part of a wider, larger crakdown, but of course the government always reserves the right to do that, given the grey area,” Ahmad said.
Chinese console gamers usually have to wait several months before international hits are released domestically, if ever, due to stringent censorship of imported gaming titles. Some famous titles never get released domestically due to graphic violence or sexual content.
This has created a small but active market for consoles and cartridges imported from nearby Hong Kong or Japan.
READ MORE: INSIGHTS | No country for console gamers
In response to the crackdown, several shops on Taobao removed listings for the imported console gaming products. Some told customers they would not be delivering for a while. One of the biggest Taobao stores, called TGBus, told customers that deliveries would be halted temporarily because a water leak had damaged some of the goods and had led to power outage in its warehouse, Chinese media reported.
The hashtag on social media site Weibo about Nintendo Switch being targeted has been seen over 150 million times, peaking at 136 million on March 31. That was when local media reported that popular Taobao stores selling imported consoles were down.
The shop that had claimed water leak damage remained offline as of April 12, but its affiliates are still live on the e-commerce app. Another popular shop based in Shanghai merely told customers it couldn’t deliver due to “exceptional circumstances.” The shop remains live on Taobao, but is empty of listings.
Some of the shops that removed their listings or disappeared altogether from Taobao said they were directly supplied by the importers who had their products seized. Others were exercising an “abundance of caution. They felt like they may be indirectly implicated in some way if they were to keep these products up,” Ahmad said.
Even in the immediate aftermath of the crackdown, most shops didn’t disappear from Taobao, and the impact on other e-commerce apps was minuscule. Two weeks on, business is back to normal.
The Hong Kong release of a new entry in a popular series might have have triggered the crackdown.
The week leading up to the crackdown, the first entry for Nintendo Switch of the long-running series Monster Hunter was released in Hong Kong. Monster Hunter: Rise was developed by Capcom, the Japanese studio behind the Resident Evil series.
The series has met massive success throughout East Asia, as has the Switch console.
Prior to 2014, when sales of console gaming products were completely banned in China, authorities would clamp down on imported products when there was a surge in interest: “If you hit a certain threshold, that would trigger a reaction,” Ahmad said.
It is likely that “there would be a high number of imports” of Monster Hunter: Rise, which could have triggered a reaction, Ahmad said.
Three hashtags related to the Capcom game, #MonsterHunter, #MonsterHunterRise, and #MonsterHunterWorld, have been viewed at least 470 million times on Weibo. The hashtag numbers peaked in the runup to March 26, when Monster Hunter: Rise was released in Hong Kong.
The Switch has been a big hit in China, driving growth in the mostly niche console market. Nintendo has delivered 1 million units of the console in China since it launched in December 2019, according to Tencent, which has partnered with the Japanese game developer to sell the Switch in China.
This is roughly double what Sony’s PlayStation and Microsoft’s Xbox sold in the same time period, according to data from Niko Partners.
All major consoles are now sold legally in China in local versions, but few games are available for these outside the grey market. Eager to get their hands on a wider variety of releases, gamers turn to imported goods.
“We are now at a point where every major console manufacturer has launched a product in China,” and once something is released overseas, it will get an official release in China, albeit with a delay, the Niko Partners analyst said.
Sony has announced plans to launch the PlayStation 5 in China in the second quarter of 2021. The console’s global release was in November 2020.
For games, “there is still a very strict regulatory environment,” which means the approval process is “long” and “cumbersome,” Ahmad said. Officially, it takes three months, but in reality, it can take a year to get a game approved by China’s National Press and Publication Administration. Rather than wait, online and offline shops respond to strong demand with smuggled products.
Ahmad points out that despite a recent increase in the speed of the licensing process, a “soft cap” on how many games can get approved means that there is no “material difference” in the number of games Chinese console owners can get their hands on.
Globally, more than 3,000 titles are available on the Nintendo Switch console. As popular as the Switch has been, gamers in China can only choose from fewer than 20 titles, Ahmad said.
This might sound like a small number, but it’s a massive improvement. During the first three months of the Switch’s launch in China in December 2019, only one game was approved: Super Mario Bros U Deluxe.
New titles have been slowly added to the list of approved games, notably Ring Fit Adventure in September 2020.
“This is why there is a big smuggled games market in the first place,” Ahmad said.
Correction: A previous version of this article incorrectly described Niko Partners as “London-based.”
]]>Cryptocurrency mining rig maker Ebang was accused of inflating sales figures in a short report, while competitor Canaan reported declining fourth-quarter revenue. The end may be nigh for distributed ledger protocol Filecoin, while overseas interest in Chinese cryptocurrency exchanges is on the rise. Finally, Chinese researches say that crypto mining energy consumption could undermine sustainability initiatives.
The world of blockchain moves fast, and nowhere does it move faster than China. Here’s what you need to know about China’s block-world in the week of April 6-13.
The Distributed Storage Office of China’s Communications Industry Association warned that Chinese companies are using distributed file storage protocol Filecoin to issue unauthorized wealth management products and conduct illegal financing. A new regulation defining illegal fundraising is set to to come into effect on May 1. (China Police Net, in Chinese)
Cryptocurrency mining rig maker Canaan Creative reported losses and falling revenues for the fourth quarter of 2020, consistent with its full-year results, but said that it expects better financial performance in the first quarter of this year.
Why it matters: Along with Ebang, Canaan is one of two Chinese crypto mining rig makers listed on US exchanges. Both have been targeted by short sellers.
Losses: Canaan’s net loss for the last quarter of 2020 was RMB 72 million ($11 million), narrowed by 17% from RMB 86.4 million in Q3, according to its earnings report.
READ MORE: Rig maker Canaan misses Bitcoin surge, losses top $12 million
Revenues: The company’s Q4 net revenues plunged 76% quarter on quarter and 91% year on year to RMB 38.2 million.
Down payments: The company said it has signed $174 million worth of contracts to deliver its mining rigs, which it said lays a solid foundation for strong revenue growth in Q1 2021.
Product prices: In Q4 2020, Canaan increased its product prices back up to 2019 levels. In Q3 2020, the company sold equipment at a price of $8.10 per Thash/s, down from $27.5 in 2019, likely in a quest to boost dwindling sales.
Context: Amid soaring Bitcoin prices, crypto mining rig makers have their pre-orders booked for the next few months. Canaan largely missed the boat in 2020, but could be rebounding in 2021.
READ MORE: Mining rigmaker MicroBT is planning a US IPO: report
]]>Ebang share prices on the Nasdaq have fallen 9% since Tuesday, when short seller Hindenburg Research released a report accusing the company of a number of misdeeds including inflating its mining rig sales and cryptocurrency trading volumes.
Why it matters: Ebang is one of two Chinese cryptocurrency mining rig makers that is publicly traded on US stock markets along with peer, Canaan Creative.
The timeline: On Tuesday, the day the short report was released, Ebang shares opened at $5.23, falling 17% from market close on Monday.
Missing earnings: Ebang’s stock began to fall on March 17 after reaching a high of $11.85 per share that day. As of Friday, it has not yet announced a date for the release of its 2020 earnings.
The short report: Hindenburg research said Ebang is “simply the latest chapter in the ‘China Hustle’ disguised as a Bitcoin mining play,” referring to a documentary exposing Chinese companies that conduct stock market fraud on US exchanges.
Rig sales: Bitcoin and Ethereum prices have soared in the last few months, and so have mining rig sales. Industry leader Bitmain’s deliveries are booked for months.
The crypto exchange: Ebang first announced that it is building a crypto exchange in August, entering an already crowded market.
Sales inflation scheme: The reason for the failed listings, Hindenburg said, was a sales inflation scheme involving Yindou, a peer-to-peer lending scheme. P2P lending in China was an industry rife with fraud, with many companies simply Ponzi schemes masquerading as tech firms.
Shady underwriter: Ebang’s IPO underwriter, Hong Kong-based AMDT Global Markets Limited, has a “history of fraud and self-dealing allegations (including from one of China’s largest private equity firms), as well as a track record of US IPO flops,” Hindenburg said.
Huobi Charity, the philanthropic arm of one of China’s most popular cryptocurrency exchanges, pledged $1 million worth of Bitcoin and fiat currency to UNICEF’s CryptoFund, the agency’s crypto venture arm.
Why it matters: This is the first institutional Bitcoin pledge to the agency. The news could attract more donations to UNICEF’s crypto fund, which is not widely known.
READ MORE: Huobi subsidiary nabs Hong Kong asset management license
Details: Huobi Charity has already donated BTC 7 ($350,000 at the time of the donation) to the fund, the company said in a press release sent to TechNode.
Context: UNICEF’s older Innovation Fund works like a tech venture capital fund in that it invests in early-stage ventures with potential to support the agency’s goals as well as being commercially viable, Davin said.
Updated: This article has been updated to clarify that the pledge came from Huobi Charity.
]]>The digital yuan is increasingly going global: A cross-border transaction with Hong Kong was completed last week, and trials for the e-CNY opened in the territory. Domestically, three more companies were added on the digital RMB app, while a university started testing different payment methods using the currency. An established auction house announced it will start selling non-fungible tokens (NFTs), while non-crypto companies continue to pivot to cryptocurrency mining.
The world of blockchain moves fast, and nowhere does it move faster than in China. Here’s what you need to know about China’s block-world in the week of March 30-April 6.
READ MORE: UPDATED: We got some digital yuan!
Red Date Technology, the company behind the Blockchain Services Network, has acquired the rights to sell Corda, an enterprise blockchain used by global financial firms, to Chinese businesses. This is the first time Red Date has acquired the rights to sell blockchain domestically, as the company is increasingly angling to become a major domestic blockchain player. (TechNode)
The Hong Kong Coast Guard seized 300 graphics processing units specialized for mining cryptocurrencies in an anti-smuggling operation. This is the first time local authorities have caught smugglers in the act of transporting crypto mining equipment. (IT House, in Chinese)
]]>Red Date Technology, the firm behind government-backed blockchain platform Blockchain Services Network, has licensed American distributed ledger company R3’s enterprise blockchain to resell in China.
Why it matters: This is the first time Red Date has acquired the rights to resell enterprise blockchain from an overseas provider. Primarily known for its role with the BSN, Red Date is diversifying to become a heavyweight in China’s blockchain industry.
READ MORE: EXCLUSIVE | Chinese state banks accepting applications for enterprise e-CNY accounts
Details: Corda’s enterprise nodes will connect to notary nodes hosted on China UnionPay’s cloud, forming a single China Corda Network, Yifan He, CEO of Red Date told TechNode. Chinese firms will be able to participate in Corda’s enterprise blockchain through Red Date.
We’re aware of R3’s huge success outside China… Red Date will also help to drive Corda and CorDapps’ [Corda decentralized application] adoption among all Chinese banks.
—Yifan He, CEO of Red Date Technology
Context: Following the rollout of the BSN, Beijing-based Red Date has been breaking out its other products.
READ MORE: State Grid to deploy Wanglu Tech’s blockchain for data integration
Blockchain Services Network (BSN)
What: A platform for blockchain development, bringing together cloud services and different chain protocols on city nodes.
Why: To reduce the cost of blockchain application design and deployment while powering communication between chains. It will be made available around the world through local cloud providers, ultimately creating a global internet of blockchains.
Who: It is part of the government’s Global Blockchain Strategy unveiled by Chinese President Xi Jinping in November 2019, spearheaded by the China State Information Center, China Mobile, China Union Pay, and Red Date Technology.
The first known digital yuan B2B transaction took place in northern China, while regulators called for its accelerated rollout. China’s State Grid is working with a Beijing-based blockchain company to revamp its data management. Singaporean DBS Bank issued bonds using blockchain. Fenbushi Capital raised $23 million to invest in Filecoin projects.
The world of blockchain moves fast, and nowhere does it move faster than China. Here’s what you need to know about China’s block-world in the week of March 23 – 30.
China’s State Grid will use Wanglu Tech’s consortium chain to integrate data in a city in eastern China. The state-owned company likely won’t be the last to adopt blockchain: The central government recently named blockchain a strategically important technology. (TechNode)
DBS Bank worked with Shanghai Pudong Development Bank and China Central Depository and Clearing to issue RMB 2 billion ($304 million) of tier-two capital bonds using a consortium blockchain. (China Banking News)
Neo is launching N3, the third version of its network, which promises faster transaction speeds and low transaction costs, oracles, distributed file storage, and a new governance mechanism. (TechNode)
The State Grid Corporation of China will trial the use of blockchain and smart contracts using Beijing-based Wanglu Tech’s cross-chain consortium chain, the company told TechNode.
Why it matters: The collaboration is the first concrete step taken by a Chinese state-owned enterprise (SOE) to adopt blockchain technology.
Blockchain for privacy: The company will deploy a blockchain-based data-sharing and management platform for State Grid in a city in eastern China, Li Ni, Wanglu’s VP of operations told TechNode.
Testbed: State Grid is positive but conservative about using new technology, the SOE employee said.
Connecting islands: Several SOEs such as banks and mobile network operators are preparing similar feasibility studies for blockchain, according to Li. “This will be an example for others to follow,” he said. Connecting all the blockchains such that different companies can share data is important for the technology to work.
Long process: The procurement process started in the second quarter last year, when State Grid invited about a dozen companies to submit proposals for data management. In July, they selected Wanglu to proceed with a full feasibility study. After submitting in August, they had to make many changes because the SOE “asked a lot of questions,” Li said.
Wanglu: Founded in 2016 and based in Beijing, Wanglu Tech focuses on government and enterprise blockchain applications. It also runs a public chain called Wanchain.
Context: State Grid is piloting the use of 5G, AI, big data, and internet-of-things solutions to modernize its infrastructure.
READ MORE: Enterprise blockchain to integrate China’s digital yuan
Update: The headline and first paragraph of this article have been revised to add detail about the services State Grid is testing.
]]>Non-fungible tokens (NFT) are everywhere. In the last few weeks, everyone I’ve spoken to in China blockchain is either already working on, starting a new project, or just won’t shut up about the blockchain-powered digital collectibles.
China isn’t making a lot of NFTs or much of the underlying technology, for now. But on March 26, it will spearhead NFT exhibiting in the physical world: The world’s first “major” exhibition of blockchain-based art is due to open in Beijing this Friday.
The exhibition is sponsored and curated by Beijing-based BlockCreateArt (BCA), supported by auction heavyweight Christie’s, and partially funded by crypto mining rig maker Bitmain and blockchain investment firm Digital Finance Group. It will take place at UCCA Lab, a project and art space created by Belgian-founded Beijing art museum UCCA to explore interdisciplinary approaches to art.
Titled “Virtual Niche — Have you ever seen memes in the mirror?”, it will feature works from over 30 artists, including deadmau5, Robert Alice, and reigning NFT king Beeple.
NFTs have been shown in exhibitions before, but this will be the first time the walls of a physical gallery will be completely taken over by crypto art.
Ahead of the exhibition, I reached out via e-mail to Wang Qinwen, who co-produced the exhibition with BCA founder Sun Bohan. Wang is the Web 3.0 Foundation’s China community manager and a member of the council at Polkadot network, one of the leading cross-chain interoperability protocols in the world, developed by Web 3.0 Foundation.
The following interview has been edited for length and clarity.
TechNode: Tell us the story of the crypto art exhibition at UCCA Lab in Beijing, how did it come to be and what was your role in it?
Wang Qinwen: We are proud it’s a community-driven initiative and how the Chinese community has played a vital role in making this exhibition.
The exhibition aims to showcase artists using blockchain technology as a medium for creating dialogue and connection between the institutional art world and the crypto community. In addition to works by well-known names on the digital art scene such as Robert Alice and Beeple.
My role is to bring together the crypto art community, particularly the Polkadot community and the art world. I have been a continuous supporter and contributor to Christie’s Art & Tech Summit Initiative since Christie’s first obtained a license to auction in China in 2013.
TN: Will all the works exhibited be NFTs? What’s the difference between exhibiting a digital photo and an NFT?
WQ: All the works exhibited will have an NFT version.
Exhibiting a digital photo and exhibiting a NFT artwork looks no different in a physical museum, both deploy a screen as medium. All you need to do is to download a picture that is clear enough and find a proper screen.
NFTs, or non-fungible tokens are more about ownership and less about ways of exhibiting. NFT are essentially a cryptographic contract. It is like a certificate of authenticity for an object, and the object can be either physical or virtual.
TN: Can you explain to us how all the different parties are involved (Polkadot, UCCA Lab, BlockCreateArt, etc.)? What is UCCA Lab’s role?
WQ: UCCA Lab is the ideal venue for our exhibition. It has been supporting emerging Chinese artists and top-level exhibitions since its founding. We are proud to be able to host our exhibition here. UCCA Lab has contributed to the public attention on our exhibition as well.
BCA (BlockCreatArt) is the main organizer of this exhibition. Since its founding in 2017, it has been actively researching and promoting crypto art and artists in China and around the world. It has put incredible efforts to place this grand exhibition to the public.
TN: Why is the exhibition taking place in China and what do you think it means for China’s NFT ecosystem?
WQ: We are proud that this exhibition happens in China, thanks to Polkadot’s Chinese community, BCA and all our partners in China and around the world. Polkadot has a huge community in China, but we never view ourselves as merely a Chinese community, we work in a more globalized way. I think it’s the same for all the contributing parties, including Christie’s. They are all well-connected to the global resources that together makes this exhibition happen.
We are open to carry on our endeavors and bring the exhibition to other places in the world. Now we see vaccines promoted around the world and look forward to the world recovering from the Covid-19 situation. I think that’s when we will see more exciting possibilities unveiled.
TN: How popular are NFTs in China? Are people buying, creating them, or building NFT technology?
WQ: NFT are as popular in China as in the world. BCA, for example, has been supporting crypto artists who are actively creating art with NFT projects. As far as I know, some young artists in the Central Academy of Fine Arts [in Beijing] are also active in NFT art. In the blockchain industry, I know a great number of projects that are at the forefront of NFT technology.
READ MORE: China Voices | What China thinks of NFTs
TN: How has the Polkadot China community taken the news of the exhibition? Have you noticed any changes to how they view crypto collectibles?
WQ: We are extremely proud of the exhibition. If you are in the blockchain industry in China, you will see friends sharing the news everywhere. It was like exciting news that proves their faith, knowledge and technology have unlimited potential, and people are happy that it will be seen by the public this time.
People have been more enthusiastic about crypto collectibles recently, amidst all the NFT hype that is happening now. I think Christie’s Beeple sale is a vital propeller, which caught headlines in all traditional, crypto, and art media.
TN: Do Chinese culture consumers think about intellectual property differently to other major markets? Will this affect the popularity of NFTs?
WQ: When discussing IP generally, everyone thinks of [licensed toy store chain] Pop Mart or celebrity pop stars. These companies have been very successful in hunting for, incubating, and commercializing IP. They have proved that there is a large fan base of IP consumption in China.
I think Chinese cultural consumers are open to new and great IPs, as long as they find creativity, great culture, and emotional connection to those IPs. So I think it will impact NFTs consumption in a positive way. NFTs are an important asset to the metaverse [a complete virtual world powered by technologies like AR, VR, and blockchain], where you can find boundless creations propelled by human imagination and technology advancement.
TN: What do you think will be the main uses of NFTs in China in the medium-term?
WQ: NFT is a way of storing and transmitting data, and gives ownership of the data to its creator. In the long term, the use cases can go beyond our current imagination. In the medium term, NFTs can be applied to more industries, such as gaming, entertainment ticketing, intellectual property, etc. It is definitely not restricted to art and collectibles.
Update: The story has been updated to include Digital Finance Group as one of the exhibition’s funders.
]]>Neo, an Ethereum alternative and one of China’s oldest blockchain protocols, is starting to roll out a third version of its public blockchain infrastructure, dubbed N3.
Why it matters: N3 is a make-it-or-break-it moment for one of China’s most promising and globally recognized blockchain projects. The team has been working on the update for years. On paper, N3 hits all the right notes for becoming a widely used blockchain protocol. But it will need to stand out from an increasingly competitive crowd.
READ MORE: Blockchain, fintech get name checks in 14th Five-Year Plan
Details: The original planned launch date for Neo’s third iteration was in 2020, but it was pushed back to Q1 2021 because the system wasn’t ready, Da Hongfei, co-founder of Neo, told TechNode. It is difficult to predict a specific time for a community-driven project, Da said. Like most public blockchains, the code was developed by a small team of core developers and a wider global developer community.
Just like a car needs gasoline to run, the Ethereum virtual machine needs gas.
Gas fees are essentially transaction fees that users pay to miners to include their transactions in blocks, which make up the ever-growing blockchain ledger.
Ethereum miners can pick which transactions to execute, so the higher the demand for execution—reflecting an increase in the number of people wanting to use the network—the higher the gas fees.
Migration: The migration of Neo tokens to the new network will take place using a consortium interoperability protocol Poly Network developed by the team behind Neo.
The Ethereum challenges: The Ethereum network has been facing significant challenges in the last few months, and developers are scrambling to find alternatives for their dapps. Gas fees have been hitting record highs as the network becomes congested.
Government tailwinds: Blockchain’s inclusion in the 2021-2025 Five-Year Plan will “definitely” bring more investment to the technology, Da said.
Two Chinese banks are accepting applications for digital yuan business bank accounts, TechNode has learned. A glitch lead to a $4.6 million Filecoin double deposit on Binance. Chinese authorities want to raise awareness about money laundering using cryptocurrencies, while police in Turkey busted a Chinese-run crypto scam with 101 captive employees. A $2.34 million DeFi heist took place on Binance Smart Chain.
The world of blockchain moves fast, and nowhere does it move faster than China. Here’s what you need to know about China’s block-world in the week of March 16 – 23.
Binance processed a $4.6 million double deposit of Filecoin, the token of the InterPlanetary File System (IPFS) decentralized file storage system. The initiator of the transaction tried to speed up a transaction by issuing a call for a replace-by-fee transaction, essentially asking a miner to confirm the transaction for a higher fee. The system would have normally ignored the first transaction, but it didn’t. This led to the initiators’ money doubling, from 61,000 Filecoin to 120,000. (CoinDesk)
Binance blamed a bug in Filecoin’s code. Filecoin said that the exchange was not using its API correctly. (Filecoin official blog)
Another decentralized finance project on Binance Smart Chain, the cryptocurrency exchange’s DeFi oriented blockchain, disappeared with an estimated 9,000 BNB coins ($2.34 million at the time of writing). The project, dubbed TurtleDex, claimed to be a decentralized file storage solution. (Binance Smart Chain announcement)
READ MORE: Holiday Bitcoin sell-off, $3 million Binance Smart Chain heists
Meitu announced it will buy close to $50 million in Bitcoin and Ether, just weeks after it announced a $40 million purchase. (Meitu filing)
Some of these [Bitcoin’s] features potentially even render Bitcoin as a superior form to other alternative stores of value such as gold, precious stone and real estate.
—Meitu in its filing about its second cryptocurrency purchase
The number of posted jobs in China for blockchain developers decreased 45% year on year in November, an analysis of job postings by blockchain market research firm Zero One found. Average salaries in the country have dropped 1.5% to RMB 22,300 ($3,400) although they remain significantly higher than China’s average monthly pay. Small companies with staff numbering between 50 and 149 people made up the biggest slice of China’s blockchain companies, accounting for 35.3% of the sector, followed by giants with 500 to 4,999 employees, which made up 22.9%. (Zero One, in Chinese)
Cryptocurrency rig maker Ebang announced it completed the design of its first 6-nanometer ASIC chips for Bitcoin mining. Ebang stock rose 4.5% on the back of the announcement.(Ebang press release)
]]>READ MORE: CHINA VOICES | What China thinks of NFTs
Two major Chinese state banks in Beijing and Suzhou have started opening up e-CNY merchant and enterprise accounts for businesses, bank employees told TechNode.
Why it matters: Chinese banks had only been known to set up personal e-CNY accounts for individuals. Merchant accounts are a step toward widespread retail use of the new currency. Enterprise accounts will significantly widen the scope of use cases to include larger business transactions.
READ MORE: UPDATED: We got some digital yuan!
Details: TechNode contacted two bank branches Wednesday. At the Bank of China in Beijing, staff said they are accepting applications for enterprise e-CNY accounts. Bank staff said that the bank had already started granting applications to businesses, but the accounts were not yet operational.
Context: Trials for the digital yuan have accelerated in the last few months, and China is likely to be the first major economy to issue a state-backed digital currency.
]]>READ MORE: CHINA VOICES | DCEP class is in session, with Zhou Xiaochuan
Turkish police busted a Chinese-run crypto scam ring that held 101 people captive as they worked for the illicit operation.
Why it matters: A three-year-long crackdown on cryptocurrency-related fraud in China has made it difficult for scams to run domestically. It seems scammers are still targeting Chinese consumers from abroad.
Indentured scamitude: Police forces raided the gang’s villas, where they found $200,000 in fiat currency, 712 mobile phones, 677 SIM cards, and 112 computers, according to a Google translation of a March 13 Turkish-language report from news agency Demirörenon.
Crypto pyramid: The operation was advertising a consultancy to help Chinese consumers who were looking to manage their crypto assets. “Hand over your virtual money to us, we will double it and give it back to you,” their online ads wrote, according to the Demirören report. The report does not specify whether the organization in fact doubled users’ money and gave it back to them.
Context: Crypto scams in China were abundant before 2017, when the government started cracking down severely on the industry. Known instances of Chinese nationals running crypto gangs from overseas are few and far between.
Taiwan’s Ministry of Justice is investigating Bitmain for undermining the territory’s semiconductor industry. Huobi, Binance, and OKEx’s Weibo accounts were blocked after Bitcoin’s market cap hit $1 trillion. Seychelles financial authorities said Huobi is not registered there, while US regulators launched probe into Binance.
The world of blockchain moves fast, and nowhere does it move faster than China. Here’s what you need to know about China’s block-world in the week of March 9 – 16.
Taiwan’s Ministry of Justice is investigating cryptocurrency rig maker Bitmain for allegedly poaching engineers from its top semiconductor manufacturer, TSMC. A prosecutor in Taipei accused Bitmain of “severely threatening the development of our semiconductor industry.” (Apple Daily, in traditional Chinese)
China’s Twitter-like Weibo social media platform blocked the accounts of major exchanges Huobi, Binance, and OKEx beginning on March 12, when Bitcoin’s market cap hit the $1 trillion mark, again. The news reached a ranking of tenth most-popular topics trending on Weibo. As of early Tuesday afternoon, Binance’s account had been restored, while Huobi and OKEx had new accounts. (CoinDesk)
READ MORE: Reports of Huobi COO arrest spurs whale transactions as token sinks
Ant Group filed the most blockchain-related patents of any company in the world, research from IP management news source International Asset Management said, while Chinese companies led the pack overall. (International Asset Management)
]]>Will blockchain-powered digital collectibles revolutionize the art world, or are they just another bubble waiting to burst? Collectors have dropped millions of dollars on crypto keepsakes, known as Non-Fungible Tokens (NFTs), in the last two weeks, and Chinese social media is buzzing.
As the novel assets start to sell for millions in the West in forms ranging from fine art to trading cards, Chinese tech and art influencers have been asking whether they’re a real investment, and what they mean for the art industry. So far, art and blockchain outlets have been mostly positive, while social media users have been more mixed.
As far as we can tell, China is not a big consumer of tokenized art yet, although there is no hard data on the regional spread of NFT transactions. A Chinese-developed chain Binance Smart Chain, is powering some NFTs, although most use Ethereum.
NFTs are crypto assets based on blockchain: Whenever a token is bought or sold, the transaction is recorded on an ever-growing digital ledger.
Unlike Bitcoin, each NFT is unique and can’t be duplicated, so they can’t function as a currency, but as collectibles. In digital art, encrypting works into NFTs acts like a signature: The original can always be identified by the signature while countless copies are created.
NFTs currently exist in a legal grey zone in China. Their future is uncertain: They are not currencies, which is the prohibited use of Bitcoin. Holding crypto assets like collectibles is likely ok. But NFTs can foster speculation, which is what Chinese authorities were trying to stomp out when they banned crypto-public listings known as Initial Coin Offerings in 2017.
Four events pushed NFTs into the trending column of the Twitter-like Weibo in the last couple of weeks.
Many in the art world have rushed to welcome NFTs as a breath of fresh air in what they see as a dinosaur industry with a strict hierarchy.
Traditional art trading is a rather conservative industry. It is highly hierarchical, highly opaque, and often slow to accept new things. All attempts to challenge its structure are questioned for a long time.
Sonia Xie, Vogue China, March 11
Crypto collectibles could bring tech-savvy, or tech-hungry, millennials into auction houses.
The entry of NFT encrypted art works into the auction market marks a possible trend: that auctions need to attract a new generation of customers who are not in the field of traditional art collection.
Yu Yi Collection Auction Magazine, March 4
Or it could get really metaphysical.
Art investment will be able to transcend material forms.
Yu Yi Collection Auction Magazine
Others don’t see auction houses and collectors as the benefactors of tokenized art. Instead, they see technology fueling a revolution in art markets. This techno-optimistic argument is that NFTs will change the relationship between artists, sellers, and buyers, to the benefit of artists and small-time art investors.
It is not only a change in artistic form, but also a change in production relations.
Yuan Yan, Art Business, Feb. 25
Digital art creators will be able to wrangle some power over their works from the collectors by maintaining ultimate ownership of their own creations even after it is sold, the magazine wrote.
In the traditional art industry, after a buyer purchases a work, the buyer holds its ownership, exhibition rights, sales rights, and even copyright. […] Digital art collectors who own the NFT may only have the reputation rights and trading rights as the supporters of the artist, while other rights need to be determined by the artist, the collector, and the market.
Yuan Yan, Art Business
The most techno-utopian of the takes imagined a world in which NFTs provide financial tools that could allow artists to capitalize on their art in new ways, and the general public to invest in artwork as stocks.
In the traditional art market, artists usually only get a share when their works are sold for the first time. After that, the profits generated by each resale of their works all belong to the seller. In the field of encrypted art, artists can hold “shares” of works through customized smart contracts, and a portion of the premium generated by each exchange in the future will be distributed to artists in proportion.
Sonia Xie, Vogue China
But not everyone was into the hype, especially on Weibo. Some voices warned that NFT art might be the next bubble.
Often due to lack of artistic professionalism or financial risk management capabilities, it has become a fundraising test ground for speculators…
The value of NFTs is often more dependent on market behavior than the value of the underlying assets. […] When we look to the beautiful picture of a decentralized, free, and open encrypted art ecosystem, where everyone is an artist, and everyone can set a price for the art they like, please also remember that no matter what platform is used, the exposure of the work is also directly affected by the platform and its popularity, and people’s attention is often directly linked to the economic value of the work.
The Art Newspaper, March 4
A report by HashKey Capital, one of China’s biggest blockchain venture capital firms, said that art is the “most suitable application” of NFT technology, but that regulation is lagging.
NFT development is in the stage of unregulated “barbaric growth”. According to the characteristics of NFT non-homogeneous tokens against physical objects, criminals may use NFT to launder money and in criminal activities such as trading prohibited items. In addition, as the value of NFT assets continues to increase and the ecosystem gradually expands, it may become a new target for hackers.
Fan Xiaoqi, HashKey Capital Research, March 3
Weibo users saw the recent NFT headlines as a gimmick to inflate the value of the tokenized art.
“The burned Mona Lisa seems to be more valuable than the Mona Lisa,” said the top voted comment on a Weibo news post about the burning of the Banksy artwork, with over 18,000 likes.
“Isn’t it just hype? They do a gimmick so that they can sell at a high price,” said the second most-liked comment on the same post, with 4,000 likes .
“Burn the person and sell their photo,” said a popular comment on another post.
Awareness of the risks didn’t stop some blockchain publications from offering NFT investment advice. One article said that eager investors don’t want to be left out of the next big crypto market.
The NFT market is gradually gaining traction, art creators are actively exploring the production of NFT works, and investors are looking for new investment opportunities because they feel FOMO (fear of missing out).
Li Xiaoping, 8BTC.com, March 8
Instead of worrying about fine art, the article recommends investing in crypto basketball trading cards in the virtual collectors game NBA Topshot.
The NFT product that the author invests the most is NBA Top Shot, which is a blockchain-based NBA digital collection card launched by DapperLabs in cooperation with the NBA. Most of the people who play the NBA TopShot card game are born in the 90s. They have a deep affection for basketball and the NBA in their student days.
Li Xiaoping, 8BTC.com
The author describes WeChat groups in which people are discussing how to best capitalize on the NFT hype, concluding that even if the market is a bubble, it is a good opportunity to make money.
Innovation and hype, value and bubbles, are never contradictory. NFT is on the ascent.
Li Xiaoping, 8BTC.com
If prices keep rising, Chinese investors are likely to jump on the bandwagon.
This article is not currently available as an NFT, but if you have a few million dollars lying around, make us an offer!
]]>Blockchain was mentioned in China’s Five-Year Plan for the first time in history, while photo-editing app Meitu invested in cryptocurrencies. The digital yuan got its first domestic blockchain application, and cryptocurrency exchange Huobi nabbed an asset management license in Hong Kong.
The world of blockchain moves fast, and nowhere does it move faster than China. Here’s what you need to know about China’s block-world in the week of March 2-9.
Blockchain and the digital yuan were directly mentioned in a draft of the 14th Five-Year Plan for the first time in history, signaling a turning point in the government’s support for the technologies. The draft plan is unlikely to change substantially, analysts said. (TechNode)
Meitu, the company behind one of China’s most popular photo editing apps, bought $22.1 million worth of Ether and $17.9 million of Bitcoin. The company is China’s first major non-cryptocurrency firm to invest in virtual money. Meitu shares rose 14% immediately after the announcement. (Meitu filing)
The founder and president of Chamber of Digital Commerce, Perianne Boring, told Fox Business that China is “years ahead” of the US in blockchain technology and that it will be used to monitor US citizens. “I cannot stress enough how much is at stake for the US right now,” Boring said. (Fox Business)
]]>Blockchain and fintech are to be mentioned by name in a draft of China’s 14th Five-Year Plan, marking increased focus on these technologies.
Why it matters: The Five-Year Plan is China’s most senior economic planning document. This is the first time for either technology to earn a mention by name.
READ MORE: INSIGHTS | Tech in the Five-Year plan
Details: China’s National Legislature opened its annual meeting in Beijing today. It is expected to approve the draft plan during the week-long session.
All aboard the China chain: The plan declares blockchain a key technology, along with cloud computing, the Internet of Things, big data, AI, and virtual reality.
READ MORE: Enterprise blockchain to integrate China’s digital yuan
Fintech: The phrase “fintech” (jinrong keji) got three direct mentions; under blockchain development, in a section on regulating tech, and financial reforms. This is the first time a reference by name to fintech has made it in the plan.
More rules: The draft plan calls for enhanced antitrust rules and licensing regimes for tech platforms, and the establishment of new regulatory frameworks for fintech, telemedicine, autonomous driving, and smart logistics.
As China’s legislature prepares to meet tomorrow, we’re bringing you a special edition of our Insights column: a preview of tech in the 14th Five-Year Plan. We’ve looked through the last plan, and the documents describing priorities for the new one, to give you our baseline expectations for key tech areas in the new plan.
Greetings from Beijing, where the weather is just turning to spring, the air this week feels like taking a bath in an ashtray, and, across town, about 3,000 people are getting together Friday to kick off the annual meeting of China’s national legislature.
This is one of the big meetings: This year, the National People’s Congress will approve China’s 14th Five-Year Plan, which will set out the government’s economic priorities for the next half-decade. The meeting lasts from March 5 to March 11, and in previous years the plan has come toward the end of the session.
Technology and innovation are sure to play a leading role. “Innovation-driven development” was one of the first topics addressed in the 13th Five-Year Plan, issued in 2016, and the phrase is equally prominent in previews of the new plan.
What is (likely) new is emphasis on another key phrase: “self-sufficiency.” As the US has used its control of key technologies as a weapon, China’s efforts to produce its own have a new urgency.
For people with tech projects, the start of a new plan period means opportunity. The “money spigot” for homegrown tech and innovation is likely to get even more generous, said Uny Cao, vice president at the Zhejiang University Intellectual Property Exchange Center and friend of TechNode.
What are we looking for when the new plan is published next week? What’s likely to get the most attention—and which will get less? Below, you’ll find TechNode’s roundup of key mentions of technologies we expect to see highlighted in the 14th Five-Year Plan.
Macro focus: Above all, five-year economic plans are strategic documents. The most important decisions will be macro goals for the economy as a whole: whether to set a GDP target and how high; how to pace the economy’s transition to meet a 2060 carbon neutrality goal; and how to balance such factors as imports, exports, investment, and consumption. We’re not going to cover all those issues below: You’ll find lots of sharper macro commentary from our friends and colleagues at other outlets.
Don’t expect details: A five-year plan gives you a 10,000-foot view of the government’s priorities, reflecting agreement on goals but probably not how to reach them. If you’re interested in a topic, look for more specialized plans issued by ministries and provinces for implementation.
Compare, compare, compare: Most important political documents don’t make much sense in isolation. To identify key decisions, policy analysts compare successive versions of the same plan to see what’s changed—additions, subtractions, or even changes in the order of topics may indicate shifting priorities. We’ve looked at the 13th Five-Year Plan (full text in English), which ended in 2020, to set a baseline for key technology issues.
Decisions, not surprises: You probably have already heard of most topics to be covered by the Five-Year Plan. Stakeholders across the Chinese political system have been advocating, piloting, and negotiating ideas for years in the hopes of influencing this plan. Much like a major plan in any political system, it bears the fingerprints of hundreds or thousands of political actors of all kinds.
Basis for our expectations: Last October, the Party’s Central Committee met in Beijing to discuss the upcoming five-year plan in a meeting called the Fifth Plenum. The most relevant of the reports that meeting produced was the Central Committee’s “Suggestions” or “Guidelines” for the 14th Five-Year Plan. Although much shorter—around three pages compared to three hundred—the structure of this document usually parallels that of the published five-year plan. We heavily relied on it to make the predictions below.
A new approach to data management will reverberate across tech industries. The next stage of China’s tech policy will shift from an emphasis on developing cybersecurity and big data, to building up the data economy.
Mentions in the 13th Five-Year Plan: The last five-year development plan focused on building up cybersecurity and control over data. But it also set goals to get government offices to share data with each other and industry.
READ MORE: Dust has yet to settle two years after China’s landmark cybersecurity law
Expectations in the 14th Five-Year Plan: In the Fifth Plenum guidelines, data has joined an impressive new crowd: “[We will] advance the marketization and reform of the economic factors of land, labor, capital, technology, and data.” When a Communist Party puts you on the same level as labor and capital, you know you’ve made it big.
The Fifth Plenum guidelines call for the development of a rules-based data economy. Or as they put it: Establish basic systems and standards for data property rights, transactions and circulation, cross-border transmission, and security protection to promote the development and utilization of data resources.
“Ensuring the fluid circulation of data is now an economic imperative,” said Kendra Schaefer, head of tech policy research at Beijing-based strategic advisory firm Trivium. “In practical terms, that means that the overarching theme of China’s data policy over the next five years will focus on allowing data to be shared, transferred, bought, sold, and utilized,” Schaefer said. The plenum’s recommendations called for “systems and standards” in data property rights, market mechanisms for data, as well as cross-border data transfers.
So what? “The 14th Five-Year Plan will mark the beginning of a new era in China’s approach to data policy,” Schaefer said. China is stepping up from the securitization of data resources to developing a system in which data can be exploited as a resource. In the upcoming plan period, we can expect more support for trade in data alongside a continued crackdown on bad cybersecurity practices and insufficient privacy protections.
One of the biggest components of the 14th five-year plan deals with action to combat the environmental damage that followed years of rapid industrialization and economic growth. In the wake of a vow to set China on a path to carbon neutrality by 2060, economic planners will be under pressure to come up with big changes. China’s tech sector stands to benefit: To reach the country’s emissions goals, investment in clean technology could reach $16 trillion in the next 40 years.
In the 13th Five-Year Plan: The 2016 plan laid out targets to reduce carbon emissions by cutting the country’s carbon intensity—the amount of carbon dioxide produced for every unit of GDP. Through subsidies, state planners pushed prices in the solar industry so low that it effectively went from being a high-tech sector to a commodity business.
Expectations: The new plan will likely clarify how China will reach peak carbon emissions by 2030 and carbon net zero by 2060, goals laid out to the UN General Assembly by President Xi Jinping in September.
So what? The world is waiting to see how China plans to reach its emissions targets by 2060. We expect the plan to create more targets and pressure on local governments to improve carbon emissions, but details on how these will be implemented—and how cleantech investment will be affected—will likely be spelled out in lower-level plans.
A pillar of China’s economic growth, the automotive sector has long been dominated by well-established foreign brands, which hold more than 60% of the market share, while domestic automakers are concentrated in the low-end segment. But that is changing as China’s strength in electric vehicles is boosting its position on the global industry value chain, thanks to strong policy support over the past five years.
In the 13th Five-Year Plan: When China’s cabinet in 2010 initiated a development plan (in Chinese) for seven strategic emerging industries, new energy vehicles (NEVs) was one of them. In 2016, Beijing set an ambitious target of 5 million sales of NEVs in the coming five years, a number which would mark the beginning of mass adoption. This initiative became part of Beijing’s larger goal of becoming the world’s next innovation powerhouse.
Expectations: NEVs were briefly mentioned as one of the strategic emerging industries in the fifth plenum guidelines, but with no detail about the growth outlook.
So what? China’s electric vehicle market staged a strong rebound after disruptions caused by the Covid-19 pandemic last year and has remained the world’s biggest market since 2014. However, there have been bumps on the road, including electric car fires and the ongoing auto chip shortages.
China also lags the US in the vehicle autonomy competition, raising calls for more effort put toward core technology advancement. Pledging for quality growth amid rising superpower tensions in the next five years, Beijing would have to stay the course in boosting the sector, while realizing little near-term profit.
Chinese leaders have long vowed to achieve “self-reliance” in strategic technologies, and semiconductors are one of the priorities. The sector is expected to get major attention as China issues its development blueprint for the next five years.
In the 13th Five-Year Plan: The five-year plan ending in 2020 saw semiconductors, along with other high-tech sectors like robotics, smart transportation, and virtual reality, as “new areas of growth” for the nation’s economy, but didn’t make production of semiconductors a strategic priority.
Expectations: In 2015, China set a goal to make 70% of the chips it uses by 2025 as part of its “Made in China 2025” initiative. Now the question is how China will achieve that goal. The country only produced 6% of the semiconductors it consumed in 2020.
E-commerce falls under the broader concept of the digital economy, a major theme in the plan that also covers 5G, artificial intelligence, and big data. E-commerce is expected to play a greater role in driving China’s economic growth in the next plan period.
In the 13th Five-Year Plan: The development plan that ended in 2020 set out to expand the e-commerce sector by facilitating its deep integration with traditional industries and prioritizing its governance. China sought to integrate e-commerce into various areas including education, healthcare, culture, and tourism to drive innovation.
Expectations: China expects online commerce to continue supporting its macro strategies, notably poverty alleviation and the One Belt One Road initiative. E-commerce has become an important means for China’s rural dwellers to sell their agricultural products. With more free trade zones on the horizon, China looks to expand its cross-border e-commerce market in the next five years.
Blockchain could be a new item in the 14th plan. It’s had plenty of attention at top levels in the past year.
In the 13th Five-Year Plan: Zilch. Blockchain was not on top policymakers’ agenda back in 2016.
Push from the top: The technology had its breakout moment in Chinese policy in October 2019, when President Xi Jinping praised the technology at a Politburo study session.
No crypto: Chinese regulators are not big fans of one of the technology’s most popular applications: cryptocurrencies. The past year’s clampdown on unregulated cryptocurrencies “is meant to clear a path to regulated forms of digital assets, starting first with DCEP [the central bank’s R&D project that includes the digital RMB],” said Michael Sung, co-director of the Fintech Research Center at the Fanhai International School of Finance at Fudan University, told TechNode.
Expectations: The technology was not mentioned in the 14th plan guidelines issued after the Fifth Plenum.
So what? China is already very interested in blockchain, but has not given the technology the same level of support as, say, electric vehicles. A name-check in the 14th plan would seal its status as a key technology and could pave the way for a national blockchain roadmap.
China has recently tightened antitrust regulations on tech companies. Regulators started at the end of last year to look at tech giants’ market dominance and to use anti-monopoly tools to limit them. The country also changed antitrust laws and rules to better rein in big tech. As top leaders of China repeatedly vow to “strengthen anti-monopoly” and “rein in disorderly capital expansion,” what has affected tech companies so far seems to be just the start of severer crackdowns.
In the 13th Five-Year Plan: The 13th development plan mentioned breaking industry monopolies and rooting out market barriers. It also intended to establish an “efficient antitrust law enforcement system,” deepen international antitrust law enforcement cooperation, and check administrative monopolies.
Expectations: China is already on the move to rein in big tech with anti-monopoly tools. If the new plan pushes government agencies to impose stricter antitrust regulations and break monopolies, tech giants like Tencent, Alibaba, and Bytedance may feel a lot more pain.
Agriculture, the foundation for feeding China’s 1.4 billion population, is facing a new round of restructuring and modernization. The countryside is a growing focus for tech companies because it is home to a group of maturing consumers as well as being a lower-cost manufacturing hub. That makes aligning with rural developments a big goal for these internet firms.
In the 13th Five-Year Plan: The last plan placed a high priority on continuous modernization of rural areas and the agricultural sector. The plan promoted integration of agriculture and e-commerce and encouraged the application of big data and internet of things tech in agriculture.
Expectations: China is expected to continue to focus on improving the quality, safety, and profitability of the sector, goals that require technological assistance.
Policymakers are counting on tech in a plan to improve both farmers’ output and their incomes, said Even Pay, an associate director at Trivium:
“Policymakers are preparing for a future where there are fewer farmers. Some of them may be older, and in need of equipment to make their jobs easier. They also hope to attract some young people back into farming by making the work easier and more interesting—like operating ag machinery or flying drones.”
“Another big reason the government is supporting agtech is the “dual circulation strategy”—which looks to make domestic consumption the main driver of China’s macroeconomic growth. Right now China’s rural areas have the greatest growth potential of anywhere in the country—provided farmers’ incomes go up.”
Fintech and the digital yuan might get a direct mention in the 14th plan.
In the 13th Five-Year Plan: Fintech was directly mentioned only once in the last plan. That plan called for a risk monitoring and crisis management system for all financial activity, including “internet finance.”
Fintech development: Since the release of the 2016-2020 plan, the use of fintech has skyrocketed, and an overwhelming majority of Chinese citizens now make use of some sort of digital finance, whether that’s for lending, investment, or insurance.
Digital yuan: China’s central bank has been working on a digital form of cash, the digital yuan, since 2014. If implemented, it will be the first state-backed digital currency by a major economy. The central bank appears to have accelerated the development of the currency in 2019 after Facebook announced its Libra project. Trials for the e-CNY started in late 2020 in four Chinese cities: Chengdu, Shenzhen, Suzhou, and Xiong’an.
Expectations: The guidelines directly called for the improvement of “the level of financial technology.” They also included language similar to the previous plan’s regarding inclusive and green finance, as well as on financial risk prevention and monitoring.
So what? China’s fintech industry will continue to grow, especially given a lift in the 14th plan. But incumbents will face more competition as a result of antitrust regulations and the opening up of payments systems that DCEP will bring. Tech companies dabbling in finance will also be increasingly brought under the fold of financial regulation.
]]>Hong Kong authorities granted a digital asset portfolio management license to a subsidiary of cryptocurrency exchange Huobi Technology, the company said on Thursday.
Why it matters: The news bodes well for a number of Chinese cryptocurrency companies which face regulatory pressures at home and are looking to set up shop elsewhere. Hong Kong and Singapore are among the primary destinations.
Details: The Hong Kong Securities and Futures Commission (SFC) granted Huobi Asset Management a license to manage virtual asset portfolios, according to a company announcement on Thursday.
Context: Huobi Asset Management received two licenses for cryptocurrency asset management in July 2020; Type 4, for advising in securities, and Type 9, for asset management.
]]>
Chang’an Chain, an enterprise blockchain developed by a state-backed Beijing consortium, will integrate China’s digital yuan, as the capital city readies the e-CNY for testing during the 2022 Winter Olympics.
Why it matters: This is the first known domestic application of blockchain technology using the digital yuan, China’s state-backed digital currency. It creates a path for enterprise applications of the e-CNY, which have so far taken a backseat in the development of the digital currency.
READ MORE: CHINA VOICES | DCEP class is in session, with Zhou Xiaochuan
Details: The Beijing Academy of Blockchain and Edge Computing (BABEC)—the research institute behind Chang’an Chain—and the People’s Bank of China (PBOC) Digital Currency Research Institute signed a strategic partnership on Monday, state-owned newspaper Beijing Daily reported on Thursday.
The China Chain: Chang’An Chain, known as Chain Maker, is a hardware and blockchain project with major government support. BABEC, backed by the municipal governments of Beijing and the city’s Haidian district, aims to help China achieve blockchain independence, according to its founder, Dong Jin.
Context: The project and its linkage to the digital RMB show that the Chinese government increasingly sees blockchain as a key technology, and is willing to invest accordingly.
Global crypto mining hotspot Inner Mongolia is considering shutting down mining within its borders as it pushes for zero carbon emissions. China’s central bank is joining hands with three other economies to test cross-border transactions using digital currencies. Domestic media research said that Chinese government procurement of blockchain technology has more than doubled in the last year.
The world of blockchain moves fast, and nowhere does it move faster than China. Here’s what you need to know about China’s block-world in the week of Feb. 23-March 2.
The municipal government of Inner Mongolia autonomous region proposed shutting down all cryptocurrency mining facilities in the region in pursuit of carbon neutrality, a major policy goal for the central government. Inner Mongolia is one of the areas in China that contributes significantly to the global Bitcoin hashrate, along with Sichuan and Xinjiang. (CoinDesk)
China, Hong Kong, Thailand, and the United Arab Emirates announced a joint experimental project to test cross-border transactions using central bank-backed digital currencies. The program aims to develop a proof-of-concept prototype using blockchain technology. (TechNode)
READ MORE: CHINA VOICES | DCEP class is in session, with Zhou Xiaochuan
In a bull market last seen in 2017, Chinese investors are back at it: They are investing in cryptocurrencies, despite a domestic ban of cryptocurrency exchanges. (Reuters)
A press release from Sunday stated that Japanese fund SoftBank’s UK subsidiary had invested “millions of dollars” in Chinese crypto exchange ZT. Some industry insiders are skeptical about the investment, in part because ZT has reportedly had trouble with the police, and is not a well-known company. (Wu Blockchain)
]]>A recently published speech by Zhou Xiaochuan, who spearheaded China’s foray into digital currencies when he was chairman of the People’s Bank of China (PBOC), has shaken some basic assumptions about the digital yuan, or e-CNY.
China has been working on a digital currency for years, much anticipated by fans of virtual payments and opponents of leather wallets. It’s likely to be the first major economy to adopt a digital currency. Details were scarce until April 2020, when a series of four pilot programs gave us our first look at e-CNY payments.
Just in time for the annual meeting of China’s legislature, its most famous monetary policy authority has released the text of a talk on the central bank’s digital currency plans. Zhou said that these plans are a lot broader than the launch of a new form of currency.
The text has a messy pedigree: We first saw it when finance and business newspaper Caixin published an abridgement in English on Feb. 22. A longer Chinese version was published on Caixin on Feb. 16. These articles were based on a speech Zhou gave at Peking University back in November 2020, which according to him used slides prepared for an even earlier conference, the Budapest Eurasia Forum hosted by Hungary’s central bank.
In TechNode’s members-only translation column, we bring you selections from discussions about tech on the Chinese internet. TechNode has not independently verified the claims made below.
We recommend reading the whole Chinese Caixin text, even if it means using Google Translate—it’s a lot easier to follow than the translation. We’re relying on Caixin’s English where available, and our own translation where not.
First off, Zhou’s first point: “DCEP”—short for “digital currency/electronic payments” is not the same as the digital RMB. Many writers—us very much included—have understood them to be near identical.
According to Zhou, this is a misunderstanding. The currency is called the digital yuan, or e-CNY. DCEP is the central bank’s broader research project into digital currencies and electronic payments.
I’d like to make it clear that DCEP is a two-tier research and development (R&D) and pilot program, rather than a payment product. In other words, the DCEP program may involve several payment products that can be trialed and rolled out.
Our translation
The central bank’s job is to provide underlying infrastructure and oversight, not build payments products, he wrote.
The bank shouldn’t pick one technology roadmap at all, Zhou wrote.
It’s best if the central bank doesn’t pre-determine, or endorse, a certain technological route, because technology is constantly evolving, and it is not easy to judge which technology is better or worse when the technology is advancing very fast.
Our trans.
Zhou’s next key theme is the “two-tier” approach to managing DCEP.
On the first tier sits the PBOC. The central bank’s job, Zhou said, is providing infrastructure and oversight.
The second tier is where you’ll find digital currency and payments. It comprises everyone else; commercial banks, telecom operators, and third-party payment platforms like Alipay and WeChat Pay.
According to Zhou, tier-two institutions will be tasked with developing payments products, which includes e-CNY. This means, Zhou wrote, that the digital yuan isn’t a mainstream central bank digital currency (CBDC).
Zhou likened the two-tier approach to Hong Kong’s semi-private banknotes. Most money in Hong Kong is printed by private banks, backed by deposits of American dollars with the city’s equivalent of a central bank.
To some extent, this design draws lessons from Hong Kong’s three note-issuing banks. The three banks need to give $1 [ed: US dollar] to the Hong Kong Monetary Authority (HKMA), the city’s de facto central bank, as a reserve for every HK$7.80 they issue. The HKMA then hand outs certificates of indebtedness to the issuing banks. On the banks’ balance sheets, the notes they issue are entered as liabilities. And for the HKMA, the certificates of indebtedness are its liabilities. In this sense, DCEP is different from the typical CBDC, which is owned and indebted by a central bank.
Caixin translation
On the Hong Kong model, banks would have to deposit one yuan RMB at the central bank to issue a digital RMB. But Zhou doesn’t seem to say that DCEP will adopt this exact approach.
Secondly, the PBOC can ensure the stability of the digital yuan’s value through multiple approaches, including requiring banks to set aside money as reserves and then issuing them certificates of indebtedness or letters of comfort. Therefore, the composition of the two-tier system of DCEP can be different.
Caixin trans.
“I believe that he is suggesting that DCEP can be either in CBDC form (direct claims on PBOC) or in narrow bank form. The latter is a claim on a bank which is based on segregated claims on PBOC. He is a little unclear on that, going one way in part of the essay and the other way in a different part. ” Darrell Duffie, Professor of Finance at the Stanford Graduate School of Business, told TechNode.
But at one point, Zhou seems to have it both ways on whether the PBOC should get involved in designing the system:
Theoretically speaking, under the two-tier system, the central bank’s own R&D focus may not be on the digital currency product itself (of course, it has the foundation, so there are also many people inside who are enthusiastic to do research in this area, which is not unreasonable), the central bank should focus more on building reliable settlement and clearing infrastructure…
Our trans.
Zhou wrote that China is not really working on a CBDC—at least, not a “mainstream” one.
He advised the reader to focus on a long-term R&D program, rather than current digital yuan experiments, which he seems to see as one model among many.
Pilots for the e-CNY launched in 2020 in four cities: Chengdu, Shenzhen, Suzhou, and Xiong’an. Six public trials have taken place in the four cities in the form of lotteries, starting in Shenzhen in October 2020. It appears that these have all tested the same system—all use the same app.
There are some differences between banks visible in this app. The e-CNY displayed on the pilot digital wallets currently tested in Suzhou comes in different colors, depending on the bank card connected to the account. Users were also able to spend the money in different places depending on which bank card they connected, suggesting that the major Chinese banks may in fact be implementing the system at least somewhat independently.
READ MORE: UPDATED: We got some digital yuan!
During the latest Chengdu lottery, winners could also use the JD.com app as an e-wallet.
Other products built by second-tier institutions under DCEP could include “smart contracts, like programmed payments, delayed payments, contingent payments, and so on. This could also mean API service provision, super Apps for cross applications, and so on,” Duffie said.
Zhou also commented on a few other key issues:
The PBOC should be careful to avoid cutting banks out of the equation, Zhou wrote—something known as “disintermediation.” Many early digital currencies have encouraged users to do without bank accounts, often advertising it as a feature.
Chinese DCEP architects want to keep traditional financial institutions in the loop. “Commercial banks serve a critical function in implementing monetary policy. So, in considering digital currencies strategies, central banks specifically focus on implementations that would not disintermediate these banks,” Michael Sung, founding co-director of the Fudan Fanhai Fintech Research Center and chairman of CarbonBlue Innovations.
Some observers have seen DCEP as a rebuke to Alipay and WeChat Pay, the privately-developed electronics payments platforms that dominate transactions in contemporary China.
Zhou seems to say that DCEP will not replace Alipay and WeChat Pay, but it will bring more competitors. Zhou describeed the two companies behind China’s most popular payment solutions as fundamental to the project, including them in a list of eight major two tier institutions.
Tier-two institutions are already quite motivated to come up with payment solutions, to acquire more users, Zhou wrote. But they will shirk responsibility without oversight, he writes.
In the digital yuan system, the second tier institutions will “own” the digital yuan, and thus will be forced to have enough reserves to back it up, but will also be responsible for know-your-customer requirements and protecting privacy, Zhou said.
For that matter, Zhou thinks that QR codes may be replaced:
QR codes are not very high-tech, so some people say that they might disappear sooner or later, and it may not be so long.
Our trans.
Zhou lists near-field communication and subway-style prepaid cards as other possible ways to make payments happen. Both of these QR code alternatives are being tested in digital yuan trials.
The former central banker said blockchain is not ready to be part of DCEP, but he didn’t shut the door completely.
In the field of payment, due to the huge transaction throughput, distributed ledger technology is not yet able to play a core role in the retail payment system, but it can wait for the development of technology.
Our trans.
Zhou highlighted the difficulty of unwinding transactions made in error as a downside to blockchain.
Several observers have taken DCEP as a challenge to the US dollar’s global status. But Zhou played down the international side of digital currency.
Just this week, the PBOC joined a project called “m-CBDC bridge,” to test cross-border transactions using digital currencies with Thailand, the United Arab Emirates, and Hong Kong.
But Zhou argues that new technology won’t fundamentally change cross-border transactions. The real issues, he says, are financial obstacles like exchange rates.
The difficulties linked to cross-border payments don’t really involve technical systems, but risks related to currency exchange and management of capital inflow and outflow. For example, if Mexican migrants in the US want to transfer money back home using Libra, they have to exchange it for pesos if Libra is not widely accepted in Mexico. Therefore, it’s necessary to focus more on the retail application rather than on cross-border money transfer.
Caixin trans.
However, Zhou does see opportunities for digitalization to help with some retail transactions, naming e-commerce, remittances, and tourism, which will “fit with” RMB internationalization.
He cautioned against getting a reputation for “dollarization,” referring to countries in which the dollar has partly or wholly replaced local currency.
]]>China and other East Asian countries, can steadily advance cross-border payments using new payment solutions. This requires countries to build on the solid development of domestic retail payment systems, and then focus on solving current account payments such as cross-border travel, while respecting the needs of some countries to prevent dollarization. Of course, this process may be accompanied by the internationalization of the RMB, but this should not be forced. It is more important to avoid being accused of promoting “yuanization.”
Our trans.
China, Hong Kong, Thailand, and the United Arab Emirates announced they will be testing central bank digital currencies in cross-border payments.
Why it matters: The collaboration between the four economies is a milestone in the digital yuan’s development. Nailing down cross-border payments is a key step in achieving a long-term strategic goal of using the digital RMB to internationalize China’s currency.
Details: The project, dubbed m-CBDC Bridge, will explore the potential of blockchain in international CBDC transactions. It aims to develop a proof-of-concept prototype that uses the distributed ledger technology to process in real time cross-border transactions that involve multiple currencies, a joint press release said.
Context: The Bank of Thailand and Hong Kong’s Monetary Authority completed a similar test in Q4 2019, called Project Inthanon-LionRock.
READ MORE: UPDATED: We got some digital yuan!
CLARIFICATION: This article was revised Feb. 25, 2021, to add context on the trial participants.
]]>Licensed online banks belonging to Tencent and Ant Group will reportedly take part in digital yuan pilot tests, while another bank is developing a biometric hardware wallet for the digital currency. Geely, one of China’s largest automakers, is entering the blockchain space, and a Chinese tea company pivoted to crypto mining.
The world of blockchain moves fast, and nowhere does it move faster than China. Here’s what you need to know about China’s block-world in the week of Feb. 16-22.
Chinese mixed reality glasses maker Nreal is preparing to launch its products in the US and Europe, less than a year after a California court dismissed a lawsuit brought against the company by Google’s Magic Leap.
Why it matters: Nreal is one of China’s most promising MR startups; it is backed by major Chinese tech venture capital (VC) firms and has set up partnerships with global heavyweights, including Qualcomm and Korea’s LG.
Details: In partnership with Vodafone and Deutsche Telekom, Europe’s most prominent telecom carriers, the company will launch its Nreal Light MR glasses in the EU in the spring, according to a statement sent to TechNode on Tuesday.
With the initial success we’ve seen with our carrier partners, we’re scaling this strategy and excited to get Nreal Light into the hands of American consumers by April of this year.
—Nreal CEO and founder Xu Chi, in the statement
Context: In fall 2020, Nreal launched its Light MR glasses in Japan in partnership with KDDI, and in Korea with LG.
]]>READ MORE: US court rejects IP theft claims against Chinese mixed reality firm
Tencent’s WeBank and Ant Group’s MyBank will be the first two privately owned banks to participate in digital yuan trials, Chinese media reported.
Why it matters: The two online banks will be the first fintech companies to participate in the tests, possibly gaining an edge over their competitors despite widespread speculation that developing the currency was in part to curb their influence.
Details: Under the supervision of the People’s Bank of China (PBOC), the two banks are preparing to join trials such as those already underway, which are run by six state-owned banks, China Securities Journal reported citing anonymous sources.
READ MORE: UPDATED: We got some digital yuan!
Context: Ant Group’s Alipay and Tencent’s WeChat Pay digital payment platforms account for a respective 56% and 38.8% of China’s digital payment market, according to a report from market research firm iResearch. Holding such portions of the market fulfill criteria for the pair to be considered a duopoly, according to draft antitrust rules released by the PBOC in January.
Updated: added detail about Zhou Xiaochuan’s statements.
]]>Huawei is seeking approval from authorities to acquire licensed digital payment provider Xunlian Zhifu, Chinese media reported.
Why it matters: The telecommunications giant is the latest of China’s big tech firms to expand into the digital payment industry, just as regulators are trying to break Ant Group and Tencent’s duopoly in the market with new antitrust laws.
Staffing: In addition to acquiring the Shenzhen-based licensed payment provider, Huawei is recruiting a “large number” of digital payment-related positions, such as deposit management, clearance, and bank cooperation, Chinese media reported on Sunday citing anonymous sources.
The acquisition: Founded in 2013 by Huawei’s competitor ZTE, Xunlian Zhifu was issued a nationwide online payment license in 2014. ZTE sold 90% of its stake in the payment provider to a Shanghai-based holding company in 2016.
Antitrust: Regulators have ramped up anti-monopoly regulation in the last few months, following the suspension in November of Ant Group’s mega dual listing.
READ MORE: New digital payment rules likely to hit Ant Group, Tencent
New entrants: Several internet companies bought licensed digital payment operators in 2020, including Pinduoduo in January, and Bytedance and Trip.com in September.
]]>READ MORE: Bytedance unveils Douyin mobile payment tool to rival Alipay, WeChat
The Blockchain Services Network (BSN) is working on compliance solutions for Chinese developers while integrating more decentralized chains in its international network. Two digital yuan trials were announced; Suzhou’s second and Beijing’s first. Investments in cryptocurrency mining continued as Bitcoin prices begin to climb again.
The world of blockchain moves fast, and nowhere does it move faster than China. Here’s what you need to know about China’s block-world in the week of Feb. 2-9.
READ MORE: EXCLUSIVE: International BSN to add Casper, NEAR, Findora
Six Chinese companies were among a list of 50 top blockchain companies in the world according to Forbes: Ant Group, Baidu, China Construction Bank, Industrial Commercial Bank of China, Ping An insurance, and Tencent. (Forbes)
Gene Simmons, the bassist for world-famous rock band KISS, said that he believes China is behind the US Securities and Exchange Commission lawsuit against Ripple, in an appearance on a podcast hosted by news site Bitcoin.com. In December 2020, the US SEC sued the cryptocurrency for selling $1.3 billion in unregistered securities. (Bitcoin.com)
]]>The Blockchain Services Network announced plans to integrate three public blockchains into its international network, the BSN architect told TechNode on Monday.
Why it matters: The Chinese government-affiliated project pushes ahead with its ambition to connect all of the world’s blockchain ecosystems and provide blockchain infrastructure internationally.
Details: Once the three chains—Casper, NEAR, and Findora—are integrated into the BSN, developers will be able to access them through public city nodes and build decentralized applications (dapps).
Blockchain Services Network (BSN)
What: A platform for blockchain development, bringing together cloud services and different chain protocols on city nodes.
Why: To reduce the cost of blockchain application design and deployment while powering communication between chains. It will be made available around the world through local cloud providers, ultimately creating a global internet of blockchains.
Who: It is part of the government’s Global Blockchain Strategy unveiled by Chinese President Xi Jinping in November 2019, spearheaded by the China State Information Center, China Mobile, China Union Pay, and Red Date Technology.
Context: Casper and NEAR are Ethereum alternatives and layer-one proof-of-stake blockchains. Findora is a network for decentralized finance (DeFi) with an emphasis on privacy-preserving architecture.
E-commerce giant JD.com is stuffing virtual red envelopes of digital yuan to be distributed in Suzhou’s second public lottery, which opened for registration on Friday.
Why it matters: This is China’s fifth digital currency trial open to the public, and the fourth one within the last two months. The acceleration of public tests this year compared with 2020 signals that a rollout could be close.
READ MORE: EXCLUSIVE: We got some digital yuan!
Details: The Suzhou government will distribute to lucky lottery winners red envelopes containing a total of RMB 30 million ($4.6 million) paid for by JD.com, an official WeChat announcement said.
Context: The first trial of the digital money in Chengdu, the capital of China’s southwestern Sichuan province, is underway. The Chengdu trial will distribute RMB 50 million, nearly double the amount other cities are distributing through public lotteries.
Ant Group has reportedly reached a deal with Chinese authorities to become a financial holding company, making it subject to bank-like capital requirements.
Why it matters: The restructuring is likely to ease regulatory pressure for the fintech giant, but could also drastically alter its operations and curb its rapid pace of growth.
Details: Ant Group will be putting all of its business into a financial holding company, including all of its non-financial technology operations, such as its blockchain platform AntChain, Bloomberg reported.
Context: Since the suspension of Ant Group’s highly anticipated blockbuster dual public listings, it has been facing intense regulatory headwinds as Chinese authorities move to rein in fintech giants.
]]>READ MORE: CHINA VOICES | The unsigned op-eds that foreshadowed Ant Group IPO suspension
Savvy Chinese netizens are looking to capitalize on the booming success of US-based Clubhouse by selling invitations to the invite-only live audio app, just a day after Tesla CEO Elon Musk broke audience records with an appearance on the platform.
Details: TechNode counted dozens of listings for Clubhouse invites on Idle Fish, Alibaba’s secondhand marketplace.
Context: The Clubhouse app lets users join in rooms and listen to conversations between hosts and guests. It has been buzzing in Silicon Valley the last month or so, but reached new heights of popularity after tech superstar Elon Musk’s appearance on Monday.
Observers expect a cryptocurrency sell-off before and during the Chinese Spring Festival holiday as Chinese miners cash in for fiat currency to buy presents. DeFi projects disappeared from developer platform Binance Smart Chain, taking almost $3 million with them. The BSN launched a project to bring modified public chains to China.
The world of blockchain moves fast, and nowhere does it move faster than China. Here’s what you need to know about China’s block-world in the week of Jan. 27 – Feb. 2.
Bitcoin prices will continue to face selling pressure over the next two weeks as Chinese miners sell their tokens in the run up to the Spring Festival holiday, according to a report published Thursday from Singapore-based Stack Funds, a cryptocurrency investment management company.
In the last four years, Bitcoin prices have consistently fallen during China’s week-long holiday. In 2018, they fell by 50%. The weeklong holiday, which this year will falls on Feb. 11 to 17, calls for increased spending on gifts and traveling, which has the world’s largest cryptocurrency mining community selling their tokens for fiat currency, industry observers have said. (Cointelegraph)
Several projects have reportedly raised money on Binance Smart Chain, the cryptocurrency exchange’s developer platform which focuses on decentralized finance (DeFi). Organizers behind some of these projects have raised funds from users wanting to participate in the project, and then disappeared, taking the funds with them.
Three of the five projects that have fled the Binance developer platform took BNB 59,000, the platforms’ native token, worth close to $3 million. (Wu Blockchain, in Chinese)
China’s digital yuan “poses serious risks to US national security interests,” according to a report by the Center for New American Security. The digital currency is an attempt to enhance and export Beijing’s “digital authoritarianism” through the collection of financial data and the application of AI and big data on these databases.
The digital yuan could also risk US citizens’ privacy and internationalize the renmimbi yuan at the US dollar’s expense, the report said.
(Center for New American Security)
READ MORE: INSIGHTS | China’s digital currency has a long way to go
As the Biden administration takes office in the US, there’s a bipartisan, arguably multilateral, appetite to mess with China tech.
The new president has promised to make a U-turn on many of Trump’s policies, but China isn’t on this list. Cabinet picks have said that they support an aggressive stance on China and have made it clear that technology is a key aspect of their foreign policy, but haven’t revealed details as to how they will be tough on tech.
“The view that the two countries are competitors is now firmly held in both Beijing and Washington. In turn, there is little prospect for a meaningful improvement in US-China relations under the Biden administration,” Agathe Demarais, global forecasting director of The Economist Intelligence Unit, told TechNode.
“Biden will need to appease China hawks in both political parties in order to get support for his more ambitious domestic programs, such as building new infrastructure and healthcare,” Alex Capri, visiting senior fellow at the National University of Singapore, told TechNode.
Bottom line: China’s tech companies have seen big changes in their relationship with the US during the past four years, and a new US administration probably won’t undo many of those changes. The Biden administration is likely to put a pause on surprise moves like app bans, and be less unpredictable, but there’s almost certainly no going back to 2015.
‘Buy American’ initiative: Trump tried to encourage US federal agencies to buy homegrown products from the very beginning of his presidency. The American federal government is likely not a big client for Chinese companies, with some exceptions.
The Entity List: More serious threats to China tech began in 2016 with the short-lived addition of telecoms manufacturer ZTE to a list that limits exports of US technology, a move that temporarily cut it off from crucial supplies of semiconductors. In 2019, ZTE peer Huawei was added to this list in a move called a potential “death blow.”
Transaction bans: Perhaps Trump’s most confusing tech policy, if anyone is keeping score. On Aug. 6, 2020, Trump signed an executive order to bar US companies from making transactions with TikTok and WeChat over alleged privacy violations. Both bans were suspended by courts before coming into effect.
Investment bans: Trump banned investments in companies designated as affiliated with the Chinese military by the Department of Defense (DoD) including China Mobile, China Telecom, and China Unicom, starting Jan. 11, 2021. Shares of the three telcos in Hong Kong fell sharply on the announcement. The list also includes Huawei and Hikvision.
Delisting: Not a Trump policy per se, but a potentially major hassle for US-listed Chinese tech companies. US lawmakers voted unanimously to pass the Holding Foreign Companies Accountable Act, which threatens to force Chinese companies off US stock markets within three years.
CFIUS: The Committee on Foreign Investment in the US blocked Chinese investments on several occasions, and expanded its jurisdiction in 2018.
Clean Network: First launched on April 29, 2020 as “Clean Path,” and later expanded in August 2020, the initiative seeks to rid US allies’ tech networks and infrastructure from Chinese technology.
Tariffs: Trump slapped tariffs on several Chinese tech products, starting with solar panels in January 2018, and later on electronics, including laptops and phones.
I could go on, but these are the most important.
Funding: Chinese VC activity in the US fell dramatically in 2019 and 2020, as Chris Udemans documented, when the techwar heated up.
By contrast, US funding is still flowing into China. Beijing-based VC Qiming Venture Partners closed a $1.2 billion round of financing in September, mainly led by US university endowments and pension funds.
Semiconductors: Export controls have also inspired big efforts in China to achieve semiconductor independence, or at least limit reliance on US chipmaking technology. This is a very long road and several US companies guard key chokepoints, but there is probably no going back.
The Trump administration aimed to decouple the US and China in the tech sphere, Scott Kennedy, senior adviser at the Center for Strategic and International Studies in Washington, told TechNode.
Biden will be using similar policy tools, but his goal will likely be risk mitigation rather than complete separation, Kennedy said.
Biden’s team has begun to describe an approach that could lower the temperature without changing the basic fact of rivalry.
Kurt Campbell, Biden’s Indo-Pacific Advisor, and Jake Sullivan, Biden’s National Security Advisor, summarized an alternative approach in a 2019 Foreign Affairs article:
Washington, for its part, will have to invest in the core sources of American economic strength, build a united front of like-minded partners to help establish reciprocity, and safeguard its technological leadership while avoiding self-inflicted wounds.
-Kurt Campbell and Jake Sullivan, “Competition Without Catastrophe,” Foreign Affairs
Competition: Biden’s early appointees have said that his administration will continue competing with China on technology issues. However, Biden-style competition could mean more efforts to boost US innovation and fewer surprise app bans.
Cooperation: The new administration doesn’t only want to ramp up competition with China. Cabinet picks including Antony Blinken have said they want to find ways to work with Beijing on global issues such as climate change. Biden’s Secretary of State said in September that a full decoupling is “unrealistic and ultimately counter-productive.”
Biden’s cabinet picks have almost unanimously expressed a desire to be tough on China on issues ranging from trade to human rights. They have also stressed the rising importance of technology on geopolitics.
President Biden and his incoming team have not detailed how they will deal with the US-China tech war. “I have not heard them whisper a word,” Kennedy said.
Biden’s top cabinet picks have often dodged making specific comments on technology issues. Here’s some exceptions on what they have said on China tech:
“Democracies must employ scalpels rather than sledgehammers,” Rosenberg said. CSIS analyst Kennedy said he expects the administration to “carry out a top-bottom review of China policy and the entire foreign policy of their tactics and strategy.”
There’s some policy areas where experts expect to see movement from the new administration, albeit further down the line.
Made in America: Biden signed an executive order on Jan. 25 that will narrow the definition of American-made products and make it harder for federal agencies to justify buying foreign-made goods.
Backseat for tariffs: Experts expect tariffs on imported goods to take a backseat in Biden’s administration, giving way to strategic tools that confront China’s tech companies in different ways, like sanctions. “Rather than tariffs, the Biden administration will increasingly shift to sanctions and export controls to confront China’s rise in the technological sector and to try to re-assert the US global dominance in this area,” Demarais told TechNode.
Export controls: Campbell expressed support for “enhanced restrictions on the flow of technology investment and trade in both directions,” but not in a wholesale manner to avoid the Balkanization of the internet.
Standards setting: Some Biden advisors have said that they want the US to play a stronger role in international standard settings institutions to curb China’s influence in global tech standards.
At this point, the broad strokes of the Biden team’s China approach are fairly clear. But tech companies and investors have a lot riding on the specifics. US policy won’t be going back to the rosier times of 2015, but China tech companies will have to wait to see how their access to US markets and stock exchanges will shape up in the next four years.
Kennedy said that US presidents usually don’t make decisions on foreign policy until the summer after they take office.
In the meantime, several of Trump’s policies will remain intact, chiefly entity lists. If you are Huawei or Hikvision, you will have to continue living with US export controls for the foreseeable future. If you are WeChat or Alipay, you can take a breather and expect to hear an update on whether you can operate in the US in a few months’ time.
Unfinished business: Analysts don’t expect any new moves any time soon, but the new administration has some homework due within the next two months.
Stalling: Kennedy says Biden might try to hit the pause button on these actions until he has finished his policy review.
“In terms of the larger arc in figuring out how to manage the relationship with China, I am fairly optimistic,” Kennedy said. “The Trump administration highlighted the concerns of a Xi Jinping-led China. I think Biden will show more care in the tools to get effective action,” he said.
Update: This article has been updated to include the full name and title of Abishur Prakash, futurist at the Center for Innovating the Future, Toronto.
]]>Alipay, JD Digits, and Didi Finance have completely removed all interest-bearing time deposit products from their apps, just days after authorities released relevant regulations. TechNode has independently confirmed that bank deposit products have been banished from Alipay.
Why it matters: The move is the culmination of a month-long crackdown on time deposits sold through third-party fintech platforms, which is part of a wider regulatory clampdown on fintech as regulators try to rein in China’s Big Tech.
Full measures: As of Dec. 27, Alipay, JD Digits, and Didi Finance closed the app portals through which users could increase their existing deposits with banks, Chinese media reported. The outstanding balances will be returned to their accounts once the deposits have matured.
Half measures: On Dec. 15, Sun Tianqi, head of the central bank’s financial stability department, likened the partnership between banks and fintech platforms on deposit products to “driving without a license” and warned that regulatory supervision would intensify.
The risk: Small regional banks had been advertising time deposits with interest rates as high as 7% through fintech platforms.
]]>READ MORE: CHINA VOICES | The unsigned op-eds that foreshadowed Ant Group IPO suspension
Chengdu will launch its first digital yuan lottery on Jan. 27, the fourth in China, distributing $7.7 million of the digital currency. Authorities busted a criminal network trading vast troves of personal data using cryptocurrencies. The global chip shortage is hitting cryptocurrency rig makers, and the BSN is partnering with New York Ethereum protocol ConsenSys Quorum.
The world of blockchain moves fast, and nowhere does it move faster than China. Here’s what you need to know about China’s block-world in the week of Jan. 19 – 26.
Chengdu, a city in China’s southwestern Sichuan province, will launch its first digital yuan lottery to distribute RMB 50 million ($7.7 million) of the currency via red envelopes. The lottery is the fourth public digital currency trial to take place in China.
READ MORE: Chengdu to distribute $7.7 million in its first digital yuan lottery: report
Chinese authorities arrested 30 people in connection with selling 600 million pieces of personal information collected across 10 Chinese provinces, and accepting RMB 8 million in cryptocurrencies as payment. The suspects were using the encrypted messaging app Telegram to sell the data. (Jiangsu Internet Police official WeChat, in Chinese)
The global chip shortage has hit cryptocurrency mining rig manufacturers. As Bitcoin prices have risen, so has the demand for mining rigs. Chipmakers have been unable to keep up with demand. (Reuters)
READ MORE: Digital yuan goes physical, mining rig prices rise: Blockheads
The Blockchain Services Network, a government initiative to build an internet of blockchains, announced that it is partnering with ConsenSys. The New York company’s Ethereum-based enterprise blockchain solution Quorum will be available in over 80 nodes of the BSN in China. (CoinDesk)
Eastern Jiangsu province launched a blockchain-based platform for rural finance in collaboration with Ant Chain and Jinhu Rural Commercial Bank. The platform will support the management of land mortgage loans, using smart contracts to automate deposits and verification. (Letter Chain Finance, in Chinese)
Huobi’s Chief Investment Officer Sharlyn Wu is reportedly preparing to resign from the cryptocurrency exchange. The CIO drove Huobi’s investments in decentralized finance over the last six months. (Wu Blockchain)
]]>Chengdu will distribute $7.7 million to winners of its first digital yuan lottery on Jan. 27, on the heels of similar trials for the currency in Shenzhen and Suzhou.
Why it matters: The lottery is the third digital currency trial open to the public, signaling that rollout is underway. It is also the biggest: Chengdu is giving out more than double the amount of funds distributed in each of the previous lotteries.
READ MORE: EXCLUSIVE: We got some digital yuan!
Details: The trial will start on Jan. 27 and will last until Feb. 26, Chinese media reported. Residents of Chengdu, the capital of southwestern Sichuan province, can enter the lucky draw via a local government application. The RMB 50 million ($7.7 million) in funds will be distributed in red envelopes.
Context: The lotteries distribute the digital currency and usually set a time limit for when it can be used so that the relevant authorities can gather and study data from the trial.
]]>READ MORE: INSIGHTS | China’s digital currency has a long way to go
Based on more than 10 interviews with industry insiders and regulators, TechNode tells the story of how Huawei established itself in the Greek market—and how the tables have turned for the Chinese telecom giant.
In the first part of this three-part series, we explored how Huawei entrenched itself in Greek networks. This installment expands beyond Greece to the European Union, examining how the bloc’s and consequently Greece’s policy on telecommunications security changed over the years, thanks to espionage and a global anti-Huawei campaign from the US.
A wiretapping scandal involving the 2004 Olympics, the US National Security Agency (NSA), and the mysterious death of a Vodafone employee erupted in Greece in 2005. As the mystery unraveled, the Greek government, telecommunications industry, as well as the public at large found out the hard way that Washington would not hesitate to spy on Athens’ top leadership. US security agencies had taken advantage of the 2004 Olympics to eavesdrop on the Prime Minister.
In 2018, when the US began imploring its allies to avoid Huawei, it was essentially asking Greek telecoms firms to end their relationship with a reliable partner—one that had stood by them in hard times—in favor of a government that offered them military and political support, but had spied on Greeks for months.
Greece wasn’t the only European country to be shocked by American espionage activities that decade. Starting in 2013, the bloc found out through Edward Snowden’s whistleblowing just how extensively the NSA was snooping on member-states, including heads of state.
The diplomatic fallout with the US was quickly patched up, but Snowden’s revelations contributed to the European Union’s growing concern over cybersecurity.
Decisions made in Brussels would affect Huawei’s prospects in Greece as much as those made in Athens. Over the next few years, the EU Commission rolled out key cybersecurity legislation.
In interviews with TechNode, industry and regulatory insiders stressed that Greece abides by EU rules when it comes to cybersecurity. As the bloc responded to the Snowden revelations and later, Washington’s warnings about Huawei, the effects trickled down from Brussels to Athens.
As the EU prioritized cybersecurity and made new rules, Greek governments gradually implemented them.
In the wake of the financial crisis, Huawei earned trust in Athens as it “stood by” Greece during its moment of need, as described in part one of this series.
At the same time, Huawei’s European rivals and US security agencies were caught engaging in clumsy episodes of corruption and espionage. Between 2005 and 2015, a major scandal shook Athens’ trust in its long-standing alliance with the US.
In January 2005, Vodafone found a glitch in its text-messaging service and notified Stockholm-based Ericsson, which had supplied the equipment. Two months later, Ericsson told the telecoms operator that it had found a complex piece of malware—6,500 lines of unidentified wiretapping code in the text-messaging function.
Ericsson gave Vodafone a list of over 100 tapped phone numbers, including those belonging to then-Prime Minister Kostas Karamanlis, Minister of Justice Anastasios Papaligouras, Minister of Public Order George Voulgarakis, and Minister of the Interior Theodoros Roussopoulos.
Two days later, a network planning manager at Vodafone by the name of Kostas Tsalikidis was found hanged in his Athens apartment. Two days after Tsalikidis’s death, Vodafone informed the Greek prime minister’s office of the wiretapping.
The Greek government proceeded with an 11-month preliminary investigation before breaking the news to the public.
On Feb. 2, 2006, the three ministers whose phones had been tapped called a press conference (in Greek) to inform the public of the wiretapping. By March, the government was accused of covering up the scandal in parliament. These accusations largely overshadowed the actual wiretapping in public and parliamentary discourse over the next few years.
At that point, Greek prosecutors, telcos, and the government knew that they had stumbled onto a massive security breach, but they couldn’t find hard evidence to prove who was behind the wiretapping. The highest levels of the Greek administration understood that the US had its hands dirty, but they did not discuss this publicly.
This “major scandal” made the industry and government uneasy in the years to come. The culprit of the “unprecedented data breach,” as 30-year telco veteran Andreas Polycarpou called it, was still out there. Instead of resolution and convictions, the incident left a trail of whispers and suspicions in its wake.
In 2008, the Greek Parliament passed two bills, in part to respond to the Vodafone wiretapping: In February, they voted to increase the powers but also checks and balances of the country’s intelligence service, which is responsible for counter-espionage activities. In June, they changed the legal framework on violating telecoms privacy, launching a new strategy for cybersecurity. The Greek anti-corruption watchdog disapproved of the new strategy, claiming that it would put politicians with little technical expertise at the helm of a rapidly changing technological environment.
The Vodafone case was still a mystery in September 2011, when the telco operator informed prosecutors that one of the mobile phones used for the wiretapping had made frequent calls to the US Embassy in Athens.
The Greek public had largely forgotten the Vodafone scandal, but behind the scenes the anti-corruption prosecutor was still working to hold the culprits accountable. In 2015 then-Greek prosecutor Dimitris Foukas issued a warrant for the arrest of William Basil, a US Embassy employee who was suspected to be an undercover CIA agent key in the wiretapping. The prosecutors were also investigating Basil’s connection to a plot to assassinate the former prime minister, Kostas Karamanlis.
Foukas was not reachable by phone. His staff told TechNode that the only way to speak to him would be to meet him in person at the Athens first instance court, which he now presides over.
When Edward Snowden blew the whistle on NSA surveillance, the Vodafone mystery was cracked open. Unveiled documents showed that the NSA had never removed its wiretapping system installed during the 2004 Olympics in Athens.
While giving the NSA access to Greek telephone networks was not unusual during such a high-profile event, the US intelligence agency turned it around to spy on top Greek officials. Neither the CIA’s operation in Greece, the US Embassy, nor the Greek government had any knowledge of the operation until Vodafone discovered it, the Intercept and Greek newspaper Kathimerini reported in 2015.
In 2018, the death of Kostas Tsalikidis was ruled a premeditated murder, and prosecutors pressed charges against unknown suspects. His family claimed he was murdered because he knew too much about the NSA’s abuse of Vodafone networks. Subsequent Greek governments and prosecutors refuse to officially comment on this theory.
The US was caught red-handed peeking into Vodafone’s telecoms networks to spy on Greece, its ally, without the knowledge or permission of local authorities.
Yet the Vodafone scandal didn’t make a big difference on Greece-US relations, according to Nikos Moumouris, a journalist who covered the story for newspaper Eleftherotypia at the time. It was like throwing a “pebble in the sea,” he told TechNode. “Maybe it wasn’t a pebble, maybe it was a rock. But once the story died down, it was back to business as usual [with the US].”
“Those were different times” when Greece’s capacity to investigate the breach was limited, Moumouris said.
Back in the 2000s, Greece wasn’t the only country glossing over telecommunications security. “Historically, operators simply didn’t pay a lot of attention to IT security. Other operators simply didn’t care,” said Jan-Peter Kleinhans, Project Director of Security in the Internet of Things at Berlin-based think tank Stiftung Neue Verantwortung.
The 2013 Snowden leaks were a big shock to the EU. The NSA’s privacy abuses cut deep among politicians and the public. It was a “very loud wakeup call as regards to potential threats to our fundamental rights, data protection and privacy,” an EU Commission spokesperson said.
The EU’s most powerful countries were among the biggest targets of US surveillance: France, Germany, Italy, and the Netherlands.
Greece was the target of so-called Blarney, an NSA program designed to get access to fiber optic cables, switches, and routers, wrote journalist Glenn Greenwald, who worked closely with Snowden to publish the NSA documents, in his book No Place to Hide.
But TechNode hasn’t found any records of the Snowden revelations being discussed extensively in the Greek parliament.
One prominent member of the Greek parliament, Theodoros Pangkalos, said he wasn’t surprised by the revelations: The Greek intelligence service had also spied on the US embassy decades ago, he said.
Given its history with the Stasi, East Germany’s massive secret police and intelligence agency, Germany is extremely touchy about surveillance. Relations between Washington and Berlin plunged. German Chancellor Angela Merkel, whose phone was allegedly tapped for 10 years, expelled the CIA chief from the country.
The diplomatic fallout from the NSA revelations was quickly patched up. In February 2014, French President Francois Hollande said “mutual trust has been restored” between the two countries, less than a year after he found out the NSA had collected data for 70 million phone calls in France in a single month.
But the EU had woken up to the importance of cybersecurity—and started tightening cybersecurity legislation for member-states.
In July 2016 the EU began to take steps that would push Greece to act on cybersecurity: the “first EU-wide legislation on cybersecurity,” as the EU Commission called it, came into force. The same year, the EU Commission published the EU Directive on Security of Network and Information Systems (known as the NIS Directive), an “action plan” for the bloc’s transition to 5G networks, outlining key considerations. The document didn’t mention security of 5G networks.
Huawei was not the controversial company that it is today, so it wasn’t a prominent part of the conversation as implementation took place. The original NIS Directive didn’t spell any trouble for Huawei: It was relaxed compared to later iterations.
As an EU member, Greece had to follow the Commission guidelines. But Greece had consistently lagged other EU countries when it came to digital policy, including cybersecurity.
The 2016 NIS Directive was geared more broadly toward digital service providers; the word “telecommunications” is mentioned only once in the law, in an article about security in the shipping industry.
Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras set up a dedicated cybersecurity agency (in Greek) in 2017 by presidential decree—four years after Spain, itself seen as a late mover. The Ministry of Digital Policy under Nikos Pappas published an 18-page National Cybersecurity Strategy in March 2018—five years after Italy, another member-state viewed as late to the party.
In July 2018, the EU Commission told Greece to hurry up and adopt the NIS Directive into its national law. In November, the parliament conferred on the legislation. The debate transcript is 130 pages long, but not because the merits of the bill were hotly contested.
Members of parliament took the November debate on the cybersecurity legislation as an opportunity to hash out unrelated grievances: farmers’ strikes, taxes on broadcast operators, austerity measures, protests, the reputation of Kostas Simitis, who served as prime minister from 1996 to 2004, and so on. Huawei was not mentioned.
The only parties that voted against the cybersecurity law and managed to stay relatively on the matter at hand during the debate were members of the far-right Golden Dawn, which was recently ruled a criminal organization, and the Greek Communist Party. Golden Dawn brought up surveillance by US security agencies and big tech to argue that digital policy is used against nationalist and conservative groups. The communists argued that the cybersecurity legislation will trample the right to privacy to serve US and NATO interests.
After the marathon meandering debate, the law was passed and came into force a few weeks later.
Over the next few years, the proliferation of cyberattacks, privacy scandals, increasing digitalization, and US pressure brought telecommunications security to the center of the bloc’s digital policy. The conversation was slow to take off, but quickly ramped up in 2018 and 2019.
“The issue of security is moving up in the EU agenda,” and so Greek governments and companies are increasingly prioritizing it, George Tsaprounis, head of corporate affairs at Greek network operator Wind Hellas, told TechNode.
Because Athens faithfully follows EU rules on digital infrastructure, Washington’s anti-Huawei pressure on the EU trickled down to Greece.
With the EU and member-states already on edge over cybersecurity, the Trump administration started its global campaign against Huawei in 2018. By December of that year, it started to bear fruit: The EU Commission’s then-Vice President for the Digital Single Market Andrus Ansip said that the bloc should be “worried” about Chinese companies like Huawei because they might install “mandatory backdoors […] It is not a good sign when companies have to open their systems to this kind of secret services,” he said.
In 2019, the US ramped up its anti-Huawei lobbying in Europe. In a visit to Germany in May 2019, US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo threatened that European countries which use Huawei equipment could be cut off from US intelligence.
That wasn’t enough for Pompeo, who continued to argue for more restrictions on the company. Ahead of a key meeting between EU leaders to discuss security measures for 5G, Pompeo published an anti-Huawei op-ed on Politico EU.
Pompeo asserted that “it’s critical that European countries not give control of their critical infrastructure to Chinese tech giants like Huawei, or ZTE.”
Brussels conceded to the US argument that the country of origin of an equipment vendor can pose a security risk, but has not been willing to go all the way and ban Huawei.
But Washington wanted more assurances. It launched a renewed campaign to rid telecom networks from Chinese technology in August 2020. Under the banner of the so-called Clean Network, the US started collecting pledges from countries to preclude “untrustworthy vendors,” like Huawei, from their networks.
Some within the EU and Greece disagreed with Pompeo’s campaign. They argued there was no evidence that Huawei was doing anything the US wasn’t already doing, using gear from Huawei competitors.
According to many cybersecurity experts, no vendor is completely trustworthy or infallible. The only solution is to diversify and mitigate risks. The more vendors you buy from, the less you are exposed to any one, and you set up security checks and balances; one supplier might catch the others’ mistakes.
“As German industry, you’re between two camps. You can choose which backdoor you want: A Chinese backdoor or a US backdoor,” Steffen Zimmermann, the lead expert on industrial security at German industrial lobby organization VDMA, said in March 2018. VDMA members include heavyweights like Bosch and Siemens.
While Pompeo was making the rounds in European capitals, Greek officials kept quiet on Huawei. Greek President Prokopis Pavlopoulos visited Huawei’s Beijing office in May 2019 during a five-day official visit to China. He commended the company’s work in Greece and the two sides promised to continue their cooperation. Back in 2008, the same politician had proposed the bill to revamp the Greek intelligence service after the Vodafone wiretapping scandal.
To Greek insiders, the debate felt somewhat moot. From a technical perspective, the risk of espionage or compromised communications is not affected by the country of origin or the equipment, they told TechNode.
“There are countries that do not rely on Huawei’s infrastructure. That doesn’t mean that they don’t have cybersecurity issues to solve,” Antonia Petrovits, a spokesperson for Huawei Greece, told TechNode.
Whichever company builds a network will have some capacity to use the infrastructure for its own purposes, the Greek telecom technical experts TechNode spoke with agreed.
Europe’s large telcos have recognized this risk for years. To avoid becoming dependent on any single supplier, and the backdoors or vulnerabilities in their equipment, many of Europe’s carriers have diversified their supply chains, procuring equipment from different vendors.
In January 2020, the EU Commission officially included procurement diversification in the bloc’s guideline for developing 5G networks. ”Dependency of one or several networks also significantly affects national and EU-wide resilience and creates single points of failure,” the Commission said.
Greece’s latest cybersecurity strategy, released on Dec. 3, made the same recommendation.
In January 2020, Brussels again tried to resolve the Huawei issue—by passing the buck to member states. In its official guidance on 5G adoption, the EU Commission asked national regulators to consider elaborate technical issues—in addition to equipment suppliers’ country of origin.
The EU has limited jurisdiction over member-states and, at least on paper, didn’t want to single out China. Directives “do not target or single out individual countries or suppliers,” the EU Commission spokesperson said.
The EU’s directive on 5G handed the decision on Huawei back to member-states. Every company which complies with EU rules can access the market, but individual countries reserve the right to exclude companies for national security reasons, the spokesperson said.
The January 2020 EU’s 5G cybersecurity “toolbox” places a lot of responsibility on member-states’ regulators and network operators, Kleinhans said. It’s up to them to decide whether Huawei will be excluded from 5G networks.
The 5G toolbox asks countries to consider the “risk of interference by a non-EU country” when evaluating equipment—in other words, deeming Chinese-made equipment a risk simply because it’s Chinese.
The Greek network regulator did not respond to TechNode’s multiple requests for comment.
The Commission’s delegation of the choice on Huawei has led to a patchwork of responses reflecting the bloc’s political diversity, from Sweden’s hard ban, to Estonia’s “Huawei law,” to Ireland’s continued relationship with the Chinese company. Some telecom operators like Vodafone have taken matters into their own hands and are replacing Huawei gear with alternatives.
It is hard to assess how much ground Huawei has lost, given the patchwork of responses and lack of public information.
Greek policy-makers face a diplomatic dilemma with Huawei. The company has a good track record of helping the market and offers competitive products. Security is a concern, but from a technical perspective Huawei’s gear is not more risky than its competitors, industry insiders said.
All equipment manufacturers, regardless of their country of origin, can open a backdoor to spy on communications. “There might be access points to the equipment, but these are for service purposes. Anyone can open a backdoor that is intended for service,” Polycarpou said.
Many operators told TechNode that they don’t see Huawei as a threat to their security—at least, not a bigger threat than the US. To them, security is a technical question that has been politicized. From a purely technical perspective, Huawei is at least on par with its Western counterparts.
But the diplomatic balance around Huawei is delicate. Greece needs its friendships with both the US and China.
Keep buying Huawei, and the US threatens to cut off military ties. To Athens, Washington’s support in defense issues is key to keeping Turkey, a country with four times Greece’s GDP, at bay: The two neighbours have a long history of military confrontation which flared up in August when Turkey threatened to go to war over a maritime dispute.
But giving Huawei up could be an affront to China. The EU is well aware of the political nature of an anti-Huawei decision. Considering the threats posed by state or state-backed actors is a “non-technical” issue, it said in its October 2019 5G security assessment.
When Sweden banned Huawei in October, the local telecommunications regulator said it was following the advice of military intelligence, which had found China to be “one of the biggest threats against Sweden.”
An outright Huawei ban would inevitably call China out as a threat to Greece’s security when the two countries remain, at least on paper, allies. In Greece, such a statement would incur a high political cost. Despite its longstanding alliance with the US, Athens has been courting China to invest in Greece.
In a landmark privatization deal in 2016, Chinese state-owned shipping giant Cosco acquired a 51% stake in Piraeus port, adjacent to Athens, for €280 million ($343 million), and is due to gain another 16% should it spend an additional €400 million on the port by the end of 2021.
Five days after Turkish president Recep Tayyip Erdoğan threatened military action against Greece, the US ambassador to Athens Geoffrey Pyatt tweeted that Greece had joined the Clean Network, which is widely regarded as an anti-Huawei initiative.
The next month, Pompeo visited Mitsotakis’ hometown on Crete island to talk about defense issues for which Greece is looking to the US for support, and vice versa; Mitsotakis’ focus was Greece’s dispute with Turkey, and Pompeo’s was Russia’s involvement in the Mediterrenean, particularly in Libya.
The secretary of state also visited a naval base on the island that offers support to US war and logistics ships. He announced the “US Navy’s newest expeditionary sea base,” a $498 million ship, would be moved to the Greek port.
At a joint press conference with the Greek Prime Minister during this visit, the two politicians announced enhanced cooperation on military issues—and Pompeo welcomed Greece to the Clean Network. However, Mitsotakis didn’t mention “clean” telecoms, during the press conference or anywhere else.
Pompeo claims Clean Network members will make “efforts” to rid their networks of untrusted vendors, including Huawei. So do international media outlets.
The Greek government has never confirmed whether it will make such efforts—or that it has joined the Clean Network.
It’s not clear what this means. The current Greek administration has long kept a “no comment” policy on the Huawei controversy, and in 2020 its alliance with the US has deepened, so it could be that it has joined the Clean Network and is merely letting Pompeo do all the talking.
If Greece has entered into an agreement on 5G networks with Washington, it could face retaliation from Beijing.
It’s not clear whether the small Mediterrenean nation will embrace the Clean Network and if so, how it will interpret it.
The next installment of this series explores what the Clean Network means in the Greek context, if anything, and Huawei’s position in the Greek market.
]]>The People’s Bank of China has proposed new antitrust rules for non-bank digital payment companies, which are likely to pressure the duopoly held by Ant Group and Tencent over the market.
Why it matters: The rules set the standard for monopolistic behavior in China’s third party digital payment market. If implemented, they are likely to trigger regulatory scrutiny of Ant Group and Tencent.
READ MORE: CHINA VOICES | The unsigned op-eds that foreshadowed Ant Group IPO suspension
Details: The new rules set market share thresholds for the “confirmation of market dominant position,” which might trigger a regulatory review. If non-bank online payment companies exceed these thresholds, the central bank will consult with the antitrust watchdog to determine whether the company or companies have engaged in monopolistic behaviors.
Context: Regulators have been trying to rein in big tech in the last few years. Regulatory efforts have intensified, however, since Ant Group’s initial public offering in Shanghai was abruptly halted in November.
Jack Ma made his first public appearance after months of avoiding the spotlight, following rampant speculation attributing his disappearance to a regulatory crackdown on his businesses.
Why it matters: Ma had not appeared in public since Oct. 25, when he made a speech at a gathering of China’s top financiers and regulators criticizing Chinese regulation on fintech. The speech reportedly contributed to the negative attention from regulators that led to the suspension of Ant Group’s initial public offering just days later.
Details: China’s most recognized tech billionaire held a video conference (in Chinese) with 100 teachers in remote parts of China on the morning of Jan. 20.
Context: Within a few days of the fateful Oct. 25 appearance, regulators in November halted Ant Group’s planned $35 billion listing on the Shanghai stock exchange and released new antitrust rules that severely curb the fintech giant’s operations, as well as those of its e-commerce affiliate, Alibaba.
]]>READ MORE: CHINA VOICES | The unsigned op-eds that foreshadowed Ant Group IPO suspension
Ant Group employees are reportedly using Alipay to conduct transactions in digital yuan; one of China’s big four banks opened applications for digital RMB wallets to customers in Shenzhen. Authorities in Iran shut down the operations of Chinese cryptocurrency miners. Binance and Poly Network join hands in China’s the latest cross-chain venture.
The world of blockchain moves fast, and nowhere does it move faster than China. Here’s what you need to know about China’s block-world in the week of Jan. 12-19.
Iranian authorities halted all cryptocurrency mining operations operated by Chinese people on Jan. 14. Chinese crypto entrepreneurs flocked to Iran during the Bitcoin surge to take advantage of its cheap electricity.
An Iranian tech entrepreneur, Nasim Tavakol, tweeted on Jan. 8, “The Chinese have built a 175 MW bitcoin mining farm in the Rafsanjan Special Economic Zone,” (translation via Twitter), and added the mine’s coordinates. (Wu Blockchain, in Chinese)
Binance and Poly Network are launching cross-chain interoperability. Binance Smart Chain, the cryptocurrency exchange’s decentralized finance-oriented public blockchain, and Poly, founded by Neo’s Da Hongfei, are the latest two blockchain projects to try cross-chain transactions and data exchange.
READ MORE: Binance, Poly Network to launch cross-chain interoperability
Public blockchain startup Conflux landed a $5 million research grant from the local government in Shanghai’s Xuhui district. Conflux is one of few decentralized chains to work with Chinese authorities. It received funding from Shanghai authorities in 2019 for a research lab, and scored a contract to revamp government data architecture in Hunan province in August 2020. (CoinDesk)
]]>READ MORE: Public blockchain Conflux lands second government deal
Traditional institutional investors once considered cryptocurrencies an investment for the bold or the stupid: a niche market with a bad reputation and high volatility. In 2017, J.P. Morgan CEO Jamie Dimon called Bitcoin a fraud.
In 2020, J.P. Morgan started offering banking services for cryptocurrencies and its analysts predicted Bitcoin’s price could hit $146,000 in the long term. Bitcoin’s price surged to $20,000 last year, entering the mainstream. On Jan. 9, 2021, it briefly hit $41,000. As of the time of writing, one Bitcoin costs $36,500.
Over the last year, affluent Chinese have flocked to blockchain-based digital assets as an investment—and a safer place to stash their money—industry insiders told TechNode. There are no hard figures on how much Chinese investors are putting into the largely untraceable world of crypto, but multiple insiders TechNode spoke with agreed that the virtual assets have caught on.
Chinese investors have historically preferred parking their assets in US markets through investments in stocks, funds, real estate, and more. The US is a mature and liquid market, with relatively tight control over corporate structures and low taxes on capital gains, making it a popular destination for the world’s wealth.
High income Chinese are now looking at cryptocurrencies as a safe haven for their assets, said Flex Yang, CEO and co-founder of Babel Finance, a Hong Kong-based Chinese cryptocurrency asset management company.
About $50 billion in cryptocurrencies was moved from East Asia to overseas accounts in the 12 months ending in June 2020, according to an August report by US-based crypto analysis firm Chainalysis.
“China is a large part of this activity in East Asia,” a spokesperson from Chainalysis told TechNode, though it has not yet analyzed country-level data.
Based on their own interviews with experts, Chainalysis said that at least some of this $50 billion represents capital flight.
Yang said that after March, he noticed increased demand for his firm’s services from wealthy Chinese investors.
Lennix Lai, director of financial markets at OKEx, the world’s largest cryptocurrency exchange by trading volume, and El Lee, COO of Singapore-based crypto asset custodial firm Onchain Custodian, agreed that cryptocurrencies have garnered more interest in the last year from wealthy Chinese individuals as well as the country’s institutional investors than in the past.
Politics is one of the reasons for the shift, Yang said. Investors appeared concerned about the political environment in the US, following rising tensions with China.
“Before, they thought it’s impossible for their assets to be frozen in the US. Now, the chances have increased by 100%,” he said.
The tech war has accentuated an existing trend away from traditional assets and towards cryptocurrency trading in China, said Lai.
Investors have come to question the centralization of financial industries, especially given the potential of a decoupling between the world’s two largest economies, he said.
Lai brought up the example of the SWIFT system that underlies cross-border transfers of money, which is based on the US dollar. “There are a lot of discussions and rumors in China right now that this [reliance on US currency] could jeopardize the Chinese money flow,” Lai said.
Concerns about the US dollar is “one reason, but is not a major reason” why Bitcoin prices are soaring, according to Lee.
“If that was the case, we would see our clients switching 80% of their fiat [currencies] into Bitcoin,” he said. The new interest is primarily driven by investors who want to diversify their portfolio, and people who see an investment opportunity in cryptocurrencies, said Lee.
Central banks and financial heavyweights around the world have started endorsing cryptocurrencies in the last year, which has given them more credibility among mainstream investors.
China is plowing ahead with its ambitious digital yuan project. The International Monetary Fund, European Union, and even several governments have taken up the development of their own digital or crypto currencies.
These moves are part of a trend toward a more “robust decentralized system” according to Lai, one that isn’t controlled by a few stakeholders.
In 2020, non-crypto companies invested in Bitcoin and other coins, receiving widespread attention from media. Around the world, many people reading the news about Bitcoin prices want in on Bitcoin, Lee said.
Fintech giant Square, Nasdaq-listed business intelligence software provider Microstrategy, and Stone Ridge Asset Management announced they are investing millions in cryptocurrency. Microstrategy owns more than $766 million in cryptocurrencies, and plans to buy an additional $400 million.
In December 2020, Massachusetts Mutual Life Insurance, a Fortune 500 pension fund, bought $100 million worth of Bitcoin for its general investment fund. J.P. Morgan analysts viewed this as an indication that Bitcoin is “spreading from family offices and wealthy investors to insurance firms and pension funds,” Bloomberg reported based on an investment note.
Another significant source of cross-border cryptocurrency flows from East Asia, particularly China, are cryptocurrency miners. China is home to around 65% of the world’s mining activity as of April, research from the Cambridge University Center for Alternative Finance indicated.
Miners need to convert their freshly minted cryptocurrencies into fiat currency to pay for bills like electricity and payroll. They prefer to convert them into stablecoins before converting them into fiat currency like US dollars, according to Chainalysis. Stablecoins are easier to convert to traditional currency and more resistant to cryptocurrency market fluctuations.
While the trend for Chinese investors has been to shift away from US-based investments, Chainalysis found that Chinese investors have a strong preference for Tether over other cryptocurrencies, a stablecoin pegged to the US dollar. It analyzed Bitcoin conversion into the most popular fiat currencies stablecoins in the last 12 months. All bitcoin converted from China went to Tether purchases, whereas in Korea and Japan it was mostly converted directly into local national currencies.
]]>
US tech giant PayPal is the first foreign firm to fully own a Chinese payments firm after its acquisition of GoPay on Dec. 31.
Why it matters: The PayPal acquisition is a landmark in China’s financial liberalization amid an antitrust clampdown in fintech.
Details: PayPal acquired the remaining 30% of GoPay, according to the Chinese government’s company registration platform. The US company had bought 70% of the firm in September 2019, becoming the first foreign company licensed to offer payment services in China.
Cross-border payments: PayPal said in 2019 that it wanted to tap into China’s market for cross-border payments. Unlike domestic transfers, the market for cross-border transactions is not yet dominated by giants like Ant Group and Tencent.
Regulation: Regulators have followed up on Ant Group’s IPO suspension with further antitrust moves as they seek to rein in Big Tech’s power over the economy.
Poly Network, the interoperability solution launched by the founder of cryptocurrency Neo, has formed a partnership with cryptocurrency exchange Binance’s decentralized finance-oriented blockchain to enable cross-chain interoperability.
Why it matters: The partnership could bring more developers and decentralized applications (dapps) to both Binance Smart Chain (BSC) and Poly Network, especially from the booming DeFi space.
Details: The partnership will allow interoperability between dapps built on the two networks; they will be able to transact tokens and exchange information across different blockchain protocols.
Context: Poly is one of two cross-chain protocols currently used by the Blockchain Services Network to achieve interoperability. The BSN is a Chinese government attempt to create a global “internet of blockchains.”
READ MORE: EXCLUSIVE: China’s BSN to test cross-chain interoperability in October
Corrections: updated to reflect that Poly Network was started by the founder of cryptocurrency Neo, not the company behind Neo, as previously stated. Corrected text that implied Da Hongfei is involved in operations of Neo, Ontology, and Switcheo. An earlier version of this story erroneously stated that $3 billion had been transferred between Poly Network and BSC.
]]>One of China’s largest and newest manufacturers of cryptocurrency mining equipment, MicroBT, is readying a US public offering, according to Chinese media reports.
Why it matters: Business is booming for cryptocurrency mining rig makers, as Bitcoin prices have reached historic highs over the last two months.
Details: The company is “preparing” to list in the US, Chinese crypto blogger Colin Wu (in Chinese) reported on Wednesday, but he did not specify a timeline for the offering.
Context: MicroBT is a relative newcomer in crypto mining manufacturing. It was only founded in 2016, about three years after most of its Chinese peers.
A Shanghai hospital started trialing a digital yuan smart card, and China’s third lottery to distribute the digital currency took place in Shenzhen. The prices of cryptocurrency mining rigs skyrocketed in the last two months during the Bitcoin bull run, while state media discouraged investors from buying into the craze.
The world of blockchain moves fast, and nowhere does it move faster than China. Here’s what you need to know about China’s block-world in the week of Jan. 5-12.
“The Shanghai DCEP pilot uses an ink screen similar to Amazon Kindle, which means that DCEP can be used without an Internet connection or mobile phone.”
—Colin Wu on Twitter
Shenzhen started a second digital yuan lottery just days after Suzhou concluded its own, while a Beijing cafe has started accepting the digital currency. Ebang plans to launch a crypto exchange in the first quarter of 2021, its peer Canaan is venturing into mining with an unlikely partner. One Chinese exchange is reportedly insolvent; Huobi and OKex share prices in Hong Kong started the new year with big gains. A large Chinese EV maker apologized for announcing that it would accept Bitcoin payments.
The world of blockchain moves fast, and nowhere does it move faster than China. Here’s what you need to know about China’s block-world in the week of Dec. 29 – Jan. 4.
READ MORE: EXCLUSIVE: We got some digital yuan!
READ MORE: Rig maker Canaan misses Bitcoin surge, losses top $12 million
A joint venture by state-owned EV maker NIO and state-owned legacy carmaker GAC announced on Dec. 31 that it would start accepting Bitcoin payments for its cars—a first for a major Chinese company. The carmaker quickly apologized on the same day for not fully considering and getting approval from financial regulators for the move. (China News Network Weibo, in Chinese)
]]>Troubled rental platform Danke has repaid 86% or around RMB 1.3 billion ($201 million) of tenant loans underwritten by Tencent-backed WeBank, the bank’s chairman Gu Min said on Dec. 29.
Why it matters: The rental loan rescue plan is a positive sign for the survival of Danke, whose debt-fueled expansion led to public outcry and threatened the company’s future. The move may also release some pressure from WeBank, which faces questions about its exposure to Danke’s debt, as well as its due diligence and risk assessment processes.
The Danke incident: In November, the local government of Beijing set up a special team to handle Danke, which was reportedly on the verge of bankruptcy and facing a $400 million cash shortfall.
WeBank to the rescue: Just days after the suicide, WeBank announced two separate plans to help tenants in debt to the bank—and save Danke from collapse.
The Danke model: Under New York-listed Danke’s original business model, tenants would borrow a year’s worth of rent from a bank, like WeBank, when signing an annual lease with the rental platform.
]]>READ MORE: CHINA VOICES | Crisis at Danke has China worrying about out of control fintech
The firm behind the Blockchain Services Network (BSN) is building infrastructure to support central bank digital currencies (CBDCs). ZhongAn insurance launched the first digital yuan insurance policy. Curtains close on the longtime duel between Bitmain’s two co-founders with a $600 million settlement. Local governments in China continue to deploy and test blockchain applications.
The world of blockchain moves fast, and nowhere does it move faster than China. Here’s what you need to know about China’s block-world in the week of Dec. 22-26.
READ MORE: EXCLUSIVE: BSN architect firm eyes CBDC with two new projects
Online insurer ZhongAn and China Construction Bank launched the country’s first insurance policy that is payable in digital yuan. Individuals who have taken part in the digital yuan tests can buy the eLife insurance policy. (Jiemian, in Chinese)
The fight between the two co-founders at the world’s largest cryptocurrency mining equipment manufacturer appears to be drawing to a close.
At a shareholders meeting on Dec. 28, a deal to split the company between the dueling co-founders was approved and will be implemented in January.
Under the deal, Zhan “Micree” Ketuan will take over Bitmain’s mainland business, including cryptocurrency mining rig manufacturing and domestic mining operations. Zhan will mortgage company shares worth $600 million to buy out Wu Jihan’s stock.
The company’s overseas mining operations, cryptocurrency wallet BTC.com, and computer power-sharing platform Bit Deer were spun off with a $90 million valuation and will belong to Wu.
The company behind China’s Blockchain Services Network revealed two projects to build infrastructure for central bank digital currencies (CBDCs) and stablecoins, promising a BSN payments layer, and a public chain in which “gas fees” can be paid without buying cryptocurrency. He Yifan, CEO of Red Date Tech, spoke at a TechNode-sponsored webinar recorded Dec. 21.
The payments network, a blockchain-based enterprise payments platform that will support CBDCs and stablecoins, is a BSN project and expected to launch in the first half of 2021. Stablecoins are cryptocurrencies pegged to traditional currencies, such as the dollar-linked Tether (USDT).
The public chain is at an early stage. He said that it would be a standalone chain but BSN-compatible.
Why it matters: Both projects will make it easier to use blockchain without buying cryptocurrencies, something He argues will make the technology appear less risky to large businesses. Separating blockchain from these state-free currencies will likely reassure accountants and annoy purists.
Red Date is already working on the network’s technical design with another tech company, He said. They are also in talks with eight large international banks and tech companies to work together on the network, he added.
READ MORE: EXCLUSIVE: We got some digital yuan!
Red Date’s public chain project would be one of the first, if not the first, to allow “gas fees,” paid for smart contracts and other computational services, to be paid in state-backed or pegged currencies.
What are ‘gas fees’?: Blockchains can do a lot more than support virtual money. They can also offer neutral and verifiable ways to perform computations, such as Ethereum’s automatically executed “smart contracts.”
Back to fiat: Red Date’s public chain would instead allow businesses to pay gas fees denominated in a traditional fiat currency, using a state-backed CBDC or stablecoin to make the payment.
CBDCs bonanza: Red Date promises that its payment tools will support multiple CDBCs. While only two exist today, more are expected to be available soon. Central banks have been researching digital currencies for years, but in 2020 the technology started to become real. The Bahamas and Cambodia launched their CBDCs in October.
Blockchain Services Network (BSN)
What: A platform for blockchain development, bringing together cloud services and different chain protocols on city nodes.
Why: To reduce the cost of blockchain application design and deployment while powering communication between chains. It will be made available around the world through local cloud providers, ultimately creating a global internet of blockchains.
Who: It is part of the government’s Global Blockchain Strategy unveiled by Chinese President Xi Jinping in November 2019, spearheaded by the China State Information Center, China Mobile, China Union Pay, and Red Date Technology.
Fintech giant Ant Group has been called in for a meeting with financial regulators, China’s central bank announced today, the same day that market regulators announced an anti-monopoly probe into sister company and e-commerce giant Alibaba.
Why it matters: This is the first publicly announced high-level meeting between regulators and Ant Group since the fintech giant’s IPO was abruptly suspended, days after another similar meeting.
Details: “In the coming days,” the Alibaba affiliate will be “interviewed” (our translation) by the People’s Bank of China (PBOC), the Insurance and Banking Regulatory Commission, the China Securities and Exchange Commission, and the Foreign Exchange Commission, the PBOC said in a statement this morning.
READ MORE: China launches anti-monopoly investigation into Alibaba
Context: On the same day that Jack Ma met with regulators, Nov. 2, new rules on microfinancing were released. Credittech makes up around 40% of Ant Group’s revenue, according to its IPO prospectus.
]]>READ MORE: CHINA VOICES | The unsigned op-eds that foreshadowed Ant Group IPO suspension
The second digital yuan test involving the public started in Suzhou, and TechNode nabbed some of the coveted digital currency. A former central bank governor said that China isn’t looking to challenge other currencies with its digital money. Two local governments made steps in blockchain adoption: Xiong’an launched a city-level blockchain operating system and Shenzhen released standards for blockchain in finance. In Sichuan province, authorities cut off electricity to miners.
The world of blockchain moves fast, and nowhere does it move faster than China. Here’s what you need to know about China’s block-world in the week of Dec. 8-15.
READ MORE: EXCLUSIVE: We got some digital yuan!
“Some countries are worried about the internationalization of the yuan. We can’t push them on sensitive issues and we can’t impose our will. We must avoid the perception of great power chauvinism.“
—Zhou Xiaochuan, former governor of the PBOC, as translated by the SCMP
READ MORE: INSIGHTS | Markets, not floods, will drown bitcoin miners
As Christmas is approaching, many children might be wondering whether they’re on Santa’s naughty or nice list. Meanwhile, as China’s corporate social credit system is rolled out, companies in China are asking themselves whether they’re on any of 42 national-level naughty lists or one of eight nice lists.
At the end of 2020, the planned first phase of development of China’s corporate social credit system is wrapping up. Announcements that will shed light on the next phase are expected by the end of the year.
A report by China-based policy research firm Trivium released last week provided one of the most level-headed and comprehensive looks into the emerging regulatory technology yet. Below, here’s what we learned from it:
According to the report:
Real problems: The Trivium-USCC report writes that the social credit system began as a response to real problems with compliance: companies frequently ignored court judgments, and even if companies faced consequences the individuals behind them could simply move on and start new companies. The 1999 treatise that first proposed the CSCS complained that a large portion of contract violations are not persecuted and swathes of violators go unpunished.
READ MORE: INSIGHTS | Social credit: A roadmap for a sincere and virtuous marketplace
At its heart, the CSCS is a massive record-keeping system that brings together company information from different government agencies, as well as some non-government organizations.
The data: Every company has a folder, tracked by a unique identifying number, in which an assortment of data is stored.
Access: Much data collected by the system is made public through online credit platforms, such as the publicly run Credit China and the private Tianyancha.
Work in progress: But data integration between agencies is incomplete, limiting the reach of the national platform, said Luisa Kinzius, project lead at Sinolytics, a Berlin-based consultancy that helps foreign companies navigate Chinese policies (and which authored a August 2019 CSCS report with the European Chamber of Commerce in China).
The CSCS doesn’t just keep records—it also creates incentives for compliance. Among the data on the platform are two systems to reward and punish companies: black- and redlists, and scores.
Lists: Government agencies can place companies on blacklists—or their opposite, positive “redlists”—as punishments for breaking rules, or rewards for good behavior. If a company ends up on one of these lists, it will be noted in its CSCS record.
Personal liability: The CSCS links the behavior of key personnel to the company’s records; they might be punished if the company is blacklisted, and the company’s record is affected by the personnel it hires. But these linkages only exist in “very specific areas,” in part because the personal social credit system is not as advanced as the CSCS, Kinzius said.
Grades: The corporate social credit record also includes several kinds of ratings, calculated using government data available on firms’ files by different local and national agencies, as well as some non-governmental entities. These include both letter grades and numerical point scores.
The GPA: The NDRC has promised a unified “comprehensive credit evaluation” that rates a company’s overall social credit profile from poor to excellent. The evaluation is said to take into account compliance, quality, and financial scores. Officials haven’t clarified exactly how it is calculated.
It’s used for, well, credit: As of 2014, corporate records are used to supplement financial data in lending risk assessments, particularly for small and medium enterprises (SMEs).
Localization: Provinces and province-level cities are responsible for legislation on the local level, developing data collection infrastructure, and coming up with rewards and punishments.
A huge legal project: Corporate social credit requires a massive legal undertaking: Hundreds of laws must be updated to link to the CSCS.
Next steps: The CSCS will continue being iterated in the next few years. The plan outlined by the State Council in 2014 aimed to have established the foundation for the corporate credit system by 2020. Progress has been made, although the system is not complete.
Discrimination? A January report by the US Congress Research Service identified corporate social credit as a “major concern” to Washington. The system could be used to align US citizens and companies with Beijing’s interests and expand China’s influence overseas, it said.
Tightened control? While the system is not targeting foreign companies, it does create incentives or foreign companies with Chinese operations to toe the government’s line on political questions, Trivium wrote.
Leading regtech? China is a first mover in this use case of regulation technology, and, some government officials have expressed an ambition to take the CSCS global.
Taking on the US: Some members of the government see company credit ratings as an area of strategic competition where the US currently reigns supreme. They have expressed a goal to create a competing credit model, like the CSCS, Trivium said.
At its core, the CSCS is not such an exciting concept: it’s a massive filing cabinet. Companies have already felt its consequences, but the full extent of its scope is yet to be determined. Authorities continue developing it and have not been clear on what the endgame is.
]]>LISTEN MORE: China Tech Investor podcast: China’s social credit system—everything you know is wrong with Kendra Schaefer
Lucky winners of Suzhou’s digital yuan lottery can spend their digital currency on JD.com, Meituan, Bilibili, and Didi, depending on their bank card, a look at the wallet app reveals. TechNode has seen the app in action through screen recordings sent by a user in Suzhou.
TechNode is the first English language outlet to see the digital yuan wallet in action during the Suzhou trial.
The trials are still limited: The winners received only RMB 200—about $30, enough to buy 10 coffees at Luckin or five at Starbucks. There’s no way to load more money on the digital yuan wallet. Users only have access to a few online shopping platforms, with the exact options depending on which bank card they used to register with the app. They can also spend the currency in some offline stores in the city.
The digital yuan also knows a trick that cash doesn’t: It has to be used by Dec. 27 otherwise, it pulls a disappearing act. Poof. It’s gone.
Why it matters: This is the first time consumers can use the digital currency to pay directly on e-commerce apps in the digital yuan’s public trials.
Connected to bank cards: Users are asked to link their bank cards to the digital wallet to get the digital currency. Only cards from China’s big five banks are eligible: Bank of China (BOC), Industrial and Commercial Bank of China (ICBC), Agricultural Bank of China (ABC), China Construction Bank (CCB), and Postal Savings Bank.
Where to spend it: All bank cards can connect to e-commerce platform JD.com, where users can spend their money. ICBC cards also connect to ride-hailing platform Didi and lifestyle app Meituan. BOC cardholders can connect to streaming platform Bilibili, and users of CCB cards can use the digital yuan on own CCB’s e-commerce platform.
No withdrawals: The digital currency cannot be transferred to other users’ digital wallets. It also cannot be converted to ordinary RMB in the bank account of the owner. If users wind up returning goods they buy with the digital currency, the Suzhou government said, they will be refunded only for regular currency used in the purchase.
Context: In a lottery (in Chinese) announced on Dec. 4, Suzhou distributed RMB 200 million ($30.6 million) of the digital yuan to 100,000 people in digital red envelopes of RMB 200. Only residents of the city who have paid monthly social security at least once in the last three years are eligible to participate in the lottery.
]]>READ MORE: INSIGHTS | China’s digital currency has a long way to go
Spillover of technology companies into critical financial sectors such as micropayments require unified oversight of China’s fintech sector, the chairman of China’s Banking and Insurance Regulatory Commission said Tuesday at an event in Singapore.
Why it matters: The CBIRC chairman’s remarks about fintech giants were conciliatory, but he also called for more regulation of the industry on the national level.
READ MORE: CHINA VOICES | The unsigned op-eds that foreshadowed Ant Group IPO suspension
The challenges ahead: Echoing criticism of Ant Group from other regulators, Guo spoke about “too big to fail” risks during a speech at the Switch conference on Tuesday. This phrase featured prominently in three anonymous op-eds that appeared in the PBOC’s official journal.
The data road ahead: Guo emphasized the role of security and privacy laws, and said that regulators are working to build a framework for the protection of financial data. Three out of the five “problems to be studied and solved” Guo referred to in his speech were about data management.
READ MORE: INSIGHTS | Data localization is going global
Pat on the back: He said the sector has promoted inclusive finance, particularly in the areas of credit and insurance.
Cautionary tales: Guo said that regulators have taken a cautious approach in regulating China’s nascent fintech industry, “crossing the river by feeling the stones” (our translation). He cited two examples where authorities stepped in when companies were behaving as banks without following the relevant regulations.
Based on ten interviews with industry insiders and regulators, TechNode tells the story of how Huawei established itself in the Greek market—and how the tables have turned for the Chinese telco giant. This is the first part of a three-part series.
In 2011, the Greek government was just embarking on what would turn out to be a years-long journey of bankruptcy avoidance with a cost of harsh austerity. Social welfare cuts, increased taxes and drastic public sector reforms sent unemployment and inflation soaring—and Greeks took to the streets en masse.
Thousands of people were being laid off. Many businesses didn’t know if they would make it to the end of the year. The Greek government was so cash-strapped that it had to be bailed out by international credit institutions.
During this chaos, a small telco operator decided to upgrade its network (in Greek) to 4G. Wind Hellas wanted to spend three years rebuilding infrastructure that previously took 18 years to complete.
Wind Hellas had a secret weapon: a relatively unknown Chinese company called Huawei. While the country was in deep trouble, Huawei helped Wind Hellas build a brand-new network.
By 2014, the pair had built a 4G network that they claimed was the country’s fastest.
Today, Wind Hellas is Greece’s only surviving network operator that isn’t affiliated with a European telco conglomerate, and its relationship with Huawei runs so deep that its experience of other vendors is virtually non-existent.
“We cannot compare with other suppliers, but from what we know, [Huawei’s] performance is on par with them,” Nikos Panopoulos, chief network and supply chain manager at Wind Hellas told TechNode.
To China, Huawei is a national champion, proof that the Chinese model can birth global tech leaders. To the US, it is a Trojan horse, Chinese interests and state capitalism masquerading as a run-of-the-mill tech firm.
But to Greece’s three telco operators, including Wind Hellas, Huawei—or “Hua,” as Greek telecoms professionals call it—has been a reliable partner for 10 years. It is a trusted supplier with a proven track record.
Huawei equipment is everywhere in Greece. Although it has not been used in Greece’s core network, Huawei equipment makes up more than half of Greece’s 4G radio access network (RAN), the grid of cell towers that speak directly to cellphones. Wind Hellas built its RAN system almost entirely with Huawei equipment.
RAN is the infrastructure that connects the end-user with the core network. If you’re sending an email, the first thing your phone does is to connect to the network using RAN. The EU considers RAN “highly sensitive” but not “critical” to network security.
It’s not just telecoms. The warehouses of IT providers in the country are full of Huawei products, ready to be integrated into server centers around the country. The Shenzhen-based company is so deeply entrenched in the systems of a US ally that it is all but impossible to imagine the country rejecting it.
With its most important military ally on one side and a vital trading partner on the other, Greece faces a dilemma that’s become common in 2020.
We’re going to spend the next few weeks exploring what the fight over Huawei looks like when you’re caught in the middle, using Greece as our case study. Greece’s story is unique (as we’ll see next week, it includes the suspicious death of a Vodafone employee possibly involving a US security agency), but it exemplifies the conflicts US allies face as Washington tries to drop a Silicon Curtain.
For the past two years, US diplomats around the world have implored allies not to use Huawei gear in their 5G networks. The company is “an arm of the Chinese Communist Party’s surveillance state,” said US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo in an official press release. He has called on countries to form a coalition and “push back” against China.
Some of the US’s closest allies have decided to exclude Huawei from 5G buildouts: Australia, New Zealand, Sweden, the UK, and, reportedly, France. The rest of Europe has so far resisted singling out Huawei for a complete ban.
Even three countries that signed 5G security agreements early on with the US—Estonia, Poland, and Romania—are trying to find ways to increase security without singling out Huawei.
Many European countries are still undecided: Austria, Finland, Luxembourg, the Netherlands, Norway, Portugal, and Spain. Some, like Switzerland and Hungary, have committed to buy from Huawei.
In the early 2000s, Ericsson and Nokia were the world’s biggest telecoms vendors, and China was still considered a developing country by the World Trade Organization. From 2000-2005, only about one in five people in China had either a mobile phone or a landline, according to data from the International Telecommunication Union.
Huawei was a budget alternative at best. It started to explore business in Africa in 1998 and set off on its international expansion around 2000, Antonia Petrovits, a spokesperson for Huawei Greece, told TechNode.
Telecoms equipment manufacturer Cisco was the first US entity to take aim at Huawei in 2003, alleging that the then-upstart had infringed on five Cisco patents. But Washington had yet to come up with an aggressive and comprehensive policy centered around a national security argument, which is what we see today.
Huawei’s Athens office doesn’t have a big sign. The company doesn’t even list the address on their website. Unless you are invited, the only way to find out where they are is by accident (as TechNode did).
It’s a far cry from Huawei’s grandiose Shenzhen headquarters. A simple four-floor building houses a women’s health clinic, and the national headquarters of Huawei and Media Markt, a nationwide electronics retailer.
But its strategic location more than makes up for its modest appearance. It is a stone’s throw away from the headquarters of Greece’s telco providers.
The Chinese telco giant approached Europe via the Middle East, Paul Scanlan, head of Huawei’s Carrier Group, told TechNode. They wanted to build a good brand and understand the region better before dealing with more “mature customers,” he said.
When Huawei opened its offices in Athens in 2005, it was a China-focused company with a few branches in developing countries. The same year it inaugurated its offices in Greece, it opened an office in Kenya.
Greece appeals to Chinese companies as a “landing point” for Europe. As a member of the European Union, it follows EU rules and is an entry point into Europe’s southern and eastern blocs, Andreas Polycarpou, who worked in Athens as an executive consultant for strategy and innovation at ZTE for six years, told TechNode.
At first, Huawei undercut competition with lower prices and aggressive marketing tactics. One person with direct knowledge of the procurement process said Huawei would directly compare technical specifications and pricing with competitors’ at sales meetings.
The company’s ownership structure allowed it to keep prices low while charging into new markets, like Greece. As a privately owned company, it can afford to be patient about turning profits.
“If their prices are lower, it’s not necessarily because they’re being heavily subsidized by the Chinese government. It’s because they don’t have to answer on their margins for shareholders,” Paul Triolo, practice head of geotechnology at advisory firm Eurasia Group, told TechNode.
Greek telcos OTE and Wind Hellas first bought Huawei equipment eight years ago, OTE’s Director of Strategic Planning Pavlos Vihos and Wind Hellas’s Head of Communications George Tsaprounis told TechNode in separate interviews.
Over time, Huawei’s products got better and its prices increased. But their relationships with local telcos had been established, and their equipment earned a reputation as reliable.
Industry insiders in Greece said Huawei’s equipment is excellent. Some even said that it is superior to Nokia and Ericsson equivalents, Huawei’s only real competitors.
But Huawei’s success in the Greek market goes beyond technicalities. It is largely attributable to a knack for localizing to the market and providing technical support. “Localization has always been our strategy,” Petrovits said, adding that the company “combines the best of the Chinese and international approach.”
At first, “communication was very difficult,” but Huawei developed a very good team of Greek employees and, over time, they managed to make the partnership work, Wind Hellas’s Panopoulos said.
Today, out of Huawei’s 120 employees in Greece, 70% are locals, Kostas Vasiliiou, wireless solution sales manager at Huawei Greece, told TechNode. Half of the 120 are technical staff, he said.
Huawei earned its place in Europe by delivering what was most important to the Greek market: world-class equipment at irresistible prices, and support throughout the products’ life cycle.
Huawei’s commitment to localization allowed it to distinguish itself from other low-cost suppliers. As fellow Shenzhen equipment maker ZTE learned the hard way, this was key to winning over new markets like Greece.
ZTE entered the market in 2002 with a big sale of ADSL equipment—a type of broadband—to network provider OTE, Polycarpou said.
But ZTE never managed to form relationships with Greek telcos the way Huawei did. Huawei was able to convince Greek telcos that it would provide dedicated support. ZTE wasn’t.
“When you buy telecoms equipment, you don’t buy it for a year. You buy it for decades. You need to convince the buyer that you will be there to support them,” Polycarpou said.
Huawei had a technical service team tailored to the market from the moment it set foot in Greece. While ZTE improved its localization efforts from 2011 to 2017 and gained some market share, Huawei quickly rolled out new products to counter ZTE’s success.
ZTE’s technical staff currently numbers two people. They can’t compete with Huawei’s “army” of 60 technical service specialists.
“When they [Huawei] installed the IMS systems [IP Multimedia Core Network Subsystem], they brought armies of engineers with them,” Andreas Rigas, Senior Manager of strategy and development at OTE, told TechNode.
ZTE also did not navigate the local business landscape well, sometimes trying to sell products by talking to the wrong people, Polycarpou said.
“When the manager changes, he doesn’t listen to the locals’ advice. He wants to go meet a minister. But in Greece, the minister has nothing to do with sales of telco equipment,” he said.
ZTE never gained traction in Greece. Today, Huawei is cozily nestled in the country’s RAN system, while ZTE mainly sells peripheral network products, such as routers.
When the financial crisis spiraled into strict capital controls in 2015, the stars aligned for Huawei. Domestic politics, monetary controls, and other vendors’ finances came together for Huawei to embed itself deeper in Greece’s networks.
Since 2010, the Greek government had been agreeing to difficult austerity measures in exchange for bailouts from international creditors, chiefly the European Central Bank and International Monetary Fund. Foreign direct investment, including from US companies, dried up.
Washington itself sat out the Greek crisis, leaving the fate of its close ally to the hands of its creditors—other than the occasional diplomatic assurance.
Frustrated by austerity and “capitulating” governments, in 2015, the Greek people elected a “radical left” government which promised to stand up to its European creditors.
Shortly after the election, a dramatic sequence of events led to the implementation of capital controls to avoid a run on the banks and the catastrophic collapse of the financial system.
Transfers of money overseas were banned, unless with explicit permission from financial authorities. Cash withdrawals were limited to €60 per day. Greeks spent their summer of 2015 waiting in long ATM lines around the country.
Huawei seized the moment.
When capital controls were introduced, European and US companies stopped most shipments to Greece. Many would only sell if they were paid in advance. With public and private debt reaching unprecedented levels in Greece, advance payments were basically impossible.
Chinese companies like Huawei and ZTE had more cash on hand, and a willingness to bet on the Greek economy—or the country’s geopolitical position. They turned a blind eye to the capital controls by offering generous terms.
These companies let Greek buyers have equipment on credit, accepting deferred payments of up to 15 months.
Such agreements were commonplace during the crisis across industries, an unspoken secret in Greek business. In the case of telco equipment, they boosted the Chinese vendors’ position in Greece’s systems.
The Greek government could barely pay its healthcare suppliers. But Huawei and ZTE’s support allowed Greek telcos to continue investing in their networks.
While Greek telcos were basically unable to buy from Western suppliers, their customers enjoyed substantial improvements in service
Between 2015 and 2018, the last year for which the EU Commission has released relevant data, one-third of Greek households gained access to very high-speed digital subscriber lines (VDSL). In the same time period, coverage of Long Term Network Evolution networks (LTE) increased by 20 percentage points. LTE is the technology that supports 4G connectivity.
In the context of the crisis, these facts are astounding. As Huawei equipment was being used to build up capacity during the capital controls era, about 22% of people in Greece were unemployed, 35% of the population was at risk of poverty and annual GDP growth averaged a meager 0.7%.
Huawei was pivotal in achieving these gains in connectivity. It is unlikely that telcos would have updated their networks so drastically in the midst of a financial crisis without an equipment vendor that was willing to make concessions in payment schedules—Huawei.
The Greek sector took note: when Western firms fled, the Chinese stayed. They “stood by the market,” an industry insider said.
As Huawei ties with Greek telcos were growing tighter, Washington damaged its credibility when it was caught red-handed spying on Greek telecoms networks.
By 2018, when the US began lobbying long-standing allies around the world about the security risks of Huawei products, Huawei equipment was thoroughly embedded in Greek networks. Meanwhile, European leaders in Brussels were finally waking up to the importance of telecoms security.
But in more than a decade in the market, Huawei had already made good friends in Greece. When the Huawei debate started, Greek decision makers had years of experience—and trust—with the company.
Part II of this series will explore how the US campaign against Huawei—and its own espionage activities—have affected EU policy.
]]>Hong Kong authorities are working with China’s central bank to test the digital yuan in payment scenarios. E-commerce giant JD.com will accept the digital currency during a trial on Dec. 12. Another crypto exchange founder is taken into custody by Chinese authorities, and Yunnan officials shut off power to crypto mines. Singapore’s new blockchain-based trading platform will be interoperable with China’s BSN.
The world of blockchain moves fast, and nowhere does it move faster than China. Here’s what you need to know about China’s block-world in the week of Dec. 1-8.
READ MORE: Second digital yuan lottery to launch in Suzhou: report
Singapore is launching a platform to test blockchain-based innovations for international trade. The platform, led by the city’s innovation agency and the Singapore University of Social Sciences, will be integrated with the Blockchain Services Network, a Chinese government-supported blockchain framework. (Singapore University of Social Sciences)
]]>WATCH MORE: VIDEO | Can the BSN succeed in its global expansion?
Authorities in Jiangsu province seized $4 billion in cryptocurrencies in a Ponzi scheme bust, court filings showed. The US spy chief alerts regulators about China’s crypto dominance. Outflows from Okex reached $482 million in Bitcoin after it resumed withdrawals. Crypto mining rig maker Canaan reported a 400% surge in losses.
The world of blockchain moves fast, and nowhere does it move faster than China. Here’s what you need to know about China’s block-world in the week of Nov. 24-Dec. 1.
Authorities in Jiangsu province seized more than $4 billion in cryptocurrency in a crackdown on Plustoken, a Ponzi scheme.
According to a court filing dated Nov. 19 first and reported on Friday, authorities in Jiangsu seized 194,775 bitcoins; 833,083 Ether; 487 million Ripple; 79,581 Bitcoin Cash; 1.4 million Litecoin; 27.6 million EOS; 74,167 Dash; 6 billion Dogecoin; and 213,724 of the stablecoin Tether.
More than 2 million people were swindled out of RMB 50 billion ($7.59 billion) from the Plustoken scheme during its two years of operation.
A total of 15 people have been convicted so far in relation to the scheme, the court filing said, with fines ranging from $100,000 to $1 million and prison sentences from two to 15 years.
One of the members also laundered RMB 145 million, most of which was spent by the Plustoken team and their families on expensive cars, real estate, and insurance packages in Hong Kong, the filing said.
In total, 109 of Plustoken’s core members have been arrested, according to local media reports (in Chinese). Some had initially fled to the Pacific island nation of Vanuatu, where the scheme was allegedly active.
The latest court filing said the Ponzi scheme started in May 2018 by promoting a fake cryptocurrency trading platform. Investigations into its operators began in 2019.
The first ruling on the case came on Sept. 22 by a low-level district court in the city of Yancheng in Jiangsu. The latest ruling rejected appeals and is final. (The Block)
The Trump administration’s Director of National Intelligence, John Ratcliffe, sent a letter to the chairman of the US Securities and Exchange Commission, Jay Clayton, earlier this month, warning of China’s influence over digital currency technology, the Washington Examiner reported.
Ratcliffe said that China holds significant power over cryptocurrencies because it has the world’s biggest mining capacity, the computational process by which new cryptocurrencies are minted. He also warned that the US has been left behind in the race to a central bank digital currency as China is already piloting its own.
Ratcliffe proposed to have a team of “senior economic intelligence officials” brief Clayton, the report said.
Cryptocurrency exchange Okex saw 24,631 Bitcoin ($482 million in Tuesday’s prices) leave its platform when it resumed withdrawals on Nov. 26 after pausing for nearly six weeks, Coindesk reported using data from crypto intelligence site Cryptoquant.
This is the largest outflow the exchange has seen since March, when Bitcoin markets were in free fall.
Okex halted withdrawals suddenly on Oct. 16 when one of the exchange’s key holders became “out of touch” because he were assisting with a government investigation.
The exchange’s founder was released by authorities on Nov. 20 after being held by authorities for weeks while he was cooperating with an investigation. It is unclear whether he was the key holder who was missing.
READ MORE: Okex founder is back, second digital yuan lottery: Blockheads
Crypto mining rig maker Canaan’s losses widened by 400% to $12.7 million quarter on quarter in the three months ending September 30, 2020, its earnings report said. The disappointing results are made even more bleak by the fact that Bitcoin prices have risen by 30% in the same time period, and Canaan has reduced its product prices by almost 69%.
READ MORE: Rig maker Canaan misses Bitcoin surge, losses top $12 million
China’s National Television and Radio Authority released a white paper in collaboration with privacy-focused blockchain company Arpa to outline the potential applications of blockchain in media.
The white paper aims to”introduce the traceability, authenticity, and security of blockchain in radio, television, and other media,” Arpa said in an announcement. (Arpa on Medium)
Vechain, a Chinese blockchain company that works closely with government officials, released insights on its food traceability program with Walmart. It said that it expects the government to soon release a food traceability system to build trust after the Covid-19 pandemic.
The company rolled out a blockchain-based food traceability platform at Walmart China in June 2019. Consumers can scan QR codes on products to find out information about them. The data are compiled from different parts of the supply chain, and are stored on an enterprise blockchain.
The platform has been updated seven times, Vechain said, to connect with local government bureaus.
Even as Bitcoin prices rocketed, cryptocurrency mining rig maker Canaan Creative’s losses in the third quarter jumped four fold to RMB 86.4 million, which company management attributed to pandemic and economic headwinds while competition intensified from rivals such as Bitmain and Microbt.
Why it matters: Canaan is one of China’s biggest crypto mining equipment makers, and one of only two listed in the US along with rival Ebang.
Details: Canaan’s third quarter losses widened to RMB 86.4 million ($12.7 million) from RMB 16.7 million in the previous quarter, according to a company filing released on Monday. In the same quarter a year ago, Canaan reported net income of RMB 94.6 million.
Context: The short report by Marcus Aurelius Value said that it found “undisclosed related party transactions, irregularities involving many customers and distributors, as well as a business model that we view as broken.”
The Blockchain Services Network (BSN) is one of the Chinese government’s most ambitious global blockchain projects. But can it succeed in its goal to become a global “internet of blockchains” in the face of rising tensions between the US and China?
“The BSN has already achieved this critical mass and it will have a snowball effect, as a lot more of worldwide technology infrastructure companies will want to come to it. The challenge is mainly geopolitical. Because of the current climate, this is going to be framed as the China Chain,” said Michael Sung, founding co-director at the Fanhai International School of Finance at Fudan University in Shanghai, at a panel discussion recorded on Nov. 16.
Moderated by TechNode’s blockchain and fintech reporter Eliza Gkritsi, three scholars and entrepreneurs from China, Singapore, and Hong Kong discussed what the future holds for the BSN—and whether its connection to the Chinese government will prove a blessing or a curse.
Making interoperability really work will be a real technical challenge, said Wai-shun Lo, adjunct professor The Chinese University of Hong Kong and partner at a Hong Kong angel investment fund. There is also a business challenge for portal operators around the world “to work in their own communities to really get people on board to develop dapps [decentralized applications],” said Lo.
The technology challenge will be overcome, “given time,” said David Lee, who teaches blockchain and fintech as a professor at the Singapore University of Social Sciences. But convincing “governments and incumbents to see the potential of BSN” might also be difficult in the short term, Lee said.
Blockchain Services Network (BSN)
What: A platform for blockchain development, bringing together cloud services and different chain protocols on city nodes.
Why: To reduce the cost of blockchain application design and deployment while powering communication between chains. It will be made available around the world through local cloud providers, ultimately creating a global internet of blockchains. The BSN is aligned with Beijing’s ambition to position China as a global blockchain leader.
Who: The BSN is led by the China State Information Center, China Mobile, China Union Pay, and Red Date Technology.
Michael Sung is the chairman of Carbonblue Innovations, a tech-transfer and commercialization platform focused on rapidly scaling internationally-sourced high-tech innovation, the founding co-director of the Fintech Research Center at the Fanhai International School of Finance at Fudan University, and a member of the faculty at the Chinese Institute of Economics and Finance, a national-level think tank focused on developing finance innovation policy for the central government in China.
Sung has served in advisory roles over the years for the Hong Kong, Taiwan, and China governments on international tech transfer, innovation ecosystem building, AI, blockchain, and fintech policy.
David Lee Kuo Chuen owns Blockasset Ventures, a blockchain- and cryptocurrency-focused investment company. He has founded several companies, including Dlee Capital Management, Left Coast, and Ferrell Financial Group.
Lee is also a professor of fintech and blockchain at Singapore University of Social Sciences. He is an advisor to several blockchain organizations, including the British Blockchain Association, and was the director of the Sim Kee Boon Institute for Financial Economics (SKBI) at Singapore Management University (SMU). His research interests include digital and internet finance, digital banking, Asia, finance, impact investing, blockchain, financial inclusion, and asset allocation.
Lo is an adjunct professor at The Chinese University of Hong Kong and a visiting Professor at Peking University’s School of Innovation and Entrepreneurship. Lo is currently a general partner of DL Capitals, an angel investment fund focused on disruptive and exponential technologies and has over 20 years of experience in intellectual property commercialization, business models innovation and technology transfer. Lo has also served as a senior researcher at Harvard Business School’s Asia-Pacific Research Center.
]]>The founder of cryptocurrency exchange Okex re-appeared after a month after cooperating with authorities in an investigation. Xi Jinping called on countries to work together on digital currency standards. Goldman Sachs expects the digital yuan will reach 1 billion users in 10 years, while news surfaced of a second lottery to test China’s digital currency.
The world of blockchain moves fast, and nowhere does it move faster than China. Here’s what you need to know about China’s block-world in the week of Nov. 18-24.
The CEO of OK Group and founder of cryptocurrency exchange Okex resurfaced on Thursday after being unreachable for over a month, Bloomberg reported.
Xu Mingxing, also known as Star, posted on his Wechat moments that he had been cooperating with authorities investigating OK Group’s backdoor listing in 2017.
“The authorities have clarified the matter and proved me innocent,” Xu said, according to the report. The exchange said it expects to resume withdrawals by Nov. 27.
Okex paused cryptocurrency withdrawals on Oct. 16 because one of the key holders was unreachable, the exchange said. Rumors then began circulating that it was Xu.
Okex’s token, OKB, has gained about 19% since the news broke last week of Xu’s reappearance.
READ MORE: Major disruption at Okex, Filecoin strike: Blockheads
Countries need to come together to build standards for digital currencies “with an open and accommodating attitude,” Chinese President Xi Jinping said during the virtual G20 summit on Nov. 21.
The Chinese president said that digitalization is key to handling the global Covid-19 pandemic, but that a “digital divide” is emerging between countries that are pushing ahead with innovation and those that are being left behind.
The digital yuan will reach 1 billion users in the next 10 years and account for 15% of China’s consumption, or RMB 19 trillion, in annual total payment value, Goldman Sachs said in a report.
The investment bank expects heated competition between banks and fintech companies for consumption transactions as the digital yuan is rolled out. (Coindesk)
The city of Suzhou in eastern Jiangsu province on Dec. 12 will hold China’s second lottery to disperse and test the digital yuan, local media reported, part of ongoing trials.
Suzhou is one of four cities where China’s central bank digital currency is being tested, in addition to Xiong’an, Shenzhen, and Chengdu.
The testing in these cities had been limited to select individuals only until last month when Shenzhen held a public lottery and distributed RMB 100 million (about $1.5 million) worth of the digital currency to citizens in RMB 200 red envelopes.
The Dec. 12 giveaway will test new features, such as the digital yuan’s offline functionality, the report said. (TechNode)
Bitcoin, the world’s biggest cryptocurrency by market cap, has been on a bull run. It is currently trading at an excess of $18,000—a historical high.
But Chinese investors are reportedly sitting out the bull run, potentially the result of a number of reasons including the ongoing cryptocurrency crackdown and the 2018 crash. (Decrypt)
]]>The city of Suzhou will launch the second lottery to distribute the digital yuan on Dec. 12 and trial previously untested features, Chinese media reported.
Why it matters: China is racing to be the first major country to issue a central bank digital currency. If successful, it could spearhead a new era of government oversight of the monetary system.
READ MORE: INSIGHTS | China’s digital currency has a long way to go
Details: The city of Suzhou in eastern Jiangsu province will distribute 100,000 red envelopes. Still undetermined are key details such as the amount of digital currency each will contain, where users can spend the currency, as well as the method of distribution, the report said.
Context: In October, a district of Shenzhen distributed through a lottery RMB 10 million ($1.48 million) in 50,000 red envelopes of RMB 200 each. It was the first digital yuan test that was open to the public.
READ MORE: Digital yuan law, rig maker Ebang pushes abroad: Blockheads
]]>Chinese public blockchain Nervos has launched a new token standard for use in a branch of blockchain-based finance to compete with Ethereum’s popular ERC-20 standard used in developing smart contracts.
Why it matters: With the launch of the new token standard, Hangzhou-based Nervos continues its decentralized finance (Defi) push, enabling many assets to be traded on its network.
“The launch of the SUDT standard is a significant milestone in the progression of DeFi on Nervos.”
—Kevin Wang, Nervos co-founder
Details: Developers can use SUDT to issue their own tokens on Nervos’s network. SUDT defines the implementation of tokens in smart contracts, guides their distribution on the network, and secures them on Nervos’s Layer 1 blockchain, Nervos said in a statement.
Context: There are many token standards in blockchain. The most popular is ERC-20, an Ethereum-based standard that is widely used for smart contract development.
]]>READ MORE: EXCLUSIVE: China’s BSN to integrate public blockchain Nervos
A government crackdown on cryptocurrency exchanges continues to wash over China’s crypto industry. A promised issuance of blockchain-based bonds by one of China’s big four banks was indefinitely postponed. The government reveals more numbers on the digital yuan rollout.
The world of blockchain moves fast, and nowhere does it move faster than China. Here’s what you need to know about China’s block-world in the week of Nov. 11-17.
On Wednesday, $300 million worth of bitcoins moved from crypto exchange Huobi to Binance, following rumors that Huobi’s COO is missing while being investigated by the Chinese government. (Coindesk)
Rumors that Huobi COO, Zhu Jiawei, had been arrested began circulating on Chinese social media on Nov. 2.
READ MORE: Reports of Huobi COO arrest spurs whale transactions as token sinks
Huobi denied the allegations, but Zhu’s whereabouts are still unclear.
The fact that Xu Mingxing, one of the co-founders of crypto exchange Okex, had been arrested has only intensified speculation that Zhu is also under arrest.
On Nov. 3, another $400 million moved from Huobi to Binance, this time in the form of stablecoin Tether.
Another crypto exchange, Token Better, said in a Weibo post on Nov. 9 that it was under investigation by Sichuan authorities.
Crypto miners are having trouble paying electricity bills, as the crackdown on crypto expands to the mining industry. Many have had their bank cards frozen by authorities and are unable to pay for electricity, without which they cannot operate their mining rigs.
About 74% of miners have been affected by the “frozen card tide,” an informal survey by crypto blogger Colin Wu found. (WuBlockchain, in Chinese)
On Wednesday, Malaysian digital asset exchange Fusang announced it would be issuing $3 billion worth of blockchain-based bonds in collaboration with China Construction Bank. The bonds could be purchased using bitcoins, among other forms of currency, and would mature in February 2021.
It would be the first time that a Chinese bank issued blockchain-based bonds, and the crypto world was alight with excitement.
On Friday, CCB clarified that it was not issuing the bonds, but was merely a sponsor, and that it would not be accepting bitcoins in exchange for the debt.
On the same day, Fusang said it would postpone the bond issuance without specifying why or when the bonds would eventually become available. (The Block)
The digital yuan is in use in more than 6,700 locations around China, including transportation, government services, restaurants, and shops.
Transactions worth RMB 8.76 million ($1.33 million) using digital yuan were processed during a red envelope pilot program in Shenzhen. The digital currency has been used for RMB 1.1 billion in transactions in total across pilots nationwide.
The People’s Bank of China Digital Currency Institute has reached strategic agreements with Didi and JD.com, the article said, but there were no further details. (People’s Daily Finance, in Chinese)
]]>
China’s Huawei is falling behind in the race to supply telecommunications equipment for 5G networks in Europe, its largest market outside of its home turf.
As Sweden decided in October to exclude Huawei from its next-generation mobile networks, seven out of 27 European Union member states have made moves to heavily restrict the Shenzhen company’s participation in the buildout of 5G. The list includes heavyweights like France and the UK.
Among countries that have not made decisions on Huawei, six have signed a declaration of intent to keep their networks “clean” of Chinese technology under the US “Clean Network” initiative. Signing the Clean Network initiative does not appear to bind countries to bar Huawei gear.
While regulators are driving the shift against Huawei, telcos are jumping the gun. In another five countries, telco operators have signed contracts to procure 5G equipment from Huawei’s competitors, Nokia and Ericsson, likely anticipating regulation.
Experts say that the Shenzhen-based company may eventually face de facto expulsion from Europe’s 5G networks as countries move to make their final decisions.
Huawei supplied around 50% of the equipment for Europe’s 4G networks, according to a 2017 report by the European Trade Union Institute, an EU-backed research center. However, the company now faces a much less welcoming environment for 5G—at least two countries have banned its gear outright, and a dozen others are considering heavy restrictions.
“Chinese vendors will play a minuscule role in parts of Europe’s mobile networks that are considered sensitive or critical,” Jan-Peter Kleinhans, director of the project Geopolitics & Technology at German think tank Stiftung Neue Verantwortung told TechNode.
Kleinhans said that he could imagine a full exclusion of Huawei equipment from Europe’s 5G core networks “in the long run.”
“Since the European Union put the onus on member states to objectively assess risks and adopt mitigating measures to ensure the security of 5G rollouts, most countries have increased their scrutiny of Huawei,” Jan Stryjak, associate director at market research firm Counterpoint, told TechNode. “Since no country would want to be alone in bucking the trend, solidarity seems to be the name of the game.”
European countries so far haven’t banned Huawei from all of their 5G core networks, a Huawei spokesperson told TechNode on Friday. “Huawei calls and pushes for the establishment of network security standards, and hopes all vendors to be subject to the same scrutiny.”
The company said its commitment towards the European market is “unchanged.”
The first step towards an EU-wide policy on 5G security came in January, when the EU Commission released the so-called EU 5G toolbox: A blueprint for how the 27 member states should evaluate 5G gear provider risks and trustworthiness.
The toolbox requires member states to assess supplier risk profiles on a national or EU level and apply restrictions on those deemed high-risk.
“The EU toolbox recommends a set of key measures that should be taken by all member states and by the Commission. These measures will apply to everybody, without targeting any actor or country in particular,” Marietta Grammenou, a European Commission spokesperson, told TechNode in an email.
The toolbox does not mention Huawei or China by name, but instructs national regulators to consider the “risk of interference by non-EU state or state-backed actors,” echoing US rhetoric.
Some countries have taken a middle-of-the-road approach: They have chosen to raise security requirements for all vendors in a way that amounts to a ban on Huawei without naming it.
The EU toolbox was rolled out after the US government embarked on a campaign to pressure allies into excluding Huawei equipment from their 5G networks, and marked a sharp shift from earlier guidance in EU security directives, where country of origin did not feature prominently as a concern.
Scholars have said that Huawei is owned and controlled by the Chinese state but the company maintains that it is a private company 100% owned by its employees.
The toolbox leaves the decision to ban Huawei up to member states: “While everyone who complies with our rules can access the European market, member states have the right to decide whether to exclude companies from their markets for national security reasons,” Grammenou said.
“Since mobile networks are considered a critical infrastructure with a direct impact on national security, member states are free to develop their own strategy and thus balance between costs and security,” Kleinhans said.
As countries set their own paths, a likely result is “a highly fragmented regulatory landscape,” Kleinhans said.
As more regulators and telecommunication operators put limits on Huawei, it’s getting more tempting to jump on the bandwagon. Europe’s military and intelligence community, meanwhile, has been voicing objections to Huawei gear, citing national security concerns.
“With no country wanting to be the odd one out, it wouldn’t be surprising if all member states follow the same trend,” Stryjak said.
While only two countries have specifically banned Huawei from future network buildouts, lawmakers and politicians are signaling that other European countries will likely follow their example or heavily restrict the company’s involvement.
In July, the UK banned Huawei from its 5G networks and ordered its telecommunication operators to remove existing Huawei gear from their networks by 2027, citing a US ban on the company in May that could cut the company off from the global semiconductor supply chain.
In a similar move, a Swedish telecom regulator said in October that potential grantees of the country’s 5G spectrum must not use products from Huawei in new core networks and existing Huawei gear must be phased out before 2025.
Sweden’s Huawei decision was made based on assessments by the country’s Armed Forces and the Security Service, the Swedish Post and Telecom Authority (PTS) said. On the announcement of the Huawei ban, Klas Friberg, head of the Swedish Security Service, said “China is one of the biggest threats to Sweden.” The country, Friberg added, must not forget when constructing its 5G network that China “is conducting cyber espionage to promote its own economic development and develop its military capabilities.”
Europe’s biggest economies and political epicenters, including Germany and France, have also indicated that they are turning against Huawei.
In October 2019, Germany’s spy chief Bruno Kahl said Huawei “can’t fully be trusted” to participate in the country’s 5G network rollout. While German Chancellor Angela Merkel was in September reportedly vehemently opposed to any restrictions that would single out Huawei, she faced a contingent of politicians who sought to effectively ban Huawei from German 5G networks. Later in the month, they appeared to have won.
In July, Reuters reported that the French National Cybersecurity Authority (ANSSI) had granted licenses to some operators that use Huawei gear. But the bulk of the authorizations were for three or five years, whereas most applications for 5G kit from European rivals Ericsson or Nokia received eight-year licenses.
Notably, the ANSSI informed operators during informal conversations, not stated formally in documents, that licenses granted for Huawei equipment would not be renewed once expired, according to the report.
The Huawei issue has been a flash point in escalating tensions between China and the US. For more than a year, the US government has continued to pressure its allies to exclude Huawei equipment. Not doing so, it said, poses the potential risk of Beijing using vulnerabilities in the company’s gear to spy on foreign 5G networks, an allegation Huawei has repeatedly denied.
A full ban on Huawei equipment would almost certainly be seen by Beijing as choosing sides, and fodder for retaliation.
Most recently, a UK oversight body said in October that Huawei had failed to adequately solve security flaws including a “vulnerability of national significance” in gear used in the country’s telecom networks despite previous warnings.
In April 2019, Vodafone told Bloomberg that it found “hidden backdoors” in the software that could have given Huawei unauthorized access to the carrier’s system providing internet service in Italy. The carrier said at the time that the issues had been resolved after it asked Huawei to remove them.
Huawei has not disclosed how much revenue it earns from Europe. According to the company’s annual results, it generated RMB 206 billion (around $31.1 billion) from Europe, the Middle East, and Africa in 2019, or around 24% of its total revenue for the year.
Stryjak of Counterpoint said that there could still be a play for Huawei in the radio access network (RAN) market, the less sensitive area of 5G networks that connect end devices to core networks. However, he said, Huawei’s RAN business in the continent is still subject to the “suspicion that governments and operators now hold.”
“It seems only a matter of time before all of Europe’s core 5G networks are Huawei-free,” Stryjak said.
]]>Going to the toilet can be very difficult for employees in China’s big tech firms, claims an article that went viral on Chinese social media yesterday. Big tech offices don’t provide enough toilets for their staff, writes magazine Renwu.
Why it matters: It’s not the first time that big tech firms in China have been under fire for workplace practices, but it is the first time that toilets have been the issue.
In the eyes of managers, toilets are the enemy of efficiency. The toilet is the last part of the management system of a large factory. What this system has to do is to occupy the body of the employee as long as possible, so that the employee can create more productivity per unit of time.
Chinese magazine Renwu
Details: The viral article is based on reports from employees in China’s big tech firms who report long toilet queues due to insufficient facilities. It alleges that some companies limit toilet facilities in a deliberate attempt to control employees’ bodies.
The worst experience is when you wait for a long time to enter, and find that the last colleague who rushed back to work forgot to flush.
Chinese publication Renwu
Context: Big tech firms first faced criticism over working conditions in March 2019 after employees took to Github to protest its “996” working culture; working from 9 a.m. to 9 p.m., six days a week.
As fintech titan Ant Group prepared for a long-anticipated IPO, a struggle over the reach of regulation between founder and controlling stakeholder Jack Ma and financial regulators spilled into public view.
In the days leading up to Nov. 5, when the fintech giant was set to go public and raise an estimated $34.5 billion, a series of pointed attacks on Ant Group were published in financial media including the central bank’s official newspaper.
These articles called Ant Group “too big to fail” and a “systemic risk,” likening Ant Group to the sprawling financial institutions that brought about the 2008 crisis. One accuses it of tricking its customers in taking on extra debt. All argue that Ant Group should be required to follow the Basel Accords, the bank rules created in the wake of the 2008 crisis.
Some were rumored to be written by China’s top echelon of financial regulators. The people rumored to be behind the articles include Zhou Xiaochuan, the longest-serving governor of the People’s Bank of China—a figure who presided over China’s rise to a financial powerhouse and led the development of its modern financial system.
These articles likely provide insight into regulators’ intentions for fintech. Ant Group’s lending practices have emerged as a key issue for regulators: On Nov. 2, the China Insurance and Banking Committee released a draft regulation that would limit the amount companies like Ant can lend out to micro-borrowers.
READ MORE: UPDATED: Ant Group IPO delay and Jack Ma’s ill-timed speech
In the last year, authorities have been making moves to raise the regulatory bar for Ant Group, among other fintech giants, and bring it closer to what banks have to comply with.
In September, the State Council released new measures to introduce licensing requirements for non-financial holding companies that are involved in financial services, and could potentially raise capital requirements for companies like Ant Group.
“If you were previously unregulated, it feels like a clampdown,” Andrew Polk, co-founder of research firm Trivium, told TechNode.
The People’s Bank of China (PBOC), which is chiefly responsible for “macro-prudential” policy to manage overall risk in the financial system, appeared particularly worried about Ant Group. In July, the PBOC asked banks to report lending data for H2 2018, the whole of 2019, and H1 of 2020. The central bank asked for separate reports on loans going through Ant Group’s platforms.
As Ant prepared for a history-making IPO, regulators were asking the company to accept being regulated more like a bank. This posed a threat to the sky-high valuation that would justify raising more than any company had ever asked from the markets.
But Ma believed that regulators misunderstood his business. Ant is more than a bank—as one of China’s two major online payments providers, it knows nearly everything about its customers—from rent payments to 3 a.m. e-commerce impulse purchases. Armed with this information, Ma believed, the company could assess risks with an accuracy banks could only dream of—making it safe for the company to operate at high leverage.
Ma thought the regulators were living in the analog past—and with weeks to go before the IPO, he decided to tell them in a very public setting.
On Oct. 24, Ma spoke at the Bund Summit, a Shanghai conference where some of the world’s top financiers discuss the state and future of the world economy, and China’s role in it. Speakers at this year’s conference included: China’s vice president Wang Qishan; the current and former governors of the PBOC, Yi Gang and Zhou Xiaochuan; the vice chairman of the China Securities Regulatory Commission, Fang Xinghai; high-level executives of China’s big four banks; former governor of the European Central Bank Jean-Claude Trichet; former UK Prime Minister Tony Blair; former US Treasury Secretary Robert Rubin; founder of US hedge fund Bridgewater Associates Ray Dalio; and former governor of the Bank of Japan Masaaki Shirakawa.
In this setting, Ma said: “The Basel Accords are more like a club for the elderly”—irrelevant to the “young” field of online finance. The accords are a set of international standards created in the wake of the 2008 financial crisis to reign in the banks and improve the stability of the world’s financial sectors.
The Basel Accords are about treating the diseases of the elderly with antiquated and overly complex systems. What we have to think about is: “What we should learn from the elderly?” The elderly and young people are not the same. The elderly care about whether there is a hospital, and the young people care about whether there is a school district.
The Alibaba founder said that tech companies are not afraid of regulation, but regulation using antiquated thinking:
We are not afraid of supervision, we are afraid of monitoring using the way of yesterday. We cannot manage the airport the same way as the railway station, and we cannot manage the future with yesterday’s methods.
China’s financial sector suffers from a “pawnshop” mentality, Ma says, that must be replaced with big data.
The pawnshop idea of mortgage cannot support the financial needs of world development in the next 30 years. We must use today’s technological capabilities to replace pawnshop thinking with a credit system based on big data.
The day after Ma’s speech, at the same event, Shang Fulin, director of the Economic Committee at the Chinese People’s Political Consultative Conference and the former governor of the China Banking Regulatory Commission, said that regulation must catch up with financial technology in order to reign in its excesses, making special notes of risks to the economy and privacy that big tech brings to the finance sector.
As modern information technology is more deeply involved in financial transactions, risk decision-making, internal control compliance, intelligent analysis, and other activities, information technology risks are more likely to lead to chain reactions such as operational risk, credit risk, liquidity risk, and so on. It is necessary to guard against the risks that may be brought about by the digitization of traditional business, as well as the risk of using technology to innovate in finance.
A week after Ma’s now-infamous speech, he got a response: three prominent articles in state media laying out a case for stricter financial regulation on Big Tech, widely taken to represent the views of regulators.
The first shot was a forum comment highlighted by the online edition of Guangming Daily, an influential state newspaper on Oct. 26. Ma was “arrogant,” and “the speech was not an idle talk over tea, but a targeted one in the context of Ant Group’s IPO.” “Without this kind of regulation [the Basel Accords], the size of the IPO will definitely be proportional to the sound of explosive thunder,” the commenter wrote, drawing on an image frequently used to describe industries as out of control.
A week after Ma’s speech, three strongly-worded editorials criticizing internet companies’ involvement in finance, all attributed to pseudonymous “senior scholars,” were widely reprinted on Chinese media. The latter two were printed in the official newspaper of the People’s Bank of China, Jinrong Shibao (literally, “the Financial Times”—no relation to the salmon-colored London paper).
On Oct. 31, a pseudonymous op-ed called for strict financial regulation on big tech. Market insiders believe that the author, credited as “senior scholar” Zhang Feiyu, was an insider from the regulatory authority, Reuters China reported. We are a little confused about the place of publication—we’ve found reprints citing both independent financial media Caixin and the PBOC-linked Jinrong Shibao as the original.
“There was no supervision of the development of fintech in its early stages,” Zhang wrote, reminding readers of the scams and losses associated with peer-to-peer lending platforms, which rose and fell 2007-2018.
Financial regulatory authorities must dare to say “no” when supervising big tech companies—otherwise they will be easily misled by their technology, held hostage by public opinion, and fail to conduct effective supervision, which will eventually distort the market and generate financial risks.
On Nov. 1, a second warning about unregulated fintech appeared in Jinrong Shibao under the name Zhou Jueshuo, emphasizing the systemic risks associated with fintech.
Rumours on social media identify the author as Zhou Xiaochuan, who served as the governor of the PBOC for 16 years. Using pseudonyms when writing publicly is common practice among government-affiliated public intellectuals, especially household names like Zhou Xiaochuan.
The article did not single out a target, but attacked internet companies that participate in the financial sector. In the first two paragraphs of the main body, the author makes note of the benefits of internet companies’ involvement in finance, mentioning “Alibaba, Baidu, Tencent, and JD.com.” It credits Ant with bringing hundreds of millions of people into the financial system.
Other than these name drops at the top, the text only brings up Ant Group as an example of a big tech company that has become too big.
The article argues that big tech firms in the finance sector must be reigned in, and outlines a strategy for regulators. The article blames big tech for:
Large Internet companies are [said to be] “too big to fail.” Ant Group counts over 1 billion individual users, over 80 million institutional users, and 118 trillion digital payment transactions. Its listed market value may set a historical record. If it [Ant Group] faces financial difficulties, it will cause serious contagion risk.
The section concludes:
Due to the wide network coverage of large internet companies, the convergence of business models and algorithms, the contagion of financial risk will speed up and may evolve into systemic risk in a very short time.
To solve these problems, the author argues fintech giants must be regulated in the same class as banks, but grants that authorities must update their systems for a tech-driven era. He calls for rules to protect consumer rights and prevent systemic risk, requiring fintech companies to seek licenses and accept oversight like traditional financial firms.
Finally, on Nov. 2, a third essay appeared in the PBOC newspaper, this time credited to “senior scholar” Shi Yu. The Nov. 2 essay singles out Ant, accusing it of exploiting retail borrowers.
The author starts by saying that the “‘so-called’ innovative Ant Group” is “the institution with the highest degree of cross-industry sprawl in the world.” Rebutting Ma, it continues to argue that “‘Yesterday’s regulation’ is not useless, and the Basel Accords are not outdated.”
The essay attacks the lending models of Ant Groups’ virtual credit card Huabei and its money market fund Yu’ebao, saying that what it calls “inclusive finance” is actually very costly to consumers:
The annualized interest rate when borrowing from [Ant Group virtual credit card] Huabei was once close to 24%, and has dropped recently, but is now about 15%. At the same time, the Huabei borrowing mode on Alipay’s Yu’ebao feature… raises the interest that borrowers need to pay from the 5%-6% of a bank loan to 15%.
It also accuses Huabei of manipulating users’ consent and tricking them into taking on debt:
At present, Huabei’s lending interest rates are disclosed in the form of daily interest rates, and are not converted into annualized rates, as required by regulations. Borrowing is often set as the default choice during periods such as Singles Day, and customers are easily deprived of other payment options.
Finally, the article urged regulators to examine Ant Group’s structure to require it to place financial services like Yu’ebao and Huabei under properly licensed online banks.
Probably the strangest state media response to Ma’s speech was the victory lap from official news agency Xinhua.
On Nov. 2, Ma and two other top Ant Group executives were called in for a talk with regulators, while regulators issued new rules about microlending.
That evening, Xinhua rendered a verdict on the Ma affair via the medium of roundabout bedtime podcast. Xinhua’s “Evening read”—a podcast offering “beautiful writing, every evening around 10 p.m.”—selected an essay titled “You can’t just say anything, you can’t just do anything; people can’t just do as they please.”
Ma is not mentioned by name, but he appears by rebus in a painting accompanying the article, which shows a horse-shaped cloud floating over a leafless, dark forest. The billionaire’s name can be translated as “horse cloud.”
In a gentle voice accompanied by light piano and strumming guitar, host Wu Weiling tells listeners: “You can have different opinions, but you don’t have the right to throw stones.”
“Everything comes at a price,” Wu said in words highlighted in red in the accompanying transcript. “If you don’t have the capital, don’t do as you please.”
]]>Ant Group will begin this week refunding Shanghai investors who had placed orders for what was expected to be a record-breaking public listing on the city’s technology board, but instead became a record-breaking suspension.
Why it matters: The suspension on Tuesday of Ant Group’s widely anticipated public offering has brought uncertainty among markets and investors. Retail investors had bid a total of $2.8 trillion for shares of the company traded in Shanghai.
Details: The fintech giant will issue refunds to Shanghai investors beginning Friday until Monday, according (in Chinese) to a Shanghai Stock Exchange statement on Thursday, but didn’t specify the method.
Context: Ant Group had been facing increased regulatory scrutiny, particularly over its microlending platforms and position in the digital payments market, when the group’s controlling shareholder Jack Ma told a crowd of Chinese regulators and financiers that China suffers from overbearing regulation.
]]>READ MORE: UPDATED: Ant Group IPO delay and Jack Ma’s ill-timed speech
The US president has decided to put off blacklisting Ant Group after a phone call between a senior US official and an Ant executive, Reuters reported.
Why it matters: The US State Department had reportedly submitted a proposal to the White House to blacklist the fintech giant last month, citing security issues. The move would have cut it off from US capital ahead of what was expected to be a blockbuster stock market debut.
Details: In a phone call, Alibaba President Michael Evans convinced US Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross to reject the State Department’s proposal, the Reuters sources said.
Context: On Tuesday evening, Chinese regulators suspended Ant Group’s Shanghai listing. The company consequently halted its Hong Kong listing.
]]>READ MORE: Ant Group IPO delay and Jack Ma’s ill-timed speech
Ant Group’s suspended $34 billion dual listings in Shanghai and Hong Kong may have resulted from a combination of regulators’ increased intolerance for risk alongside recent bold statements from Jack Ma, the founder of parent company Alibaba Group.
Here’s what sources told TechNode.
Updated: added regulator’s capital requirements for Ant Group’s loans to the first section, and that regulators are discouraging lenders to work with the company in the second.
]]>A Forbes report accused Binance, the world’s largest cryptocurrency exchange, of attempting to deceive US regulators. China got its first blockchain security standard, and processed digital yuan transactions almost doubled in the last month. Bitmain closed another big sale of Antminers to the US, and a new cross-chain protocol was integrated to the BSN.
The world of blockchain moves fast, and nowhere does it move faster than China. Here’s what you need to know about China’s block-world in the week of Oct. 27-Nov. 3.
An allegedly internal Binance document obtained by Forbes said that the cryptocurrency exchange banned from China in 2018 was trying to set up a complicated corporate structure to deceive US regulators and aid customers in evading US laws, the site said.
Binance denied the accusation. The founder and CEO of the company took to Twitter to question the document’s authenticity.
The document in question dates back to late 2018, when Binance was setting up a US subsidiary, according to Forbes. It speaks of a plan to set up a company, dubbed “Tai Chi Company” in the document, to distract US regulators while Binance was working on regulation workarounds.
Binance US, the exchange’s on-the-books subsidiary, would go along with US compliance requirements and would not allow highly leveraged derivatives trading, the document said. Trading crypto derivatives is highly regulated in the US.
Meanwhile, the “Tai Chi Company” would feign interest in compliance, while it was teaching investors on its platform how to evade geographical restrictions and trying to find technological workarounds. The company would return revenues to Binance as licensing fees.
Binance is the world’s largest cryptocurrency exchange, trading on average $10 billion per day. (Forbes)
]]>READ MORE: EXCLUSIVE: China’s BSN to test cross-chain interoperability in October
Hundreds of millions of dollars worth of cryptocurrencies were moved through Huobi in a few transactions and the exchange’s token plummeted Monday following reports that its COO had been arrested.
Why it matters: Huobi may the latest target for Chinese authorities cracking down on crypto exchanges, and it is feeling crypto investor jitters.
Rumors: Huobi COO Zhu Jiawei was reportedly unreachable on Monday evening, and rumors of the his arrest began swirling around Chinese social media. Local media reported on the rumors a few hours later.
Markets: At around midnight, Twitter accounts that monitor whale activity, or large cryptocurrency transactions, reported that about $400 million worth of the stablecoin Tether had moved to Huobi.
Context: On Oct. 16, Okex paused cryptocurrency withdrawals because one of its founders had been arrested.
]]>READ MORE: Major disruption at Okex, Filecoin strike: Blockheads
The Covid-19 pandemic has brought users and funding opportunities to healthtech startups, but the industry is shifting away from B2C models due to high user acquisition costs, according to an early-stage investor speaking at TechNode’s Emerge 2020 conference on Thursday.
Many B2C healthtech startups, like Ping An Good Doctor, have followed a model popularized by China’s e-commerce platforms: They don’t care how much capital they spend on user acquisition, thinking that eventually it will pay off, said Linda Li, managing director and co-founding partner of investment firm Vickers Venture Partners.
Some startups have chosen B2B models, which Li said will win out for three reasons: Firstly, “They are more capital efficient.” Secondly, once you convince doctors to use your platforms, patients will follow doctors’ orders, she said.
Li also thinks that the B2B model will help democratize healthcare. The success of B2B models will lead to the development of infrastructure, especially that which creates information transparency. This infrastructure will serve as the base for democratized, patient-centric healthcare.
Mark Zhang, partner at law firm King & Wood Mallesons, said during the discussion that a major inflection point for China’s healthtech boom came two years ago in the form of comprehensive regulation.
“Before 2018, there was no nationwide framework to regulate online healthcare,” even though the industry had been growing for 10 years, he said. Platforms couldn’t really go into healthcare so the industry was focused on tasks like making appointments with hospitals. “The law was against anyone providing healthcare solutions online,” even though “everybody knew that the major platforms were playing around in that area,” he said.
Starting in 2018, three pieces of regulation cleared the way for healthtech innovation, Zhang said. The first allowed hospitals to use online platforms to collaborate; one hospital can assist another hospital’s activities. This could “solve the imbalances of resources across regions,” he explained. A second regulation allowed offline hospitals to provide online solutions, using their own physicians and nurses.
The most exciting piece of regulation opened the door to companies to enter the healthtech space, Zhang said. Under this law, any company can set up an “internet hospital” so long as it works with an offline hospital. “This internet hospital can draw doctors and nurses from various hospitals to practice on this platform,” he said.
In 2020, Covid-19 drew a lot of patients to online consultation services. In February, many patients didn’t feel that hospitals were safe. Even in late March to early April, when the Covid-19 outbreak was under control in China, “it was still very troublesome to go to the hospitals as they had to face more complicated procedures” because of the pandemic, Li said.
Some hospitals saw their business drop by 70%, then losses were gradually reduced to 50%, she said. But some hospitals say their business is still down about 30%, Li said.
“If people are not going to hospitals, they must go somewhere. This somewhere is online,” she said. With the support of China’s advanced delivery and logistics infrastructure, online prescription services have boomed along with online consultations, she said.
“Entrepreneurs and startups have been having a very easy business development time.”
Linda Li, managing director of Vickers Venture Partners
Following this surge in user growth was a jump in revenue, and funding for startups is now triple the average size compared to three to four years ago, Li said.
Better funding has helped startups make their case to hospitals, she said. Credibility and trust are very important to Chinese hospitals, who “don’t want to talk to small startups. If capital is really pushing some companies to be leaders, that solves some of these problems,” Li said.
At the same time, regulators are cautious: They “want to make sure the door is opened slowly and gradually,” and different cities are experimenting with different regulations, according to Zhang. Regulators are trying to find the right balance between growing the sector and protecting consumers.
Cybersecurity and privacy have emerged as key areas of compliance risk for healthtech companies. Many companies in healthcare, especially pharmaceutical, are attracted to China because of its immense data resources, Zhang said.
But multiple layers of new laws regulate data security and privacy, from data collection to storage and handling. Patient records, population data, personal information, and genetic data come with different compliance requirements, making data processing a tricky business, Zhang said. These days, “Data as a resource is very attractive but you have to be careful.”
Li agreed:“The data actually belongs to the hospital,” so a startup that wants to provide services must set up a server in the hospital instead of using servers or external servers.
]]>READ MORE: INSIGHTS | High tide for healthcare apps?
So high is demand for shares in Alibaba’s fintech unit Ant Group that the company has decided to finish its institutional book-building process in Hong Kong a day earlier than planned.
Why it matters: Through dual listings in Shanghai and Hong Kong, announced in July, Ant Group is looking to raise $34.4 billion. This would make it the biggest public offering in history, bigger than parent company Alibaba’s listing in 2014 and Aramco’s in 2019.
Details: The company will close its Hong Kong books at 5 p.m. on Tuesday, a day earlier than planned.
Context: Soon after announcing its IPO plans, Ant revealed robust financial performance in 2020.
]]>READ MORE: Ant Group IPO filings: five key takeaways
The People’s Bank of China (PBOC) issued a draft regulation that updates its mandate for the age of fintech—and laid the foundations for the central bank’s digital currency. Cryptocurrency rig maker Ebang continues to expand abroad, looking to get into financial services. Authorities cracked down on a money-laundering scheme using Tether, while some government agencies showed, once again, that they are willing to use blockchain technology for governance.
The world of blockchain moves fast, and nowhere does it move faster than China. Here’s what you need to know about China’s block-world in the week of Oct. 20-26.
READ MORE: INSIGHTS | China’s digital currency has a long way to go
READ MORE: Major disruptions at Okex, Filecoin strike: Blockheads
China’s biggest shopping festival has already begun. Like Christmas, Singles Day has sprawled from a day into a shopping season. There’s a whole culture of discount shopping on Taobao and its peers—and this year, our intrepid reporters are going to take you to the front lines of the e-commerce wars as they hunt for bargains.
You need to be prepared, focused, and quick. If your internet connection is bad, you won’t get anything, Jiayi warned me. When you are competing with millions of people over limited stock, every millisecond counts.
For the past year, my colleague and Taobao coach Jiayi Shi has been training me in the art of the shopping festival deal. In June, we spent the weeks before midsummer shopping festival 6.18 building trains in an in-app game, cashing out a cool RMB 9 and RMB 11 ($1.35 and $1.55).
READ MORE: I spent weeks playing games on Taobao and won $1.55
Disappointed and frustrated, I continued with my Taobao addiction as normal over the next few months, doom-scrolling without buying anything during idle moments.
But when Singles Day season came around, I was ready for more. Singles Day is Christmas to 6.18’s Labor Day, in American terms. Like Christmas, it’s sprawling the calendar with sales that start as early as three weeks before the Nov. 11 main event.
By mid-October, my monkey brain had forgotten all about the time I wasted in June, and I clicked on the new game mentally salivating at the thought of the tiny drops of dopamine that would come over the next few weeks.
The new game turned out to be a cat. Literally, just a cat. You pet it, and get rewards. That’s it. Taobao knows how to get my brain to stoop pretty low searching for those hits of dopamine, but I won’t go that low.
I asked Jiayi what to do, and she told me I was ready. It was time for the epitome of online shopping: The Lipstick King’s pre-sale livestream.
Livestreaming is a whole other level of Taobao shopping. It’s the big leagues: Tens of millions of people join in events like Li Jiaqi’s Singles Day pre-sale, hoping to get big discounts.
The first step is planning: The King posted all the products he would be selling on his Weibo, outlining the price and overall discount. Most of them were cosmetics, the product he is best-known for, but the list included some oddities: A smart lock, a massage chair, a mattress.
The goods are sold in bundles: you buy one or two full size items and get a lot of free samples or travel-size versions, so you get more bang for your buck.
A lot of these deals aren’t exactly discounts—more like free gifts. You buy one 100ml bottle of perfume, and they throw in 10 sample-size bottles for free. You’re actually paying full price for the first bottle, but it’s billed as a 60% discount on a per-ml basis. Jiayi told me that there’s a hot debate on Chinese social media about whether these are really discounts.
The biggest offers would be on the King’s livestreams on Oct. 20 and 21, three weeks before Singles Day on Nov. 11. During, Singles Day season, the King’s livestream runs at least five hours a day.
On Tuesday, Oct. 20, after a full day’s work, Jiayi arrived at my house at 7 p.m. “Are you ready?” she asked me. “I’m ready!” I replied, excited.
My target was a bundle of L’Occitane’s four best-selling luxury hand creams, Jiayi wanted to get L’Oreal Revita lifting face masks. Both were about 60% off in total based on the free extras.
We sat down and turned on the livestream on Taobao. While Li Jiaqi was listing all the products he would be selling over the next five to six hours, Jiayi walked me through the basics. He’s going advertise the product for a few minutes, and then count down: “three, two, one.” Once he yells “one,” you have to click the little basket on the bottom left of the screen which takes you to the product page, where you can buy.
Actually, because it’s a pre-sale, you don’t buy anything on the spot. You are just putting down deposits, and you will pay the rest of the money on Nov. 1. Because of this, it’s very important to tick a box saying you agree not to get back your deposit before you click “Buy.”
If you don’t tick this box, a pop-up will appear telling you must do it. You will lose at least one second going back and ticking it. This second will probably mean you lose the product.
We quickly learned that the products we wanted would be going on sale after midnight. We kept watching nonetheless, as thousands of eye creams, moisturizers, and hair conditioners were sold in minutes.
The Lipstick King was not what I expected. TV shopping hosts in the West are usually quite chirpy. Li is a whole other kind of host. He is authoritative, almost abrasive. He doesn’t waste time. He wrangles the arms of his assistants in front of the camera, painted with different shades of lipstick or eyeshadow. He is mesmerizing, but it doesn’t feel like he is making a sales pitch. It feels like you’re joining a movement.
‘Lipstick king’ Li Jiaqi (at rear) is less chirpy QVC host, more charismatic cult leader than TechNode reporter expected before her first experience mainlining e-commerce. In a two-day livestreaming sales event kicking off the Singles Day shopping festival, he uses an assistant’s arm as a lipstick palette. (Gif captured by Jiayi Shi)
At some point I realized that 31 million people were watching. “I’ve never competed on this scale in my life,” I told Jiayi, “I need to get a drink.” I didn’t, fearing that alcohol would impair my ability to compete.
I was stressed. Could I tap my phone faster than the millions of other people watching? Would I get my luxurious hand cream at a fraction of the sticker price? There was only one way to find out.
I grew up watching the consumerist culture of the US from afar: People getting trampled on Black Friday would make the news in Greece. But I never participated in something of the sort. The Singles Day livestream is the online version of Black Friday. I felt millions of people watching simultaneously, poised to go through the same motions I would. I couldn’t wrap my head around the scale of what I was a part of.
By midnight, 100 million people had joined. Jiayi had gone home and was supporting me through texts and voice notes; a last minute cram session before the big moment.
At 12.20 a.m., my hand cream went on sale. I screamed. I clicked all the buttons. In my delirious haste, I forgot the agreement box. The error box popped up. In the milliseconds it took me to go back and tick “yes, keep my money forever,” I felt a mix of hope and disappointment. Maybe, if I just clicked fast enough… Maybe…
It had been less than 20 seconds since the cream went on sale when I finally clicked “buy.” It was already sold out.
I was devastated. I think I would have cried if I wasn’t supposed to shoot a selfie video for TechNode.
“Don’t worry about it. It’s hard. It was your first time,” Jiayi texted me. “I guess this is the closest thing a foreigner gets to feeling the competition of the gaokao,” I texted back, referring to China’s two-day pressure-cooker college entrance examination.
I went to sleep still checking the livestream. The next day, I watched Li Jiaqi’s livestream again. I didn’t plan on buying anything, but I couldn’t help myself.
Calmer and more confident, I was ready to tap. I barely understood what the Lipstick King was saying, but he was somehow convincing me to purchase cosmetics.
“Maybe I’ll buy this eyeshadow palette, what do you think?” I texted Jiayi, who was also watching. “BUY BUY BUY” she texted back.
There were 150 million people watching now, but the competition was less intense. Perhaps the products were less desirable. Perhaps people were just tired, all 150 million of us. There was one face mask that me and Jiayi managed to buy that was competitive, it sold out in a couple of minutes. But I was ready. I ticked the box. I bought it.
Before signing off at 11.00 p.m. that second night. I also bought a pair of Dr. Martens (at 25% off) that I didn’t intend to. I would feel bad for spending money on shoes I don’t need, but now I’ve felt the magic of the Lipstick King. You can’t blame yourself for falling for David Copperfield’s tricks.
The Lipstick King is still doing livestreams every day. Millions of people join him. Me? I’m just waiting for Nov. 1, to pay the rest of the money and see my products dispatched.
For now, I’m done with livestreams. I have to prepare my shopping cart for the Singles Day showdown when the clock hits midnight on Nov. 10. But somewhere deep down I know, it’s just a matter of time before I fall back under the king’s spell.
]]>Bilibili wants companies in China to use its livestreaming feature to recruit university students and fresh graduates, as the Covid-19 pandemic has complicated campus recruitment.
Why it matters: The streaming platform has been looking for ways to expand beyond its core business in anime, comics, and gaming (ACG) streaming.
Details: Campus Recruitment Express is a form of content collaboration with employers, a Bilibili spokesperson told TechNode.
Context: In the second quarter of 2020, Bilibili had over 171.6 million monthly active users, 12.9 million of which are paying users.
]]>READ MORE: CHINA VOICES | ‘Bilibili is becoming Chinese Youtube’
Shanghai-based lending and wealth management unicorn Lufax is looking to raise $2.36 billion in its debut on the New York Stock Exchange, according to the market’s website.
Why it matters: Lufax is one of two Chinese fintech firms looking to raise multi-billion dollar amounts on US exchanges this autumn. Chinese tech companies meanwhile face increasing scrutiny from US regulators and China vies to keep homegrown tech companies from listing abroad.
READ MORE: Ant Group IPO filings: five key takeaways
Details: Lufax filed in early October to go public but details have not been released.
Context: Lufax was founded in 2011 by Ping An Insurance as a peer-to-peer lending company, but has gradually expanded its business into wealth management.
READ MORE: INSIGHTS | What’s at stake in fight over delisting Chinese firms
Cyberx, a Hong Kong-based crypto prime brokerage, launched on Wednesday the world’s first cross-exchange portfolio margin service for spots and derivatives trading.
Why it matters: Prime brokerage for cryptocurrencies is still a nascent industry, with only a handful companies around the world offering such services. Most crypto-focused prime brokerages are headquartered in and focused on the US, away from the crypto liquidity of Chinese miners.
Details: Cyberx’s new product, “Prime,” will unify portfolio margins across exchanges for derivatives, according to its press release.
Context: Founded in 2016 by former Goldman Sachs executive Wang Hao, Cyberx offered trading services in traditional finance until 2018, when it switched to crypto.
It was a dramatic week for China crypto. Okex, one of the largest crypto spot and derivatives exchanges, halted withdrawals with an ambiguous explanation of a police investigation involving their founder. The Filecoin mainnet launched on Thursday, then five of its largest miners went on strike two days later.
The world of blockchain moves fast, and nowhere does it move faster than China. Here’s what you need to know about China’s block-world in the week of Oct. 13-20.
READ MORE: Filecoin fork, US and UK outspend China: Blockheads
Give a man a fish and you feed him for a day. Give a tech reporter a smart guitar and one hour, and she will learn how to play “Where’s Dad?” If you don’t know this song, don’t worry, neither did we.
That sums up our test session with the Poputar, a smart guitar made by Chinese company Beijing Shigan Technology Company, also known as Popumusic. Its first product, a smart ukulele, was “an epic momentum of consumer technology,” the company claims. Popumusic has sold 400,000 units of its two smart instruments worldwide since the 2016 launch of the Populele smart ukelele. The company is currently doing crowdfunding on Indiegogo as a way to promote this guitar on the western market for the first time. Production and shipping will start in December this year.
The Poputar is a lightweight acoustic guitar with LED lights embedded in its neck. The instrument syncs with an app made by the same company that registers what you are doing on the guitar and gives you feedback as you play, much like karaoke games on a Playstation. The neck-lights indicate where you should place your fingers to play chords.
The app includes bite-sized video courses that take you from the basics, including how to hold the guitar and pluck the strings, all the way to mastering popular songs like “Let it Be” by the Beatles and Billie Eilish’s “Bad Guy.”
The Poputar promises to teach you to “play a song in five minutes.” Unsurprisingly, this is not what happened when we tried it.
The app was not loading properly when we tested it, so we wasted a lot of time waiting for the video courses to load. A Popumusic spokesperson later told us that this was a VPN-related issue.
The Poputar didn’t live up to the five-minute promise, but it was an enjoyable experience, and I felt like I learned something. Hey, I got a 79% on “Where’s Dad?” so I must have inched closer to becoming a guitar virtuoso.
It is definitely worth a try if you are a complete novice and want to master the basics, or if you just want to learn how to play “Wonderwall” by Oasis. If you want to get Carlos Santana’s level, you need to hire a teacher somewhere down the line.
]]>READ MORE: TechNode blind tasting: plant-based meat
Back in the 1990s, people thought the internet would abolish borders. “Cyberspace does not lie within your [governments’] borders,” wrote author and internet activist John Perry Barlow in 1996.
The idea of a borderless network has held on. “One of the great things about the internet is that it does not have national borders. When a company in Tokyo sends a digital file to a company in New York, the data does not have to clear customs,” wrote the New York Times in a 2015 op-ed.
While that may hold for Japan and the US, files going from Beijing to Brussels now often do have to pass digital customs inspections.
China’s model of data localization, and the associated 2017 Cybersecurity Law, has been the subject of criticism and confusion. But now it seems that Beijing was on the cutting edge of a trend.
Bottom line: China is continuing to develop a system that limits where companies keep data, and what they can send abroad. Many multinational companies—and Washington—don’t like it, but they’d better get used to it: this idea is catching on around the world.
What is data localization? Data localization regulations require that data be stored and processed on computers in a particular place, usually within a country’s borders, as opposed to letting them flow freely through data centers around the world.
Why localize?
Regional styles: There are three main approaches to regulating cross-border data flows, said Nigel Cory, who studies cross-border data flows as Associate Director of Trade Policy at the Information Technology and Innovation Foundation, a think tank based in Washington DC.
China’s approach: The landmark 2017 cybersecurity law set the scene for data localization in China, but elements of data localization date back to 2006, Cory said.
Slow roll-out: Details on how the law will be implemented on different sectors are still being hammered out in accompanying laws and regulations.
READ MORE: Dust has yet to settle two years after China’s landmark cybersecurity law
Opening up: China is experimenting with relaxed localization rules in new free trade zones, said Xiaomeng Lu, an internet policy analyst at political risk consultancy Eurasia Group.
Additional costs: Data localization costs international companies money. They have to build several local data centers to ensure data is backed up, Lu told TechNode. These costs are adding up as more countries adopt data localization schemes, meaning ever more local data centers.
AI headaches: Compliance becomes more complicated for global firms who use AI-empowered analytics in their products.
Competitive advantage: Chinese companies are more comfortable with data localization abroad, seeing their experience with it at home as an advantage.
Local champions: Data localization requirements have helped China’s domestic data center industry flourish, as large multinationals work with local firms in joint ventures to run data centers in China.
The opposition: In China, lobbying against data localization is a top priority for multinationals, Lu said.
More than data: There is no evidence that big multinationals have pulled out of China due to increased cloud costs. But data localization has other consequences that could make doing business in China less appealing.
Loco for localization: China is not alone in pursuing data localization. Regulations started popping up around the world before China’s 2017 cybersecurity law, and the trend has accelerated since.
Washington: More than Silicon Valley’s tech giants, Washington has lobbied hard against data localization around the world, with some results.
READ MORE: INSIGHTS | China’s digital currency has a long way to go
But Tiktok! But when it comes to China, even the US is starting to talk about data localization. When Washington moved to ban two Chinese apps—Tiktok and Wechat—from US phones, it cited the risk of sensitive personal data being sent to China.American authorities appeared ready to accept a deal that would see Tiktok’s US user data kept on local servers run by Oracle.
A future of data corridors? The rest of the world doesn’t need signaling or support from the two superpowers to set its own course when it comes to data localization. While China, India, Russia, and others, are pursuing data localization within one country’s borders, new free trade agreements are creating free data flow bubbles between trading partners.
CPTPP signatories have moved to liberalize data flows among themselves. A January agreement between Singapore, New Zealand, and Chile enshrined free data flows between the three countries.
As data becomes a regular part of trade talks, bubbles like these, rather than a global network, could be the future.
]]>China’s blockchain industry doesn’t stop, even during China’s week-long National Day holiday. A public test for the digital yuan was announced in Shenzhen, over-the-counter (OTC) traders are facing increasing pressure, and two reports shed some light on the numbers behind China’s vast blockchain industry.
The world of blockchain moves fast, and nowhere does it move faster than China. Here’s what you need to know about China’s block-world in the weeks of Sept. 28 – Oct. 12.
READ MORE: INSIGHTS | China’s digital currency has a long way to go
Reporting on blockchain from China is difficult; there’s a lot of noise and little substance. But the Chinese press sometimes offers some of the best leads on crypto stories. There’s one crypto blogger who’s my all time favorite—let me give you an introduction.
Beijing-based Colin Wu, who writes at Wechat public account Wu Blockchain, has the nose to sniff out exclusive stories and the knuckles to investigate them. More importantly, in my opinion, he is able to see through a lot of the smoke screens that plague China’s crypto world.
I respect—well, sometimes I envy—his work, and I often refer to it in my reporting. On Sept. 6, he was the first to report that Chinese investors were staging a protest against centralized crypto exchanges. I reported on his work and took it a little further.
Just last night, he broke the news of a crackdown against over-the-counter traders in Shaanxi province.
I’ll stop fangirling and get to the point: If you want to understand China tech, people like Wu are exactly who you should be following. Chinese media often get a bad rap for (allegedly) being little more than propaganda machines, but there are many amazing, often independent, Chinese journalists that do investigative work. Wu is one of them.
Granted, if you’re like me and have to use translation apps to read Chinese-language articles, it can result in some awkward phrasing at best. Luckily for us, Wu tweets the gist of his pieces in English.
Wu started out as a journalist in Chinese media and later went corporate doing government and public relations at Bitmain, the world’s leading manufacturer of crypto mining rigs. The logic of this move, I am not privy to.
He left Bitmain after almost two years to “pursue some journalism ideals,” he told me, with a touch of self-mockery. Wu is a jaded kind of guy.
He started writing on Wechat in his channel Wu Blockchain in November 2019, and initially built up an audience covering the months-long saga of two rival founders trying to oust each other from Bitmain. At the time, what we at TechNode call the Battle for Bitmain was only getting started; he had inside information and was the first to break the news.
“One day at 3 o’clock in the morning, I suddenly got inspiration and wrote this article. Many people were attacking Micree [Zhan Ketuan] at the time, but no one really understood it, so I wanted to write something from a neutral perspective,” he told me.
“He is small, short-tempered, he likes to drink, but is not materialistic, and wears a pair of New Balance sneakers and a gray polo shirt 80% of the time,” he wrote in reference to Zhan in his first article.
His coverage of the dueling co-founders’ drama at Bitmain can seem partial to Wu Jihan (no relation), Zhan’s nemesis, at times. In his most recent article on Wu Jihan’s reinstatement he reported that employees were shedding tears of joy when he resumed leadership of the company. Despite this, Wu has been the first to report on new developments regardless of what they favor.
Wu has turned into a crypto investigator and a blogger with influence as his following across channels has grown: 50,000-80,000 by his counting. He has expanded his coverage to other topics, and he now employs three part-time people. His articles get reprinted in other Chinese crypto outlets.
I asked him how he gets his scoops. His network of contacts, as well as tipsters who come to him because, in his words, they appreciate his journalistic standards, have been a rich source of information.
Wu Blockchain | Aug. 25
Last month, Wu broke the news of a crackdown by the government of the Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region on crypto mining.
At the end of 2019, on-site inspections of 30 big data and cloud computing companies in seven leagues [administrative units of Inner Mongolia] and cities were carried out, and 21 mining companies were found, and the qualifications for participating in the listing of characteristic industries were suspended. Companies that are no longer mining can have penalties revoked after verification.
According to the notice, in accordance with the requirements of the state and autonomous region on guiding enterprises to withdraw from the “mining” business, in order to effectively support the sustainable and healthy development of cloud computing and big data industries in the region, and to further regulate power market transactions, the lists of the companies’ names will be published.
The 21 companies include most of the large mines well-known in the industry, and the rest are mainly normal IDC [internet data center] companies. But there are also some mining companies not on the list. The requirements of this notice are more detailed, and industry professionals worry that they are stricter than in the past and enforcement will last a long time.
Wu Blockchain | Sept. 23
Last week, Wu wrote that over-the-counter crypto (OTC) traders are facing heightened scrutiny from the People’s Bank of China, which has frozen the bank cards of a number of traders for three years.
This year is the year when the People’s Bank of China cracks down on money laundering…
Wu said [he often quotes himself in this style] that Wu Blockchain has exclusively learned that recently many OTC merchants have been placed on the central bank’s “disciplinary list” and all bank cards linked to their IDs have stopped even ATM and banking app transactions.
This means that in addition to the traditional freezes on bank cards, banks and central banks have also begun active supervision of OTC merchants, and the crackdown is widening.
The logic behind what happened is:
The People’s Bank of China cracked down on money laundering this year, but delegated responsibilities and obligations to major banks and financial institutions. Subsequently, bank monitoring of suspected money laundering has become very strict, and any account opened needs to be reviewed by the anti-money laundering system.
Wu Blockchain | Sept. 28
The Blockchain Services Network (BSN) is widely regarded as one of the most important blockchain projects to come out of China: we’ve called it a state-backed, blockchain-powered internet.
Wu disagrees. He thinks that the BSN is just one of many similar projects made by private companies and consortiums. The only reason for all the hype on this project is that observers perceive it to have backing from the Chinese government. But Wu argues that the BSN is only supported by minor government agencies, which he sees as an indicator of the project’s importance. Frankly, I do not agree with him, but I hear his argument and I sure respect his fortitude in swimming upstream (and the BSN wasn’t even the only much-praised blockchain project Wu had dismissive words for last week).
Firstly, the white paper says that the initiators of BSN are the State Information Center [SIC] Smart City Development Research Center, China Mobile Design Institute, government and enterprise customer branches, China UnionPay, China Mobile Financial Technology Company, and the [BSN] operator Beijing Red Date Technology.
…
In China, cryptocurrency is managed by the central bank, and blockchain technology is managed by the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology. To some extent, the [SIC parent agency] National Development and Reform Commission is not the government department closest to this industry.
If you take a closer look, the initiator is not the State Information Center, but the Smart City Development Research Center under the State Information Center. The so-called government department that is endorsing BSN is a research center under a think tank of a department that has nothing to do with blockchain. Therefore, it is totally inaccurate to call the BSN an organization led by the Chinese government.
Secondly, in fact, there are many organizations similar to the BSN, and their models are similar, that is, to create a so-called blockchain platform, and allow enterprises and developers to design blockchain applications on this platform. Those with a little strength, such as Ant Financial, Ping An, and Weizhong, write their own code and build their own alliance chain platforms; those without strength, directly use overseas open source public chains, and copy them. A so-called alliance chain. We can see similarly the Trusted Blockchain Alliance under the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology.
Translations by Jiayi Shi.
China’s Blockchain Services Network, known as the BSN, will launch cross-chain interoperability on its testnets by the end of October and will integrate a second cross-chain protocol called Poly Enterprise, according to the CEO of the BSN’s main architect company.
Why it matters: With the inclusion of Poly, the BSN is edging towards a free-market approach to interoperability, first revealed to TechNode in June. The BSN is giving several options to developers instead of limiting the platform to one cross-chain protocol.
Blockchain Services Network (BSN)
What: A platform for blockchain development, bringing together cloud services and different chain protocols on city nodes.
Why: To reduce the cost of blockchain application design and deployment while powering communication between chains. It will be made available around the world through local cloud providers, ultimately creating a global internet of blockchains.
Who: It is part of the government’s Global Blockchain Strategy unveiled by Chinese President Xi Jinping in November 2019, spearheaded by the China State Information Center, China Mobile, China Union Pay, and Red Date Technology.
Looking for the right connection: “Today all interoperability technologies are at application-level or framework-level,” neither of which is system-level “true interoperability,” Yifan He, CEO of Red Date, the company which is building the BSN’s software, told TechNode on Tuesday.
“A true interoperability protocol will be here one day, we hope BSN would be the one to create it.”
—Yifan He, CEO of Red Date Technology
The candidates: Starting in late October, developers will be able to use Poly Enterprise and Irisnet’s Inter-Realm Industry Trust Alliance (IRITA) framework to build decentralized applications (dapps) that can work with other dapps, even those built using different blockchain frameworks.
READ MORE: EXCLUSIVE: China’s BSN and Irisnet are building an ‘internet of blockchains’
Context: In June, Red Date’s He revealed to TechNode that Shanghai-based Irisnet will be the first company to enable interoperability in the BSN.
]]>READ MORE: BSN says decoupling is to meet compliance rules in China
Last week, various Chinese government-related entities gave mixed messages on cryptocurrencies, while Binance said it had been banned in Russia just days before Huobi launched a new crypto trading app in the same region. Finally, two interesting developments in privacy applications for blockchain came from China.
The world of blockchain moves fast, and nowhere does it move faster than China. Here’s what you need to know about China’s block-world in the week of Sept. 22-29.
]]>
Since Beyond Meat launched in China, plant-based meat has been all the rage—at least in news headlines. Rarely do the marketing-savvy earth warriors ask, does China really want new age plant-based meat?
Dozens of companies are betting that it does, including Yum China, the company behind KFC, Taco Bell and Pizza Hut. In July, we visited the fast food chains to try Beyond Meat’s plant-based meat alternative. It exceeded my carnivorous expectations.
I was especially impressed by Taco Bell’s vegan taco. The vegan beef was really juicy and blended well with the sauce. KFC’s vegan burger was good for the first few bites, but the portion was too big for me, and I felt my stomach fill with fast food grease as I ate more. Let’s not talk about my Pizza Hut experience…
All these foreign brands entering the Chinese market with armies of branding and marketing specialists are facing competition from local startups—and a centuries-old industry of Buddhist vegetarian meat.
With China’s market heating up, we thought it’s time to do a taste test on some of the local veggie meat brands. A lot of the hype around plant-based dishes on the Chinese market has revolved around western food, but we wanted to see how they’d perform with Chinese basics.
We picked dumplings—if plant-based pork is going to catch on in Chinese kitchens, stomachs, and hearts, it has to work with dumplings. They are usually made with pork, which is China’s favorite meat.
To ensure our taste test adhered to the highest standards of justice and fairness, we would not reveal to our tasters which dumpling was made with which plant-based meat until after they had given us their feedback. In other words, the phyto-beasts were subjected to a blind test.
The dough-wrapped pockets of delicious Chinese cooking have the added benefit of hiding what’s inside, sparing us the cost of blind folds.
The contenders:
We invited two vegetarians and two meat eaters to try our dumplings. Check out the video to see their verdict.
]]>This week, Chinese Filecoin miners threatened to fork the massively popular network, the BSN will integrate two dozen public chains, and a new cryptocurrency mining rig may give Bitmain a run for its money. Two reports show how China stacks up globally in the blockchain world.
The world of blockchain moves fast, and nowhere does it move faster than China. Here’s what you need to know about China’s block-world in the week of Sept. 15-22.
A group of Chinese investors threatened to fork Filecoin, a cryptocurrency network whose main offering is decentralized file storage. The completed mainnet is scheduled to be released in the coming weeks.
The coin, which has been massively popular among Chinese miners, issued a $250 million initial coin offering three years ago.
The head of MIX Group, a Filecoin mining company, unveiled the threat at a conference in Xiamen. He said users are not satisfied with the governance of the network, saying it is too centralized, and with the fact that the mainnet launch has been delayed from its initial release in March 2020.
The mainnet launch could wash out as many as 80% of miners through a staking mechanism, a recent report said. (Decrypt)
E-commerce giant JD.com is partnering with the People’s Bank of China Digital Currency Research Institute to build mobile apps that can support China’s digital yuan, local media reported.
Why it matters: JD is not the first company reported to be working with the central bank on the digital currency, but this deal has been described in more specific terms. The news also confirms that blockchain technology will be used in dissemination of the currency.
Details: JD.com has entered a “strategic partnership” to build what the announcement calls mobile and blockchain platforms for the central bank digital currency, local media reported, and to integrate those platforms with JD’s existing ecosystems.
READ MORE: INSIGHTS | China’s digital currency has a long way to go
Context: The digital yuan has been in development since 2014 and is currently piloted by select individuals in Shenzhen, Suzhou, Xiongan, and Chengdu. But these tests appear to be very limited, and few details have surfaced.
I love lurking on Linkedin. A couple of weeks ago, something struck me. While Tiktok was facing the prospect of a US ban under an Aug. 7 executive order, many people in my European networks were delighted to announce that they were joining the short video company. Countless emojis were harmed in the making of these Linkedin posts.
As its future in the US is under threat, Tiktok appears to be trying to fortify its operations in Europe. On Tiktok’s careers site, 272 jobs are posted in Europe (excluding Russia) at the time of writing. Dublin takes the lead with 117 jobs, London comes second with 78, and Germany third with a total of 34. Germany is hiring for offices in Berlin, Munich, and Hamburg. Positions in Madrid, Paris, Stockholm, Warsaw, and Milan are also seeking candidates.
In Europe, Tiktok’s hiring patterns reflect its growing ambitions on the continent and a push to localize and clear the bloc’s data security hurdles.
A data sweep on Twitter conducted by TechNode indicates that Tiktok has ramped up its hiring in Europe. Bytedance employees and job advertising services including the UK’s Job Centre Plus, a state-run employment platform, have mentioned jobs at Tiktok more frequently in recent months.
In August, 42 links to the Tiktok global careers website were posted on Twitter, compared to 12 in February.
“It’s quite incredible how many people they’re bringing on board. Every week there’s new people,” a new hire who joined Tiktok’s European operations in August told TechNode.
Open positions on the company’s website include a wide variety of roles, from advertising and brand strategists to privacy specialists. Tiktok appears intent on localization, seeking fluent speakers in most European languages, such as Swedish, Hungarian, and Greek.
“Of course everybody is looking at what’s happening in the US,” the recent hire said, “but there’s no anxiety. On the contrary, everyone is very optimistic.”
Despite the ongoing row with Washington, Tiktok hasn’t taken down its job listings in the US. Currently, 465 positions are listed as available in the US on the app’s website.
READ MORE: China tech faces double compliance challenge in Europe
Bytedance’s continued hiring for the popular video app shows it is optimistic about the European market, despite criticism over its privacy policy. Regulators have expressed concern over personal data flowing from the EU to China, the app’s handling of minors’ data and consent. But as long as Tiktok complies with local data regulations, the company should be safe in Europe, experts told TechNode.
Tiktok currently has over 1,600 employees based in Europe, roughly 1,300 of whom are based in the UK and Ireland, the company said in a statement Monday.
A Europe-wide ban is “unlikely,” said Jan Stryjak, Associate Research Director at Counterpoint Research. “Tiktok has not faced the same levels of scrutiny and political grandstanding in Europe as in the US,” he said, so it makes sense that it “looks to establish itself to build on its rapid growth in the region.”
In Europe, regulators have tried to appear neutral. “I am not in the business of banning any company, I am in the business of explaining very clearly what are our rules,” EU Commission Internal Market Commissioner Thierry Bretton told Politico earlier this month.
“In the short-term, I wouldn’t expect any comparable moves on Tiktok in Europe to match US actions,” Andrew Small, associate senior policy fellow at think tank European Council on Foreign Relations, told TechNode.
By contrast, the situation around Huawei includes “fundamental questions” about the company’s role in Europe’s digital infrastructure and “longstanding issues about Chinese subsidies undermining European telecoms firms,” he said.
Tiktok does not provoke the same sensitivities. “The issues at stake with Tiktok relate to censorship and data use, neither of which is likely to lead to an outright ban, and there will be no inherent objection to Tiktok hiring and investing in Europe either,” said Small.
New data privacy and security rules in the European bloc are compelling Tiktok to reconfigure its global operations.
Bretton stressed that the “key subject” when it comes to Tiktok operating within the bloc is data, highlighting the rigor of Europe’s data security and privacy rules in comparison to China.
“The EU has not had to deal with this issue on a really major scale given that Chinese apps have not made many inroads with European consumers,” Small said.
In August, the European Court of Justice ruled that personal data collected on EU citizens can only be transferred to third countries that have similar privacy regimes. The decision, known as Schrems II, could mean that personal data collected by Tiktok on European citizens can never be legally transferred to China.
A few weeks after the ruling, Tiktok said its Irish and UK entities will be taking over data management for European users from its US operations. Shortly after, the company announced plans for a new data center in Dublin. According to company statements, the data center will form part of a “Privacy and Safety Hub” for Europe, the Middle East, and Africa.
Bytedance said it plans to spend €420 million ($500 million) on the Dublin data center. The investment will “create hundreds of jobs” in the city, said Roland Cloutier, Tiktok’s Global Chief Information Security Officer in a blog post.
Cloutier previously worked at Automatic Data Processing, a Nasdaq-listed HR systems provider, as well as US computer manufacturer Dell.
The job listings on Tiktok’s website appear to line up with this announcement. Dublin is the city with the most job openings.
But the Dublin data center doesn’t mean that Tiktok can put the data security issue to bed.
The EU is known for having some of the world’s most stringent personal data protection rules, known as the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR).
In June, the European Data Protection Board, an EU body in charge of the application of the GDPR, set up a task force to probe Tiktok’s data processing activities and privacy practices across the EU, China’s Caixin reported.
Privacy watchdogs in France and the Netherlands have also launched inquiries into Tiktok’s privacy policies, especially as they pertain to Tiktok’s underage users.
Tiktok has not replied to a Sept. 15 email seeking comment.
Tiktok’s job listings show that politics have not dented its ambitions to be a true multinational. The company is charging ahead with establishing regional hubs and localization teams in key European cities, all answering to a CEO currently based in California.
London ranks second among European cities in active jobs listings on Tiktok’s careers website. The short video app operator is reportedly considering moving its headquarters from Beijing to London, British media reported in August.
“A new global headquarters in London could be a huge boon for the UK’s job market, which has suffered in recent months due to the Covid-19 pandemic,” Stryjak said.
UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson will welcome the Tiktok headquarters with open arms, risking the wrath of US President Donald Trump, UK media has reported.
The British government is reportedly split over the potential Tiktok move. Trade and tech officials and ministers are at odds over how to handle the Chinese tech company, the Telegraph reported citing UK government sources familiar with the matter.
Germany, which ranks third in the number of listed job openings, represents a big market with a big pool of tech talent, experts told TechNode.
It’s also a strategic location that Tiktok can use to “buy some goodwill, given its outsized influence over the European debate,” Small said.
Yet those who decide to join the company in these times are taking on a lot of uncertainty. The app’s US and EU operations were nearly sold to Microsoft after pressure from the US government. After weeks of speculation about a deal with Microsoft, the company has reportedly settled on a partnership with Oracle instead.
TechNode found two people who have been approached by recruiters. Both said they ignored the recruiters’ messages as they were not interested in working for the short video app. “Tiktok is stupid,” one of them said.
But Linkedin job updates indicate that Tiktok’s attempts to poach top tech talent have been successful at times.
Many of the new hires came from some of the West’s biggest companies, including big tech. The person who onboarded recently said the salary offer was “very competitive” but didn’t give any further details. But “it wasn’t like I couldn’t trust my eyes,” they said.
Another new hire said that they were under a non-disclosure agreement that is valid for 100 days after onboarding.
In a Linkedin search, TechNode identified one person who worked at Amazon for seven years in Germany and recently said they joined the Bytedance app in September. A UK-based professional with four years of experience at Google and three years of experience at Netflix said they took a position at Tiktok in July. Another person who was at Google for two years also said they joined the app in September.
The European who is considering a position said that working for the Chinese company in the midst of an international storm seemed “insane” at first, but that they have come to appreciate the challenge.
The recent hire said that Tiktok is “an exciting place to work in at the moment, regardless of how safe this job is in the long term.
“We all know that this industry is moving very fast. But it’s really interesting to be part of this and get this experience at this time,” they said.
]]>Beijing will pilot an intelligent system to assess and manage cross-border data flows as part of the city’s new free trade zone, the State Council said on Monday.
Why it matters: China’s data localization laws has been in place since 2017, but enforcement has been lagging. The law requires that overseas transfers of “important data” are cleared by public security authorities.
READ MORE: Dust has yet to settle two years after China’s landmark cybersecurity law
Details: The cross-border data flow management pilot is part of a wider system aimed at monitoring and controlling risks related to the free trade zone. It will make use of big data, AI, blockchain, and 5G to assess the security of potential cross-border data flows, in line with China’s data localization laws.
READ MORE: Beijing unveils plan for blockchain-based government
Context: Chinese law requires that important data, distinguished either by the size of the dataset or the nature of the data, are stored within Chinese borders.
This week, various governmental bodies in China were busy announcing blockchain integration in their operations. Supporters in China of decentralized finance, or “Defi,” staged a protest against centralized exchanges, while police raided cryptocurrency exchange Gate.io over the listing of the Kimchi token.
The world of blockchain moves fast, and nowhere does it move faster than China. Here’s what you need to know about China’s block-world in the week of Sept. 7-14.
READ MORE: BSN taps DAML as ‘exclusive standard’ for dapp development
READ MORE: Blockheads: China sets global blockchain standards and Canaan is alive
The leadership at cryptocurrency mining rig maker Bitmain has switched again with the re-ousting of co-founder Zhan Ketuan from the helm of the company’s Beijing operations, rival co-founder Wu Jihan said on Monday.
Why it matters: The leadership drama at the world’s leading mining equipment maker is almost a year running. It has caused disruptions in the company’s supply chain, just as product orders from the US accumulate and China’s cryptocurrency regulation is heating up.
Details: The registration information for Bitmain’s Beijing entity changed to indicate that Wu was its legal representative, Chinese media reported on Monday evening. Bitmain employees in Zhan’s faction were seen packing up their office belongings, according to reports.
“The options promised to employees have almost become waste paper.”
—Wu Jihan, recently re-instated Bitmain co-founder, in his Monday statement
Context: The drama started in October when Wu ousted Zhan in a boardroom coup. Wu claimed that Zhan had wasted company resources on an artificial intelligence chip push, far from the company’s main business model.
China’s Blockchain Services Network (BSN) has named programming language Digital Asset Management Language (DAML) the “exclusive standard” for developing smart contract applications on the platform, its architects said on Monday.
Why it matters: The BSN’s developers hope DAML will bring the platform closer to its most ambitious goal: seamless interoperability between all the major blockchain protocols.
Blockchain Services Network (BSN)
What: A platform for blockchain development, bringing together cloud services and different chain protocols on city nodes.
Why: To reduce the cost of blockchain application design and deployment while powering communication between chains. It will be made available around the world through local cloud providers, ultimately creating a global internet of blockchains.
Who: It is part of the government’s Global Blockchain Strategy unveiled by Chinese President Xi Jinping in November 2019, spearheaded by the China State Information Center, China Mobile, China Union Pay, and Red Date Technology.
READ MORE: China’s BSN and Irisnet are building an ‘internet of blockchains’
Details: DAML is an open-source blockchain-agnostic language, meaning it can work with different ledger protocols like Hyperledger Fabric and Ethereum.
“By selecting DAML as the exclusive smart contract language of the BSN itself, our developers will gain the choice of using one unifying smart contract language seamlessly and interoperably across every blockchain.”
—Yifan He, Red Date CEO in a statement on Monday
Context: The BSN operates 130 nodes across China, according to Red Date.
]]>Since 2018, there’s been talk about China losing its crypto mining lead to North America. The idea made headlines again in early 2020 after Barry Silbert, founder of $3 billion crypto investment fund Grayscale put a big bet on mining in the US.
China’s status as the world’s crypto mining leader has gone unchallenged for at least five years. The country is home to the biggest equipment manufacturers and accounts for almost 65% of the global bitcoin hashrate, a measure of computer power on the network, data compiled by researchers at the Cambridge Centre for Alternative Finance.
We’ve seen claims that Chinese miners are going to America to escape regulations, and that Americans are jumping into the industry themselves. We wanted to know if either checked out, so we made some calls.
Six China-based miners and industry insiders contacted by TechNode said they have no intention of moving their operations to North America, but industry watchers said there are signs that the industry is preparing for take off in North America.
Can this traditionally Chinese wildcat industry flourish in North America?
Silbert’s US-based blockchain group DCG made a big bet that it can. In late August, DCG announced it has committed to invest $100 million through 2021 in a crypto mining investment company it founded in 2019, Foundry.
From its base in upstate New York, Foundry wants to challenge China’s crypto mining dominance. It plans to build its own mining operations and finance other companies to do the same across the US and Canada.
According to eToro Bitcoin, Foundry’s mission could have support from Washington. The centralization of the $215 billion bitcoin network (at the time of writing) has rung alarms in the US. Just yesterday, a Congress committee debated a bill to support US competitiveness in blockchain technology that could include crypto mining.
It’s not just North America that wants to challenge China: Kazakhstan and Iran have made moves to support local crypto mining industries.
Mike Colyer, Foundry’s newly appointed CEO told TechNode that concerns around centralization are essentially about security, which are not specific to China. It’s not about “North America vs. China, or US vs. China, it’s about strengthening the decentralization and the security of the bitcoin network,” he said.
Transactions on bitcoin’s ledger are not verified by a single authority, but instead rely on consensus among the majority of the users. This makes the network vulnerable to what is known as a 51% attack, whereby the majority of the miners use their collective hashpower to take control of the network.
In an op-ed published in August, Ripple CEO Chris Larsen said that bitcoin miners’ concentration in China “means the Chinese government has the majority needed to wield control over those protocols and can effectively block or reverse transactions.”
But it’s an unlikely scenario. An attack is estimated to cost a little over $516,783 per hour. Despite professionalization and consolidation of the industry, China’s 65% is not a unit, but a wildcat industry of small miners that operate in a legal grey area.
READ MORE: INSIGHTS | Markets, not floods, will drown bitcoin miners
Chinese miners have had a rocky relationship with local authorities, to say the least. Just last week, the local government of Inner Mongolia announced it was halting electricity discounts for major cryptocurrency mines, including Bitmain and Ebang.
This news seems to support the idea that China-based miners are fed up with regulatory crackdowns and are moving out.
READ MORE: Blockheads: Mining and the curious case of the digital yuan
However, authorities in Sichuan have recently indicated that they want to legitimize and support the mining industry. New regulations will bring it under the direct supervision and taxation of the government, but only big, professionalized miners will survive the ripple effects of the new rules.
Despite these changes, Sichuan-based miners contacted by TechNode said they have no intention in moving their operations to North America. They said conditions for mining in China are still good.
Flex Yang, CEO of Babel Finance, a company which finances Chinese crypto mines, said he hasn’t seen any miners moving to North America, at least not yet.
“Chinese miners love China,” Alejandro de la Torre, VP at Poolin, one of the world’s biggest mining pools, told TechNode. He said that the rumored move to North America is “just a rumor.”
One miner contacted by TechNode said he was considering moving operations to North America but for foreign exchange purposes rather than concerns about regulation. His company is funded in US dollars instead of Chinese yuan.
He said the tides of regulation can be as unpredictable in the US as China, with the Internal Revenue Service, the federal tax agency, and local governments bringing instability.
Some states in the US have seen the value of bitcoin mining and are welcoming the new investments, Colyer said. “Georgia, North Carolina, and Texas are really excited to have folks,” he said.
Foundry isn’t betting on China-based miners crossing the pond. He says US institutional investors have realized the value of the industry and want in. In the last three years, many have built out infrastructure in the form of facilities waiting to be filled with mining rigs, Colyer said.
But for North America to develop its mining industry, it needs more than the good graces of regulators.
Mining needs a lot of cheap electricity to be a profitable business. The abundance of cheap electricity in parts of China, notably Sichuan, Xinjiang, and Inner Mongolia, has helped miners scale up their operations by keeping costs low.
At the peak of rain season, electricity produced by hydropower stations in Sichuan, a province on the foot of the Himalayas, prices can be as low as $0.01 per kilowatt hour. The mining provinces are also sparsely populated, which means a lot of electricity is untapped.
“North America has a few advantages that can make it as competitive for mining as China,” Ethan Vera, co-founder of North America-based mining operator Luxor and founder of Hash Rate Index, told TechNode.
Vera said that the idea that China has cheaper and better sources of electricity than the US is not entirely accurate.
“Canada and the US have very advanced electricity grid infrastructure that can be used for crypto mining at a lower cost,” he said, pointing to Texas where he said electricity can cost less than $0.02, the state has seen a lot of mining infrastructure build-outs.
Foundry sees opportunity in parts of the US with power grid conditions similar to Sichuan: Washington state, western New York, Texas, and the Tennessee Valley, are among the parts of North America that Colyer said have similar power grid conditions to Sichuan.
But other costs can stack up in the US. Labour costs are significantly higher in North America, the miner who is considering moving his operations there said. Yang said the overall cost of developing mining operations is higher in the US.
US-based miner Vera thinks Chinese mining rig manufacturers welcome investors’ interest in North America, even “prioritizing” orders from there. “They don’t want to be China-centric either,” Foundry CEO Colyer said.
“We plan to continue collaborating with Foundry as we focus on increasing our global market share,” Jordan Chen, COO of MicroBT, said in a press release announcing Foundry’s launch.
The bulk of the orders for mining rigs in 2020 are from North America, said several industry insiders, including Yang. It is likely that major manufacturers will be occupied with delivering orders to North America for the rest of the year, with little to no capacity to deliver new orders to China.
If true, this could suffer a major blow to China’s mining industry. Access to the newest machines is a make-it-or-break-it condition for an industry where small differences in equipment stack up to major competitive edges.
In July, Bitmain signed the biggest known deal for its newest mining rig with Washington state-based Core Scientific, which happens to be Colyer’s previous gig. The Beijing company will sell 17,595 S19 Antminers to Core Scientific over the next four months.
READ MORE: Battle of Bitmain: big Antminers sale as co-founders try truce
We didn’t find evidence of an exodus of Chinese miners, but North American investors are putting their weight, and wallets, behind the local crypto mining industry. Their investments have yet to mark a visible mark on hashrates, and it is too early to tell how different costs will stack up in the cash flow-intensive industry.
Foundry, backed by the deep pockets of Silbert’s DCG, will try to boost the North American industry.
Politics might make this an opportune time for Foundry’s mission to bring mining to North America, as US lawmakers are talking about national competitiveness in blockchain and cryptocurrencies.
Vera predicts that the tide is just “beginning.” “While 2020 hasn’t seen any large change yet due to the rainy season in Sichuan, tariffs and manufacturer delays, 2021 is poised to see a significant change,” he said.
Correction: An earlier version of the article incorrectly stated that DCG has already invested $100 million in Foundry and that Flex Yang is the co-founder of Babel Finance.
]]>On Sunday, Chinese crypto investors holders began withdrawing their deposits from centralized cryptocurrency exchanges in an effort to protest what investors say are unfair practices on such platforms following the crash of Sushiswap, a popular decentralized finance token.
The protest was circulated on Chinese microblogging platform Weibo and instant messaging app Wechat on Saturday and Sunday. Some users called it a “revolution.” It is unclear how many people participated or how much cryptocurrency was withdrawn in total.
Reserves of Ethereum on several exchanges started falling early on Sunday, but the change was small. Binance’s Ethereum reserves dropped by $62,000 from Sept. 5 to Sept. 6.
Some exchanges blocked Ethereum withdrawals, saying they had to update their systems unexpectedly.
“On Sunday, Okex briefly suspended [Ethereum] withdrawals to allow our developers to implement a small but necessary system upgrade. This was not something that we had foreseen which is why we were not able to post prior notice of the upgrade,” Jay Hao, CEO of cryptocurrency exchange Okex told TechNode.
Why Occupy? Colin Wu, the journalist from Wu Blockchain who broke the news, compared it to the Occupy Wall Street movement of 2011. He told TechNode that the protests didn’t have any specific demands, it is just about “hating the rich.”
Investor grievances with centralized exchanges trace back several months. Centralized exchanges have the power to make money off the investors on their platforms, users argue. Such exchanges can manipulate token prices and sell fake coins, taking advantage of the price fluctuations to make money for themselves while misleading investors on their platforms, they said.
Research in 2019 found that 95% of the trading volume on popular exchanges was fake. In May, Huobi and Okex were among big exchanges to join a “real volume” metric launched by crypto data platform Messari.
The Sushiswap connection: On Saturday, popular decentralized finance (defi) token Sushiswap crashed unexpectedly. The coin had led decentralized exchanges to unforeseen heights.
On Sept. 1, shortly after the Aug. 29 Sushiswap launch, the 24-hour trading volume on Uniswap, a decentralized exchange, surpassed that of Coinbase, the leading centralized US exchange. On the same day, Sushiswap accounted for 77% of Uniswap’s trading volume.
On Saturday, Sushiswap’s price dropped by 70%. Some analysts have attributed the fall to the fact that Sushiswap’s lead developer cashed out on $15 million of funds.
But some investors accused centralized exchanges of deliberately crashing the price of the token. Sushiswap’s popularity as a defi token could be seen as a threat to the centralized model of exchanges like Binance and Huobi.
This theory caught on in Chinese social media, with users posting messages conveying their belief that centralized exchanges wanted to kill Sushiswap’s success.
To be continued: While the total amount of cryptocurrency withdrawn from centralized exchanges was small, the movement marks a shift in Chinese crypto investors’ view of centralized exchanges.
]]>Last week, the usual flurry of blockchain news slowed, but the news that broke was big. The first China-made global blockchain standards were approved and bitcoin rig maker Canaan may be back from near-death.
The world of blockchain moves fast, and nowhere does it move faster than China. Here’s what you need to know about China’s block-world from the week of Aug. 21-Sept. 6.
Cryptocurrency rig maker Canaan Creative has endured two short reports, several investor lawsuits, and an 85% decrease in share price since its listing on the Nasdaq in November. Its unaudited financial results for the second quarter indicate that the company is getting back on its feet and cleaning up its act.
Canaan cut its net losses by more than half in Q2 to RMB 16.8 million from RMB 39.9 million ($5.84 million) in the three months ended March. Its gross profit rocketed 1,711% in the same time period, and 302% year on year.
However, Canaan is not out of the woods quite yet. Concerns set out in two short reports over the company’s business model have not yet seen improvement: cash burning and research and development (R & D) investment.
Canaan’s cash and cash equivalents have decreased by 69% compared with Q4 2019, which the company attributed to a splurge on short-term investments. In the same time period, the rig maker’s short-term investments increased by a factor of 30.
Authors of the short reports accused the company of underspending on R & D, resulting in machines inferior to those of its competitors. The company has decreased its R & D spending by 38% sequentially and 28% year on year. (Canaan Creative)
Fintech giant Ant Group plans to raise more money through its listing on the Shanghai tech board than its simultaneous debut in Hong Kong, Reuters reported citing sources with direct knowledge of the matter.
Why it matters: Ant Group’s initial public offering (IPO) is expected to rake in $30 billion and could be one of the biggest listings of the year.
Details: The breakdown of the total float between the Shanghai and Hong Kong stock exchanges has not been decided. But after feedback from investors, Ant Group is looking to sell more shares in Shanghai, according to Reuters.
READ MORE: Ant Group IPO filings: five key takeaways
Context: Ant Group has not disclosed key details for the dual listings including the timetable, total float, and number of shares. It is looking to sell between 10% and 15% of its total shares.
Last week was a busy week in China’s blockchain world, particularly in cryptocurrency mining circles. The Battle of Bitmain drags on, while the government of Inner Mongolia is cracking down on the local mining industry. At the end of the week, the digital yuan made an appearance on a banking app, then mysteriously disappeared.
The world of blockchain moves fast, and nowhere does it move faster than China. Here’s what you need to know about China’s block-world for the week of August 24-30.
China Construction Bank, one of China’s “big four,” on Saturday opened its digital yuan e-wallet to the public. The feature was available on the bank’s app, leading to widespread speculation that the central bank’s digital currency was finally ready for public use. Some users even managed to conduct some transactions.
Later on the same day, the feature disappeared with no explanation, leaving users and speculators puzzled about what CCB was doing with the digital renminbi.
READ MORE: INSIGHTS | Markets, not floods, will drown bitcoin miners
Alibaba’s fintech affiliate Ant Group filed draft IPO prospectuses for a dual listing on the Shanghai and Hong Kong stock exchanges on Tuesday, the first simultaneous listing for a Chinese tech company.
Ant Group is reportedly eyeing a $200 billion valuation, which would make it the world’s most valuable fintech company. Such a valuation would top those of some of the world’s biggest banks, including China’s big four. It could be one of the biggest IPOs in recent years, potentially topping Saudi Arabian state-owned oil producer Aramco’s $29 billion listing.
READ MORE: Ant Group’s dual listing will be one of the biggest IPOs of 2020
Ant Group’s 674-page Hong Kong prospectus reveals the extent of its empire, risk factors related to geopolitical tensions, and financial regulations. Here are five key takeaways.
In the first half of 2020, the company earned RMB 72.5 billion in revenue, a year-on-year increase of 38%. Digital finance services drove growth, growing 56% year on year to RMB 46 billion in the period.
The company booked a net profit of RMB 21.9 billion in the first half, outstripping its RMB 18.1 net profit for all of 2019, according to the prospectus.
Monthly active users of mobile payment app Alipay, Ant Group’s key asset, reached 711 million as of end-June, while transaction volume for the app reached RMB 118 trillion during the 12 months ended June 30.
The bulk of Ant Group’s revenue comes from its “Credittech” business, which operates a range of loan services targeting individuals and merchants. Credittech revenue grew 59.5% year on year in the first six months of the year to RMB 28.6 billion, accounting for 39.4% of its total revenue in the period.
Credittech’s key products include Huabei, a virtual credit card service; Jiebei, a micro-lending service targeting individuals; and Mybank Loan, which lends money to small and medium-sized businesses (SMB). The company said in the prospectus that the consumer credit balance of its loan businesses was RMB 1.7 trillion and the SMB credit balance was RMB 400 billion as of the end of June.
Ant Group warned investors that rising geopolitical tensions could seriously impede its business. It emphasized rising risks of sanctions and trade restrictions on Chinese tech firms from the US government.
READ MORE: Techwar: Trump to end transactions with Tencent and Bytedance in 45 days
Such restrictions have the potential not only to banish Ant Group from US markets, but also disrupt its ability to participate in the US dollar-led global financial system, the company said.
The company singled out its cross-border payments business as exposed to such actions, adding that cross-border payments will be a key area of investment for Ant Group in the future.
Some analysts have said that new listing restrictions in the US are the very reason that Ant Group didn’t list in the US, as Alibaba did with massive success in 2014.
In June and July, four Chinese companies, including China’s US IPO pioneer Sina and online travel agency Ctrip, announced plans to delist from the US stock market. Big Chinese tech companies listed in the US have also started dual listing their shares in Hong Kong, signaling a retreat from US financial markets.
The fintech company has tried to distance itself from Alibaba founder Jack Ma and Alibaba in the past, insisting that it is an independent company. Yet Alibaba shares in New York jumped 3.6% Tuesday on the back of Ant Group’s IPO news.
The prospectus said the billionaire entrepreneur is Ant Group’s “ultimate controller,” holding a 50.52% stake in the company. Information about Ma’s stake after the IPO is redacted in the draft prospectus.
The Alibaba and Ant Group founder helms a limited liability partnership, which controls two other partnerships that are Ant Group’s biggest shareholders.
According to the prospectus, Ma transferred 66% of the controlling entity’s equity shares to Ant Group’s leadership on Aug. 18. He divided it equally between Eric Jing, the company’s executive chairman, Simon Hu, the CEO, and Fang Jiang, a non-executive director.
Ant Group also recognized that its success is closely linked to Alibaba. The prospectus says Alibaba, mentioned 650 times in the document, is a “major shareholder,” and the prospectus reports that the two have a data sharing agreement. It lists conflicts of interest between the two giant companies as a risk factor, highlighting the fact they have “overlapping” user bases.
There are “no assurances,” the prospectus says, that Alibaba won’t try to compete with its fintech twin.
The prospectus warns of tightening regulations in key business segments for Ant Group, both globally and in China: payments, investment, insurance, and credit, among others.
It makes special reference to China’s tightening anti-monopoly laws: Authorities have in recent years “strengthened enforcement,” it said.
China’s central bank is reportedly not happy about Ant Group and Tencent’s hold over the domestic digital payments market through Alipay and Wechat. In late July, Reuters reported that Chinese regulators are preparing for an antitrust investigation in the two apps.
READ MORE: INSIGHTS | China’s digital currency has a long way to go
The digital yuan’s e-wallet is expected to compete with the effective duopoly, possibly breaking Ant Group and Tencent’s chokehold on the market.
“If we fail to adapt to these new initiatives in a timely manner, our business, financial condition, and results of operations may be materially and adversely affected,” the company said in reference to the digital yuan.
Ant Group’s IPO filings are not final, and many pieces of crucial information were redacted, including the number and price of shares, and the company’s total valuation.
]]>“The A Share [REDACTED] comprises an [REDACTED] of initially [REDACTED] A Shares for subscription, representing approximately [REDACTED]% of our total outstanding Shares following the completion of the H Share [REDACTED] and the A Share [REDACTED], assuming that the [REDACTED] are not exercised.”
Ant Group in its draft IPO prospectus filed at the Hong Kong Stock Exchange
Much has changed in the blockchain universe since Vitalik Buterin released one of the most influential white papers in the history of the distributed ledger technology. His 2013 Ethereum white paper was the first step in developing the world’s second-largest cryptocurrency by market capitalization. Unlike Bitcoin, the Ethereum protocol was created to support the development of blockchain applications (known as decentralized applications, or Dapps), which has rendered it into the go-to platform for blockchain developers.
One change that Buterin doesn’t often talk about is China’s rise as a global blockchain powerhouse.
On the heels of the annual Ethereum Developers Conference, TechNode interviewed Ethereum co-founder Buterin via e-mail. Supported by the Ethereum Foundation, EDCON is a community-supported event organized by LinkTime, Unitimes, ETHPlanet, and other Ethereum communities.
Buterin spoke about blockchain adoption in China, China’s Blockchain Services Network (BSN), and the early days of Ethereum.
The Ethereum co-founder welcomes Chinese developers, government, and large enterprises to the field, but warns that a preference for consortium blockchains may get in the way of their international ambitions. This type of blockchain centralizes control of the network.
In an international context you cannot assume that there is even a single government that everyone trusts, whereas public blockchains are more easily perceived as being neutral.
VItalik Buterin
Buterin also sees potential in the Chinese government-led “internet of blockchains” BSN, but cautions that it’s far from a done deal. He compared the hype to Facebook’s Libra digital currency, which also made headlines when announced. Only five months later, major partners pulled out from the project, and it has yet to pick up steam.
Blockchain Services Network (BSN)
What: A platform for blockchain development, bringing together cloud services and different chain protocols on city nodes.
Why: To reduce the cost of blockchain application design and deployment while powering communication between chains. It will be made available around the world through local cloud providers, ultimately creating a global internet of blockchains.
Who: It is part of the government’s Global Blockchain Strategy unveiled by Chinese President Xi Jinping in November 2019, spearheaded by the China State Information Center, China Mobile, China Union Pay, and Red Date Technology. For details watch our webinar with BSN’s architects and key partners.
TechNode: Where are you seeing the most blockchain talent, geographically speaking?
Vitalik Buterin: I think it’s widely distributed! At the beginning it was more highly concentrated in Silicon Valley, Berlin, and a few other places, but now there are hubs of blockchain talent all around the world. I see many successful teams in the US, Europe, Australia, and recently more in China as well.
TN: Governments are increasingly involved in blockchain, either through regulation or their own initiatives. Consortium chains are garnering increasing attention and popularity. Do you think that either or both of these moves diminish the potential for decentralization?
VB: My impression is actually that public chains are gaining more support recently, including from large enterprises and even government applications in a few cases. Consortium chains are of course the more safe and conservative option, and much more powerful than public chains in the short term because public chains have scalability issues, but I think public chains will prove themselves to be more safe and scalable with time.
TN: How do you think China’s increased activity in the blockchain world, both by the private and public sectors, will affect the development of the technology in the next decade? What are some pros and cons?
VB: I am definitely happy that so many in China are interested in building blockchain applications. We are in a time when there is great concern about what technologies can be trusted; blockchains cannot solve all problems but there are definitely some things that blockchains can make better by making it easier to build platforms where users control their own data, improving auditability and transparency of algorithms, etc.
One main challenge I see is that so far Chinese large enterprises and government tend to focus mostly on consortium chains, and while I think this will work within China, I also think that many of the most valuable blockchain applications are international ones, and in an international context you cannot assume that there is even a single government that everyone trusts, whereas public blockchains are more easily perceived as being neutral. So I do think that more adoption of public chains is going to be necessary. BSN integrating with public chains is definitely a positive step in this regard.
TN: Ethereum is one of the chains available on China’s BSN, according to Red Date. How was the decision to participate taken, can you describe the reasoning? How do you think you can manage the collaboration/competition relationship given that both projects pertain to smart contracts and Dapps?
VB: That decision was taken by the BSN group, it would be better to ask them for their reasoning! I think they simply want to give developers options and the ability to use high-quality public networks that are widely used, and Ethereum is absolutely at the forefront of that. I don’t see BSN as being a competitor to Ethereum; I see it as being a different layer.
TN: What is your take on the BSN more broadly? What will its impact be?
VB: I think it’s still too early to tell; it remains to be seen exactly what kinds of projects will be built on BSN and how it will evolve. It’s important to not try to guess too much from early initial information about a project when it’s being released; e.g. I think this is one of the mistakes that people made with Libra.
TN: It is said that back in 2013 you proposed creating a scripting language on top of Bitcoin, but that this didn’t go down well. If this is true, what do you think looking back on that interaction now? Is there anything you would have done differently? Do you think that, ultimately, the creation of Ethereum was for the best?
VB: This is a misconception; I did not actually propose to build on bitcoin first. I proposed to build on Primecoin instead of Bitcoin, because at the time the Bitcoin community was already having debates with many people pushing to change the protocol to make it impossible to build second-layer protocols of the type that I wanted to build on top. A big part of the reason why I wanted to build on Primecoin instead of building an independent blockchain was because at the time I expected I would have to write the code myself and I did not see myself capable of writing an independent blockchain from scratch. However, when I published the idea, far more people quickly offered to help, and so I did feel like I had the ability to create Ethereum as a separate blockchain.
TN: You began your career as a journalist at Bitcoin Magazine. Have skills from media helped you in your later career? What is the most common mistake journalists and public speakers make when communicating blockchain with the general public?
VB: Probably the two most important skills that I learned were (i) an understanding of the tech and economics and other properties of bitcoin and cryptocurrency, and (ii) writing skills. I think the biggest mistake made by a lot of educational writing is that there are usually two types of educational writing. First, there is writing that tries to fully explain the idea technically, with the goal of helping people fully understand it and be able to implement it; however, this writing tends to be very academic, very difficult to read, and often written to be read by people who studied the same things in university as the author etc etc. Second, there is writing that targets the general public, but is completely technically inaccurate. I feel like there is a large missing space in between these two extremes, and it’s what I try to target with a lot of my writing.
TN: What was it like to be paid in Bitcoin (BTC) in the early 2010s? What did your family and friends tell you? What were the most important reasons why you got involved with cryptos?
VB: Being paid with BTC for the first time definitely felt like becoming part of a new world. My family and friends were not too interested at first, though I became interested very quickly; I found the combination of math and technology and ideas around open source software, digital communities and freedom very attractive. It took time for other people to find cryptocurrencies interesting as well.
TN: What is the most important roadblock in a blockchain-powered internet, back in the early 2010s and today? How was your thinking about the technology changed? Have you discovered new potential/limits that you didn’t see before?
VB: There are definitely many things that I understand now that I did not understand well back then. One example of this is around decentralized governance. In the early 2010s, I was very interested in DAOs (fully decentralized companies running on the blockchain) and similar ideas, but I understood little about the challenges of actually building them and the economics of governance mechanisms.
Since then I’ve come to understand much more, and I know what the limits are; for example, I have written many articles about how coin-based voting systems are vulnerable to bribing voters, control by very few wealthy actors, and similar problems. Understanding the economics and the limits of oracles has also been another significant advancement since then. [Oracles connect Dapps with the real world, facilitating the execution of smart contracts.] Though at the same time, we have come much further in actually having these systems running on a live network, so I think there has been progress.
TN: Ethereum 2.0 (Eth2.0) is adopting a proof of stake consensus algorithm to improve the network’s scalability and efficiency. But it’s likely that staking pools, much like mining pools, will emerge to dominate the network, increasing centralization. Will Eth2.0 sacrifice some decentralization for scalability? How do you plan to deal with centralization stemming from staking pools?
VB: The Eth2.0 research team takes decentralization very seriously. We have made many protocol changes to try to make the protocol more friendly to individual and small-scale stakers. Staking pools are definitely going to happen, through it is definitely our hope, and our expectation, that there is less centralization in staking than there was in mining.
]]>China’s dino-banks are starting to look more favorably upon blockchain. Huobi is charging towards blockchain-powered finance, and wants to help people save cryptocurrencies. A Chinese startup has sold its public blockchain solution to a provincial government, and Vechain wants to sell blockchain for the sustainability of supply chains. Meanwhile, cryptocurrencies are being used to transfer money from China overseas.
The world of blockchain moves fast, and nowhere does it move faster than China. Here’s what you need to know about China’s block-world in the week of August 17-23.
READ MORE: BSN says decoupling is to meet compliance rules in China
READ MORE: INSIGHTS | Markets, not floods, will drown bitcoin miners
The miners: The global bitcoin hashrate, a measure of mining activity in the bitcoin network, suffered a 15% decrease last week as mines in Sichuan were hit by floods and power outages. China’s southwestern province accounts for more than half of the global hashrate. As of Sunday, the network has mostly bounced back, with the hashrate at over 90% as of Monday, compared to the last high before the rainstorms on August 16. (Coindesk)
The crypto flight: Over $50 billion in cryptocurrencies have been moved from Chinese wallets to other countries in the last year, a report by Chainanalysis said. The report suggests that Chinese investors are looking to park their funds elsewhere, and are looking to cryptocurrency due to restrictions on owning foreign currencies. (CNBC)
Dragon City: Chinese developers are building a distinctly Chinese virtual city on the world’s largest Ethereum-powered virtual plot of land. Dubbed Dragon City, the blockchain-based city draws heavily on Chinese history and myths. Users are experimenting with monetization models, such as renting virtual landmarks to other users. (Decrypt)
Hong Kong and DCEP: China plans to test the digital yuan in Hong Kong. But the city’s currency is pegged to the US dollar. This puts the city at an uncomfortable position, argues Bloomberg’s Andy Mukherjee: it could be the first battleground for the two currencies. (Bloomberg Opinion)
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The 13-minute gameplay video of “Black Myth Wu Kong,” an upcoming role-playing PC and console game by a relatively unknown Chinese indie studio, is taking the internet by storm.
Why it matters: While China’s mobile game developers have found global success with mass-market hits like Tencent’s “Honor of Kings,” its studios haven’t produced critically acclaimed premium games.
“I feel if this game got properly released, it would become the first genuine Chinese next gen game. It looks very good!”
—Top-voted comment from “dream208” on gamers’ subreddit
Details: Game Science, the studio behind Black Myth, released the gameplay video on Youtube on Thursday morning. A day later, the video has gained 426,000 views. Including reposts by other Youtube channels, it has reached almost 3 million views. On Chinese streaming platform Bilibili, the video has been viewed more than 11 million times.
Context: Game Science has previously released three other PC and mobile titles, the most acclaimed being 2016 multiplayer strategy game, “Art of War: Red Tides.” This is its first title to be released on consoles.
]]>READ MORE: INSIDER | The sun never sets on Tencent’s gaming empire
Public blockchain startup Conflux will set up a new data management system for the provincial government of Hunan and set up an innovation and training lab at the province.
Why it matters: This is the second official endorsement that Conflux has received from a government entity—an extremely rare feat for a public blockchain startup—after it struck a deal with the local Shanghai government in December.
“It is a great opportunity to demonstrate to the wider society that blockchain is actually useful and not just speculation.”
—Conflux founder Fan Long to TechNode
Details: Conflux will “revamp” the provincial government’s information architecture using its blockchain solutions and create a blockchain research and training facility at Hunan University, the startup’s founder Fan Long told TechNode.
Context: After Xi Jinping encouraged the adoption of blockchain last autumn, local governments have jumped on the bandwagon.
READ MORE: Beijing unveils plan for blockchain-based government
Correction: An earlier version of this article incorrectly stated that Fan Long was the CEO of Conflux.
]]>Amid escalations in the tech war, Bytedance has applied for five financial licenses in Hong Kong through its local subsidiary.
Why it matters: If approved, the licenses would allow Bytedance to sell securities and futures, trade foreign currency, as well as offer advisory and asset management services in Hong Kong.
READ MORE: Techwar: Trump to end transactions with Tencent and Bytedance in 45 days
Details: The Tiktok owner registered its subsidiary, Squirrel Securities, with Hong Kong authorities in December 2019, looking to move into the city’s lucrative financial services market.
Context: After the resounding success of Tiktok and its domestic version known as Douyin, Bytedance has pursued growth by entering different verticals of the tech industry including edtech, gaming, and workplace collaboration.
China has promised the world an all-digital currency. The digital yuan will replace physical cash with a digital twin: A monetary means of exchange guaranteed by the central bank and issued to consumers made up of code.
Announced in 2014, China’s central bank digital currency, dubbed Digital Cash/Electronic Payments (DCEP), was slow to take off. Officials quickly accelerated their efforts in the summer of 2019 when Facebook announced it was working on its own digital currency, Libra.
Media and fintech enthusiasts have been speculating about its grandiose effects: It will topple the dollar and upend the international order, the story goes. The US must catch up or say goodbye to its reign as a financial leader.
Bottom line: We don’t know much about the DCEP, and we probably won’t until it’s ready for prime time. What we do know indicates that, despite the hype, national implementation is a long way off. Current pilots are limited to very few select individuals. The PBOC has said it will still be testing the DCEP in 2022. But rising political tensions with the US are likely to further accelerate the PBOC’s schedule. We could see a wide rollout of the DCEP within the next year.
What’s wrong with cash? The People’s Bank of China (PBOC), hopes to solve many of the government’s biggest currency headaches:
What’s wrong with e-payments? China is often called a cashless society, but this is not true for everyone.
The engineering: A high-level understanding of how the system will work has been made public through press releases and interviews.
The security hurdle: The International Monetary Fund, the Bank of International Settlements, a global consortium of central banks, and numerous consultancies, banks, and observers have stressed the importance of ensuring tight security before issuing any CBDC.
Extending pilots: In April, the PBOC announced it had begun trialing the DCEP. The news brought about a media frenzy, but they are very limited, indicating that the digital yuan is far from national deployment.
Behind closed doors: Search Chinese social media long enough, and you will find rumors covering pretty much anything—except the DCEP. Chinese netizens are either censored or clueless about DCEP developments, other than those reported by the media.
The 2022 promise: Despite the void of information about the DCEP trials underway, the PBOC has made a single specific promise: The DCEP will be tested during the 2022 Winter Olympics. This is a stark contrast to the fact that there is no official timeline that describes how and when the digital yuan will be rolled out.
The dollar’s demise: If you follow this story on the news or Twitter, you might be concerned that the US dollar is on its deathbed. Given that a full rollout of the digital yuan is a long way to go, China hawks can take a breather.
Programmable money: What is more likely in the medium term are vast improvements in China’s monetary and financial systems. Beijing hopes the ability to program digital money will help it fight crime, money laundering, and upgrade the implementation of monetary policy on an unprecedented level.
Crisis breeds urgency: Programmable money will greatly enhance the government’s speed and efficiency in times of economic crisis. The quicker the DCEP is implemented, the better prepared China is to deal with any sort of crisis.
In the last few weeks, we have seen significant escalations in the China-US techwar. As the likelihood of a decoupling between the two economies increases, so does the PBOC’s sense of urgency to release the digital currency widely.
Pilots are likely to be accelerated further, and the DCEP could be fully released within the next year.
US President Donald Trump signed two executive orders late on Thursday vaguely banning transactions with the owners of Wechat and Tiktok starting in 45 days.
Why it matters: It is unclear whether the orders will effectively ban the Wechat and Tiktok apps themselves in the US.
Details: The orders ban “any transaction” by any person or company under US jurisdiction with Bytedance, and any transactions with Tencent that relate to Wechat. The Secretary of Commerce is tasked with identifying these transactions until September 15.
Context: The techwar between the US and China has seen major escalations in the last week, with Tencent and Bytedance the latest of China’s tech champions joining Huawei on the White House’s bad side.
]]>READ MORE: Techwar: US wants to rid its internet of Chinese technology
The US State Department is ramping up efforts to rid American digital networks of made-in-China technology, including apps, cloud services, and telecoms operators, the US State Department said late on Wednesday.
Why it’s important: The program, outlined by the US State Department, signifies a monumental shift in US internet policy, moving away from a free web towards a China-like walled garden.
Escalating techwar: US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said in a statement that the program, dubbed Clean Network, is the Trump Administration’s “comprehensive approach” to protecting US citizens’ privacy and American companies’ data from “aggressive intrusions by malign actors, such as the Chinese Communist Party.”
The five fronts: “Untrusted” Chinese technology will be removed from five key areas, Pompeo said.
Context: Over the past few months, the Trump administration has signaled increasing protectionism against China.
Selected employees at China’s largest banks are trialing the country’s much-anticipated digital currency “on a large scale” (our translation), Caijing reported on Wednesday.
Why it matters: The trials extend pilot programs announced by China’s central bank in April but are limited to whitelisted bank employees in four major cities around China.
Details: Whitelisted employees from the Agricultural Bank of China, Industrial and Commercial Bank of China, China Construction Bank, and Bank of China have started using the digital yuan to transfer money and pay for services, anonymous sources from the banks told Caijing.
Context: The digital yuan has been in the works since 2014. In April, limited pilots were announced in the four cities.
State-backed blockchain development platform Blockchain Services Network (BSN) has said that the reason it is adopting a twin governance model for its international and domestic versions is to ensure compliance, “notably in China,” and particularly for the public blockchains on the network.
Why it matters: In a rare move for a state-backed project, the BSN is aiming for full transparency in the international version, and has removed Chinese state actors.
Blockchain Services Network (BSN)
What: A platform for blockchain development, bringing together cloud services and different chain protocols on city nodes.
Why: To reduce the cost of blockchain application design and deployment while powering communication between chains. It will be made available around the world through local cloud providers, ultimately creating a global internet of blockchains.
Who: It is part of the government’s Global Blockchain Strategy unveiled by Chinese President Xi Jinping in November 2019, spearheaded by the China State Information Center, China Mobile, China Union Pay, and Red Date Technology.
“The main motivation is to allow the overall BSN Network to interoperate more freely with public/permissionless blockchain frameworks while being in better compliance with the relevant blockchain regulations and laws around the world, notably in China.”
—Red Date in a statement posted on Medium
Details: The international network will be managed by Red Date Technology, a Beijing-based company that has served as the project’s main architect in conjunction with an independent council formed with global blockchain companies and actors.
“The decoupling ensures the BSN’s core value is available to global developers for both public and private chains, namely easy and cheap access to blockchain development.”
—Yifan He, CEO of Red Date Technology
Context: Public chains are not explicitly banned in China but are subject to heavy regulatory scrutiny. Insiders say this is because they do not impose any limitations on who takes part in managing the blockchain, which contains vast amounts of data.
]]>READ MORE: EXCLUSIVE: China’s BSN and Irisnet are building an ‘internet of blockchains’
In the latest installment of the Bitmain saga, formerly ousted, recently reinstated co-founder Zhan Ketuan may be selling the company’s Beijing office just months after he forcibly gained control of the company’s mainland headquarters, according to Chinese media reports.
Why it matters: Things are once again getting weird at the world’s largest mining rig producer.
Details: A lost property announcement appeared in Beijing newspapers: Zhan claims he lost the property deeds for Bitmain’s property in Zhongguancun. Based on the image posted by Chinese site Blockchain Real, this includes at least 30 contracts.
Shots fired: In the other camp, Wu on Tuesday accused Zhan of stealing rigs from Bitmain’s Mongolia mining facility.
Context: The Bitmain battle started in October 2019, when Wu ousted Zhan in a coup.
Chinese venture capital firm Qiming Venture Partners led a Series A in Hashquark, a Hong Kong-based staking service startup.
Why it matters: The investment signals that cryptocurrencies are increasingly becoming a viable sector for Chinese investors after years of mistrust.
Details: Hashquark is one of a few staking startups to receive funding from a traditional tech fund, Qiming said in a statement sent to TechNode on Wednesday.
Context: Qiming is an early-stage investor in Chinese tech companies. Some of its notable initial public offering (IPO) exits include Meituan Dianping, Xiaomi, and Bilibili.
Correction: An earlier version of this article incorrectly stated that Hashquark is a subsidiary of Hashkey Capital rather than a subsidiary of Hashkey Digital Asset Group.
]]>China’s first blockchain application platform for electronic company seals went live in Hangzhou on Friday, built using Ant Group’s Blockchain as a Service, the Alibaba-affiliated fintech giant said in a press release.
Why it matters: Official company seals are the cornerstone of China’s corporate bureaucracy, required to validate corporate documents such as contracts. A forged, or stolen, seal can allow someone to take actions on the company’s behalf in a form of corporate identity theft.
READ MORE: INSIGHTS | Corporate intrigue triple header
Details: Hangzhou-based companies can obtain a blockchain seal by applying on a platform, available through both government portals and Alipay.
Context: Since Chinese President Xi Jinping praised blockchain in October 2019, China’s local governments have been pushing blockchain technology in governance.
Ant Group, Alibaba’s fintech affiliate, has started the paperwork for concurrent listings on Shanghai’s Nasdaq-style STAR Market and the Hong Kong Stock Exchange, the company announced on Monday.
Why it matters: Ant Group is reportedly targeting a $200 billion valuation in one of this year’s biggest IPOs.
Details: Ant Group, which operates Alipay, China’s most popular mobile payments app, hinted that it wants to be more than a fintech company in a press release announcing the listings.
Context: In its last round of private fundraising in June 2018, Ant Group’s valuation climbed to $150 billion according to analysts.
The local government of Beijing released on Thursday a blueprint of its plan to implement a blockchain-based programmable government.
Why it matters: This is the first time China’s capital city has laid out details of how it will implement blockchain in its operations.
Details: The government’s main goals in the plan are to build a blockchain-based unified framework for digital governance, facilitate data-sharing between agencies and businesses, and enable cross-departmental and cross-regional collaboration.
Beijing’s 12 blockchain application cases
Project Name | Function | Goals |
Municipal Commercial Bureau Airport International Logistics Blockchain Platform | Logistics, cross-border trade | Data sharing between merchants, logistics operators, customs authorities, regulators, airport authorities to facilitate customs in cross-border air cargo trade. |
Beijing-Tianjin-Hebei Port Customs Clearance | Logistics, cross-border trade | Data sharing between port authorities, tax agencies, and customs authorities to coordinate between port terminals. |
City Financial Electronic Identity Authentication System | Enterprise banking | Reduce time and application materials, while ensuring identity authentication in enterprise banking. |
City Electronics Bills System | Billing | Improve the ability of businesses to issue bills and track reimbursement. |
Haidian District Finance Platform for SMEs | Finance for SMEs | Improve access to capital for SMEs and risk management for their lenders. |
Municipal Real Estate Registration System | Property management | Revamp the management of real estate, including mortgages, deposits, utility bills, tax audits, and more. |
Multi-terminal Business Licensing System | Enterprise Regulation | Improve authentication processes for businesses, as well as collaboration between firms through electronic certificates. |
Internet+Government Haidian District Pilot | E-governance | Create a “national benchmark” for comprehensive blockchain-powered government. More than 100 government agencies will implement blockchain for managing anything from high-tech enterprises to unemployment benefits. |
Xicheng District Government Services Pilot | E-governance | Improve bureaucratic efficiency for various government services through data sharing and electronic certificates. |
Chaoyang District Government Services Pilot | E-governance | Improve bureaucratic efficiency for various government services through data sharing and electronic certificates. |
Shunyi District Government Services Pilot | E-governance | Improve bureaucratic efficiency for various government services through data sharing, smart contracts and electronic certificates. |
Beijing Economic and Technological Development Zone Government Services | Enterprise governance | Create a “one-stop” service platform in the special economic zone that manages government services. This will help make the area “a world-class business environment,” according to Beijing. |
Context: Just two weeks ago, Beijing announced its plan to become a global hub for blockchain technology by 2022. It is one of 11 cities across China to release official strategies based on the technology.
Picture a remote village tucked at the end of a winding road. Towering overhead are the peaks of the world’s tallest and largest mountain range. It’s the perfect place for bitcoin miners to set up shop.
Mountains invite rain, and, in modern China, rain is just begging to be channeled through gargantuan dams into electricity generators. The Himalayas have made the southwestern province of Sichuan home to abundant dams and, during the rainy season, incredibly cheap electricity.
Normie tech entrepreneurs haven’t flocked to these inaccessible secluded villages to take advantage of it. But bitcoin miners have swarmed the area, consuming as much as 10% of Sichuan’s total electricity, by some accounts (in Chinese).
But this year could turn out to be just too wet. On June 17, Chinese media reported that a hydroelectric power station had been swept away by debris and that many local mines were destroyed in Ganzi prefecture in western Sichuan. Across China, this year’s floods have already killed more than 121 people and caused $3.6 billion in damages.
But these epic floods are the least of the miners’ worries.
Bottom line: Crypto mining is traditionally a wildcat industry, inhabiting a legal grey area and the remotest regions of China. As the industry professionalizes, local authorities are embracing it. The private sector is stepping up to offer financial products to bitcoin miners.
Three forces shape bitcoin mining in Sichuan: hydro power, regulations, and the markets. Both regulators and market favor big mines. As the industry consolidates, small mines face going out of business or selling out to mining tycoons.
Bitcoin mining requires a lot of electricity, and keeping this cost low is essential for a sustainable mining business. During the rainy season, Sichuan’s massive hydroelectric power stations produce a lot of power, with local prices as low as $0.01 per kilowatt hour.
READ MORE: China accounts for 66% of the world’s bitcoin processing power: research
Heads above water: But miners reached by TechNode were not worried about the floods and said they had not been affected. It’s business as usual, they said. Every year the floods destroy some mines, but provide cheap power for the rest.
This year could still see disaster. Flooding is shaping up to be more severe than usual, local media report that dams are near breaking point.
Crypto is legal—unless you want to spend it: China has a love/hate relationship with crypto currencies. In late 2017, major homegrown crypto exchanges were kicked out of the country after a blanket ban on crypto trading and initial coin offerings were banned.
READ MORE: Chinese court recognizes Bitcoin as virtual property, a first
Black market power trading is not: What is definitely illegal and has got many miners in trouble, is mines getting electricity without going through the grid.
Moves to legalize (hesitantly): Local authorities in Sichuan have recognized the economic value of bitcoin mining, and are slowly bringing it into the mainstream, in return for tax and power grid compliance. But without clear permission from central authorities, the province has run hot and cold on mining.
Big is beautiful: Sanctions on crypto mining look a lot like other newly-legal industries: while a few big players go corporate at hydroparks, others are left out in the Himalayan cold.
Let go of the weak: While new regulations have yet to be fully formed and implemented, they will almost certainly favor a small group of big miners.
Sharks in the mountains: The last year has seen many small miners lose their equipment over debt.
The pitfalls of capital markets: Increasingly sophisticated players are making a host of new bitcoin-related financial products available to miners. They might use them to hedge—or to place even bigger bets.
The price of bitcoin has surged since the March price drop off, and electricity prices in Sichuan remain low due to the overabundance of rain. Some small miners are still powering through. But as electricity prices rise in autumn—and whenever further regulation is rolled out—legal and financial pressures will mount on small miners.
]]>Authorities in the eastern Chinese province of Fujian raided the headquarters of a smart contracts scam that are accused of stealing RMB 100 million ($14 million) since 2019, according to Chinese media reports.
Why it matters: China has been promoting blockchain development since President Xi Jinping’s speech on the significance of the technology in October, but cryptocurrencies are still on uncertain legal ground. Concerns about fraud could discourage moves toward legalization.
Details: Chinese media reported that the perpetrators claimed to run a smart contracts business on Telegram which exchanged cryptocurrencies Ethereum, Bitcoin, and Tether for Huobi Tokens (HT). But the HT they returned to their customers were worthless counterfeits.
Context: Scams and Ponzi schemes have plagued the Chinese cryptocurrency sector, and authorities have been tough on the technology as a whole.
Only two weeks after a half-hearted truce, rival founders appear to be tussling for control of one of the world’s most important bitcoin companies again. Bitmain co-founder Zhan Ketuan appears to have attempted to redirect customer payments to a new bank account with a midnight Wechat post.
Why it matters: The world’s largest manufacturer of bitcoin mining rigs has seen product deliveries interrupted as two co-founders fight for control.
The story so far: Zhan and rival co-founder Wu Jihan each claim to be the company’s legitimate CEO.
READ MORE: Bitmain Battle: Signs of reconciliation, but not resolution
The notice in the nighttime: Last night at midnight, a Bitmain official Wechat account associated with the camp of founder Zhan Ketuan posted a curious notice: A scanned document saying that Bitmain was changing important sales information, including the bank account for payments.
The scanned document carried a seal associated with Zhan. This seal, identified by its serial number, has been used in the past to stamp documents produced by his faction.
“From now on, Beijing Bitmain Technology has changed its collection account, after-sale service website, and e-mail address,” the notice said (our translation).
The website announced as Bitmain’s new point of service looks like a haphazard attempt at an official site. It is available only in Chinese (Bitmain’s usual official site defaults to English). It features a search function for machine serial numbers, and contact information like an email and a phone number. It also includes “about us,” terms of use, and privacy policy sections.
The notice in the afternoon: About 16 hours later, at 4 p.m. on Tuesday, another notice appeared on a second official Bitmain Wechat account associated with Wu, as well as the company’s website. It revoked the midnight document.
The document carries Wu’s signature, and a seal with a serial number previous used by Wu.
The Wu statment said the document posted at midnight contained false information and asked the public to ignore that account from then on.
In the document, Wu attributes the notice to “abnormal conditions” and alleged that “criminals” are trying to pass as official Bitmain representatives. But Wu did not attribute the “illegal” midnight post to Zhan.
What’s going on? The most likely explanation is that Zhan hopes to gain control of incoming revenue by redirecting payments from accounts controlled by Wu. A Bitmain spokesperson did not comment on the incident and directed TechNode to the notice posted in the afternoon. What is clear is that the Zhan-Wu truce is already showing cracks.
]]>Alibaba’s fintech affiliate, Ant Group, has teamed up with Chinese shipping giant COSCO to bring blockchain technology to the shipping industry, the company said on Monday.
Why it matters: Blockchain could streamline the complicated logistics involved in maritime transport, including hurdles from multiple regulators, customs agencies, and harbor authorities.
Details: Ant Group will explore how Ant Blockchain, its proprietary blockchain technology, can transform logistics in the global maritime industry, according to a statement sent to TechNode on Monday.
Context: Alibaba and its payments affiliate Ant Group hold the most blockchain-related patents worldwide, a study by the China Patent Protection Association found, followed by US-based IBM, which works with Danish APM-Maersk.
Correction: an earlier version of this story incorrectly stated that Alibaba, not Ant Group, partnered with COSCO.
]]>Alibaba and its mobile payment affiliate Alipay together hold the highest number of blockchain patents worldwide, though China lags significantly behind the US.
Why it matters: The results of a study by the China Patent Protection Association indicate that China has a long way to go to match the level of innovation in distributed ledger technologies seen in the US.
Details: Alibaba holds 212 out of 3,924 blockchain-related patents in the world, the China Patent Protection Association said on Wednesday. The only other Chinese firm in the top 10 is Tencent with 42 patents. US tech giant IBM came second with 136 patents.
Context: China has had a tumultuous history with blockchain, especially cryptocurrencies.
Beijing’s local government on Tuesday released a two-year plan aimed at making the city a global hub for blockchain development and integrate the technology into its operations, from real estate to social credit.
Why it matters: Beijing is one of a handful of Chinese cities that has adopted blockchain. Nevertheless, the technology has typically made Chinese officials uneasy, and cryptocurrencies were completely banned in 2017.
Details: The Beijing government wants to become an “influential” center for blockchain innovation, using the technology to promote “social and economic development” by 2022.
Context: Since Chinese President Xi Jinping publicly advocated for blockchain adoption in October 2019, China’s local governments and entrepreneurs have rushed to take up his calls.
The Beyond Meat plant-based patty is hitting Alibaba’s Freshippo stores in Shanghai this summer, the company said in a statement sent to TechNode on Wednesday.
Why it matters: The US alternative protein company is keen to tap into China’s market, but is facing competition from local players like Starfield and Z-Rou.
“Beyond Meat and Freshippo share a vision of bringing innovative shopping experiences and products to our customers.”
—Zhao Jiayu, senior director and head of merchandising at Freshippo
Details: The plant-based patty will be available at 50 Freshippo stores in Shanghai starting in early July.
Context: The imitation beef patty is a tough sell in China, where pork massively outranks beef in popularity and vegetarians are scarce.
China’s Blockchain Services Network (BSN) will fully integrate a permissionless blockchain developed by Hangzhou-based Nervos which will allow Chinese developers access to a public chain, a first for the government-backed project.
Why it matters: Nervos’s permissionless, or public, protocol will be made available to all BSN’s nodes, including those in China. This marks a major change in the BSN’s—and by implication, the Chinese government’s—treatment of public chains.
Details: Developers will be able to use the Nervos blockchain protocol to build their decentralized applications (dapps), according to a person familiar with the matter. The integration will go live in late July.
Context: The BSN aims to make blockchain development cheaper and more accessible to developers around the world. Software engineers can connect to its network of city nodes to access development tools and cloud infrastructure to deploy their dapps.
Read more: EXCLUSIVE: China’s BSN and Irisnet are building an ‘internet of blockchains’
Bitmain signed a deal with to sell 17,595 of its newest bitcoin mining rigs, called S19 Antminers, to Core Scientific, the Washington state-based mine hosting company said in a press release on June 26.
Why it matters: The deal is Bitmain’s largest known sale of the S19 Antminers yet. It could indicate that the worst is over for the Beijing-based manufacturer.
READ MORE: Bitmain Battle: Signs of reconciliation, but not resolution
Details: Bitmain will deliver the S19s over the next four months, the press release said. Core Scientific will deploy them in their 655,000 square feet of data centers across the US.
Core Scientific has received and begun testing the first of Bitmain’s newest ASIC miners, and has seen material success in increasing existing hashrate to achieve a 110 TH/s ± 3%.
Kevin Turner, President & CEO of Core Scientific
Context: Bitmain has had two rival CEOs since Zhan seized control of the Beijing arm of the company in May, which runs Bitmain’s manufacturing operation in Shenzhen. Wu Jihan ousted Zhan back in October 2019. He remains in control of offshore sales and procurement through Bitmain’s Hong Kong affiliate.
Rival co-founders at Bitmain have reached a deal to resume product deliveries at the divided company amid a months-long struggle for control that has plunged the mining rig maker into chaos.
A statement on Bitmain’s official Weibo account said that an interim agreement has been reached to continue product deliveries. It was deleted a few hours later, but sources tell TechNode that the deal remains in place.
In the blue corner: The co-founders of the world’s largest makers of bitcoin mining rigs are in a standoff over control of the company. For the last two months, they have been producing official statements accusing each other of illegal behavior and ordering employees not to listen to each other’s commands.
And in the red corner: Wu Jihan led the coup against Zhan in October, declaring himself CEO. He retains control of Bitmain’s offshore sales and its procurement affiliate in Hong Kong.
Today’s news: A statement posted on Bitmain’s official Weibo account yesterday suggested (in Chinese) that the factions have made progress in their negotiations. They reached a consensus to maintain production schedules, ensure financial and tax compliance, and calm employees, the statement said.
Plenty of question marks left: deliveries will continue as normal, but the negotiations are still ongoing. It is unclear who is in control of Bitmain’s finances.
On Wednesday, a California court dismissed an intellectual property (IP) theft lawsuit against Chinese mixed reality company Nreal filed by a former employer of its founder, according to court documents sent by Nreal to TechNode. US-based rival Magic Leap accused Nreal founder Xu Chi of stealing MR glasses technology while working there.
Why it matters: The Nreal-Magic Leap lawsuit is the latest in a series of IP theft accusations against Chinese-born former employees of American companies.
From the beginning we’ve firmly stated that Magic Leap’s claims against Nreal are meritless. The fact that the court found that Magic Leap failed to state a single viable claim is telling.
Xu Chi, Nreal CEO and founder, in an emailed statement to TechNode
Details: In granting the motion to dismiss, the court found that Magic Leap’s case against Nreal failed to explain how the alleged IP theft happened.
Context: Chinese companies whose products look similar to US-developed counterparts are often faced with accusations of theft—especially if they share staff. But “inspired by” products aren’t necessarily illegal.
READ MORE: For Chinese startup Seengene, the future is grounded in mixed reality
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The chief architect of the Blockchain Services Network (BSN), a crucial component of China’s blockchain strategy, explained how it will work with Shanghai-based Irisnet to develop an “internet of blockchains” during a TechNode web event on June 18.
The BSN will inaugurate an “inter-chain, inside-BSN service hub” with Irisnet to power communication between blockchain frameworks as well as the outside world, according to He Yifan, CEO of Beijing Red Date Technology, the company building the BSN software.
Why it matters: The announcement sheds light on how Red Date will tackle one of the BSN’s key ambitions: connecting blockchains so that they can exchange data and tokens. Until now, it was not clear how Red Date would facilitate interoperability.
Details: The service hub built in collaboration with Irisnet will add another architectural component to the BSN—one which will power inter-chain and off-blockchain communication.
“For all the DApps deployed on the BSN, if they want to talk to another DApp, consortium or public DApp for example, they can just call the hub and pass the data, and the hub will process everything.”
—He Yifan, CEO of Beijing Red Date Technology
Context: The BSN is a Chinese government-led initiative to increase interoperability and reduce development costs. Telecom provider China Mobile, payments provider China Unionpay, and Red Date have all invested in BSN, and Red Date is the main software architect.
Read more: Tencent’s WeBank providing tech support to China’s blockchain service network
With contributions from Shaun Ee and Savannah Billman.
]]>In China’s consumer culture, “limited offers” from globally-recognized brands have the distinct potential to command long queues and consumer frenzy on levels associated overseas only with hardcore Star Wars fans.
The collaboration between the buzzy American plant-based meat company Beyond Meat and fast food giant Yum China did not command anything near those lines, for now.
The Chinese subsidiary of Yum! Brands, one of the world’s largest fast food corporations, recently introduced limited edition, China-only menu offerings featuring Beyond Meat’s plant-based protein in three of its restaurant brands.
KFC tested a Beyond Meat burger in select stores in Beijing, Shanghai, Hangzhou, and Chengdu for three days. Taco Bell offered a plant-based taco in three stores in Shanghai from June 3 to 10. Pizza Hut made a burger with the plant-based patty, available from June 8 to 10.
I tried all three. I was impressed, but I didn’t encounter any Chinese consumers who were interested in trying the products.
After a hugely successful IPO in May 2019, Beyond Meat wants to bring its products to China.
In a country that overwhelmingly prefers pork to beef, loves fried chicken, is bursting with soy-based alternative proteins, and tacos and burgers are far from staple dishes, Beyond Meat’s botano-beef patty is a tough sell.
READ MORE: Start-ups and incumbents battle for China’s meatless future
It seems to me that Beyond Meat is keenly aware it is playing an away game. The launch tried to play to its strengths: Western food, big brands as partners, a launch so limited edition that it is basically a trial before the trial.
I’m the kind of person that always roots for the underdog. But the reaction from the public I saw was underwhelming.
KFC was the first fast food brand to launch a Beyond Meat patty in mainland China. From the looks of it, it was also the most successful.
Yum China secured one of the famous burgers at an official tasting event. Faced with a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to see this phyto-beast in the plant-based flesh, I invited TechNode’s visual reporter—and passionate eater—Jiayi Shi to immortalize the moment.
On one less-than-fine June day, we headed to outer Shanghai for the tasting in the sweltering heat and overbearing humidity. The selected KFC location wasn’t downtown or in a busy mall, it was in the headquarters of travel giant Trip.com; a marvel of glass and steel architecture with solid representation of all major food and beverage chains on its lower floors.
The KFC store was mostly empty, with only a few employees having a late lunch. A total of eight reporters from Chinese media showed up for the event, escorted by two Beyond Meat PR reps and two Yum China reps.
Our PR contact had told us that stock was so limited that she could attend but would not get a burger. Thankfully, they managed to find one for her. By the end of the press event, the KFC branch had sold out all the Beyond Meat burgers. Employees told us that they sold 500-700 plant-based burgers in total.
The Beyond Meat burger was very good, at least on par with your average fast food beef burger. The patty was juicy and bigger than a McDonalds or Burger King equivalent—a pleasant surprise considering that at RMB 32 ($4.80), it is twice the price of a regular burger.
It had that je-ne-sais-quoi flavor of fast food—plenty of MSG-induced umami—but less of the greasy meat aftertaste. The texture was practically indistinguishable from a beef fast-food burger; tender with the right amount of chew. The rest of the ingredients—bun, lettuce, spicy mayo, pickles, and cheese—added freshness and rounded off the sandwich.
All in all, a 10/10 fast food burger. I preferred the bigger, less greasy patty to the animal protein versions. Jiayi thought the patty was too big. Whilst I didn’t see the problem with that, our in-house fast-food expert found the patty overbearing relative to the rest of the ingredients. “It’s too much,” she said, shaking her head with a deadpan expression, as I was trying to plot my way to a second serving.
A few days later, we managed to track down another two Beyond Meat dishes in the wild. No PR representatives or company photographers were harmed in the consumption of our subsequent plant-based lunches.
The Pizza Hut store was in the basement of a busy mall, closer to central Shanghai. It was a sit- down affair and the sound of chatting clanking of cutlery filled the air during the lunch hour rush. The only way to get this particular patty was to buy it in advance through Pizza Hut’s Wechat mini-program. So we did, and were met with an unwelcome surprise.
The plant-based burger at Pizza Hut came with an uninvited guest. The pizza chain served a dish of two burgers for RMB 59, one with the Beyond Meat patty and one with a plain old animal protein steak. The steak was chewy and flavorless. It tasted like a bit of ham you forgot at the back of the fridge for too long.
The meat was so bad that we were left wondering if it was a ploy to make the plant-based alternative taste better by comparison. We tried to order the plant-based patty on its own or exchange the steak for another vegetarian patty. The waitressing staff was quick to reject our claims.
The Beyond Meat patty appeared to be exactly the same as the one served at KFC, but in fancier clothes—a bit like running into your gym buddy downtown in a tuxedo. The bun had a little more flavor and the burger was topped with kale, mushrooms, tomatoes, and a spicy mayo.
While I appreciated the effort to achieve a more sophisticated burger and the toppings were tasty, I preferred the humble KFC version. The patty doesn’t lend itself well to such attempts at elegance. You can serve it in a fancy chopping board and add black sesame seeds on the buns (as Pizza Hut did), but at the end of the day it remains a modest fast-food burger.
Pizza Hut in China targets a more upscale clientele, so their version of the Beyond Meat burger was on brand. The menu features less pizza and more steak, gratin, Japanese curry and matcha desserts, even a clam chowder soup topped with puff pastry.
On a different day, we sat at an outdoor Taco Bell seating area in an upscale mall. We couldn’t order in advance but were able to get three tacos each.
Taco Bell’s take on the Beyond Meat protein was my favorite, but—full disclosure—I really like tacos. The “meat” was cooked into something resembling a chili con carne. It was served in two tortillas, one soft and one hard, along with lettuce, tomato and sauce. I’m not sure if what made it so appealing was the texture, as it was cooked like ground meat, or the spices. It definitely tasted more fresh, perhaps because of a higher proportion of fresh ingredients.
Just because we liked the tacos so much, we ordered a total of six tacos during our lunch. We had no problem getting them, probably because no one was really buying them.
At the restaurants I visited during busy lunch hours, no one was trying out the plant-based products. No one was even looking at them with any curiosity, despite the fact that the stores featured gigantic posters for the product launches.
I’m not sure how much sense it makes to push burgers in China, where pork is king, fried chicken is the star of the fast food industry, and beef is generally dwarfed on menus by other protein staples like pork and tofu. Even at McDonald’s, chicken often leads beef on the menu.
But beef is the product that Beyond Meat developed, and it did so with a Western palate in mind. The US-based company not only went for beef, but designed it for burgers, sausages and tacos. These are not exactly staples in the Chinese diet, where noodles, rice dishes, and stir fries abound. So, beef is what it is trying to push into China. Some of China’s older generation is vegetarian, so promoting it as sexy Western fast food is not such an outlandish idea.
Along with China’s long Buddhist tradition come plenty of vegetarian soy-based proteins. But many Chinese youths have told me there isn’t anything appealing about this religion-inspired old people’s food. Avoiding this association is key to developing a trendy sought-after product in the new-age plant-based meat space.
The limited-edition, limited-time offerings of Western food at well-known chains are a sound marketing strategy to this end. They can create buzz without breaking the bank, test consumer appetite and open the market for a hip plant-based protein.
A Beyond Meat PR representative said that the products “sold well” but that specific sales figures were not available. Store employees told us that there were less than a few thousand items across the selected Yum China stores in Shanghai. Maybe the launch created some interest in the product, but nowhere near what other brands have accomplished in China.
]]>After forcefully re-taking control of Bitmain headquarters, ousted co-founder Zhan Ketuan has ordered employees to halt product deliveries, according to a report in Chinese blockchain media Blockbeats. The reasons for his decision remain unclear, as is whether Bitmain staff are taking his orders.
In our last episode: Amidst soaring bitcoin prices, the world’s largest mining rig maker is enthralled in chaos as rival leaders battle for control of the company.
Today’s details: After Zhan’s order to stop deliveries, Wu tried to reassert his power. In a statement issued on June 9 and signed by “Bitmain Technologies Limited,” Wu said he is taking legal action against Zhan’s orders.
The story so far: The feud started in October 2019, when Wu ousted Zhan in a surprise move. He ordered staff to stop taking orders from then-CEO Zhan, threatening them with termination.
READ MORE: Bitmain preps for Bitcoin by slashing workforce: report
Correction: An earlier version of this article misspelled the first name of Bitmain’s co-founders Wu Jihan. He is Wu Jihan, not Wu Jintao.
]]>Nasdaq will release new restrictions on IPOs that will restrict many Chinese companies from listing on the stock exchange in the future. Chinese companies listed in the US are facing increasing skepticism after Luckin Coffee admitted to fraud in April.
Why it matters: The new restrictions are likely to have a profound impact on Chinese tech startups. Many pick the New York-based bourse for going public, in part because of its relaxed rules.
Details: The tightened rules will not single out Chinese companies, but are prompted by fears over transparency and accountability specific to them, Reuters reported.
Watch: Thin ice for US-listed Chinese tech companies: Webinar playback
Context: In April, Nasdaq-listed beverage chain Luckin Coffee admitted to falsifying RMB 2.2 billion in sales.
Long-suffering Chinese console gamers were disappointed yet again when the global hit game Animal Crossing vanished from Taobao a month ago.
With only three Nintendo Switch games licensed for sale in China, gamers have long relied on the grey market for imported consoles and game cartridges.
Using sales volume data from market analyst firm Niko partners and public price information, TechNode estimates that Nintendo sold $32 million worth of the Switch console in 2019. We estimate that sales of consoles in China on the grey market amounted to $183 million.
For all consoles, the grey market is also believed to be much larger than the legal one. Niko Partners estimates that 60% more consoles were sold illegally in China in 2018 compared to legal ones. Based on TechNode’s observations, imported consoles sell for 1.5 times the price of domestic ones. Multiply this out and you get a grey market 240% the size of the licensed one.
Bottom line: Much like news and films, Chinese authorities are keen to regulate imported console games. The approach is very similar: A frugal licensing regime approves very few games. But content controls haven’t stopped fans from tracking down the latest Japanese releases. Chinese developers are facing an uphill battle to compete with billion-dollar incumbents that have nursed the console industry. So far, they haven’t come up with a game or console to compete with blockbusters by Sony and Nintendo. With tacit support from Japanese console makers, it’s unlikely that the grey market will ever die out.
Banned but tolerated: Owning a forbidden title won’t get you in trouble, but selling them might land you in jail.
“If the door’s locked, isn’t there a window? And if the window’s shut, isn’t there a doggie door?”
A Weibo user commenting about attempts to restrict gamers’ options (our translation).
Playstation: Sony’s digital store is divided into regions, but it’s easy to jump regions.
Switch: Nintendo has tried harder to comply with regulations, driving fans away from China market consoles
Weak local competition: China doesn’t have competitors to Japan’s titans. Independent Chinese studios have released a few well-liked console games, but no blockbusters, while attempts at a Chinese console have gone nowhere. Titles in series like Call of Duty, Tomb Raider, or Grand Theft Auto cost tens, often hundreds, of millions of dollars to make.
Other priorities: China has a world-class games industry, but consoles are not its priority.
Tough crowd: Gamers tend to demand the biggest, latest thing, and Chinese gamers want the same titles as their peers in Seoul and Cincinnati. It’s hard to get between them and a popular title. Restrictions on popular titles are met with staunch resistance.
Shocked, shocked! Ultimately, censoring the market would require console makers’ cooperation. With not much legal market to lose and big money in grey market sales, they don’t seem to care.
Admitting defeat? Authorities may be coming around to a more lenient stance on console releases. The Nintendo Switch Lite, PlayStation 5 and Xbox Series X are expected to see legal releases in China in 2020. With a lighter hand, regulators could finally get control over the market.
Censors and console makers are in an intricate negotiation process. As consoles are rising in popularity among Chinese gamers, this is a story to watch.
]]>Shenzhen-based Yingzhong Technologies released China’s first x86 computers with a homegrown central processing unit (CPU) on Saturday. But the CPU technology by fabless Zhaoxin Semiconductors is at least three years behind other players’.
Why it matters: The PCs announced are the first to integrate Zhaoxin’s x86 CPUs, which in turn are China’s first homegrown microprocessors based on the x86 architecture.
Details: In their first common product launch, the two companies released more than 50 new products, from desktops to notebooks.
Read more: SILICON | China’s progress on homegrown CPUs
Context: Founded in 2013, Zhaoxin is a joint venture between Taiwanese VIA Technologies and the Shanghai government. VIA Technologies is one of three companies around the world with a license to produce x86 processors, along with US-based AMD and Intel.
A fight broke out at a government office in Beijing after local authorities tried to hand the company’s operating license to ousted co-founder Zhan Ketuan. Bitmain is the world’s largest manufacturer of bitcoin mining rigs.
Why it matters: The latest co-founder spat adds to a series of layoffs, regulatory interventions and IPO turmoil at one of China’s biggest blockchain companies. The situation is at a standstill and it is uncertain who will lead Bitmain in the future.
Details: The Market Administration of Beijing’s Haidian district summoned a meeting to hand over Bitmain’s business license to ousted co-founder Zhan Ketuan.
Context: In October 2019, Wu sent an email to employees threatening them with termination of contract if they took any orders from Zhan or attended any meetings he held.
Looking for a job as a go-go dancer? You better have your digital health paperwork in order. In WeChat groups, promoters are asking would-be go-go dancers to provide health code and travel history. It’s a sign of how deeply digital tracking has permeated Chinese society.
Group chats in China often include posts for English teachers. In some, a little harder to find, you will find advertisements for go-go dancer and KTV girls positions. One recruiter looking for women to dance in clubs in Aksu in Xinjiang, and Longyan in Fujian, had one strict requirement: Applicants must show a green health QR code on WeChat or Alipay.
Government authorities at the border require the QR code to enter the provinces, the recruiter said. For the position in Xinjiang, the QR code is not enough. Applicants must also produce a fresh virus tracing test.
The same recruiter also required health codes for KTV girls, women who are paid to accompany men at karaoke bars, in Guizhou and Guangxi, provinces in southwest China.
TechNode got in touch with the recruiter to verify the ads and find out exactly how important the health codes are. He had no questions about our reporter’s ability to dance or looks, only their ability to show the coveted green QR code.
People with recent history of travel to Hubei, Shanghai, Guangdong, Zhejiang, Inner Mongolia, Heilongjiang, will need to be quarantined in Xinjiang, he said.
It’s not just the go-go dancers that must prove their health to participate in the club’s shenanigans, the recruiter said. Club patrons must also show a health code before entering the party.
Go-go dancers are people who dance in skimpy outfits in clubs to get the party going. The recruiter specified that this job does not involve “consummation,” whereas for KTV girls he left it open.
QR codes might be on the decline in Shanghai, but in the rest of China, they are a key tool for controlling the Covid-19 pandemic—and keeping the go-go dancing industry safe.
]]>As China reopened cities following the Covid-19 epidemic, it relied on “health code” digital systems that divide people into green, yellow, and red based on little understood risk algorithms. Now, as the country moves toward normalcy, local authorities continue to turn the surveillance system off and then on again.
Health code has mostly disappeared in Shanghai and nearby cities. Even Hangzhou, where the system was first deployed, has largely pulled the plug on the labor-intensive network of checkpoints associated with the system.
Meanwhile, other cities are ramping up code use to head off a possible second wave, including some that largely ignored digital quarantine during the initial rollout.
China offers the world a preview of what writer Tomas Pueyo called the “dance” with Covid-19 that will likely define post-lockdown life until a vaccine is developed. While shops and restaurants have been open across China for weeks, the continuing threat of an outbreak is driving restrictions to ebb and flow.
The system always varied between places—rather than a nationwide system, the health code is a patchwork of local systems. As China began re-opening, it was common to show one’s code a dozen times per day across the country—entering a market, restaurant, office building, public transport, or returning home all required displaying one’s QR code in many cities.
Shanghai’s implementation of the system was relatively lax. Even at the peak, apartment complexes inhabited by TechNode correspondents checked health codes only once or twice per resident, afterward treating them as non-risks. The system also issued codes without an initial survey of symptoms and travel history, unlike other cities. However, Shanghai office buildings, museums, and bookstores rigorously enforced the system for a few weeks.
As life returns to normal, TechNode correspondents in Shanghai have gone weeks without displaying their health QR code. Eliza Gkritsi has not used her health QR code once since returning from South Korea and Greece on March 22, shortly before China closed its borders to non-citizens. TechNode correspondents and sources have even entered the city by train without passing any kind of check.
But while most Shanghai residents have stopped using their codes, students will begin using new back-to-school codes as schools resume in-person classes.
There are other exceptions, even in relaxed Shanghai: some office buildings are still checking, but not all. David Cohen was asked for his code when trying to use the bathroom at a co-working space.
Checkpoints are still in place at residential and office compounds, as well as public transport, with varying enforcement of temperature and identity checks. Some of these systems require a one-time registration on paper or digital forms. Smaller residential checkpoints are frequently left unattended, especially late at night. Even contactless delivery protocols have softened, with many compounds now allowing delivery drivers to enter.
Hangzhou, a health code pioneer and enthusiastic adopter, has also largely abandoned checks. Unlike Shanghai, the city closely monitors train stations. When a TechNode reporter visited the weekend of April 17, non-nationals were asked to display both their health code and mobile phone carrier-generated travel itineraries, as well as filling out paper forms. Visiting Suzhou, TecNode contributor Dev Lewis observed travelers with Hubei ID cards treated to the same extra attention. However, once past this check, the code was no longer used at apartment compounds or shops.
In Xi’an, one of the most rigorous enforcers of health code, graduate student Liu Weiqi observed the beginnings of relaxation as restaurants resumed outdoor service without any checks.
In the last week, TechNode sources in several cities described sudden ramp ups in digital controls and checkpoints, presumably in response to recent increases in case numbers.
In Guangzhou, QR codes never really fell out of use, two residents told TechNode. Public transport stopped checking codes, but they remained widely used in supermarkets, restaurants, office, and residential buildings. But on April 27 public transport checks were suddenly renewed following reports of local cases.
In the smaller city of Yantai, Shandong, TechNode Russia editor Lavrenity Klimov encountered checks at supermarkets and home for only about two to three weeks before the system fell out of use. But on April 28, checkpoints suddenly returned, with shops and residential compounds demanding the QR codes. However, Klimov said, when he had trouble registering for the code without local ID the guards agreed to let him pass.
Health codes reportedly remain essential for residents of Hubei, the province at the center of the epidemic, to leave the cities in which they were quarantined for months.
Meanwhile, the capital continues to enforce strict controls, including mandatory two-week isolation for anyone arriving from other parts of the country, although the health code takes a back seat to temperature checks and paper passes. The city of Harbin, China’s far north has also reportedly intensified controls following new cases associated with Chinese nationals returning from Russia.
It’s not clear how much of a role digital systems played in allowing China to end its lockdowns safely—they were coupled with extraordinarily strict limits on movement, widespread testing, and in-person surveillance. Even the most digital systems relied on blanketing cities with guards to check the codes. This expensive—and intrusive—approach seems to fade quickly when the virus is under control.
But despite strict quarantine policies that have forbidden all non-citizens to enter the country and place the few remaining travelers in 14-day isolation, Chinese provinces continue to report new cases of the virus.
With the pandemic predicted by experts to last for months or over a year, health code is likely to come and go as local governments play whack-a-mole with the disease.
Imagination Technologies, a top UK semiconductor company acquired by a state-backed Chinese fund, ranks a listing on the Shanghai stock exchange’s tech board as its top option once it is ready to float shares, according to Reuters.
Why it matters: The chip design company is at the center of a geopolitical storm between China, the UK, and the US.
Read more: Imagination Technologies: What’s at stake in the fight over control
Details: The UK chipmaker’s financials have been in a bad state for a while now, recording an operating loss of $23 million in 2019, a Reuters source said. An initial public offering is a few years down the line, according to the report.
Context: The boardroom takeover was cancelled after intervention from prominent conservative members of the UK Parliament.
With contributions from Eliza Gkritsi.
China announced Monday a reform that brings the Nasdaq-style registration-based listing process used by Shanghai’s STAR Market bourse to Shenzhen’s Chinext startup board.
Why it matters: China is stepping up efforts to mobilize private capital to assist companies hit by the coronavirus outbreak and accelerating financial market reforms amid increasing scrutiny of Chinese firms in overseas stock markets.
Details: The new IPO system allows companies that have yet to turn a profit to list on the Chinext startup board on the Shenzhen Stock Exchange, according to a draft rule (in Chinese) by the bourse on Monday.
Context: China opened the STAR Market on the Shanghai Stock Exchange for trading in July, making it the first registration-based board in the country. A total of 99 companies were trading on the STAR market as of Tuesday.
Decentralized or centralized? Bluetooth or geolocation? Control quarantines or alert people to infection risk? Store data for one month or six? There are many questions that need answers to build an app-based system to manage the Covid-19 pandemic and lift lockdowns. Much like how the implementation of health code systems wildly varies between Chinese provinces and cities, European countries are coming up with wildly different solutions.
The differences between Europe’s path to technology for epidemic control and how China did it offer a glimpse into the future. In an era where China is increasingly exporting its innovations around the world, observing how other regions are taking to them is an ever-pressing issue for China tech. A rich debate between governments, companies and private citizens is taking place in Europe, one that China didn’t get. It is a debate that is slowing down the process, but it will determine what and how gets implemented—and how China’s techniques will be judged.
On the continent, any hint that Europe is taking up China-style surveillance comes at a political cost. Officials are claiming to be examining the South Korean and Singaporean models. But after years of bashing China’s privacy policies and the whole world looking at China during Covid-19, it is hard to dissociate China’s model of epidemic control from what European leaders are doing. So, the continent’s public health challenge has become intensely political. What began a choice between epidemic control and individual liberty is understood by many as our way versus the China way.
We have identified 39 different epidemic control apps mentioned in news reports in several European languages, and 7 different mobile data tracking programs across European states. With many still in development and not public, it is likely that there are tens, if not hundreds. With governments, the private sector and non-profits jumping in, it is a messy process.
The Netherlands government sent seven apps to the national data protection regulator. The regulator rejected them, saying it was not able to “properly assess” (in Dutch) them.
Mainstream approaches range from bluetooth-based contact tracing to GPS tracking. Outliers include such novelties as sharing selfies with the police and asking users to report every time they wash their hands (in German).
Bottom line: Europe’s efforts at digital epidemic control are—characteristically—messy, diverse, and numerous. Suspicion of privacy issues, tech, and China all make it harder to roll out. It’s too soon to say what the results of this messy process will be. Europe’s health code struggle shows how China’s digital innovations travel overseas, how they are received, and changed upon landing ashore.
A pan-European approach? In a major twist of irony, the European Union’s data privacy regulator has called for a pan-European Covid-19 tracking app. The polyphony of apps could create catastrophic splintering. The Schengen area and the EU operate on free movement of people. If your Austrian app doesn’t work in Germany, that’s no good for the epidemic or the economy.
Answering this call, a team of 130 engineers and researchers, backed by a German company, launched the Pan-European Privacy-Preserving Proximity Tracing initiative (PEPP-PT), a Bluetooth-based protocol that participating teams can use to build apps for their own countries. The organizers claim to have the participation of Austria, Germany, France, Italy, Malta, Spain, and Switzerland, but there have been no official statements to confirm this from any of those states. Switzerland’s top research institution is the leader of the competing decentralized protocol and Austria declared it is working with it.
The team was organized in a hurry and, in fact, doesn’t yet exist as a legal entity. Two weeks after it was launched, it faced criticism for backing off a promise to support a decentralized protocol. An EU Parliament resolution from April 15 “demands that all storage of data be decentralised.” After the letter, several researchers from high-profile universities pulled out to back a rival Decentralized Privacy-Preserving Proximity Tracing (DP-3T). Switzerland, Estonia, and Austria’s apps are developed on the DP-3T protocol.
The players: Unlike China, Europe doesn’t have a central authority able to designate a few official solutions. Lots of actors are putting forward their own plans. Governments, the EU, nonprofits, and the private sector have all jumped into the game.
The people decide: It may not be governments who decide which app prevails, and they certainly cannot make any effective alone. The figure making the rounds in European media is 60%: That’s how many people need to voluntarily download the app to make it useful. As EU Commission guidelines published last week say, what needs to be accomplished is a “common approach for voluntary and privacy-compliant tracing apps.” Politicians and researchers have argued that if apps overstep in data collection, people will be distrustful of the government, and app adoption will be low. After all, the European Union’s data protection regulation requires explicit consent prior to data collection.
The models: There are four main models touted or already in action, and plenty more in development. Governments could choose to adopt combinations of tools to manage different aspects of epidemic control.
Privacy: As much as privacy considerations are a concern for civil society, it is not the number one priority for European governments. But in order to convince people to use the apps, there need to be certain data protection guarantees. With the pandemic ravaging through the continent, and several members going their own way, privacy is a priority only so long as its needed for an efficient response.
China anxiety: Association with China’s privacy attitudes is a liability for a proposal in much of present-day Europe. Both publics and elites are suspicious. “Belgium is not China,” a privacy activist wrote on a grass-roots news site. In one of Germany’s top newspapers, a German-Korean philosopher said that Europe’s illusion of liberalism is headed to an end: “We have been China for a long time—only we don’t want to admit it.”
European essence, Chinese methods? A hundred years ago, Chinese reformers associated with the Self-Strengthing Movement argued about whether they could combine “Chinese essence with Western methods” (Zhongti xiyong). It’s not easy to adapt foreign tools to domestic values—as they learned, there’s a lot of values baked into technology.
Now, Westerners have to confront the same thing in reverse. Health code is a dramatic example, but as China pioneers more and more technology, Europe will often be in the copycat role. It could be a good time to brush up on your Kang Youwei.
]]>Residents of Wuhan grabbed RMB 30 million ($4.2 million) worth of WeChat coupons in 9 minutes on Sunday, WeChat developers said in a blog post. The coupons generated transactions worth 13 times their value on the first day of usage. The vouchers are offered by the local government as well as individual merchants through WeChat Pay. Users get the vouchers via lucky draw through a WeChat mini-program.
Why it matters: China’s central and local governments are hoping that spending vouchers will stimulate domestic economic activity, as global demand is wavering.
Read more: Qingdao is using WeChat for vouchers to boost spending
Details: The coupons issued on Sunday are the first batch in a series that will total RMB 2.3 billion. The Wuhan government will be issuing RMB 500 million in coupons. Individual merchants will contribute an extra RMB 1.8 billion, WeChat said.
Context: China reported its first GDP contraction since it started releasing records in 1992 earlier in April. On March 28, a consortium of 23 government agencies issued a directive telling local governments to “raise residents’ purchasing power.”
In a milestone for China’s semiconductor industry, Yangtze Memory Technologies (YMTC) announced last week that it has developed a 128-layer NAND flash memory chip (128L) in-house. The company expects mass production to start sometime between the end of 2020 and mid-2021, a spokesperson for YMTC told TechNode.
The Wuhan-based firm hit this milestone while fighting to continue production during the lockdown of its home city.
Read more: What industry can’t stop? Semiconductors
As wafers hit surface area limits, space on them is like downtown real estate: it comes at a premium. Layering circuits allows chipmakers to fit more memory into the same space—building up instead of out. 128L puts YMTC on the cutting edge of flash memory, but scaling up to mass production to match its competitors will be challenging.
Flash memory is used in products from “entry-level” USB and memory cards, to more complicated solid-state hard drives. YMTC’s current generation of 64L memory has its foot on the lowest rung of this ladder.
Samsung, Micron and SK Hynix hit the initial production milestone in 2019, and started selling their in-class chips in early 2020. YMTC’s product could compete with them, but comes six months to a year behind the competition.
It is an important step on China’s path to semiconductor independence, but the fact that YMTC has managed to stack 128 layers of circuits on a wafer won’t necessarily make it a big player in the global semiconductor industry, experts said. There are several hurdles that YMTC needs to jump through in order to compete with incumbents in quality, scale, and price.
Analysts said that YMTC’s previous NAND chip was hardly a wild success. “Because YMTC has just begun selling 64L NAND products, and because of the impact from COVID-19, the actual sales figure remains low at this point,” Avril Wu, a semiconductor analyst at Taiwanese market research firm TrendForce, told TechNode.
YMTC has not released any information as to how many units of the 64-layer memory chip it has sold, and did not reply to TechNode’s request for data. TrendForce expects YMTC to account for 8% of the global flash memory market in 2021.
The timing is right for YMTC to launch the 128L chip, as innovation from some competitors is likely to slow. The price of NAND Flash fell by an average of 46% in 2019, leading to losses, conservative capital expenditures, and record-low output growth expectations, TrendForce said.
For YMTC to compete with international peers, memory chip production standards will matter as much as design. One measure used in the industry to gauge quality is yield: the proportion of chips on a wafer that work properly.
In the best case, YMTC will become a big player in the global flash memory chip game. In the worst case, Randall said, its clients won’t evolve past China.
“YMTC lags behind other mainstream memory manufacturers in terms of yield and product stability,” Wu said. She added that “it is actively bridging this competitive gap.” More than a matter of design, yield is affected by the production process. Companies refine the manufacturing process as engineers gain know-how in making a particular design.
Market analyst Wu said the “primary hurdle” is the procurement of manufacturing equipment. The billion dollar machines that are used to produce chips are made by few companies in the US and Europe, like Dutch ASML and American LAM Research. They take months to produce and have long waiting lists, which is why usually there is a months-long lag between announcing a product and bringing it to market.
“In the future, if the US government prohibits European and US equipment suppliers from shipping to YMTC, it will negatively affect the company’s capacity expansion schedules,” Wu said.
The issue of experience and know-how is important for scaling production as well, James Lewis, Senior Vice President and Director of the Technology Policy Program at US think tank Center for Strategic and International studies, told TechNode.
“It’s not foreign sources for semiconductor manufacturing equipment that is the obstacle,” he said.
The 64L’s yield was reportedly “good enough,” said Stewart Randall who heads the electronics and embedded software department at Intralink, a consultancy that provides market entry services to China, told TechNode. This is a positive sign for the 128L’s yield, but its production is harder. “Let’s see how the 128L does,” he said.
In all likelihood YMTC will manage to scale up capacity and mass produce its 128L flash chip in 2021, analysts said. But the scale at which this production happens is crucial to the economies of scale that allow companies to offer competitive prices. Given the lack of know-how and equipment, it will take time for YMTC to match the offers of incumbents in price and quality.
But the Wuhan memory chip-maker has a powerful friend holding its hand. It is funded by government-backed conglomerate Tsinghua Unigroup. Beijing’s Big Fund, focused on promoting the development of homegrown semiconductors, raised $29 billion last summer. Tsinghua Unigroup received the most state funding out of all semiconductor players in the world between 2014 and 2018 in a December report published by the Organization for Economic Construction and Development.
As a strategic company that isn’t listed, YMTC and Tsinghua Unigroup don’t need to churn profits the same way that its competitors do. The state-owned company is likely willing to bankroll losses in order to help a Chinese semiconductor company establish itself in the market
“Neither financial nor human resource factors are issues for YMTC,” Wu said. Backed by Tsinghua Unigroup, all it needs is time to make a dent in the flash memory market. TrendForce said that YMTC’s mass production of 128L is likely to drive down prices for the industry overall.
Beijing has other ways to help YMTC, but it must strike the right balance. “The temptation will be for the Chinese government to press companies to give YMTC preference, but this works only if the chips are competitive in price and performance,” Lewis said.
Foreign companies could relocate rather than buy an inferior product from YMTC, Lewis said. This policy is “a bit touchy now, as the government doesn’t want to encourage foreign companies in China to leave” during the Covid-19 pandemic, he said.
YMTC’s clientele is overwhelmingly made up of Chinese companies, but it also works with Phison Electronics, a Taiwanese company that packs flash memory chips into controllers for USBs, memory cards, and SSDs, sources told TechNode.
The development of the 128L flash memory chip is an accomplishment. Founded in 2016, the company has managed to come head-to-head with decades-old players like Samsung on one crucial aspect of semiconductor design: stacking circuits on a wafer. It is big news for the Wuhan-based firm, but it is only a small step in China’s efforts to achieve self-reliance in semiconductor production and manufacturing.
The 128L wafer will allow YMTC to up its game, from memory cards and USBs into solid-state drives for computers. The fact that it has developed its own chip architecture, called Xtacking, bodes well for future intellectual property conflicts, Wu said.
But memory chips are some of the easiest integrated circuits to produce, the “low end of semiconductor technology,” Lewis said. Chinese companies have yet to make significant progress in designing more advanced chips, like graphic processing units, and rely on western companies. China’s semiconductor industry might soon be supplying memory components to the globe, but it will continue to import all the other chips that computers are made of from the rest of the world.
]]>As EU and US authorities are trying to protect their most valued assets from Chinese money, China made what could be a goodwill gesture: The country’s antitrust regulator approved the acquisition of Israeli Mellanox Technologies by California-based Nvidia for $6.9 billion. The deal is expected to boost Nvidia’s edge in artificial intelligence computing.
Why it matters: China’s green light comes at a time of heightened tensions between Beijing and the Western world. Analysts speculate that there could be multiple reasons behind the approval: an attempt to defuse tensions, a sign that China doesn’t plan to fight every single battle, or that they simply don’t care.
Details: The Mellanox deal was announced in March 2019 and was first cleared by US and EU authorities.
Context: The Imagination Technologies boardroom takeover that never took place has caused a stir in US and European circles. The UK chipmaker’s CEO, CPO and CTO resigned, unconvinced that the company was safe from a takeover.
Luckin Coffee’s sudden admission of financial fraud has touched off a short-selling bonanza for US-listed Chinese stocks. In the weeks since it admitted to fabricating over half of its claimed revenue, a short-seller firm called Wolfpack Research made similar accusations against iQiyi, while TAL Education has admitted to smaller-scale inflated figures.
What does this mean for everyone else? How badly will these cases affect the reputation of other US-listed Chinese stocks? To answer these questions, TechNode has analyzed 31 US-listed Chinese tech companies.
Editor’s note: A version of this first appeared on our sister site, TechNode Chinese. Below is a translated summary. Some of the data used comes from Wind, a financial data services company.
In US markets, e-commerce platforms are the heavyweights. Alibaba alone is eight times bigger than runner-up JD, and you don’t see anything but e-commerce until Netease at number four. You might notice the absence of Tencent—it’s listed in Hong Kong.
Share prices of e-commerce and edtech startups have boomed as more people are relying on online services during the Covid-19 pandemic.
Despite short-sellers’ fraud accusations, edtech startup GSX Education has almost doubled its market cap in the last year to $4.6 billion. TAL Education has also seen a 48% increase whilst streaming site Bilibili has gained 65% or $3.6 billion.
E-commerce has made strides, with second and third-tier city focused Pinduoduo leading the pack with a $25 billion increase, or 100% compared to last year. At 18% Alibaba’s growth might not seem so impressive in comparison, but it amounts to a staggering $85 billion.
Tencent Music lost $10 billion in market cap over the past year—a hefty hit, but at 37%, it is far less than Baidu’s eye-watering 41% $24 billion decline.
Of the firms that have released 2019 reports, Netease, JD, and Trip.com led the pack (Alibaba releases its annual reports in May). Leaving aside allegations of inflated revenue, iQiyi was the second-worst in the sample. The only bigger loser was Nio.
TechNode has identified nine US-listed Chinese companies whose stocks have fallen below their original issue price. Of them, 36Kr has fallen the most, losing 76% of its value. It is closely followed by Luckin Coffee with a 74% decrease.
Last week, iQiyi was trading below its $18 IPO price after accusations of fraud. It started a moderate rebound late on April 14.
Even as tensions between the two countries have grown, the US has attracted increasing numbers of Chinese IPOs. In 2018, 42 Chinese companies went public in the US, the most since 2006. The next year, a still-strong 38 firms listed in the US.
But short selling frenzies may change this trend—a previous wave of Chinese short sales, starting with Muddy Waters’s famed 2010 attack on Orient Paper, helped tank the 2011 IPO count from 22 to five. It took until 2017 for the number to pass 20 again.
]]>Tencent, Huawei, and Baidu are among the companies that will comprise a new committee tasked with setting up national standards for blockchain and distributed ledger technology, the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology (MIIT) announced (in Chinese) yesterday. The proposal is open for public comment until May 12, 2020.
Why it matters: Chinese authorities have been ramping up their efforts to boost blockchain as a strategically important technology. But the industry is crowded with many players, big and small, and standards are lacking.
Details: The committee is comprised of 71 members, including people from well-known tech companies from all verticals, including Tencent, Baidu, Huawei, JD, and Ping An.
Context: Just 5 days ago, the MIIT released a set of standards for information security of blockchain applications, among others, for public comment.
Two executives at Imagination Technologies, a UK semiconductor design and manufacturing firm, have quit their positions following a postponed boardroom takeover from Chinese investors, Sky News reported citing people familiar with the matter.
Why it matters: The semiconductor firm is one of the UK’s most prolific tech assets with over 30 years worth of patents. UK Members of Parliament got involved due to the company’s business and strategic importance to the UK.
Read more: Imagination Technologies: What’s at stake in the fight over control
Details: The two executives, Steve Evans, Chief Product Officer, and John Rayfield, Chief Technical Officer could change their minds. But only if they are assured that the “proposed change of control” does not take place, Sky News said.
Context: Last week, Imagination Technologies would have discussed the appointment of four representatives of state-owned China Reform Holdings as directors in an emergency meeting.
The Beijing metro system is piloting carriages equipped with cameras that can identify passengers that don’t wear face masks, state-owned Xinhua news agency reported today.
Why it matters: The pilot will contribute to Beijing’s coronavirus response, ensuring commuters follow guidelines about wearing masks in public.
Details: Some carriages running on metro line 6 in Beijing are equipped with high-resolution sensing cameras that transmit video data to an “intelligent system” for analysis, Xinhua said.
Context: Life in China is almost back to normal, after weeks of strict lockdown measures across the country. Authorities and the private sector have been working on technologies to control possible Covid-19 infections whilst normal life goes on.
The world’s leader in consumer drones, DJI, is making major changes to its US operations, three niche US-publications reported this week citing DJI dealers. Monica Suk, a DJI spokesperson, confirmed that the company is making “organizational changes,” but didn’t comment on reported layoffs nor a change in strategy.
Why it matters: Journalists suggest that faced with mounting scrutiny from US lawmakers and prolonged supply chain disruptions due to Covid-19, the company is using the upheaval to pivot to a direct-to-customer model and/or working only with major dealers.
“We have made some organizational changes in order to adapt to today’s challenging economic environment, but we remain open for business everywhere we operate.“
Monica Suk, DJI spokesperson
Details: It is unclear whether the reported changes are a result of turmoil caused by the Covid-19 pandemic, or if there is a wider organizational change in motion.
Context: The Shenzhen drone maker is notoriously secretive and opaque. As a private company, it doesn’t release revenue and sales figures nor provides any details of its strategic plans. Media requests for interviews are seldom granted.
The United Nations is partnering with Tencent to use its video conferencing and remote work platforms for a digital “global dialogue” to commemorate its 75th anniversary on June 26.
Why it matters: The partnership is a boost to Tencent’s image and prominence around the world. It could aid Tencent’s global ambitions in enterprise software, while China’s tech giants are ramping up their efforts to grab a share of the B2B enterprise collaboration market at home and abroad.
“Tencent’s technology and global outreach is particularly important to reach young people. As one of the world’s largest tech companies, Tencent’s support for the UN75 campaign sets an important example.”
—Fabrizio Hochschild, Special Adviser to the Secretary-General on the Preparations for the Commemoration of the United Nations’ 75th Anniversary
Details: The UN for its 75th anniversary is inviting people around the world to take part in a conversation about what they want the world to look like in 25 years, and how crises like climate change and pandemics can be tackled, according to its website.
“Global collaboration not only plays a vital role in human well-being and our future, but is also the key to fighting the current global pandemic.”
—Martin Lau, Tencent president
Context: The UN usually marks the anniversary of its establishment on June 26, 1946 with a ceremony at its headquarters and other events around the world. For its 70th anniversary, important landmarks around the world were illuminated in blue, the organization’s official color.
]]>Read more: To work smart, China should delete DingTalk
Ant Financial, Alibaba’s fintech arm, has set up a corporate credit rating company for small and micro enterprises.
Why it matters: The new venture brings Ant Financial closer to the comprehensive offerings of traditional banks, with the distinct advantage of having access to the Taobao marketplace—a massive pool of small and micro enterprises.
Details: Ant Financial Credit Rating is wholly owned by Ant Financial and funded with RMB 500 million (about $70.5 million) in capital, according to Chinese media reports. The company was listed on China’s National Corporate Credit Information System (NCCIS), the national corporate registry database.
Context: The corporate credit industry has increasingly crowded, with 128 registered companies, according to Beijing News.
Chinese passenger drone maker Ehang has more than quadrupled its revenues and significantly narrowed its losses in the fourth quarter, the company said Wednesday, but it expects some short-term effects from Covid-19 in 2020.
Why it matters: In Ehang’s first quarterly financial results since listing on Nasdaq in December, the urban air mobility company recorded a surging top line as well as solid progress toward commercialization of its passenger drones.
Details: “Absence and late return of front-line workers, delayed fulfillment across our supply chain, and the short-term disruption on some of our customers’ industries such as tourism” as a result of the Covid-19 outbreak might dampen Ehang’s results in 2020, the company said. But it is looking to explore new opportunities such as emergency response and search and rescue.
Context: The drone maker’s initial public offering raised $46 million, less than half of its initial goal of $100 million.
As working from home catches on globally, gaming giant Tencent on Tuesday launched its video conferencing tool internationally, taking China’s battle for enterprise collaboration and productivity tools to markets overseas.
Why it matters: China’s tech heavyweights have been pushing into B2B services since late last year, looking for sources of growth outside their traditional industries. The Covid-19 pandemic has accelerated the shift, dramatically increasing in the size the pool of potential users.
Details: Voov is an international version of Tencent Meeting, launched in December 2019 by Tencent Cloud. It offers cloud-based encrypted video conferencing and instant messaging capabilities during meetings, the company said in a statement emailed to TechNode.
Context: Alibaba’s productivity tool Dingtalk also offers video conferencing functionality, but does not offer interoperability with Tencent’s WeChat, the most popular social network app in China.
Alibaba has launched a free international collaboration platform based on its enterprise productivity app Dingtalk for medical professionals to share information and advice on prevention and treatment of the Covid-19 outbreak, Alibaba Cloud said on Wednesday.
Why it matters: Information sharing between medical professionals is key to tackling the pandemic, as new hotbeds of infections rise.
Details: Alibaba’s “Medical Expert Communication Platform” is built on the Hangzhou-based giant’s Dingtalk work collaboration app. It seeks to connect “medical heroes” from around the world to share experience and know-how in the fight against Covid-19, according to a company statement.
Context: The Covid-19 epidemic started in China, but is now crippling the healthcare systems in countries including Italy, Iran, and Spain. As of Tuesday, there were more coronavirus cases outside of China than in. Yesterday, China reported only 13 new confirmed cases of the virus,
Alibaba founder Jack Ma posted on his freshly minted Twitter account on Monday that he is donating through his charity foundation testing kits and masks to countries afflicted by Covid-19 including the US, all of Africa, Italy, and Spain.
Why it matters: Ma’s move follows other tech billionaires in offering help to countries affected by Covid-19, but has also given him the most positive publicity he has seen in a while.
Details: A donation of 500,000 Covid-19 testing kits and 1 million protective face masks to the US was already underway, according to Ma’s first tweet on Monday which has drawn nearly 430,000 likes as of Tuesday morning. The Jack Ma Foundation said it plans to deploy similar aid to Japan, Korea, Italy, and Spain.
Context: Jack Ma donated RMB 100 million (approximately $14.3 million) to two Chinese companies working on Covid-19 vaccines and RMB 1 billion for medical supplies to central Hubei province, where the virus was first reported.
Snowplus has raised $125 million in funding from a number of global investors to fund its expansion into overseas markets, the e-cigarette startup said in a statement on Thursday.
Why it matters: The Beijing-based company showed promise in China’s competitive vaping market, but had reportedly fallen onto hard times due to strict regulation further exacerbated by the Covid-19 outbreak in the country.
Details: The $125 million investment was a global fundraise including investors in Asia, the Middle East, North America, and Europe, according to the statement.
“Snowplus has been making adjustments to our business as we continue to expand overseas.”
—Derek Li, co-founder and head of international business at Snowplus
Context: A former employee at Snowplus told TechNode that the startup had fired 50% of its staff beginning in November due to liquidity issues. The company was already in trouble and the Covid-19 outbreak only made things worse, the person said.
Ant Financial, the fintech arm of Chinese online marketplace Alibaba, bought a small stake in Swedish payments app Klarna, the startup said on Wednesday.
Why it matters: Ant Financial has embarked on a series of moves to tap European consumers, as the Chinese online payments market is effectively saturated by the WeChat Pay and Alipay duopoly.
“Alipay, and the wider Alibaba Group, have truly set the global pace on retail innovation and the app economy. We are delighted in this confidence shown in Klarna in defining the future of payments and shopping.”
— Sebastian Siemiątkowski, Klarna CEO
Details: The investment accounts for less than 1% of Klarna’s equity and was comprised of existing and new shares, Reuters reported citing a source familiar with the matter.
Context: Ant Financial announced a partnership in November with French startup Worldline to bring Alipay into Europe to provide payment services to Asian tourists. At least another six European mobile wallet platforms, together accounting for 5 million users, are partnering with Alipay to offer payment services on the continent.
Chinese telecommunications giant Huawei and Russia’s state-owned bank Sberbank are partnering to launch an enterprise cloud services platform in the country, the bank said on Tuesday.
Why it matters: This move is another way for Huawei to gain access to the Russian market with approximately 90 million users as it contends with major hurdles in the US.
Details: The strategic partnership is the first “on this scale between Russian and international cloud providers,” according to a Sberbank statement released on Tuesday.
“We are sure that businesspersons will appreciate this solution and it will become a great contribution to the digital transformation of Russia.“
— Wang Wei, CEO, Huawei Cloud in Russia
Context: Huawei has been making moves in Russia’s digital market in the last few years while Sberbank is trying to transition from traditional banking into offering digital services.
Popular infection simulation game Plague Inc. has been removed from Chinese app stores, Apple and Xiaomi users noticed today, after enjoying renewed popularity during the Covid-19 outbreak.
Why it matters: The removal shows just how serious the country’s authorities are in managing the public perception of the virus.
Details: TechNode has confirmed that Plague Inc. is not available on the Chinese versions of the Apple and Xiaomi app stores as of Thursday.
Context: In January, the eight-year-old game beat Minecraft in Apple’s US App Store’s paid games popularity rankings, according to market intelligence firm Apptica. This happened on the day that Wuhan, the central Chinese city considered the epicenter of the outbreak, was cut off from the world.
Update: added a statement from the game developer in the Details section.
]]>E-cigarette startup Snowplus has laid off a significant portion of its employees, TechNode has confirmed, as China’s vaping industry struggles to stay afloat after being limited to offline sales in November and as customers dwindle amid the outbreak.
Why it matters: The epidemic has delivered another blow to an industry already in turmoil due to new regulations.
Details: Reports of Snowplus’s layoffs circulated on Chinese media on Saturday night, which the company confirmed today in a statement shared with TechNode. The Shenzhen-based startup said it is conducting “staff optimization” which is a “natural part of the growth of any business.”
Context: Home to 300 million smokers, China was expected to be the next big market for e-cigarettes, which have taken off in the US. But the country’s many vaping startups are facing a stricter regulatory environment because of tax and sales regulations, including a ban on online sales that came into effect on Nov. 1.
Pinduoduo added a new social e-commerce feature to its app, creating so-called “circles of trust,” through which users can exchange product reviews with a group of selected contacts, the company said in its newsletter on Tuesday.
Why it matters: The feature, dubbed “Pinxiaoquan,” is meant to tackle counterfeit and substandard goods, especially those related to medical supplies like protective face masks during the coronavirus outbreak in China.
E-commerce firms cracking down on sellers of fake protective masks
Details: Online shoppers can select friends and family to include in their trusted circles, and then follow their purchase histories and comments on listings, cutting through the noise produced by Pinduoduo’s 536 million users.
Context: Requests for refunds and returns on Pinduoduo have risen by 120% compared with the same period last year, the company said, attributing the increase to “panic buying and erroneous purchases” when the users lack sufficient information and time to select high-quality products.
Correction: an earlier version of the story identified the feature as the “Circle of Trust” instead of using the pinyin for its official name in Chinese only, “Pinxiaoquan.”
]]>iPhone assembly plants in China belonging to Foxconn will not return to normal production volumes for at least another week due to the novel coronavirus outbreak, multiple media reports have reported, with some factories remaining closed and delayed returns expected for significant parts of its labor force.
Why it matters: Foxconn, also known as Hon Hai Precision Industry Co., is China’s largest private sector employer and the world’s biggest iPhone assembler. Delays in Foxconn’s production, a key manufacturing contractor for Huawei, Amazon, Google, and many others, are likely to affect supply chains for several major electronics brands.
Details: Local authorities in Shenzhen have ordered Foxconn to keep its factories closed over the next week due to “violation of epidemic prevention and control” which could result in the death penalty, Nikkei Asian Review reported on Saturday, citing anonymous sources familiar with the matter.
Context: Southern Guangdong province, where Shenzhen is located, has reported the second-highest number of coronavirus infections after Hubei. Shenzhen counts 368 confirmed cases, compared with 337 in Beijing and 295 in Shanghai, according to official data.
This article was co-authored by Wei Sheng.
China’s tech stocks have dropped sharply since Jan. 13, when an epidemic disease known as novel coronavirus went global. On Tuesday Feb. 3, they started to recover, but most have a long way to recover from January losses.
E-commerce giant Meituan Dianping opened at HK$109.20 (about $14) on Jan. 13, dropped to HK$99.50 by the end of the day Feb. 3, and has climbed back to HK$100.50.
The stock rise coincided with a strong monetary boost from Beijing on Tuesday. The People’s Bank of China injected RMB 400 billion (about $57 billion) of liquidity to the banking system and strengthened the yuan exchange rate to support the economy.
The liquidity injection was the largest in the past year, sending a strong message to markets that the government will support the Chinese economy during the virus outbreak.
Manufacturers of surgical masks, now widely used and sometimes mandated in China for protection against airborne viruses, have seen a surge in share prices. Stock for three Chinese firms TechNode analyzed have gained 40% in share price since Jan. 13, indicating that investors expect a prolonged health crisis.
But things are looking up this week in tech. Stocks on Shanghai’s tech board started to climb on Tuesday, gaining back on the past few weeks’ losses. The benchmark SSE Composite Index, in which the STAR Market is listed, has gained close to 3% since Tuesday.
China’s Nasdaq-style STAR Market has been on a roller coaster ride after it reopened on Monday. Most shares dropped during the first day of trading after the week-long break with 43 out of 79 listing companies seeing their share prices reach the tech board’s daily limit of 20% downside.
The e-commerce sector has been hit the hardest among those analyzed, as expectations for consumption were low in the past few weeks. Share prices of the six companies TechNode analyzed saw a 9.4% decrease on average until Feb. 3, and have since won back 5.4%.
Millions of people are staying at home this week due to obligatory work-from-home policies, adding on the fact that fears of the virus spreading is running high. But fear of the virus might prove beneficial for e-commerce companies.
“Alibaba and Meituan’s share prices dipped slightly, but are now on an upward trajectory, as investors price in how important e-commerce will be over the coming months,” Michael Norris, leader of research and strategy at AgencyChina, told TechNode.
Cities across China have ordered entertainment venues to shut down and shopping malls to take strict entry measures during the Spring Festival break which went from Jan. 23 through Feb. 2 after a last-minute extension.
“Over the coming weeks, the default for many folks’ consumption will be e-commerce,” Norris said. E-commerce and delivery platforms have already implemented “no-contact delivery,” meaning the delivery driver doesn’t come in person with the person receiving the goods. This scheme meets consumer desires and “the stock market has responded positively to these developments,” Norris said.
Luckin Coffee shares have dropped by 29%, from $44.17 on Jan. 13 to $31.35 on Feb. 3, the biggest drop among the companies analyzed. On Saturday, the US investment firm Muddy Waters delivered a further blow to China’s largest coffee chain, saying that it believes the company is inflating sales numbers. Luckin Coffee stock has increased by 24.56% this week, recovering to $39.05.
Smartphones and telecommunications companies have also seen a drop. The five companies TechNode analyzed showed a 2.3% decrease since Feb. 13.
“We predict the overall smartphone shipment in China to drop by 15% to 20% year on year in the first quarter,” said Fang Jing, chief analyst at Cinda Securities, a Beijing-based investment firm.
The drop is attributable to the government’s calls remain during the Spring Festival holiday in an effort to contain the spread of the virus, Fang said.
The holiday is usually considered a barometer of Chinese private consumption because of the traditions of gift-giving and family reunions. However, fears of the deadly coronavirus that has killed 491 people and sickened 24,363, based on official data, have kept shoppers away from the streets.
“We have seen shipments of smartphones through offline channels drop by 70% during the Spring Festival holiday,” said Fang. “If the situation is not going to take a turn for the better, the percentage will likely increase.”
Instead, people are going online for electronics consumption. Online shipments of smartphones are expected to account for as much as 40% in the first quarter, Fang said, adding that the proportion was only 28% in the same period last year.
With a small store footprint, Xiaomi relies on online sales, which makes it a strong contender for the coming months when e-commerce will become an even bigger pillar of consumption. Its stock climbed 3.29% in the time period analyzed, making it the only rising stock in the smartphones and telcos category.
Compounding on Xiaomi’s relatively good outlook in China, are good results in India. The Beijing-based company remains the top smartphone brand in India, according to research by market intelligence firm Canalys published on Jan. 29.
The epidemic also creates challenges and disruptions for supply chains in China, especially after authorities in some big cities announced rules barring companies from resuming operations for a certain period of time following the break.
Companies in Shanghai, for example, are not allowed to re-open offices before Feb. 10, meaning either remote work or a longer holiday. In the meantime, jobs that require the physical presence of employees, like factories, remain closed.
DingTalk, WeChat Work overburdened as hundreds of millions work remotely
Car manufacturer Hyundai had to close all its factories in South Korea after it ran out of critical components coming from China. The world’s fifth-largest automaker said it would take three to four weeks to switch to parts made outside China.
“We expect that most consumer electronics manufacturers will resume operations on Feb. 9 or Feb. 10, which means a delay of roughly one week,” said Fang.
“But, given that the first quarter is always a low season for electronics consumption in the year, the impact is limited. We expect that orders affected by the delay will account for less than 2% of smartphone makers’ annual orders.”
CORRECTION: An earlier version of this article erroneously reported Meituan Dianping’s stock price as though it were listed in US dollars. The company’s shares are priced in Hong Kong dollars.
]]>Chinese online travel platform Trip.com Group, is extending a free cancellation policy for people traveling in or to China until Feb. 29 for those affected by the current coronavirus outbreak, it said on Sunday.
Why it matters: Tourism in China has been hit hard by the epidemic, as thousands of travelers have already been affected by travel restrictions.
Details: Trip.com, or Ctrip as it is known in China, has waived fees normally charged for canceling or changing bookings for hotels, tours, and airplane and train tickets. Customers who have booked hotels or transportation in China until Feb. 29 can cancel or amend their booking at no extra cost if the booking was made before Jan. 28.
Context: The current novel coronavirus strain which was first reported in the central Chinese city of Wuhan in Hubei province, brought the country to a standstill during one of its busiest travel seasons.
News that a Taiwanese supplier for Apple and Samsung with factories in China plans to set up new production facilities in Vietnam following a US-China “phase one” deal is a signal that the trade friction merely hastened the process of electronics manufacturers diversifying from China, according to an analyst.
Why it matters: The so-called phase one trade deal was expected to restore confidence in China’s economy, but Pegatron’s move shows that tech companies are still trying to disentangle their supply chains from “the world’s factory” to mitigate risk.
“The trade war accelerated manufacturers’ moving away from China and it sent a strong message: Do not put all your eggs in one basket.” (our translation)
—Will Wong, smartphone analyst at IDC Singapore
Details: Vietnam lacks the level of infrastructure and skilled labor pool that supports China’s manufacturing capacity, Will Wong, a Singapore-based smartphone analyst at market research firm International Data corporation, told TechNode. But local governments remain hopeful that it will become central to electronics supply chains in the future and are trying to attract investment, he added.
Context: Increasing labor costs and stricter regulation in China had tech companies looking for manufacturing facilities elsewhere prior to the trade war, Wong said.
Includes contributions from Wei Sheng.
]]>The small city of Trikala, Greece offers some quintessential provincial scenes: bustling farmers’ markets with vibrant colors and old men with bushy mustaches chatting on park benches.
Delve deeper and you’ll discover public wifi, smart parking facilities, and coming soon, driverless buses. Trikala has become Greece’s first smart city thanks to the roll-out of multiple digital initiatives. With technology delivered straight from China, the city is set to commission (in Greek) the world’s first operational pilot for autonomous buses in real traffic conditions downtown.
Chinese state-owned vehicle manufacturer Weichai will provide the driverless buses which will operate for at least two years. This is the first time that China-made driverless vehicles will hit the roads in Europe.
The buses will automatically avoid obstacles and pedestrians and offer an on-demand service. They will provide customized options for passengers that deviate slightly from original routes to better serve their needs. 5G networks will support operations with lower latency and quicker connection speeds to the control center.
“There was great interest from European manufacturers. Weichai participated through a local subsidiary called Amani Swiss,” Odysseas Raptis, chief executive at e-Trikala, the company responsible for procurement, told TechNode. The most important factor was the technology and know-how of candidates, he said.
The project received funding from the Greek government and the European Union. The two governmental authorities handed out rounds of funding last summer and announced a procurement tender.
A team of five to seven engineers and experts from Weichai will accompany the driverless buses to the city for about nine months. During the first phase, the team will work with local engineers to map out a route. This phase is expected to last two to three months, Raptis said.
The driverless buses will then operate for six months while the Weichai team trains local staff. After that point, passenger operations will start and the program will run for an additional two years.
A team from Greece’s Institute of Communications and Computer Science from the National Technical University Department will also support the experiment, Raptis said.
“Globally, our program is synonymous with pioneering innovation,” said Yannis Kotoulas, president of e-Trikala told TechNode. “We will be able to see how passengers and people living with the experiment react to the buses,” he said, describing the partnership with Weichai as a “huge pleasure.”
Weichai Group is a Chinese state-owned corporation that specializes in the design and manufacture of diesel engines and vehicles. It has clients in 110 countries around the world, according to its website.
“We believe not only in this particular move, but in close collaboration with them [Weichai] to take steps that the global automotive market needs,” Raptis said, referring to the bypassing of obstacles and on-demand service.
Shanghai-based DeepBlue AI was also involved in the design and manufacturing of the vehicles, people familiar with the matter told TechNode.
If it wasn’t for a DeepBlue event in Athens last June, this deal may never have gone through. Trikala Mayor Dimitris Papastergiou told TechNode that it was after this promotional event that he informed DeepBlue of the tender.
Primarily agricultural with little industry in the heart of Greece’s biggest valley, Trikala had fallen on hard times competing with international product prices and volumes.
Over time, it became, at best, a stop over for tourists on the way to Meteora, a UNESCO world heritage site featuring monasteries built on towering rocks reaching 550meters in height. While tourists from Russia, the Balkans, and beyond continued to flock to the important religious landmark, Trikala’s economy was dwindling.
Technology offered the city not only an opportunity to better the lives of residents but also to nurture tourism and create jobs. Tours to Meteora now stop at Trikala to see the city’s smart infrastructure and try out the free public electric vehicles.
“We need to create our own opportunities and not wait for the state,” the mayor said. He said the municipality had submitted over 1,000 applications to international institutions for technology funds.
Trikala has gained a reputation on the European stage as the country’s first smart city. The Ministry of Economics and Finance named the city Greece’s first digital city in 2004. By 2009, it was listed in the world’s top 21 smart cities worldwide by the Intelligent Community Forum, a global network of smart communities.
The local municipality has integrated several intelligent features into the city’s infrastructure, including sensors on car parking spots, smart waste management and a pilot 5G network, one of three in the country. Chinese technology has been key to at least one of these, the engineers working on the project told TechNode.
The smart waste system was designed by local engineers and manufactured in China. The system monitors key pumps in the city’s waste pipes and alerts the control room if the pumps are under stress or in need of maintenance.
Without the option to manufacture cheap and quality hardware in China, implementing the system would have been far more difficult, the engineers said.
In 2015 and 2016, Trikala ran another driverless bus pilot funded by the European Union. Among the seven cities that participated in the project, Trikala was the only one to launch the project downtown. It served well as a tourist attraction, e-Trikala President Kotoulas said.
Results from the EU study showed that passengers at Trikala were unique in using the driverless bus regularly, as opposed to just out of curiosity. This data concurs with what local authorities told TechNode. The city’s residents are used to high tech applications and are proud to be part of a community that innovates.
The municipality anticipates further collaboration with Weichai in automated and sustainable mobility in the near future.
]]>The future of autonomous aircraft in cities bears more resemblance to a centralized bus system rather than on-demand vehicles like taxis, Chinese drone maker Ehang said in its first white paper released on Wednesday.
Why it matters: The Beijing-based firm is veering from the flying taxi model adopted by other players in the field, including Uber and Volocopter.
Details: The white paper explored “the potential of [urban air mobility] through insights into UAM applications and commercialization based on practical use cases,” according to Edware Xu, the startup’s chief strategy officer.
Context: Ehang caused a splash in 2016 when it debuted the world’s first electric passenger drone, called Ehang 184, at the Las Vegas Consumer Electronics Show (CES).
Relx, one of China’s leading vape startups, launched two flagship stores in Shanghai and Beijing on Saturday, following a national ban on online sales of e-cigarette products in November.
Why it matters: The e-cig industry is pivoting to offline to maintain sales and ensure compliance in response to strict regulation on online purchases and stringent rules on selling to minors.
Details: The startup will invest RMB 600 million ($85 million) in opening 10,000 stores globally within three years, Relx told TechNode in an emailed statement.
Context: Founded in January 2018, Relx claims to hold over 60% of the market in China. Investors include renowned tech VCs such as Sequoia Capital China, Source Code Capital, and IDG Capital.
China’s tech industry lags behind overseas peers when it comes to renewable energy goals and measures, according to a Greenpeace report published Thursday.
Why it matters: Chinese data centers are forecasted to emit 163 million tons of CO2 in 2023, according to another Greenpeace report, accounting for 1.5% of China’s total carbon emissions, based on European Union data for 2017.
Details: The report by Greenpeace and the North China Electric Power University surveyed 16 companies which make up 70% of China’s public cloud market (in Chinese) and 85% of the market for independent data centers (in Chinese).
Context: The Chinese internet industry is forecasted to increase its consumption of electricity by two thirds in the next three years, a September 2019 Greenpeace report said. This equals Australia’s total energy consumption in 2018.
Two security flaws at Chinese medical device operators put over 24 million patient records at risk in October. These medical data leaks reveal how cybersecurity practices and regulations lag behind as China’s healthtech industry plows ahead.
Cybersecurity monitoring site WizCase first noticed the leaks, which came from two separate sources. TechNode reviewed screenshots from the reported leaks and sought out further details from Dutch cybersecurity researcher Victor Gevers.
Sichuan Lianhao Technologies, a provider of internet of things medical solutions, left 24 million records exposed in the first leak. These included not only medical records, but also data that could directly identify patients and doctors, such as names, ID numbers, phone numbers, and medical information.
In a second leak, the medical department at China’s leading Tsinghua University left details of approximately 60,000 patients exposed. The data included data of birth, height, age. The server did not include identifiable information such as names and ID numbers.
“The leaks were initially identified as servers with open DB ports which were connected to the open internet,” Avishai Efrat, a lead researcher at WizCase who was part of the team that disclosed the leaks, told TechNode.
DB ports are able to connect to MongoDB servers, a commonly used type of data storage architecture associated with many recent leaks. The server architecture is free to use and serves document-like data, rather than multimedia files.
“The server proved to be accessible via ElasticSearch ports with no authentication needed, meaning that anyone could access the data they hold by approaching the IP and port of each server’s ElasticSearch service,” Efrat said.
Elasticsearch is a search function added on top of the server model and “is commonly used for making big data sets easily searchable,” said researcher Victor Gerves.
Companies can bring the server online to make the data accessible to employees via ports. But steps are needed to safeguard access.
“Some platforms and technologies are meant to be kept away from the open internet,
Efrat said. “Databases like ElasticSearch were designed to be implemented in closed networks.”
It is common practice to prevent data from falling into the wrong hands through the use of shield servers that block certain entry ports, or by requiring authentication to gain access.
“Our advice is always protect servers connected to the internet by firewall blocking everything except port 443 (for HTTPS) or limit the access of the service with network filtering to only accept local connections,” Gevers said.
Tsinghua University was responsible for another leak of medical data back in September, Gevers said. The leak left millions of identifiable data from 109 hospitals in China’s Sichuan province available online, he added.
After comparing WizCase’s information to his own disclosure, Gevers told TechNode the two leaks came from separate servers. The security flaw in both cases relate to the ElasticSearch service.
The Beijing-based university refuted Gevers’s claim in September on Twitter, saying that it did not operate the server.
Companies are vying for a share of China’s trillion-dollar (in Chinese) healthcare industry with intelligent connected devices. Heavyweights like Alibaba and JD have joined the race.
A 2018 report from Tencent’s security arm found that 84.7% of hospitals provide online services via mobile or desktop apps, which typically come from third parties. By contrast, only 56.4% of these services include testing and consultation, the report said.
The use of third party software is common in the medical industry, and increases the probability of cyberattacks, Efrat said.
“It was reported about 17% of network attacks in hospitals come from medical devices,” Simun Hui, a Shanghai-based partner at law firm Baker Mckenzie, told TechNode. “77% of hospitals said that they are concerned about the security risk of medical equipment.”
A little over three-quarters of Chinese hospitals’ apps for patients have cybersecurity vulnerabilities. Patients use these programs for booking appointments and increasing access to medical services from home.
Ransomware attackers have targeted the Chinese medical sector since 2017, Tencent said, adding that ransomware makes up nearly one-third of all attacks in the country. These blackmailing attempts have become a danger to the physical well-being of patients, the experts told TechNode.
Hui said there is “a trend that hackers are no longer satisfied with extracting medical records and patient data. They are reaching out to the medical devices and threatening the safety of patients.”
Authorities are yet to release any regulations specifically covering medical data at healthtech providers. “So far we have not seen any mandatory laws or regulations being implemented specifically for medical device operators and vendors,” said Hui.
The China Food and Drug Administration (CFDA) released Guiding Principles on the Technical Reviews of the Cybersecurity Registration of Medical Devices in 2017. They call for security reviews for all medical devices operators. Hui expects them to become mandatory in the future.
The Ministry of Public Security says it has conducted inspections on 27,000 companies, he added.
The 2017 Cybersecurity Law has led to fine against hospitals. Administrative fines are typically close to the minimum amount required by the law, which stipulates a range between RMB 10,000 ($1,440) and RMB 100,000, state local media reports
A Chongqing hospital received a RMB 10,000 Chongqing last May after its servers were completely shut down as they were held hostage by hackers (in Chinese). The hospital hadn’t separated data according to their sensitivity, and it was not adequately protected from hackers.
In March, hackers installed a backdoor in the servers of a plastic surgery hospital, and information about its patients was used to build a prostitution website (in Chinese). Authorities deemed the hospital liable for the hack and levied a RMB 10,000 fine.
Whilst, the Tencent report states cybersecurity is becoming a priority in the increasingly digitalized healthcare industry, there are plenty of examples that show how sloppy architecture is still prevalent in the healthcare industry.
]]>Chinese online-to-offline beverage chain Luckin Coffee announced two separate developments on Tuesday aimed at a major cash raise including a five-year bond offering and a new share issuance, just eight months after its US stock market debut.
Why it matters: Issuing debt and new shares is a signal that the company is short on the cash needed to support its ambitions, namely rapidly increasing its footprint, deploying its unmanned store initiative, and international expansion.
Details: The company said that its stores numbered 4,507 at the end of 2019, putting it ahead of rival Starbucks’s 3,600 outlets in China and making it the largest coffee chain in the country. It served 40 million customers in 2019.
Context: Founded in 2017, Luckin Coffee is challenging Starbucks in China as it strives to popularize coffee in tea-loving China. It leverages technology to drive a focus on convenience and low prices. Users can order coffee on its app and pick up drinks in its stores.
DST, a startup which provides online logistics solutions for new energy vehicle (NEV) fleet management, has secured an undisclosed amount of funding in the tens of millions of dollars in a Series C1 round, Chinese media reported.
Why it matters: The Shenzhen-based startup is taking a different approach to NEVs, betting on commercial logistics fleets instead of individual cars.
Details: The round was led by New York-based venture capital firm Olympus Capital, and the other two investors have both participated in DST’s past fundraising rounds.
Context: DST was founded in 2015 and provides maintenance and operation support for 10,000 NEV logistics vehicles using a fleet management app and a network of offline services.
With contributions from Eliza Gkritsi
The technological development that has taken over China’s cities is finally hitting rural areas. With the help of government subsidies, farmers are acquiring drones to automate water and pesticide spraying as they deal with an uphill battle against labor shortages brought by urbanization.
If you can’t see the YouTube player above, try watching here instead.
Chinese farmers use more pesticides relative to land size than any other country in the world, three times more than their US or European counterparts, TechNode calculated based on data from the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations. These pesticides end up in the soil and produce, which can have adverse effects on the environment and public health.
Farmers can reduce the need for 30% to 40% of pesticides, and 90% of water by using XAG drones, Justin Gong, co-founder and vice president at the Guangzhou-based company, told TechNode. The firm’s drones are fully automated: farmers have only to press a button and artificial intelligence will do the rest.
The use of drones can also mitigate the diminishing labor force in China’s agricultural industry. “People under 50 are basically not farming. No one will be farming in the future,” said Huang Jianfeng, a rice farmer from eastern Zhejiang province.
Saving on labor costs, farmers can get a return on their investment. Three people will spray about 1.33 hectares in a day. In contrast, drones can cover more than 6.7 hectares at the same time. “If accumulated over a long period of time, the cost of using drones is even lower,” Guo Jianhua, a lemon farmer in southern Guangdong province, told TechNode.
Local governments provide subsidies of varying levels to encourage tech purchases. Huang told TechNode that authorities returned half of the money he used to buy the 24 drones he operates.
But the use of tech doesn’t necessarily improve the sustainability of farming, said Sacha Cody, a former fellow at the Hong Kong University of Science and Technology who led research on agricultural automation. It only distributes the chemicals more efficiently, he said.
The drive for efficiency in food production is guiding policy, meaning the government is more focused on feeding China’s growing population and not finding a new way of farming with long-term sustainability.
This overarching attitude is true to a certain extent, according to Lin Yifei, assistant professor of environmental studies at New York University’s Shanghai campus. At the same time, “we see a lot of conflicting observations on the ground about which direction China is going in the context of sustainability,” he said.
25-year-old Guo, the Guangdong lemon farmer, shared Lin’s uncertainty, saying he doesn’t know how his family’s future will look.
“I don’t have plans,” he said, “We don’t know what will happen in 10 years when they grow up, maybe they don’t need to do manual labor, maybe there will be a fully automatic system in the future. It’s hard to say.”
Getting precise about agriculture drones, one piece at a time
UPDATE: At 6.30pm on January 26, 2019, the WeChat team said on Weibo that the bug was fixed, an hour after it was first reported on Chinese social media.
The backend of WeChat official accounts has stopped working on desktop, making it difficult for businesses that use the function to advertise and communicate with their clients. The social media app’s team admitted to the bug in a thread on Sina Weibo this afternoon.
Why it matters: This is the second bug in the last two weeks to appear in one of China’s most used social media apps.
Details: Tencent’s WeChat team said it is repairing the bug and will keep updating customers. It is unclear how many accounts are affected.
Snafu in Tencent’s WeChat translation tool for Canadian flag emoji
Context: WeChat is China’s most used social media app, which makes it an essential part of any company’s advertising toolbox. Official accounts are akin to pages on Facebook and allow groups and business to amass followers and communicate with them, sending promotions or building brand identity through articles.
The Chinese market for wearable devices reached 27.15 million units shipped in the third quarter of 2019, up 45.2% from 20.97 million units in the same time period last year, according to a report from market research firm International Data Corporation (IDC). The report predicts the market to reach 200 million units in 2023.
Why it matters: The report highlights the fast growth of China’s wearable devices market, and the fact that Chinese companies are the biggest players in this field.
Details: Xiaomi is leading the market, with a quarter of all shipments, but Huawei saw the biggest increase in shipments. The Shenzhen-based telecoms giant saw its shipments almost double in the last year, doubling its market share from 10.7% in the third quarter of 2018 to 20.7% in the third quarter of 2019.
Context: Xiaomi overtook Apple as China’s largest seller of wearable devices in 2018.
]]>Chinese semiconductor companies receive the most government support of any of their global peers proportionately to their revenue, states a report from the Organization for Economic Construction and Development (OECD). The report describes not only the enormous size of the Chinese apparatus supporting the local integrated circuit (IC) industry, but the unique role of government equity and cheap loans in the Chinese IC ecosystem.
Some non-Chinese companies like Samsung and Intel receive similar amounts of state funding, but because of higher revenues, the government funds support a significantly smaller proportion of their operations.
The OECD in collaboration with moorcroft debt recovery looked into public financial records of 21 international chipmakers which represent two-thirds of the global market. They found that Chinese companies receive higher government support relative to their revenues on average than their global peers. This support comes by way of cheap loans, investments at below market price, and direct budgetary support.
Tsinghua Unigroup, a semiconductor developer 51% owned by a leading state university in Beijing, is the largest recipient of government support in the sample. The Semiconductor Manufacturing International Corporation (SMIC), China’s largest chip manufacturer, is the largest recipient of funding as a proportion of revenue, getting government help equal to over 40% of its revenue.
In terms of Chinese semiconductor companies, only privately-held HiSilicon, owned by Huawei, made it into the global top 20 by revenue in 2018, in sixteenth place.
Chinese firms received 86% of all below-market-equity investments among the firms surveyed. These take place via the Integrated Circuit Fund, a government company set up in 2014 to invest $23 billion in the industry, as well as through state-owned enterprises and local governments that acquiring stakes in chipmakers.
Semiconductor plants, known as fabs, are subject to a complex ownership structure in China, involving different levels of government in different parts of the company structure. One of these facilities costs around $20 billion to construct, the OECD said.
The government owns 95% of equity in fab Shanghai Huali, the OECD said. It is supported by a $1.8 billion injection from the national IC fund and $316 million from the Shanghai government. In addition, it is owned by the SASAC and Hua Hong Group, a state-owned semiconductor agency. Other examples in the report include 75% government equity in a fab in Wuhan, the provincial capital of central Hubei, and 57% in a Beijing fab.
But these investments have yet to produce significant returns, as profits remain low. Chinese firms’ assets doubled in the period 2014 to 2018, after the national IC fund was set up, but average profit margins were one-fifth of their global peers as of 2018.
Chinese IC firms lack their own chip designs, and usually act as manufacturers for overseas companies, which keeps profit margins low. In September, two Chinese companies announced plans to start making homegrown memory chips, but experts remain skeptical on if they can compete with incumbents.
“New NAND flash and DRAM players like Changxin Memory and Yangtze Memory are entering markets full of incumbents,” Stewart Randall, head of electronics and embedded software at Intralink, a consultancy that provides market entry services to China, told TechNode. “It will be extremely hard to gain market share. selling at a loss to gain market share may be necessary, but government funding can keep them going,” he added.
The three largest recipients of below-market loans between 2014 and 2018 were Chinese; Tsinghua Unigroup at $3.14 billion, SMIC at $695 million and JCET at $688 million, the OECD said. State-owned Hua Hong Group also received a $71 million loan in that period, the report states.
These loans typically include better terms than those from commercial lenders, with lower interest rates and longer repayment periods. The loans came from state-owned banks, namely the Bank of China, China Development Bank, and China Construction Bank.
All other firms in the sample received little or no funding. The next largest non-Chinese recipient on the list was Korea’s SK Hynix, which borrowed $34 million from various lenders, including the Korean Development Bank.
Beijing is also helping China’s chip industry through direct cash injections, subsidized inputs and tax deductions. SMIC and Hua Hong were the greatest beneficiaries of such budgetary support, proportionately to their revenue, according to the report. SMIC receives fiscal help from the government equivalent to almost 7% of revenue and Hua Hong’s budget receives assistance equivalent to 5% of revenue.
The US-dominated semiconductor firm acquisitions from 1998 to 2018. But with the creation of the national IC fund, international buyouts from Chinese players boomed. Nearly three-quarters of all IC firm buyers were Chinese in 2016. Activity has since slowed as restrictions on capital outflows intensified.
]]>The US administration is putting the final touches on a plan to limit key technology exports to rivals like China, Reuters reported on Tuesday.
Why it matters: The US is balancing the need to maintain access to an important consumer market with keeping its homegrown technology from falling into the hands of adversaries. Rhetoric from administration officials as well as the blanket export ban on Huawei, the world’s largest telecommunications equipment manufacturer, have alarmed American companies, which have lobbied for more relaxed rules.
Details: The rules will be submitted to international trade bodies for review, so that they can be implemented by US companies’ overseas subsidiaries as well, according to Reuters, though the review process would also slow down the roll out of restrictions, likely to mid-2021.
Context: Other than Huawei, the US has imposed export restrictions on the world’s most valuable artificial intelligence (AI) startup, Hong Kong-based Sensetime, as well as natural language-processing company iFlytek, and surveillance system manufacturers Hikvision and Dahua Technology.
A US national security committee wants to know if Apple and Google require app developers to disclose their ties to foreign entities and whether apps store American user data overseas.
Why it matters: The letters indicate growing concern in the US about whether private Chinese technology companies are providing information to the Beijing government and warn that the data could be used to blackmail US users.
Details: House national security subcommittee chairman Rep. Steven Lynch applauded the decision to force Grindr’s Beijing-based owner to divest from the LGBTQ app, adding that it could be “only a small part” of how foreign countries “seek to exploit consumer mobile application data to gain leverage” over the US.
Briefing: Chinese firm looking to sell Grindr after US raises security concerns
Context: Bytedance’s TikTok short video app has tried to separate its Chinese and US operations, facing increasing scrutiny from US politicians in recent months, but has also delayed scheduled meetings with US regulators.
China’s version of the Global Positioning System (GPS), called Beidou, will be completed by the end of the year, according to its website, as the country works to close the technological gap with the US and improve its domestic technology capabilities.
Why it matters: Beidou is China’s attempt to compete with US leadership in the navigation services market, as well as a strategic attempt to minimize China’s reliance on US technology in case of disputes.
Details: The news was first announced by the Chinese delegation at the United Nations International Committee on Global Satellite Navigation Systems in Bangalore on Dec. 8. China’s effort for a homegrown version of GPS started in 2000 and comprises three satellite networks. Beidou-3 is the first to provide global navigation services and the latest to be rolled out.
Context: Beidou is operated by China’s National Space Administration. The first satellite for the Beidou-3 program was launched on March 15, 2015 and geolocation services from Beidou-3 became available to the Asia-Pacific region in December 2018, ahead of the originally planned date in 2020.
Around 10% of Taiwan’s semiconductor engineers have moved to China as a result of Beijing’s stepped-up efforts to attract talent in support of its Made in China 2025 initiative, according to a report by Taiwan’s Business Weekly.
Why it matters: Chinese global consumer and industrial electronics powerhouses such as Huawei are dependent on chips made in the US, Japan, and South Korea, leaving the sector vulnerable to geopolitical risks. This became clearer after the US cut off Huawei’s chip supply by adding it to a trade blacklist in May, and Beijing is pouring money toward bolstering its weak chip sector.
Details: In the last five years, top executives and engineers from Taiwan have taken jobs in government-affiliated companies in China, including two senior research and development engineers and the co-chief operating executive of TSMC, Asian Nikkei Review reported.
Context: China’s State Council set up a fund to bolster investment in chipmaking in 2014. After its second financing round in July, it has raised RMB 338.7 billion (around $48 billion).
With contributions from
Amidst a sea of startups on show at TechCrunch Shenzhen 2019, two startups stood out for innovating in a massive industry that has remained unchanged for decades—industrial maintenance.
Founded in 2016 by two Canadians living in Shenzhen, Skygauge has developed a uniquely stable and precise drone that tilts four rotors to keep the main body stable, even in strong winds. It is equipped with a sensor that attaches to a metal structure, such as an oil rig, and collects corrosion data within a few seconds.
“Our frame can remain perfectly level, so that we can precisely approach a structure and contact the structure in very specific locations,” Nikita Iliushkin, co-founder and CEO of the startup, told TechNode.
Thanks to the stability, the Skygauge drone can conduct inspections of large metal structures, like oil and gas facilities, offshore platforms, bridges, and ships. Currently, such checks usually require scaffolding around the structure to make it accessible—a task that can take weeks. Skygauge can not only save businesses time and money but also put workers out of harm’s way, Illiushkin said.
Skygauge sees inspections as only the first application of its stable drone technology. In the future, the team wants to attach a stable robotic arm for general work, so that the drone can carry out jobs like painting, washing, and coating.
“The same way robotic arms revolutionized work in factories, our drones will revolutionize work in the skies,” Iliushkin said.
Also based in Shenzhen, Cassandra has developed an IoT-based predictive maintenance solution. The solution involves attaching magnetic ultrasonic vibration sensors to industrial machinery, and wirelessly feeding data in an artificially intelligent algorithm. Using Cassandra’s system, factory operators can monitor in real-time variables such as temperature, speed, and corrosion on an iPad app.
The AI analyzes the data and provides predictions on the machine’s state and functionality, so that the operators can know when a machine will fail ahead of time.
“86% of all maintenance is either scheduled unnecessarily or too late [currently],” said Alain Garner, founder and architecture director at Cassandra, a Cogobuy Group company. “Either people are using time-based maintenance, so just throwing away things before they break,” he continued.
Cassandra’s solution can help businesses save money on unnecessary maintenance or downtime caused by maintenance operations. “We’re in deployment at the moment in pilot stages, and we’re sort of rolling this out further,” Fournier said.
The predictive maintenance market is expected to grow to $10.7 billion by 2024, according to global research firm MarketsandMarkets.
]]>With additional reporting from Nicole Jao and Coco Gao.
Food delivery drivers whizzing around on scooters have become commonplace in the streets and alleys of China’s sprawling cities.
Around half of the country’s internet users, typically located in urban areas, ordered takeout online in the first half of 2019 (in Chinese). As user growth slows, the two main players are focusing on profitability and order growth, while the drivers receive the short end of the stick.
The market is effectively a duopoly—Chinese tech giant Meituan Dianping and Alibaba’s food delivery arm Ele.me have outdone smaller players, and boast a combined six million registered couriers.
Ele.me told TechNode in an email that they have 3 million registered drivers, while Meituan said it employed 2.7 million drivers in a 2018 report.
Meituan advertises the positions using images of happy, proud drivers and slogans emphasizing the potential for high pay. But the ads omit some crucial details to the job—insurance
In reality, fierce market competition and a lack of labor regulation have birthed algorithms that rule over drivers’ livelihoods and working conditions.
The overwhelming majority of food delivery drivers work under one of two labor regimes. Zhongbao, crowdsourced, delivery workers simply sign up to the platform and pick orders at will. With no contractual obligation to the company, they enjoy a more flexible schedule but receive no work injury insurance or social security.
The platforms also contract companies around China to act as labor-management intermediaries, which formally employ drivers. These workers adhere to fixed contracts with a single delivery service, and get regular working hours and orders via contractors.
“Even though they have a labor contract, many of them don’t have social security,” and often face “unpaid wages,” said Aiden Chau, a researcher at Hong Kong-based NGO China Labour Bulletin (CLB). The organization uses media reports and social media posts to maps strikes across different industries and locations in China.
The most common reasons for strikes are unpaid or diminishing wages, according to CLB’s strike map. The NGO gathers data on strikes and accidents from Chinese social media and local press reports. Many of the posts TechNode reviewed in October have since disappeared from Weibo.
Drivers have little to no legal right to demand higher compensation. After Chinese New Year in 2019, drivers noticed that their wages had fallen, said Chau.
With lower pay per order, zhongbao drivers have to work longer hours to make ends meet. A driver who requested only to be identified as Liu told TechNode, “The pay is now too low. I can’t stand it anymore.”
As a free agent, Beijing-based driver Ding works a 12-hour shift every day from 7.00 a.m. to as late as 11.00 p.m. Like many diligent delivery workers in China, Ding works weekends and holidays but considers his workload to be in the mid-range. “There are drivers who work from 5.00 a.m. to 11.00 a.m.,” he said.
A Chinese University of Hong Kong survey of 45 drivers in 2018 found they worked 12.4 hours on average.
Drivers have also noted that contractors are sometimes late or miss paying salaries. On Sept. 12, some 24 Ele.me couriers in northern Hebei province protested after they didn’t receive pay between May and August.
Ding completes 30 to 40 orders per day, earning RMB 11,000 to 13,000 per month, decent by the industry standard. Food couriers earn RMB 7,000 to 8,000 on average per month, TechNode found in an informal street survey.
Unlike other countries, these gig economy workers make the same or more than their white-collar counterparts, Michael Norris, research and strategy lead at AgencyChina, a Shanghai-based marketing and e-commerce consultancy, told TechNode. In 2017, the average salary in Shanghai and Beijing was around RMB 8,000, according to official data.
But drivers spend much of that money on remittances to support their families back home. The six million-strong food delivery workforce mostly comprises migrant employees from agricultural areas, born in the ‘80s or ‘90s. For many, a job in food delivery is far more attractive than hard labor in the fields and factories.
Ele.me has started an initiative to provide “strict and regular assessments of our logistics vendors to protect couriers’ rights and a service hotline (10105757) through which couriers can share their feedback to help us better supervise the vendors,” a company spokesperson told TechNode.
Drivers such as Ding work across multiple platforms, including Meituan, Ele.me, and parcel courier SF Express. But Meituan is trying to change that by locking workers in. The company has started a “loyalty program,” said CLB’s Chau. “If you do not join this loyalty program, your orders will be fluctuating or decreasing,” he continued.
Meituan Dianping declined TechNode’s request to comment on this article.
The two leading platforms often promise deliveries within 30 minutes and pay couriers more for hitting this target. Fulfilling orders late can incur a penalty for drivers and they may receive fewer orders over time.
Drivers have complained that the algorithm for calculating distances has changed, giving them impossibly short windows to make deliveries, Chau said. Ele.me’s use of as-the-crow-flies distancing to work out times spurred zhongbao workers to strike on July 9, a Weibo user said.
Short on time, drivers often break traffic rules. They ride the sidewalks, drive the wrong direction down streets, and run red lights.
Tough deadlines and lower wages push China’s delivery drivers to take risks
“You know how the way delivery men ride their scooters like they had no care for their lives,” an Ele.me driver said. “It’s not like we don’t care about our own safety. We have to make a living, so we have to rush to get the meal delivered.”
Shanghai police reported a spike in road accidents in the first half of 2019, and food delivery workers were involved in more than 80% of them.
Ding doesn’t take days off, even in adverse weather conditions. “We have to work and earn a living. I work every day, even in snow and in heavy rain,” he said.
During an August typhoon, a Shanghai driver died of electrocution (in Chinese) when driving through rainwater. Ele.me drivers said the platform threatened them with penalties if they didn’t work during the extreme weather event for an additional RMB 0.80 per order.
Ding has been involved in just one car accident during his four years as a courier. He collided with an inattentive driver’s car door. Ding ended up in the hospital though he said it was minor. Fortunately, the driver at fault covered the damage and medical bills for Ding.
Not all drivers are so lucky. Because of the lack of formal contracts, they are “seen as providing services to the company, so when they have an accident, it is not seen as a work injury,” Chau said. Their injuries are not covered by work insurance, and they have to pay for treatment themselves, he added.
Ele.me has set up an initiative to provide insurance to all registered drivers, a spokesperson told TechNode. The plan “covers the main risks the couriers may face in their daily work, along with low-interest loans and other benefits,” he said.
Drivers are fighting back with industrial action and protests. Their chief complaints, according to Weibo posts, are wage cuts, unpaid wages, and changes in the algorithms that administrate their work (all in Chinese).
The number of such strikes hit 56 in 2018, up from 10 in 2016 and 2017 combined, states CLB data. So far this year, CLB has reported 45 strikes across the country, and food delivery drivers made up 12% of all industrial action during July.
The strikes usually involve less than 100 food delivery drivers, though some involve larger numbers.
“Maybe not all protests are effective, but they definitely learn something, how to organize, how to deal with the government,” said CLB’s Chau. Often, drivers protest by staking out local company offices, waiting for management to hear them out.
“In the past, the customer service will tell them that it’s just the computer calculations,” Chau said. “When they talk to management, management will say that this is the policy of the company. They will know that it is not some neutral maths, but a decision made by management affecting their lives,” he continued.
Drivers sometimes go to great lengths to convince peers to participate. Chau said there had been cases of strikers slashing others’ tires to prevent them from working.
The workforce is also joining forces in more agreeable ways. Drivers set up a network in Shanghai’s Putuo district in February 2017 to connect five delivery driver trade unions from across the country. Local media reported at the time that there were 400 unionists nationally—a fraction of the total labor force.
In China, only the National Federation of Trade Unions is recognized as legal. All trade unions are required to be affiliated with the national-level body.
The union aims to protect workers’ rights and provide tangible services. “When we encounter grievances, face difficulties, and seek help, the trade union is our strong supporter,” said Yi Wu, a unionist driver, in January 2018. The Putuo union organizes welfare activities, including traffic education seminars, according to local media reports.
“Because drivers are employed as independent contractors, they think it is very difficult to change the algorithm,” Chau said.
But unionizing has done little in the way of protecting labor rights against China’s food delivery giants. They are just “paper unions,” Chau said, meaning that they haven’t achieved any reparations or policy changes for the drivers’ grievances.
]]>A Chinese drone manufacturer is testing reconnaissance and strike drones designed for use in cities, according to a South China Morning Post report on Thursday.
Why it matters: This is likely the first made-in-China unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) and one of the few in the world that can carry out attacks and reconnaissance missions in densely populated urban environments, signaling that China is catching up with the US and Israel in defense drone technology.
Details: The Tianyi quadcopter is designed by Tianjin Zhongwei Aerospace Data System Technology, an aerospace corporation based in northeastern China that also makes radar systems for government and civilian use, according to the report which cites an article in Modern Weaponry, a Chinese defense magazine.
Context: Little is known about specific models and applications for defense drones. The People’s Liberation Army showcased its progress in drone technology during China’s 70th Anniversary parade held in Beijing during the Oct. 1 to 7 national holiday, but the most advanced drones are shrouded in secrecy.
Drone maker XAG unveiled a new cargo delivery drone in a test flight on Monday at its headquarters in Guangzhou, a project developed in collaboration with Airbus, the world’s second-largest aviation manufacturer.
Why it matters: The “Project Vesper” initiative brings a global aerospace heavyweight into the already-crowded race for automating China’s delivery services.
Details: The drone flew 1.6 kilometers (around 1 mile) in 3 minutes, from a nearby restaurant to a terrace on the top floor of XAG’s headquarters, three stories up. It delivered noodles and rice in a box similar to those widely used by food delivery drivers as the crowd gathered for the event cheered.
Context: Other companies have run similar trials in the past both in China and the US. In China, most major players developing such technologies are software and logistics companies, with millions of delivery orders at hand, and lack expertise in aeronautics and hardware.
China’s decision to halt online sales of vaping products earlier this month has put e-cigarette makers under intense pressure, and follows a global trend towards stricter regulation. One Chinese startup, backed by some of Asia’s most prominent tech investors, remains confident of weathering the storm through its innovative products and safety-first approach.
The backstory: Founded in February 2019, Snowplus launched its products in April and scored significant funding from major backers including Sequoia Capital.
“Our investors believe in us because we are making products with unique tech that provides a competitive advantage in the market.”
—Derek Li, co-founder and head of international business at Snowplus
Unique selling point: Snowplus has already launched two world-first innovations in the e-cig industry, a vape that substitutes caffeine for nicotine and one that produces almost no second-hand smoke.
Funding: Snowplus’ Series A was the largest investment ever in Chinese vape startup to date. Sequoia Capital China, ZhenFund, K2VC, and Matrix Partners China contributed to the $40 million round.
The landscape: China is home to 300 million smokers—the world’s largest market—providing much room for vaping to grow. The country produces 95% of e-cigs globally, but only 5% of them are smoked in China, CGTN cited data from the Chinese Centre for Disease Control and Prevention as saying.
Prospects: Derek Li, one of the Snowplus co-founders, told TechNode that he is optimistic about the startup’s future both in China and abroad, despite the imminent rule changes and the need for localization in overseas markets.
Y Combinator (YC), the Silicon Valley seed accelerator behind Airbnb, Reddit, and Dropbox, has abandoned plans to build a China accelerator, it announced yesterday, ending its formal collaboration with former Baidu executive Lu Qi.
Why it matters: The China branch would have been Y Combinator’s first overseas expansion, offering an opportunity for Chinese entrepreneurs to build companies from the ground up with one of the world’s most successful team of consultants.
Details: A recent change in leadership made YC rethink its strategy and return to its “tried and true approach of supporting local and international startups” from its headquarters in Silicon Valley, it said in a statement.
Context: Y Combinator announced in August 2018 its plans to open a program in China. Former Microsoft and Baidu executive Lu was to head the effort.
A bill introduced to the US Senate on Monday could make it illegal for internet companies to transfer American user data and encryption keys to China, in an effort to prevent user data leaks to the Chinese government.
Why it matters: If passed, the bill introduced by Republican Senator Josh Hawley would be the first to ban tech companies from storing US user data in China citing national security concerns.
“If your child uses TikTok, there’s a chance the Chinese Communist Party knows where they are, what they look like, what their voices sound like, and what they’re watching. That’s a feature TikTok doesn’t advertise.”
—Senator Josh Hawley
Details: The bill would also stop Chinese companies from collecting non-essential data from US citizens.
Context: Hawley held a congressional hearing Nov. 5 exploring security risks brought by social media platforms and their ties to Beijing. Executives from Apple and TikTok declined to attend.
The US is failing to respond to China’s efforts to lure talent and appropriate industrial secrets from American universities, according to a report from a US Senate subcommittee published Monday which took aim at federal agencies and research institutions.
Why it matters: International cooperation and talent flow in academia has been a main source of contention in the US-China trade war.
Details: The United States Senate’s Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations (PSI) blasted federal agencies like the FBI for their lack of effectiveness, and academic institutions for lack of leadership in assessing conflicts of interest. Washington is failing to halt China’s ambitious plans to steal US technology and talent, and lacks a “comprehensive strategy to combat this threat,” the report said.
“For the Chinese government, international scientific collaboration is not about advancing science, it is to advance China’s national security interests.”
—Senate Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations
Context: Critics have denounced the effect of mounting distrust between the US and China on global academic research.
China became by far the leading source of foreign students in the US following the implementation of the Thousand Talents Plan in 2008. (Image credit: TechNode/Eliza Gkritsi). Data: Institute of International Education
]]>In civil aviation, “innovation is still incremental and not disruptive,” but market entry in aerospace has been disrupted, said Philipp Visotschnig, CFO of Airbus China said at TechCrunch Shenzhen 2019.
The space industry has been disrupted and private access to space is possible, which was long considered impossible, he said. Elon Musk’s SpaceX approached rockets differently in terms of vertical integration and managed to use software to reuse the rocket, he said.
But commercial and cargo airplanes remain relatively unchanged in the era of innovation. “The cycle of aviation is relatively low in aerospace” as it takes around 7 years to develop an aircraft and typically fuel consumption must be reduced by 15% for a new model, he said.
Startups usually deal with simpler and shorter regulatory approvals and so far innovation has happened around customer experience and aircraft connectivity, he said. Interesting projects are developing around 5G and connectivity, as well as digital tools that help companies interface with passengers, Visotschnig said.
A trend in aviation is using digitalization and AI to analyze big data related to aircraft maintenance, he said. “We need to make sure that it [the aircraft] is flying for the next thirty years. Having all this data is helpful,” he said. Logistics and fleet support are two areas where Airbus is looking for partnerships.
The industry needs to adopt a “far more open” approach in order to integrate new technologies into its offerings, he said. Airbus is partnering with startups at its Innovation Centre in Shenzhen, opened in 2017, where it is developing vertical lift, battery, electrification, and customer experience solutions, Visotschnig said.
Airbus is also setting up a model to commercialise flying taxis in China in two to three years, he said. The European aviation company has launched a fleet of helicopters to hire in Sao Paulo in Brazil, through its local subsidiary Voom.
]]>The world’s biggest commercial drone manufacturer DJI revealed on Wednesday that it is developing technology to track and identify drones via smartphone app in a bid to reduce airspace disruption and improve data transparency in the industry.
Why it matters: Unauthorized drones have caused flight delays and and cancellations, costing the airspace industry millions of dollars. American and European authorities are increasingly pushing drone makers for a system to better monitor the technology.
Details: Users of the app will allow be able to identify all drones flying within a certain radius, just as license plates are used for cars, DJI said in a press release (in Chinese).
“It’s possible to provide this information in a direct drone-to-phone broadcast, without requiring an expensive mobile data connection, an additional transponder on the drone, or other complex tech.”
—DJI spokeswoman to TechNode
Context: The European Aviation Safety Agency will roll out mandatory remote drone tracking and identification regulations in 2020, and the US Federal Aviation Administration is in the process of drafting relevant legislation along with a cohort of industry stakeholders.
The main challenge for Chinese tech companies entering Southeast Asia is overcoming market fragmentation, said Charles Debonneuil, CEO of Intrepid Group, in a fireside chat with TechNode Editor-in-Chief John Artman at TechCrunch Shenzhen 2019.
Debonneuil is a co-founder and former chief marketing officer at Lazada Group, one of SEA’s largest new retail platforms. Alibaba invested $1 billion to take a controlling stake in Lazada in 2016, four years after its inception. Debonneuil called the deal a “kick-off” moment for the inflow of Chinese capital into the region. His new venture, Intrepid Group, aims to help sellers “leverage media trends around e-commerce.”
The region is home to 600 million people and is growing fast. The population is young and tech-savvy, which makes it “very attractive from a macro perspective.” But the market is “much more fragmented than it looks from the outside,” the plethora of different languages and cultures make seizing opportunities far “trickier” than it seems and a practical approach to localization is necessary for success, Debonneuil said.
Foreign players are also facing stiff regional competition. “The entrepreneurial mindset is very impressive,” he said, bringing up the example of Grab, a Singapore-based ride-hailer that took over Uber’s SEA unit early last year.
Because the individual countries are small in size, companies must expand beyond national borders to compete with more prominent players in the region. Localization is key to this expansion, he said. Back in 2012, Lazada launched operations simultaneously in five countries—Indonesia, Thailand, Malaysia, Singapore, and Vietnam.
Because of these unique challenges, “the winners will be those who can form strong local teams and adapt to local cultures,” he said. Companies looking to expand into Southeast Asia face a similar dilemma that US companies deal with when expanding into China, “do they do it on their own, or do they partner with local companies?” he said.
Offline retail limited is in the region as stores are few and far apart, so e-commerce services have a lot of room to develop, he said. “Platforms have adopted the Taobao shopping experience, but they have stronger control of their logistics to ensure consistent delivery,” he said.
Unlike in China, the adoption rate for online payments remains low, and many transactions rely on cash on delivery, he said. Also, more online payment platforms vie for market share in SEA countries.
SEA sees similar trends to China in terms of platform gamification, and livestreaming is becoming increasingly popular, Debonneuil said. “Thailand and the Philippines have the highest use of Instagram hashtags per square meter. Vietnam and Thailand have the highest number of gigabytes used per month and the highest number of videos consumed per capita,” he said.
All local e-commerce apps have either launched livestreaming platforms already or are preparing to do so, he said, adding that they are also pursuing gamified features, such as leveling up to acquire coupons for purchasing goods.
Note: This article has been updated to clarify the value of Alibaba’s investment in Lazada.
]]>Chinese tech investors are increasingly looking for a way to gain access to India’s untapped potential, and their approach has been to bet on local talent to best approach the market.
“From 1990 to 2014, aggregate Chinese [foreign direct investment] in India was less than $2 billion. From 2012 to 2016 or 2017 that number was $6 billion to $7 billion,” mostly led by China’s tech giants like Alibaba and Tencent, said Dev Lewis, a researcher at Hong Kong-based think tank Digital Asia Hub during a TechNode Emerge panel at TechCrunch Shenzhen on Monday.
Chinese investor interest in India is primarily centered around e-commerce and social media, said Richard Xu, who heads the US operations of Grand View Capital, a New York investment bank.
Unlike US tech giants, Chinese companies often choose to invest in local startups rather than rolling out their products straight from the Chinese market, because of the differences between the two markets.
“[Chinese investors are] not saying let’s be the Facebook of India. They’re saying let’s invest in the local Facebook, let’s invest in a local e-commerce company. They’re giving Indian startups the opportunity to say, we can be Indian while still having the cash flow compared with US companies,” Lewis said.
Apart from being country of 1.3 billion people with different customs and dialects, India has developed its own tech ecosystem, Xu explained. For example, “India has a very strong e-commerce ecosystem based on Whatsapp,” he said, so a WeChat-based model would face significant headwinds.
Presenting another challenge for Chinese entrepreneurs looking to dive right into the subcontinent is the long and complicated history between India and China, the echoes of which still reverberate today. “Security and politics still is the primary lens by which the Indian population, Indian government, view Chinese tech, companies, Chinese money,” Lewis said.
]]>Despite the sophisticated nature of Europe’s telecom networks, security has only recently become the centerpiece of the conversation, Paul Scanlan, chief technology officer of Huawei’s Carrier Group, told TechNode at the Fortune Tech Forum in Guangzhou. When asked about Huawei’s past cybersecurity mistakes, he said the company’s focus on innovation and speed contributed significantly.
In the past, Huawei was focused on “innovation and getting products out fast,” and was unaware of how it should strive to uphold certain security-related architectural features in their code, Scanlan said in response to a report by the UK’s Huawei Oversight Board (HCSEC) that found “underlying defects” in its software development.
“If a customer wants to add a feature, we can’t re-engineer the whole product,” because that would be too slow, he said. Instead, Huawei would put a module on top of the existing code, he continued.
Over time, these development practices led to some “architectural peculiarities,” which the HCSEC found undesirable, especially given that hackers were getting more sophisticated, he said. “Now we [Huawei] understand that these sorts of things are important,” he added.
Last March, the HCSEC reviewed Huawei product software and found “extensive non-adherence to basic secure coding practices, including Huawei’s own internal standards. “These included suppressing alerts from static analysis tools and using an outdated third-party operating system.
HCSEC is a UK subsidiary of Huawei that works under the watchful eyes of British authorities.
The important thing is that “it found no backdoors,” Scanlan said, echoing Huawei’s statement when the report first came out. Huawei has invested $2 billion to “develop better testing, processes and KPIs focused on developing trustworthy software,” he said.
This so-called “transformational program” was announced by Huawei in November 2018. Three months later, the HCSEC report said that it remained “a proposed initial budget for as yet unspecified activities,” giving the watchdog no confidence in Huawei’s ability to follow it through.
Scanlan also said that the company is the only equipment vendor that faces so much scrutiny and that it has a history of handing their code over for review in the UK, and to a lesser extent, Germany. According to him, it is the only company to be under so much scrutiny.
But in a network, “you’re only as insecure as your weakest link. If you have multiple vendors and you are only scrutinizing Huawei, that doesn’t make sense,” he said.
“The real issue is that this is the first time security is being talked about on a global, government level,” Scanlan said. During the rollout of 3G and 4G, similar discussions on the security of networks were lacking, he said.
“We’re having these discussions globally now, and everyone is part of them, vendors, operators, governments. Excluding the US, we are having a lot of these discussions,” he said.
European regulators have been working together with industry players to come up with a common security framework that all member-states can agree on. All equipment vendors are consulted in these discussions, Scanlan said.
Note: This article has been updated to reflect better Paul Scanlan’s words following an inquiry from Huawei.
]]>Led by ex-Google chief Eric Schmidt, a US defense committee urged the government to increase its spending on artificial intelligence (AI) research and continue the use of export bans to ensure its lead over China.
Why it matters: The report is the latest and most comprehensive effort from the Department of Defense (DoD) to create a blueprint for safeguarding American interests against the rise of China as a global leader in AI. The National Security Commission on AI (NSCAI) released its first interim report on Monday, outlining key strategic concerns and proposing next steps.
“We are a pro-America Commission, and the final report will say how we will win this competition.”
—Eric Schmidt, NSCAI chair
Details: The NSCAI recommended that the US enhance domestic and allied cooperation while expanding export controls on target technologies and protecting American research from “state-directed espionage.”
China’s share of global AI investment shrinks as headwinds take their toll
Context: The NCSAI was established by the National Defense Authorization Act of 2019, an annual US regulation that sets the defense budget. It first convened on March 11.
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Around half of all China’s netizens or an estimated 421 million people ordered takeout delivery on their smartphones last year, bringing in revenues of RMB 240 billion ($34 billion). The market is dominated by two major players—Meituan Dianping and Alibaba’s food delivery subsidiary, Ele.me.
Propping up this industry is an army of food delivery drivers, who work long hours rushing around China’s megacities to keep up with customer orders. Meituan said (in Chinese) that in 2018 it employed 2.7 million drivers.
TechNode recently shadowed 26-year-old Ding Liang, who has been a driver for four years, on his daily routine. Most drivers work around 10 hours a day while others work 15 hour-shifts every day, he said. All of them have to compete fiercely to get orders, especially during the lunchtime rush.
Drivers get anywhere between RMB 5 ($0.71) to RMB 7 ($1) for each order, depending on the time of day, distance, and other factors. He works as a crowdsourced or “zhongbao” (literally, crowd outsourcing in Chinese) delivery worker so he has a more flexible schedule and type of orders he receives varies greatly.
Ding takes 30 to 40 orders a day, earning him an average of between RMB 11,000 and RMB 13,000 per month—a decent income compared with the average salary of food delivery workers in China, around RMB 7,750 per month in 2018 (in Chinese). But other contract food delivery workers, those who have a fixed contract with a company, earn RMB 7,000 to RMB 8,000 a month for the same amount of orders.
However, as the two major platforms fight to consolidate their market position, drivers are seeing their wages fall. “The pay is now too low. I can’t stand it anymore,” said Liu, a full-time Ele.me driver, who requested his given name not be used for fear of possible repercussions.
As wages are getting lower, drivers struggle to deliver more orders within the 30-minute window the apps allow them. They have to drive faster and faster to make ends meet within a limited time frame, often breaking traffic rules and working in extreme weather conditions, which can lead to accidents.
“If everyone abides by the law and also tries to deliver orders as specified by the platforms, it means that they can only complete 8 to 15 orders a day,” which is not enough for them to make a living, said Aidan Chau, a researcher at China Labour Bulletin, an NGO based in Hong Kong that monitors working conditions in China.
Shanghai police reported a spike in road accidents for the first half of 2019, and food delivery workers were involved in more than 80% of them. In August, one driver died (in Chinese) in Shanghai when he was electrocuted by his own scooter during the typhoon.
Ding said he doesn’t take a day off even in bad weather conditions. “I work every day, even in snow, and heavy rain,” he said.
But the drivers are often not entitled to work injury compensation.
There are two kinds of drivers, formal and informal. The formal ones are contractually bound to their jobs, either directly to the app provider or to an agency that is in turn contracted by the app. Their contracts typically don’t provide social security or work insurance.
The informal ones are those who adhere to the most common conception of the gig economy—they simply sign up to the app and select orders at will. Being free agents, they are not entitled to any compensation for accidents.
In terms of regulation, “the first step is to help all these platform workers become formal workers,” said Chau.
With contributions from Eliza Gkritsi and Nicole Jao.
]]>China will reform major stock exchanges in the image of the STAR Market following the Nasdaq-style tech board’s success, said Yi Huiman, the head of the China Securities Regulatory Commission to government-affiliated Xinhua news (in Chinese).
Why it matters: Shanghai’s STAR Market has had mixed results in keeping China’s rising tech stars from listing abroad, but Beijing appears determined to widen efforts to attract more capital to domestic tech firms by spreading the reforms across the country.
Details: Under the new measures, stocks will trade without caps on the first day of trading and will be capped at 20% gains or losses on subsequent days.
Shanghai tech board shows fresh approach to listings by admitting loss-making chipmaker
Context: After tech behemoths like Alibaba opted to list in New York and Hong Kong, the Chinese government decided to set up a stock exchange which was not subsequent to China’s strict rules for stock trading. At the Shanghai Stock Exchange’s Science and Innovation Technology Board, or STAR market, unprofitable companies were allowed to trade in China for the first time.
Guangzhou-based drone maker Ehang filed on Thursday an application for an initial public offering (IPO) in the US, using a placeholder amount of $100 million, following reports in late September about a confidential submission.
Why it matters: The first to receive a license to test unmanned aerial passenger vehicles, Ehang is one of several Chinese tech companies that have recently filed to float shares on US exchanges despite China’s efforts to keep homegrown tech companies from listing abroad with the debut of its new Nasdaq-style tech board.
Details: Morgan Stanley and Credit Suisse are working together on the listing.
“We cannot assure you that our AAVs will not be placed on such trade blacklist in the future.”
—Ehang in its filing to the Securities and Exchange Commission
Context: Beijing introduced its Nasdaq-style tech board on the Shanghai stock exchange to keep Chinese companies from taking their IPOs to other countries.
US Interior Department to ground Chinese-made drones: report
Huawei has been defending its “trustworthiness” amid comments from Germany’s spy chief, though the country’s government has already drafted new security guidelines allowing the Chinese equipment maker to supply equipment for Germany’s future 5G network.
Bruno Kahl, head of the German Federal Intelligence Agency, claimed that Huawei can’t be fully trusted. In response, Huawei Germany issued a statement repeating that it is independent of China’s Communist Party and has a good track record working with network operators worldwide.
In an ironic twist, German authorities drafted new security guidelines issued on October 15, calling for would-be suppliers to 5G network operators to submit a document self-declaring their trustworthiness, a similar sentiment to Huawei’s statement.
Equipment vendors, such as Huawei and ZTE, would produce the document confirming that they are not obliged to reveal personal data, equipment design, or any other critical information to third parties.
“Certain telecommunications providers and network operators with increased risk potential may only use certain critical system components if they have been purchased from trusted sources,” Michael Reifenberg, a representative for German regulatory office, the Federal Network Agency (FNA), told TechNode by email.
Reifenberg referred to the trustworthiness document as a “no-spy declaration” for dealings between equipment suppliers, such as Huawei, and network operators, such as Deutsche Telekom. Operators would then submit the declaration to the FNA. The document binds the supplier or manufacturer with the network operator in case of data breaches, meaning that they will bear joint liability in case of a leak.
“It is the weakest link in this entire document,” said Jan-Peter Kleinhans, Project Director of Security and the Internet of Things at Stiftung Neue Verantwortung, a think-tank in Berlin. The certification will be based on technical standards, but the vendors’ declaration of trustworthiness “is not double-checked by [cybersecurity agency] BSI , it is not evaluated. It is not enforced, there are no sanctions,” he said.
“Details of the implementation are not yet specified,” Reifenberg said. When a declaration is breached, the Agency “may give orders, take other measures to secure compliance and may set penalty payments” on an ad hoc basis, he said.
The draft guidelines also provide for the certification of 5G network equipment, which will be issued by Germany’s cybersecurity authority, known as the Federal Office for Information Security.
Regulators have yet to decide whether the certification, based on an upcoming technical guideline, will be a mandatory process for suppliers.
Germany is one of many countries worldwide facing pressure from the US to exclude Chinese firms from the development of 5G networks. Washington claims that Chinese vendors’ have a close relationship with the government, which may force them to turn over critical information.
Back in May, US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo issued a veiled threat during an official visit to Berlin, saying there is “a risk we will have to change our behavior in light of the fact that we can’t permit data on private citizens or data on national security to go across networks that we don’t have confidence (in).”
Days before Germany released the guidelines, the EU Commission released a risk assessment on 5G, warning “hostile third countries” against colluding with 5G equipment vendors to conduct cyberattacks on member states. But the German agencies which drafted the security catalog are not trained to account for political risk, “in the eyes of the BSI, the origin of the vendor doesn’t matter,” said Kleinhans.
“In a way, you are asking the wrong question to the wrong person,” he said. “You have two completely technocratic agencies that are very much focused on technical aspects, drafting a technical document, which suddenly the world and some Germans included, expect that will have geopolitical impact.”
This is in line with Angela Merkel’s overall approach to the security of 5G, which has “pushed the debate into the technical realm,” Kleinhans said. Analysts say that Merkel’s government is trying to protect Germany’s industrial prowess, which relies heavily on access to the Chinese market.
The guidelines have caused controversy within the German Parliament, not only because of the content. The draft needn’t be voted on by parliamentarians before it is enacted, since it is not a new law but an updated version of technical guidelines created by the responsible agencies.
“A question of such strategic meaning should not be being decided at the administrative level,” said Norbert Röttgen, a member of Merkel’s party, the Christian Democrats.
The draft will be open for public comment until 13 November 2019.
]]>The US Interior Department said on Wednesday that it is grounding all drones made in China or containing China-made parts on fears of espionage and cyberattacks, Bloomberg reported, a move which effectively pulls from the field its entire fleet pending an agency review.
Why it matters: The grounding is the latest in a flurry of US decisions to shun industry-leading Chinese tech companies citing national security concerns.
Details: The government agency responsible for managing all federal land, the Interior Department is concerned that the drones could be used to send classified information, mainly videos and photos, of sensitive US infrastructure that could later be attacked, according to the Wall Street Journal.
“For far too long, we have turned a blind eye to China and allowed their technology into some of the most critical operations of the U.S. Government. This has to stop.”
—Rick Scott, Republican senator in the American Security Drone Act
Context: More than 14 federal agencies including the Federal Emergency Management Agency and the Department of Homeland Security use drones, the Wall Street Journal said.
Huawei’s handset shipments in China rose two-thirds during the third quarter, helping the firm to hit a market share of 42%, data from market research firm Canalys shows.
Why it matters: The data indicates that the world’s second-largest smartphone maker has fared well at home despite the US blacklisting that is impairing performance overseas.
Unchanged:
Details: This quarter marks Huawei’s sixth consecutive quarter of double-digit growth, and places the Shenzhen-based company way ahead of its competitors with a 25 percentage-point lead over second-placed Vivo.
“Huawei opened a huge gap between itself and other vendors. Its dominant position gives Huawei a lot of power to negotiate with the supply chain and to increase its wallet share within channel partners.”
-Nicole Peng, vice-president of mobility at Canalys
Context: The US ban, enforced in May, cut off Huawei from key suppliers, including chipmakers and Google’s Android operating system used in its devices.
China will no longer force foreign firms to transfer technologies in order to access the market, Wang Shouwen, a vice commerce minister said at a press conference in Beijing on Tuesday.
Why it matters: Forced tech transfer and the unequal playing field conditions on China’s mainland have been issues at the heart of the US-China trade war.
Details: The new measures are aimed to bring about a transparent and predictable investment environment in order to stabilize foreign investment flows, according to Wang.
“Administrative organs may not implicitly or explicitly force the transfer of technology by foreign investors or foreign-invested enterprises.”
—Wei Ye, Commerce Ministry official
Context: Wang’s pledge did not address the joint venture mechanism which forces foreign enterprises to partner with a Chinese company in order to operate in China, frequently creating conditions for unintended tech transfer.
Briefing: European firms say forced tech transfers rising in China
Ucommune, China’s homegrown version of WeWork, filed a prospectus with the US securities regulator in late September as it prepares to go public by the end of the year, Reuters reported.
Why it matters: The news was a surprise to many after the debacle involving WeWork, the world’s largest coworking space provider, having to scrap its own public listing plans and accept a $10 billion bailout from Softbank on Tuesday.
Details: Apart from the confidential prospectus filed with the US Securities and Exchange Commission, Ucommune has held preparatory meetings with investors to gauge appetite in the market, which will be key in determining whether the Beijing-based startup will go public, according to Reuters citing people with direct knowledge of the matter.
Context: Last week, SoftBank offered a $5 billion cash infusion to WeWork, a $3 billion tender offer for existing shareholders and, according to the Wall Street Journal, $1.7 billion for CEO Adam Neumann to walk away. In return, the Japanese tech conglomerate owns 80% of the company.
Updated to include that Ucommune has invested in TechNode in the “Details” section.
]]>UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson is preparing to allow Huawei equipment in certain parts of the country’s next-generation networks despite the risk of backlash from the US, the Sunday Times reported.
Why it’s important: The move would be a major blow to Washington’s campaign to bar Huawei from 5G networks worldwide on security concerns, and could cause a rift in the close relationship between the US and UK.
Details: According to the Sunday Times report citing anonymous senior sources, the UK government is nearing a decision to allow Huawei supply gear for “non-contentious” part of the network.
Context: In April, Theresa May made a similar decision, which sparked a cabinet crisis and was eventually revoked. Whether Johnson’s meetings included his cabinet was not made clear in the report. It remains to be seen how Johnson’s decision fares with the British Parliament, which last year protested intensely against May’s decision.
Apple CEO Tim Cook started a three-year term as a top adviser at Tsinghua University, China’s most prestigious academic institution, chairing his first meeting on October 18, according to the school website.
Why it matters: Cook’s appointment places him at the heart of Beijing’s goal to increase the gravitas of Chinese universities.
“In the next three years, I will work with all of the board members to promote the development of Tsinghua University School of Economics and Management and to lead the effort to build it into a world-class school.”
—Tim Cook, CEO of Apple
Details: The university announced Cook’s participation in the advisory board meeting and his mandate on its WeChat account.
Context: Apple is one of few Silicon Valley giants whose products are allowed in the Chinese market, along with Microsoft and Oracle.
The government of Hangzhou is increasing its presence in the day-to-day operations of more than 100 companies in order to enhance the cooperation between the private and public sector, it said on Saturday. According to Chinese media, companies to see increased scrutiny include e-commerce giant Alibaba and automaker Geely.
Why it matters: The move is in pursuit of an ambitious “New Manufacturing Plan” aimed at increasing manufacturing output through smart, green, and service-oriented supply-side reforms, according to the statement.
Details: The government officials will smooth the communication between companies and administration, as Hangzhou’s firms implement various government programs to eliminate traditional production and integrate cloud-based smart manufacturing.
Context: The relationship between government and private sector is complex in China, and public security officials are already present in various Chinese companies for crime prevention and information monitoring.
Philippine president Rodrigo Duterte defended a deal allowing a Chinese state-backed telecommunications company to construct and manage communications towers on bases belonging to the military in a statement to journalists on Wednesday.
Why it matters: In stark contrast to the US-led campaign cautioning against China’s involvement in the construction of 5G networks worldwide, President Duterte rejected claims that China Telecom could use its position to spy on the Philippines military.
Details: The Armed Forces of the Philippines (AFP) signed a relevant memorandum of understanding last week with Dito Telecommunications, a consortium led by domestic conglomerate Udenna Corporation and China Telecom. The deal would allow Dito Telecommunications, previously known as Mislatel, to install bases and relay towers on military bases. The AFP has similar deals with two homegrown telecom firms, Globe Telecom and PLDT-Smart, the AFP told local media.
Context: The new consortium was formed as a ploy to break a monopoly held by Globe Telecom and PLDT-Smart, aiming to be the country’s third largest telecom player. Dito Telecommunications is led by Dennis Uy, a known local businessman and reportedly a close friend of Duterte’s, who has no experience in telecom services.
Chinese smartphone maker Vivo announced its new premium device, the Nex 3. Vivo will offer a 5G version of the handset, following the rest of the world’s major smartphone makers.
Why it matters: Vivo is vying to remain competitive in global markets, as telecom operators around the world work to deploy 5G services to consumers.
“We’re trying to provide more choices for consumers.”
—Ding Guanli, Vivo Product Manager
Details: The screen on the Vivo Nex 3 curves over the sides on the phone, giving the device the world’s largest screen-to-body ratio at 99.6%, according to Vivo Nex Product Manager Li Xiang. This “Waterfall Full View” feature is unique in the market, and should remain without any competitors for the next six months, Xiang said in a Weibo post.
Context: Share of international sales for the Dongguan-based company are some of the smallest among Chinese smartphone makers, but is climbing. Vivo accounted for 7.4% of global smartphone shipments in the first quarter of 2019 compared with 5.6% the same period a year earlier, according to data from IDC.
SAP, one of the world’s largest enterprise software companies, could outperform its US rivals during the trade war because it is free to trade with China, the company’s CEO Bill McDermott said in an interview at a TechCrunch event on September 6.
The trade war has created a binary hurdle for American rivals including Microsoft and Cisco: not only has the US banned trade with Chinese businesses, China’s state-owned firms will not let them bid on their procurement tenders.
“The fact that Germany has excellent relations at the public and the private-sector level in China, it’s no question it’s a help to us.”
—Bill McDermott, SAP CEO
Why it’s important: The Trump administration is betting on a strategy of non-cooperation to stifle China’s competitive tech companies on the global stage. McDermott’s comments indicate that the trade war is helping it gain an edge over US rivals simply because it has unfettered access to the Chinese market.
Details: SAP, with a market capitalization of $145 billion, makes financial and management software for enterprises, competing with Microsoft, Cisco, and Oracle among others. SAP’s German roots has allowed the company to target China’s gigantic state-owned enterprises as clients.
Context: Washington has taken bold moves in the trade war, trying to force Beijing to end practices that the Trump administration sees as unfairly promoting China’s homegrown businesses and stifling foreign competition.
Apple and its manufacturing contractor Foxconn admitted to breaking Chinese labor regulations by the excessive use of temporary staff in the world’s largest iPhone factory, according to Bloomberg. The accusation came in a report by non-profit advocacy group China Labor Watch (CLW), which also said that Apple’s Taiwanese manufacturer subjected staff to other illegal and harsh working conditions.
Why it’s important: This is not the first time Foxconn, China’s largest private sector employer, has broken Chinese labor laws. Last month, Foxconn fired two executives after another CLW report found that temporary staff and underage interns making Amazon Echo speakers exceeded the legal limit in its Hengyang factory in central Hunan Province.
Details: For its report, CLW claims it sent undercover investigators to Foxconn’s Zhengzhou plant in central China, including one who worked there for four years. At the world’s largest iPhone factory, CLW found that around 50% of the workforce in August was made up of temporary staff, including interns who were in high school. Chinese law stipulates that only 10% of a factory’s plant should be temporary.
Context: CLW published the report ahead of Apple’s iPhone release which will take place Tuesday morning in the US. Foxconn hires thousands of temporary staff every year during key moments of the year to meet demand.
HSBC completed the world’s first blockchain-based letter of credit transaction using Chinese renminbi, successfully using the technology in a transaction between Hong Kong and Shenzhen, Reuters reported on Tuesday.
Why it matters: The deal is a milestone in HSBC’s plan to make headway in automating China’s largely paper-based finance industry using the digital ledger technology.
“We are hoping that we will have something by end of the year, maybe the first quarter of next year, where will we know from Voltron what it costs, at which point, a lot of banks who might be sitting on the sidelines will be able to make a decision.”
—Ajay Sharma, HSBC head of global trade for Asia-Pacific, to Reuters
Details: The technology decreased the processing time for the deal to 24 hours from what normally takes five to 1o days. The transaction involved Hong Kong’s MTC Electronics sending LCD parts to its parent company in Shenzhen.
Context: HSBC has tried to stay ahead of the curve in integrating new technologies in its offerings.
China’s second-largest 5G equipment maker ZTE is continuing its recovery from a disastrous 2018 with a profitable second quarter. The Shenzhen-based company attributed its positive results to 5G equipment sales.
Why it matters: ZTE recorded RMB 607 million ($85 million) in profits during the quarter ended June 30 as it works to turn around losses of around RMB 7 billion in 2018 following US sanctions and a $1.4 billion fine over its business with Iran.
Details: ZTE earned RMB 22.4 billion in revenues in Q2, more than doubling the RMB 11.9 billion in revenue from the same period a year ago.
Context: The telecom giant was hit hard by US sanctions in 2018, and continues to face aggressive lobbying from Washington, which wants to exclude Chinese companies from the development of its 5G networks.
UBTech Robotics, a Shenzhen-based manufacturer of human-like robots backed by Tencent, said that it is considering listing on Shanghai’s new STAR Market.
Why it’s important: The promising robotics company’s choice to list in the mainland is music to Beijing’s ears. Shanghai stock exchange’s new tech board is an attempt to woo homegrown companies from listing overseas.
“We are preparing for the public markets . . . We have not made a decision yet but we are much more likely to raise money in the mainland market.”
—Michael Tam, Chief Brand Officer at UBTech
Details: UBTech was founded seven years ago and has caught the attention of large investors. It was the first robotics company in China to reach unicorn status.
Context: After years of seeing domestic companies seek public offerings abroad, including heavyweights Alibaba and Tencent, China wants to keep big listings on its own turf. Its regulations for tech companies listing on Shanghai’s tech board are relaxed compared with other exchanges in China.
China’s cloud market is set to become the largest in the world by 2023, according to research firm IDC. But right now, it remains nascent and insubstantial compared with its respective sectors in mature economies. The Chinese market is roughly one-tenth the size of the US equivalent.
The market is expanding but remains fragmented, which means that much of it is up for grabs. Domestic tech heavyweights Alibaba and Tencent, along with international players like Amazon and Microsoft, all want a piece of what will eventually become a very large pie.
Among Chinese tech players, the excitement surrounding cloud computing’s potential as a growth driver is real. The aforementioned Alibaba is set to run its entire business on its public cloud within two years, while Tencent aims to quadruple overseas revenue at its related unit this year.
For foreign cloud firms, the local ecosystem features several peculiarities that have so far restricted them from securing significant market share on a global level. In addition to standard regulations that prohibit foreign cloud providers, they also face a market unready for widespread public cloud adoption.
Unlike more mature cloud markets, firms still prefer private cloud solutions, which allow them to maintain full ownership and control of physical resources.
The winds may be turning for public cloud adoption, but exactly when and how these roadblocks will be overcome remains to be seen.
Experts say many Chinese businesses opt for private cloud solutions in part because of an accounting quirk. Building their own internal cloud setup means spending money upfront and can be considered capital spending, said Kevin Ji, senior research director at research and advisory firm Gartner.
Private cloud’s one-off purchase model fulfills the desire of Chinese businesses to own hardware and software rather than outsourcing a service. Some businesses are reluctant to rent IT services from public cloud providers because they prefer to keep close control over their workloads and data for security reasons.
Public cloud, on the other hand, follows a pay-as-you-go fee structure, which can be counted as an operational expense. A company essentially rents cloud services from an industry mainstay like Amazon, Microsoft, or Alibaba. The cloud operator owns and maintains the hardware and software, charging clients relative to their usage, and the service becomes a recurring operational expense.
China ‘s fledgling cloud market tilts heavily towards public cloud solutions. (Image credit: TechNode/Eliza Gkritsi)
The private cloud market is dominated by companies like Huawei and H3C, which offer comprehensive infrastructure including the server, the network, and the storage, Ji said.
However, according to Ji, a pattern of public cloud adoption started to emerge in 2019. Following a trend observed in more mature cloud markets such as the US and Australia, many businesses in China have shifted from on-premise solutions to public cloud.
The public cloud market is “waking up now, and it is a little bit behind,” Augusto Marietti, CEO of cloud provider Kong, told TechNode. Founded in 2009 in a garage in Italy, Kong uprooted operations to the US the following year. Outside of the US, the company’s largest client base is in China. The culture of the private cloud still reigns supreme due primarily to security concerns, Marietti added.
Some firms think that if they own and operate their cloud infrastructure themselves, they can better ensure its security. However, this is not entirely correct since legal requirements for both types of solutions are more or less the same, said Chen Xu, technology strategy director at Alibaba Cloud Intelligence.
Domestic public cloud providers like Alibaba Cloud and Tencent Cloud also offer private solutions, though their market share is small.
Alibaba holds a 43% share of the public cloud market, according to data from the IDC, and continues to bet on it, Chen said. “We believe the public cloud will continue to be the focus of development in the future but it is important that we also provide comprehensive private cloud solutions,” he added.
The IaaS market is dominated by Alibaba. (Image credit: TechNode/Eliza Gkritsi)
According to Chen’s analysis, private cloud systems serve as a platform for enterprises to transition away from traditional IT to the modern cloud paradigm. But it is the public model that provides the full iteration of such a paradigm—that is, unconstrained elastic computing power on a flexible fee structure. Experts agree that the advantage of private cloud is that it allows firms to retain greater control over their resources.
The hybrid cloud—a computing model that combines public cloud and a private cloud for different purposes—will likely become mainstream in China as more businesses choose both solutions for different ends.
Even though public cloud services have made some headway, the market is not ready for widespread adoption, Ji told TechNode.
In China, the early adopters of cloud services have been small- and medium-sized enterprises and internet companies. The large enterprise market segment is largely untapped. Even though some cloud providers in China have a large customer base, the revenue that each customer contributes is in fact quite small, said Christopher Thomas, a partner at McKinsey & Company.
The abundance of large enterprises outside the internet industry which have not adopted cloud solutions altogether presents a big growth opportunity. These are the types of clients typically targeted by large public cloud operators, such as Microsoft and Amazon Web Services (AWS). Enterprise cloud solutions drive growth for most foreign cloud providers, said Ji.
At the moment, these large enterprises “are not fascinated by private cloud services. This year we are seeing a pattern towards public cloud, but the trend needs time to grow,” Ji said.
Foreign tech companies like Microsoft, Amazon, and Oracle have poured millions of dollars into setting up cloud services in China, but they have seen little bang for their buck. Amazon accounts for around 6% of public cloud, specifically in the Infrastructure as a Service (IaaS) market, according to the IDC.
Despite the hurdles in China, many international players are committing resources to gain a firm foothold in the market.
Amazon’s cloud arm, which appointed a new executive director for the China market this week, decided earlier in 2019 to shrink its online retail offerings to sharpen its focus on cloud computing and cross-border e-commerce.
US multinational IT firm Oracle is shuttering its research center in China—which has led to job cuts of more than 900 employees—as it repositions itself and expands further into cloud computing.
Experts agree that in the next three to five years, public cloud operators will gain significant market share as companies will move towards the hybrid cloud model.
Thomas noted that it is hard to peel back the rosy growth forecasts and look at what is going on in China’s cloud market. “I think there are a lot of challenges to overcome before China’s cloud market really takes off.”
A lack of technical know-how coupled with regulatory constraints means that the road ahead will be tough for public cloud providers, especially foreign ones.
“Many companies still don’t realize the value brought by cloud computing, or have not found the right application scenario,” said Brian Lu, product lead at California-based software and services provider Pivotal Software. The US-listed company entered China in 2013 and its open-source Platform as a Service (PaaS) has a well-established user base in the country.
Because Chinese firms are not used to spending a lot of money in IT, convincing them to invest in public cloud operations is a hard sell, said Thomas. “You need to have a significant value proposition, and a lens on digital transformation,” he added. In short, public cloud operators have to convince brick-and-mortar businesses that moving to the cloud will save them a lot of money.
One of the major inhibitors to public cloud adoption among large enterprises is technical issues. Services like Alibaba Cloud offer agility but are complicated to deploy. “Most enterprises do not have the skills,” Ji said.
Chen from Alibaba Cloud said cost and cloud security are the top two factors that potential public cloud users in China will consider, but he believes that the adoption of the cloud is expected to become more immersive in traditional sectors across China and Asia.
Increasingly, businesses in China are coming around to the potential of cloud computing and consider it as part of the core business strategy, according to Lu. However, many still have not realized the value of the technology or the appropriate use cases for it. “At the same time, we also need to realize that the technical and management aspects of cloud services can still be improved,” Lu said. Previous cases of system crashing and security problems, in China and abroad, affect users’ confidence in such solutions, he added.
Chinese and foreign public cloud operators bring different things to the table, but foreign players have to consider a different regulatory environment.
The landmark 2017 cybersecurity law mandates that personal data that can identify Chinese citizens must be stored within China’s borders, meaning that foreign cloud operators must restrict the transfer of data to overseas data centers.
In addition to the data localization requirements, as of today, foreign public cloud operators in China must also form joint ventures with Chinese companies in the industry. For example, Apple’s iCloud data is stored by a company in the southern province of Guizhou.
This joint venture requirement could potentially be overturned in a trade deal with the US. Back in March, Chinese Premier Li Keqiang floated a proposal to form a free-trade zone for foreign cloud enterprises. However, the trade talks fell through; the proposal which would allow foreign public cloud enterprises to operate data storage and management independently is still up in the air.
Lu noted that the government’s proposal to open up and allow more foreign-funded firms into the market is no doubt a powerful booster for the company’s operations in China.
Even so, the issue of market-readiness has to be solved. Ji said that despite regulatory limitations, China’s market simply isn’t mature enough to deploy public cloud. Unlike laws, this challenge can only be resolved with time.
Although China’s market is still largely dominated by Alibaba Cloud, it is not impossible for foreign players to challenge its entrenched leading position in the cloud market, say experts.
Ji believes that it is too early to say who will get the upper hand in the large enterprise segment. AWS, which offers cloud services similar to Alibaba, has a stronger product portfolio, but the latter has a larger network base. In areas like PaaS, which provides IoT and machine learning solutions, Alibaba has some catching up to do, said Ji.
Additional reporting by Eliza Gritsi
]]>China surpassed countries including Switzerland, Ireland, New Zealand and Sweden in this year’s Global Cybersecurity Index, ranking 27th in the world. (Image credit: TechNode/Eliza Gkritsi)
China’s ranking on the 2019 Global Cybersecurity Index (GCI) has improved to 27th place globally from 32nd last year despite a number of recently publicized data security lapses.
Why it matters: China’s cybersecurity practices have been scrutinized for years and local governments have been accused of neglecting basic principles.
Details: The index is compiled annually by the UN’s telecommunications body, the International Telecommunications Union. Rankings are based on scores calculated by assessing progress in the legal, technical, and organizational aspects of cybersecurity, in addition to international cooperation and capacity building, including research and development and training programs.
Context: China’s quick rise as a technology powerhouse has left gaps in its cybersecurity practices, leading to data leaks and numerous compromised devices.
The principality of Monaco is the first country in Europe to cover its entire area with a 5G network featuring Huawei equipment, giving the Shenzhen-based telecom giant an opportunity to showcase its equipment in real time.
Why it matters: Monaco is the first on the continent to fully welcome Huawei 5G technology as part of its core infrastructure.
“It allows us to make a shop window in a number of areas, notably linking 5G development to this intelligent state.”
— Huawei Vice President Guo Ping
Details: Monaco Telecom, owned by a French billionaire, signed the agreement with Huawei in September.
Context: As the US-China trade war plows on with Huawei’s 5G bids at the eye of the cyclone, Europe has been struggling to pick a side. The US maintains that Huawei poses a national security risk. But European leaders are not entirely convinced and countries are making their own assessments. The UK will use Huawei equipment on non-core parts of its 5G network, while Germany is on the fence.
Nine out of the first 25 Chinese firms to list on Shanghai’s Nasdaq-style STAR market announced their share offerings on Tuesday. Investors can sign up tomorrow ahead of the start of trading on July 22.
Why it matters: This is the most offerings announced in a single day in China since June 2015. The new listings could turn around the fortunes of the Shanghai market after a poor first half.
“Investor enthusiasm seems very strong for these new shares, but if the stock market keeps falling, investors will likely price in some negative sentiment on them.”
Jiang Liangqing, an investment manager at Beijing’s Ruisen Capital Management told Bloomberg.
Details: Four companies have already finished preparing their offerings. The remaining 21 are expected to start taking subscriptions this week.
Context: The new tech board was announced only eight months ago and Chinese authorities hope it will keep homegrown tech firms from listing abroad, as well as attract foreign companies. To this end, the STAR market will trade under loosened -by Chinese standards- rules, even admitting a loss-making semiconductor firm.
Last month, the CEO of encrypted messaging service Telegram said that a distributed denial of service (DDOS) attack on the platform was coming from devices in China. The country was revealed to to be the biggest source of DDOS attacks globally in a recent report by security provider Nexusguard.
But according to our statistical analysis and input from experts, the fact that most compromised devices come from China does not necessarily indicate that attackers work from China, nor that security practices are worse there than in other countries.
China was the top source of DDOS attacks for the first quarter of 2019, while the US was a close second. Their overall share is decreasing, as countries like Vietnam and Brazil -which didn’t even make the top 10 two years ago- now take the fourth and sixth spots respectively.
China surpassed the US as the top source of DDOS attacks in 2017. Data from Nexusguard Q1 2019 DDOS report (Image credit: TechNode/Eliza Gkritsi)
DDOS attacks essentially overwhelm web servers with bogus traffic, hindering them from processing requests from real users.
Nowadays, “devices which perpetrate these attacks are unwilling victims,” Nexguard Product Director of Enterprise Security Solutions Donny Chong told TechNode. Hackers take over others’ devices and use them to overwhelm websites with traffic.
Theoretically, it is possible to find who is controlling the devices. In practice, however, it might prove difficult. “The IP address of who is controlling the devices can be spoofed,” said Chong, which makes it harder to track the origin of the hack.
Attacks of the denial of service (DNS) type often use IP spoofing. According to the Nexusguard report, DNS attacks accounted for around 43% of all DDOS attacks in the first quarter.
These so-called botnets are traded on the dark corners of the internet and, in the case of China, on WeChat and QQ groups, Chong said.
In other words, the devices that perpetrate the attack often do not reveal who is behind it, nor where the hacker is based, and hacked devices from all around the world are traded online.
Vietnam and Brazil are increasingly the source of DDOS attacks, whereas Germany’s share has fallen. Data from Nexusguard Q1 2019 DDOS report (Image credit: TechNode/Eliza Gkritsi)
But why are devices in the US and China making up almost two-fifths of the total used in DDOS attacks, and why are countries like Vietnam becoming more common sources?
Using data from Nexusguard’s report and the World Bank, TechNode found that a larger online population correlates to a higher incidence of compromised devices used in such attacks.
Dmitry Kurbotov, CTO of Russian cybersecurity company Positive Technologies told TechNode that the proliferation of smartphones and IoT devices have given hackers plenty of unwilling victims to choose from. “This is simply where most devices are,” he said.
Countries like Vietnam have been developing, and so people are buying more internet-connected devices. “Citizens are getting more exposed to security risks,” Chong said.
Apart from the larger pool of devices, Chong added that security practices and awareness differ from country to country, and these have a large impact on device safety. “We believe it is linked to IT security awareness and the issue of privacy,” he said.
A wifi router, for example, can be used as a launching platform for a hacker carrying out a DDOS attack. But many people “do not apply basic security practices when they buy these devices,” said Kbutrov. These include setting up strong passwords or switching off some management interfaces.
In addition, in some countries, when a new device is purchased, the network operator may enhance security controls. Kbutrov said that in some countries “the network operator says we’ll provision the ‘box’ but we will manage it for you. So maybe they will hide the management ports [from the user]” he said.
The share of DDOS sources a country has globally is more closely related to the number of broadband subscriptions. (Image credit: TechNode/Eliza Gkritsi)
But there is no clear evidence that China is doing something wrong to protect its devices, and the higher share of DDOS sources could just be a result of the sheer number of devices.
Based on data from Nexusguard and the World Bank, TechNode found that a country’s share of global DDOS attacks is most strongly correlated to the number of broadband subscriptions. This could be because wifi routers are often more vulnerable to attacks than smartphones, for reasons ranging from device settings to security habits of users.
Smartphone usage and the total online population are positively correlated to the percentage share of source of DDOS attacks, but the relation is weaker.
Because of gaps in security awareness across countries, the issue of compromised devices is harder to solve in some countries compared with others, said Chong.
In preventing cyber attacks, “the role of security awareness is huge. It’s like the safety instructions when you cross the road,” Kbutrov said.
]]>Professor faces 219-year prison sentence for sending missile chip tech to China – The Verge
What happened: An electrical engineer and University of California, Los Angeles professor was found guilty of conspiring to export semiconductor technology used in missiles. Yi-Chih Shih’s partner, Kiet Ahn Mai, posed as a customer to obtain the key technology for an American chipmaker before sending it to a company in China that has been on the US entity list since 2014. According to a press release by the US Justice Department, Shih was found guilty by a jury in a Los Angeles court for 18 counts, including illegal exports and fraud, on June 26 and could face up to 219 years in prison.
Why it’s important: Trade secret theft is at the core of the US-China trade war. Washington claims that Beijing has built its burgeoning tech sector based on technology taken from US companies. Huawei lost a case of IP theft two weeks ago in Texas, and is facing another one. Florida-based Magic Leap has sued an employee of Chinese Nreal over an AR headset. Some in Washington meanwhile have voiced concern that Chinese students studying at American universities are contributing to tech transfer.
]]>Huawei founder predicts internet of things is next US battle – The Financial Times
What happened: Huawei founder Ren Zhenfei expects conflict between the Shenzhen-based telecom giant and the US will continue, and that it will involve industrial applications of the internet of things (IoT). Huawei is trying to quickly develop the hardware and software necessary for automating factory floors, in an effort to set the standard for the industry. “They’ll fight IoT next. Let them fight,” Zhengfei said.
Why it’s important: The “let them fight” quote reflect’s Ren Zhengfei’s public statements towards US efforts to bar it from the development of 5G networks. Regarding the export ban in May, he said it could cost Huawei $30 billion in output, but that he didn’t think it would “thwart our [Huawei’s] progress.” Huawei has been fighting to become the industry trendsetter in 5G, and it is trying the same with industrial IoT. According to this statement, Ren Zhengfei thinks the US will go after them in that technology as well, hinting at deeper differences.
]]>HP, Dell and Microsoft join electronics exodus from China – Nikkei Asian Review
What happened: A new set of companies which produce notebooks, game consoles, e-readers, home assistants, and smart speakers plan to join the exodus from China, Nikkei Asian Review reported citing anonymous sources. Microsoft, HP, Dell, Sony, Nintendo, Google, and Amazon think the renewed promises of reconciliation coming from last week’s G20 meeting are too uncertain, the report said. Lenovo and Asustek are also considering similar moves. Meanwhile rising labor costs in China have already lowered production demand and will continue to do so. Companies are eyeing Southeast Asia as an alternative.
Why it’s important: Leaders from the US and China made an effort to appear reconciliatory at the G20 meeting. But observers have said no solid details have been announced, while there are many issues left to be resolved for a trade deal. The US-imposed hiked tariffs on Chinese exports have landed a severe blow to China’s position as a tech powerhouse. Apple and China’s largest private sector employer Foxconn have already announced plans to move more than 30% of production out of China. Meanwhile, other American companies are fighting to maintain access to the Chinese market.
]]>How U.S. Chipmakers Pressed Trump to Ease Huawei Export Controls – Bloomberg
What happened: The semiconductor industry launched a concerted effort to lift the blanket ban on exports to Huawei, Bloomberg reported citing anonymous sources. Following reports in June that Qualcomm and Intel lobbied independently against the ban, the Semiconductor Industry Association orchestrated a full court press campaign in high-level meetings and a signed letter, Bloomberg reported. The companies argued that the blanket ban is making the US look like an unreliable trade partner, damaging the chipmakers’ chances of investment while Huawei could source parts from other countries, according to the report. They asked for a target ban of specific technologies.
Why it’s important: US President Trump announced that he will lift some restrictions on the Chinese telecoms giant on Saturday. The Huawei ban has been in place since May 16 and has roiled the semiconductor industry across the world. China is the world’s largest buyer of computer chips. In 2018, Huawei spent $11 billion on American semiconductor products. In the four weeks after the ban was announced, NeoPhotonics, a US chipmaker, saw its share value fall by more than 20%, and Qualcomm stocks fell 18%.
]]>Advanced Micro Devices, known as AMD, has denied any wrongdoing for a deal that transferred key semiconductor technology to Chinese supercomputer manufacturers, universities, and supercomputer manufacturers affiliated with the military.
The Wall Street Journal reported that a joint venture signed in 2016 that led to AMD chips “rolling off Chinese production lines” had been inked without adequate regulatory oversight. The complex system of joint ventures set up by AMD in China put the transfer of chip intellectual property in a legal grey area that, until last week, remained outside the usual purview of US controls on tech transfer.
AMD responded to the claims on Friday, saying that the report made several factual errors and that it had been in touch with the Department of Defense and Commerce Department since 2015, the year before the joint venture was signed. It added that recent developments have made the topic sensitive in a way that it wasn’t at the time of the deal.
The California-based semiconductor designer licensed its proprietary designs of x86 processors for $293 million dollars plus any royalties coming from new chip designs. The chips, invented by Intel, are the foundation for modern high-speed computing and can be found in both consumer devices and state-of-the-art supercomputers.
In February 2016, AMD had set up a joint venture along with Chinese state- and privately owned companies under the name Tianjin Haiguang Advanced Technology Investment Co. Ltd. (THATIC). The newly set up company was co-owned by AMD, the Chinese Academy of Sciences, and other Chinese private and public companies.
AMD then set up another two companies in China, HMC and Hygon. AMD holds a 51% stake in Hygon, according a company filing. In 2018 Hygon produced Dhyana, a CPU processor almost identical to AMD’s EPYC model. More recent online reports say that AMD owns 30% of Hygon and 51% of HMC.
According to anonymous sources cited in the story, the Pentagon and the US Department of Commerce suspected that the joint venture violated export controls over national security risks that are reviewed by the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States (CFIUS). They tried to block it by attempting to convince company representatives to submit the deal for review. However, the US Treasury Department, which has the final say in the CFIUS review process, agreed that AMD’s joint venture deal fell outside of its scope.
As of June 21, all three of AMD’s joint ventures in China are subject to the extended export ban. Sugon, one of AMD’s Chinese partners, “publicly acknowledged a variety of military end uses and end users of its high-performance computers,” thus US authorities decided that it is acting contrary to national security interests and placed it on the entity list.
According to the US Department of Commerce, Sugon, which manufactures half of China’s fastest supercomputers and is affiliated with the military, owns a majority stake in THATIC and minority stakes in HMC and Hygon. Sugon has used the Dhyana processor in its supercomputers, which are used by the Chinese military, the Department of Commerce said.
According to the report, AMD licensed its technology to THATIC which in turn passed it on to Hygon and HMC which produced processors and devices respectively.
In addition to the complex company structure, the Wall Street Journal reported that AMD intentionally stripped the x86 semiconductors from features that would definitively place it under export controls, such as encryption protocols.
AMD did not respond to TechNode’s requests for comment on Monday.
In 2016, AMD was struggling. Shares of its biggest competitor, Intel, was valued six times higher and the company was dependent on outsourcing the manufacturing of its IP. Under the guidance of a new CEO, it decided to monetize its precious IP to save itself from its financial problems.
The IP of semiconductors is guarded closely by manufacturers and governments alike, since design remains one of the most important and difficult aspects of the technology. Their importance in the development of supercomputers, which are used for military and other state functions, also makes them a highly coveted.
The year before AMD set up the intertwined joint ventures, the Obama administration stopped Intel from selling its Xeon processors to a supercomputer facility in China.
]]>The race to 5G is at the center of rising international trade friction, but at the 2019 Mobile World Conference in Shanghai, it was business as usual. Companies from around the world were eager to demonstrate their deployment of 5G in robotics, augmented reality (AR), entertainment, food delivery, and others.
China Mobile used 5G to send signals from a human wearing sensors, and a robot reflected the movements almost instantly.
ZTE showed off a robot playing the piano. While the music was pleasant, it was unclear what role 5G played in the demonstration.
ZTE also partnered with Nreal to deliver an AR headset.
Huawei put on an impressive show; it was everywhere, and it was big. It had the largest booth in the exhibition area, which was invite-only. The telecom giant kicked off the conference with a presentation called “5G is ON” and headlined another five events—more than any other company.
At a press conference on Tuesday, Huawei said that its 5G equipment will not be affected by the American technology ban. It also announced that it had secured 50 commercial 5G contracts worldwide.
On Wednesday, Huawei announced a partnership with China Telecom to enhance uplink speed to support the telecom operator’s plan to deliver artificial intelligence (AI) solutions in industry, transport, home, and more. The Baolong 5000 chip made by Huawei subsidiary HiSilicon will be used for the project, the company said.
Huawei also spoke about its goal to become a first-tier supplier for 5G-powered AI transport systems, offering end-to-end intelligent system solutions, both horizontally and vertically.
China Mobile introduced plans for smart mobility and spoke about the role of the Chinese government in autonomous vehicle (AV) development. Authorities have made clear the strategy to develop vehicle-road cooperation using 5G so that China can compete in the global market for autonomous driving, it said.
International semiconductor and telecom equipment manufacturers were also present and showcasing hardware capabilities for building 5G systems.
With additional reporting by Jill Shen, Wei Sheng, Jiayi Shi, and Eugene Tang.
]]>New ams/MEGVII Partnership for Plug-and-play solutions Enabling 3D Face Recognition in Any Smart Device – Businesswire
What happened: Chinese AI surveillance company Megvii will join forces with Austrian sensor manufacturer Ams AG to make what it claims will be the first off-the-shelf facial recognition solutions that don’t rely on smartphones. The standalone plug-and-play 3D suite, featuring Ams AG’s laser technology with Megvii’s facial algorithms, will focus on smart home, retail, security applications.
Why it’s important: Once referred to as “China’s rising AI star,” Megvii, which reached a $4 billion valuation in May, has recently entered choppier waters. The firm’s role in China’s state-level surveillance has attracted criticism from abroad since a March report stated Megvii was seeking an $800 million IPO listing. Many speculate that China’s surveillance players could soon face a US administration ban similar to that of Huawei. As a result, anonymous insider sources claim it is rethinking its listing altogether. Despite the turmoil, Megvii appears committed to partnerships and product development, this time with a European partner.
]]>Huawei Technologies loses trade secrets case against U.S. chip designer – Reuters
What happened: A court in Texas ruled against Huawei’s claim that US semiconductor company CNEX Labs had stolen Huawei trade secrets. The Shenzhen-based telecom equipment giant had accused the Microsoft- and Intel-backed chip designer of stealing intellectual property (IP) related to memory control technology and poaching employees. CNEX, whose co-founder is a former Huawei employee, responded with a counter suit, claiming that Huawei had posed as a customer to obtain confidential information and that the lawsuit was an attempt to acquire proprietary technology. The court found that Huawei committed IP theft but did not award damages to CNEX.
Why it’s important: Huawei is a cornerstone of the US-China trade war. One of the Washington’s main grievances with China is that its rise as a global tech powerhouse has been on the back of stolen foreign technology. Two of Huawei’s business units face charges by US prosecutors for allegedly misappropriating robotic and mobile testing technology from cellular provider T-Mobile. Notably, the same judge who oversaw the CNEX lawsuit will see Huawei’s lawsuit against the US government filed in early March to overturn a law which prohibits government agencies from buying its equipment.
]]>Almost half Australians are worried about the national security implications of tech transfer above potential benefits, Data: The Lowy Institute (Image credit: TechNode/Eliza Gkritsi)
Most Australians support Canberra’s decision to ban ZTE and Huawei from the development of 5G networks, according to an annual poll by a foreign policy think tank the Lowy Institute.
The Australian government banned the Chinese telecom giants in August, saying that using their technology would expose networks to to “foreign interference.”
“That decision appears to have gained the backing of many Australians,” the report said. The Lowy Institute polled 2,130 adults in March.
According to the 2019 poll, nearly half of Australians consider “protecting Australia from foreign state intrusion” a top priority when deciding on key technology suppliers. The balance of respondents were equally split between prioritizing the most sophisticated tech and keeping consumer prices low.
Traditionally, Australia has fostered a strong relationship with the US. Australia is also one of the Five Eyes, an intelligence alliance that also includes the US, UK, New Zealand, and Canada. Allies are granted access to classified US intelligence.
Since China became its largest trading partner in 2007, Australia has found itself closer to Beijing. China has made significant infrastructure investments in Australia, including building fiber optic cables and providing telecom equipment.
However, the investments have not engendered trust, as 79% of respondents said that these infrastructure projects are “part of China’s plans for regional domination” and a little over half, 52%, think that they are not good for the region.
Distrust in China has heightened this year, according to the survey, which said that “trust in and warmth towards China are at their lowest points in the poll’s history,” which began in 2005. Only 32% of those surveyed thought that Beijing would act responsibly on the global stage, down from 52% in 2018.
While fewer Australians trust China, they still recognize its importance. Half of respondents thought Australia should build a better relationship with the US even if it jeopardizes their relationship with China, while 44% said ties with Beijing should be a higher priority than Washington, the report said.
Australia’s closest ally, New Zealand, is on the fence about using Chinese suppliers for 5G networks and has announced it will carry out its own investigation.
]]>FedEx sues U.S. government over ‘impossible’ task of policing exports to China – Reuters
What happened: The American courier services company FedEx is suing the US Department of Commerce, claiming that it shouldn’t be held liable over unintentionally delivering Huawei parcels that violate the US ban. FedEx claimed in a court filing in the District of Columbia that the task of monitoring millions of packages is “a virtually impossible task, logistically, economically, and in many cases, legally,” and that the government has essentially “deputized” them to police parcels.
Why it’s important: FedEx has been caught between a rock and a hard place since several Chinese firms have been included in the US entity list, which prohibits American companies from doing business with them. In May, Huawei said two of its packages containing documents were misdirected, and that it will review its ties with FedEx. Yesterday, PCMag reported that FedEx refused to deliver a Huawei P30 smartphone mailed from one of its writers in the UK to one in the US. FedEx said that it was due to an “operational error.” The delivery company said that it will not deliver any Huawei-made products mailed to Huawei addresses, or others which are on the entity list.
]]>FedEx misses delivery of Huawei package to U.S.; China paper says retaliation threatened – Reuters
What happened: American delivery services operator FedEx said it did not deliver a package belonging to Huawei because of an operational error. The package was bound for the US and “was mistakenly returned to the shipper, and we apologize for this operational error,” FedEx told Reuters in an email. State-owned newspaper Global Times tweeted in response that FedEx could be added to China’s entity list, which Chinese authorities announced earlier in June.
Why it’s important: This is the second time in a month that FedEx has mishandled a Huawei package, and the Chinese telecom giant had stated previously that it might reconsider its relationship with the delivery company. On May 28, FedEx diverted two Huawei parcels through the US, which were sent from Japan to China. More than just crucial components, such as the Android OS and ARM chips, the Trump administration’s inclusion of Huawei in the US entity list seems to be affecting its logistics. German courier DHL denied rumors in late May that it had halted deliveries of Huawei products. FedEx’s repeated “errors” also spell trouble for the delivery firm itself, raising concerns about privacy.
]]>Foxconn chairman hands over reins ahead of presidential bid – Reuters
What happened: Terry Gou, founder and chairman of Foxconn, announced today he is handing the reigns of the world’s largest electronics contract manufacturer to a new operations committee. Gou, 68, was expected to withdraw from the daily operations of Foxconn since he announced his bid for president of Taiwan, where the company is based. He is expected to keep a seat at the board, but the company said at its first investors relations conference today that his presidential candidacy will affect his future role there.
Why it’s important: The news of Gou’s resignation has been expected since he announced his presidential bid. It comes a week after Foxconn unveiled a leadership overhaul and plans for increased transparency towards investors. The new nine-person committee is comprised of key figures in Foxconn’s various businesses, and speculation is high as to whether one of them will replace him as chairman of the board. As the largest assembler of iPhones, Foxconn is likely to undertake serious changes in its supply chain operations. The US-China tariffs impart a heavy burden on iPhones, which are mainly made in China. The Taiwanese company has said it is ready to shift production out of China.
]]>Republican Senator Marco Rubio is seeking to revoke the intellectual property (IP) rights of companies on government watch lists, just days after Chinese telecom giant Huawei asked for more than $1 billion from American telecoms operator Verizon over licensing fees.
The Senator submitted an amendment to the National Defense Authorization Act, a series of laws that guides American military expenditures. The amendment does not name Huawei or any other company, but proposes that foreign firms on certain priority lists be barred from pursuing legal action, filing complaints to the US Trade Commission, or receiving reparations for their US patents.
Two different federal watch lists are named in the proposal. One includes companies from countries that the US Trade Department sees as failing to provide adequate IP protection for American companies, such as China. The second includes the telecom and internet providers which “pose an unacceptable risk” to US national security under the executive order signed in May by American President Donald Trump, which banned Huawei from trading with US companies.
In short, if a company poses a national security risk or is from a country that doesn’t respect property rights, according to the US government, it will not be granted patent rights in the US.
Industry insiders in China were shocked by the news. “Nobody expected that your patent rights can be taken away,” said Yu Uny Cao, vice president at the Zhejiang Intellectual Property Exchange. “America is a good practitioner of the patent system. This damages its reputation,” he continued.
Senator Rubio tweeted yesterday that Huawei is using patent law to retaliate against the US government and that “We should not allow #China government backed companies to improperly use our legal system against us.”
Many responses from Twitter users spoke of a “double standard.”
Last week, the Wall Street Journal reported that Huawei was seeking more than $1 billion in damages from Verizon for infringing on 238 of its patents, citing anonymous sources familiar with the matter.
According to patent services provider IFI Claims, Huawei is one of the top patent-holders in the US, higher than many major American companies including General Electric, Boeing, and AT&T. It is ranked 16th with more than 3,000 patents.
Chinese tech professionals are wondering if the proposal is fair. “People take it personally, Huawei has been having bad news every day, and this engenders some kind of sympathy,” said Cao. “There is a group that says Americans are unfair, Americans are overstepping,” he said.
State-owned newspaper People’s Daily published a news report saying that “The senator from Florida intends to let the US—not steal—but blatantly grab the intellectual property and patents of Chinese companies.”
Rubio responded on Twitter, “When the official newspaper of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of China attacks you, you know you are doing something right.”
The defense bill was used in 2018 to ban federal agencies from using ZTE equipment and in 2019 to prohibit them from using Huawei equipment. The Shenzhen-based telecom giant has sued the US government over the 2019 bill, saying that is “unlawful” and hinders “fair competition.”
“I am almost certain that Huawei will sue the US government if the amendment passes,” Cao said, adding, “The question is how, and will it be frozen in the meantime?” Huawei could have no legal intellectual property protection during an ongoing legal battle, and the proceedings are likely to be lengthy.
The bill is set to be debated this week. Last year’s act passed on June 18, 2018, almost two months after the amendments were reported to the Senate, and was signed into effect by President Trump on August 13 of the same year.
]]>Alphabet employees blast policies on contractors and China at shareholder meeting – CNBC
What happened: At an annual shareholder meeting for Google’s parent company, Alphabet, a Google employee proposed a resolution to publish an assessment of the human rights impact of Project Dragonfly, Google’s secret project to launch a censored search engine in China. Tyler Holsclaw, representing a “coalition concerned about the impact of government censorship and surveillance on human rights,” told his employers that “Google’s powerful technology could give China data that it wouldn’t otherwise get.” Alphabet rejected this proposal along with all others presented at the meeting. Google founders Sergey Brin and Larry Page were not in attendance to hear their employees’ concerns.
Why it’s important: Googlers are known for speaking up against their bosses. When Project Dragonfly was revealed by news site The Intercept, Google employees pushed the tech giant to abandon its plans. After Google claimed to have ended the project, they brought evidence to the press that showed otherwise. The management’s defiance of its employees is souring internal relations. Another concern expressed at the meeting is that several leading figures have resigned, citing a “betrayal of its stated values,” including diversity and sexual harassment policies.
]]>Business confidence among top companies in the Asia-Pacific region has fallen to its lowest point since the 2008-2009 financial crisis, according to the Asian Business Sentiment report, a survey by Thomson Reuters and Singapore’s INSEAD business school.
The business sentiment index fell to 53 in the quarter ended June from a rating of 63 held in the two previous quarters. The measurement tracks companies’ outlook for the next six months and a score above 50 indicates an overall positive outlook.
The fact that this quarter’s number remained just over 50 indicates that companies do not expect a global recession, but are cautious about the future as the trade war escalates.
Uncertainty over Brexit is the second biggest concern, with 25% of firms naming it as the biggest risk for the next six months.
The report was a survey of 95 companies in 11 countries which make up a third of the world’s GDP output and 45% of its population. It was administered between May 31 and June 14. Companies surveyed include South Korea’s Samsung, Japan’s Nikon, and Thailand’s state-owned oil and gas company PTT PCL.
The global trade war has become the top perceived business risk, when a little over a year ago it was only a “worry.” The report from the first quarter of 2018 found that 14% of surveyed firms put “worries” about an impending trade war at the top of their concerns. The next quarter the “worries” became a reality and in the last three months, the trade war was the top concern for 57% of surveyed firms.
The trade war has had a significant impact on global supply chains, as many companies are looking to move production outside of China. Smartphone production has been severely affected by the tariff war. Taiwanese Foxconn, the biggest assembler of iPhones and China’s biggest private sector employer, announced last week that it is ready to expand productive capacity outside of China to minimize tariff impact.
Manishi Raychaudhuri, the Asia-Pacific equity strategy for BNP Paribas, the world’s eighth-largest bank in 2018 by asset size according to Standard & Poor’s, told Reuters that the trade war is unlikely to be solved in 2019. He added that the changes that must be made to supply chains “will not happen overnight.”
]]>As artificial intelligence and fintech come knocking, half of Asia-Pacific finance professionals fear for their jobs – South China Morning Post
What happened: Half of the employees working in the finance industry in the Asia-Pacific region fear they will lose their jobs to artificial intelligence (AI), but the number of China’s financial professionals is expected to grow 26% in the next decade, according to a poll by the Chartered Financial Accountants Institute. The international association of investment professionals surveyed 3,832 members worldwide, a third of which live in Asia. Despite the rise of AI, China’s employment in financial services will grow at a rate second only to India, which will grow 33% over the same time frame.
Why it’s important: China is one of the world’s biggest investors in fintech, with tech giants like Tencent and unicorns like Lufax in the game, and also one of the biggest virtual payment markets. But the fintech industry has faced serious turmoil after a recent regulatory crackdown, particularly P2P lending. According to the report, AI does not threaten the overall growth of the sector. As China’s fintech industry evolves, the government is trying to increase its financial clout while attracting tech capital with a new Nasdaq-style exchange in Shanghai called the “STAR Market.”
]]>Secretive Magic Leap Says Ex-Engineer Copied Headset for China – Bloomberg
What happened: Florida-based augmented reality (AR) unicorn Magic Leap has sued a former engineering employee and Chinese national for stealing technology used in its AR headset. Xu Chi left Magic Leap in 2016 and founded his own company in Beijing, known as Nreal, which unveiled an AR headset at a tradeshow in January, fewer than six months after Magic Leap’s device came to market. The Alibaba- and Google-backed company accused Xu of “neglecting his work duties” as he was stealing proprietary information and plotting to start his own firm. Magic Leap points to the fact that Xu’s company released a headset in less than two years, saying its own product was deployed after seven years of development and $2 billion of investment.
Why it’s important: Cases of trade secret theft have added to souring relations between the US and China. In April, the Justice Department indicted two Chinese nationals over alleged trade secret theft from General Electric. Washington claims that such incidents show China’s tech rise has boosted by appropriated technology. Chinese telecommunications giant Huawei has been also been accused of intellectual property theft. The company was indicted in January over allegations that they stole robotics technology. In May, a US chip startup also sued the Shenzhen-based telecoms operator over theft of trade secrets.
]]>More than four weeks after the Trump administration placed Huawei on a trade blacklist, the stock market is still reacting. Tech companies in China and the United States alike have seen share prices fall.
Huawei’s suppliers and competitors have lost share value since the Trump administration’s ban. Chipmakers NeoPhotonics and Lumentum, and semiconductor firm Qorvo have been hit the worst. NeoPhotonics relies on Huawei for 47% of its revenue, Lumentum and Qorvo for 11%, according to Goldman Sachs data analyzed by Reuters.
Huawei’s American chip suppliers in blue and red; those which depend on Huawei for more than 10% of their revenue in red. In green, Huawei’s international competitors. The semiconductor composite index in purple. (Image credit: TechNode/Eugene Tang)
South Korean electronics giant Samsung has seen its shares increase the most, exceeding 5%. Share prices for other non-Chinese telecom equipment companies have also gained: Finland-based Nokia and Swedish telecom firm Ericsson both rose around 3%. China’s other smartphone and telecom equipment makers, Xiaomi and ZTE, have both lost share value.
Huawei’s American chip suppliers in blue and red; those which depend on Huawei for more than 10% of their revenue in red. The semiconductor composite index in purple. (Image credit: TechNode/Eugene Tang)
Nearly all American chipmakers which supply Huawei with electronic components have seen share prices fall. The composite index for the semiconductor industry declined about 5%.
(Image credit: TechNode/Eugene Tang)
Chinese phone makers have also lost share value, whereas Huawei’s international competitors have seen a steady rise.
]]>China’s housing unicorn Danke appoints ex-Baidu executive as new COO – TechCrunch
What happened: Danke Gongyou, a Chinese housing startup valued at $2 billion, has hired Gu Guodong as its chief operating officer. TechCrunch reports that he will roll out targeted marketing and real estate acquisitions, and oversee more rigorous operational procedures. Gu was one of five top-level Baidu executives following Baidu’s disappointing quarterly earnings report. He oversaw marketing staff for search, Baidu’s highest-grossing division, helping earn annual sales of around $14.4 billion.
Why it’s important: Founded in 2015 and backed by Tiger Global and Ant Financial, Danke rents shared houses targeting young professionals. It now manages nearly 500,000 housing units in 10 major Chinese cities including Shanghai, Beijing, and Guangzhou.The industry of housing startups is increasingly competitive, with tech giants like JD.com claiming a piece, but it has had a tumultuous year. One of the largest Chinese online rental platforms, Ziroom, has hit with a series of scandals over data theft, hidden cameras, and elevated levels of formaldehyde in apartments. Danke’s aims for Gu are to leverage his extensive operational experience to help the startup set stricter operational standards and shore up long-term growth prospects.
]]>Chinese companies have preferred to list in Hong Kong this year, but the freshly opened Science and Technology Innovation Board in Shanghai could be a “real shake up” in Chinese initial public offerings (IPO), a report by US law firm Baker McKenzie said.
The firm expects that the new tech board at the Shanghai Stock Exchange, named the STAR Market, will challenge the Hong Kong Stock Exchange. The tech board started accepting applications in March, and approved its first three listings earlier in June from the biotech, semiconductor, and artificial intelligence (AI) industries.
The new exchange is an attempt to keep China’s valuable homegrown tech firms from listing abroad.
The STAR Market relaxed listing requirements compared with other exchanges in China, allowing for pre-profit and even loss-making companies to list.
Last year, Hong Kong made a move along the same lines, changing its rules in order to allow pre-revenue biotech firms and some which operate on weighted voting systems to trade. This has been received “positively,” but Shanghai’s new tech board could still prove a more alluring, Baker McKenzie said.
In the first half of 2019, eight of the 12 high-tech IPOs were from Chinese companies, but half of them chose to list in Hong Kong, three on Nasdaq and one on the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE), the firm said. Live-streaming platform Douyu, backed by Tencent, was largest cross-border public offering. It raised $500 million with its NYSE IPO in April, according to the report.
However, as the two Asian cities are sparring with Shanghai, the US maintains the lead when it comes to high-tech IPOs, according to Baker McKenzie’s analysis. In the first quarter of 2019, American stock exchanges raised $14.45 billion from high-tech listings, an 185% year-on-year increase, the report said. China saw an 80% decrease in capital raised from tech IPOs, from around $9.7 billion to around $1.7 billion. Hong Kong didn’t even make the top five list, the report said.
Similarly, in the first half of 2019, Chinese stock exchanges lagged their American counterparts, according to the report. The NYSE and Nasdaq raised approximately $15.38 billion for high-tech firms, almost six times more than Shenzhen’s Stock Exchange, third on the list and the only Chinese board to make the top five.
China’s internet companies are spurring growth by transforming online business models, said this year’s internet trends report by venture capitalist Mary Meeker.
China has solidified its position as the world’s largest online population, at 21% of the global internet users, though it lags the US and other Western countries in internet penetration rates. India is catching up, accounting for 12% of global internet users. It is also a promising market for growth, since internet penetration rates are lower.
Alibaba and Tencent are among the top 10 most-valued public tech companies in the world, and Meituan Dianping, Baidu, JD.com, NetEase, and Xiaomi are in the top 30. But the market capitalization rates of Chinese companies have seen less year-on-year growth than other leaders on the list. Alibaba grew the most, jumping 106% but still falling short of Netflix at 366% and Microsoft at 146%.
However, online business models in China continue to evolve. US banking behemoth Citibank said Wednesday that it was looking to Asia, particularly Ant Financial, to build a digital strategy for the future.
Internet business models are transforming consumption in China. Platforms that began as single function are evolving into one-stop “super apps,” including life services platform Meituan. Its offerings include more than 30 types of services such as food delivery, movie tickets, hotel and travel bookings, and payments, the equivalent of combining US peers like Yelp, OpenTable, Fandango, Booking.com, and Airbnb.
Ant Financial’s Alipay evolved from a payment app to a life services platform with more than 200,000 mini-programs offering food delivery, healthcare, public transportation fares, and utility bills. Alipay’s transition to a super app is facilitated by the broader Alibaba ecosystem, which covers virtually every emerging internet sector in China.
China is a pioneer in adding entertainment elements to e-commerce, messaging, payment services, and online education platforms.
E-commerce platforms drive growth with gamified shopping features or more interactive in-app live-streaming functions. Pinduoduo is as an example of how gamification can play a role in driving online sales. Users earn discounts on a price by sharing with friends, who can then play a game to nab discounts. Also, users can grow virtual fruit trees in the app and real fruit is delivered to their homes at “harvest time.” This combination of social shopping and gamified discounts helped the company achieve rapid growth in the past two years.
Livestreaming is another main driver for the e-commerce sector in China. Taobao Live, the live-streaming unit of the mega marketplace, sold $14 billion in livestreaming gross merchandise volume (GMV) in 2018. Similarly, short video apps such as Kuaishou and Douyin are also adding e-commerce features.
WeChat’s mini-program game, “Jump Jump,” has helped build the mini-program ecosystem in WeChat, allowing brands to better engage users. Alipay meanwhile is using gamified experiences to boost consumer engagement. Alipay Ant Forest packaged philanthropy into a game-like system, where users can accumulate green energy points by completing tasks that reduce carbon emission such as walking and using public transit. Users can collect energy points from friends and donate them to plant real trees.
Games have also made their way into education. A number of education apps have incorporated games and competition with classmates to motivate students to learn math and coding.
In 2018, China’s cellular internet data usage grew 189% year-on-year and total daily time spent doubled to 600 million hours in April 2019 from 300 million hours in April 2018. The two biggest short video platforms, Douyin and Kuaishou, are both approaching 250 million daily active users, with Douyin ahead.
With contributions from Tony Xu and Eliza Grkitsi.
]]>The Asia Cloud Computing Association (ACCA) published a report in May on public procurement guidelines which argued that data localization, a legal requirement for cloud operators in China, “on balance weakens data security.”
The ACCA is a trade organization that represents the cloud industry in Asia. The authors of the report are executives and public policy experts working at major players in the Asia cloud market, including Amazon Web Services (AWS), Google, Microsoft, Equinix, and Salesforce.
However, these companies have relatively small cloud operations in China. According to the International Data Corporation, a US market intelligence firm, Microsoft held 5% and Salesforce 4% of the Software as a Service market in 2018; AWS held 6% of the Infrastructure as a Service market.
“China—and other economies—have put in place data localization policies, citing various reasons,” Lim May-Ann, executive director of the ACCA, told TechNode. They are “using reasons such as protection of data and cloud security as rationales,” she said. Lim added that data localization was not the best way to address these issues.
The Multi-Level Protection Scheme (MLPS), the regulation which outlines security requirements for different types of data, requires all network operators wishing to provide cloud services in China to store data in infrastructure within the country’s borders. They are not absolutely prohibited from moving the data overseas. To transfer “important” data across international borders, Chinese law requires a security assessment. The law defines “important” data as those that are critical to national security or personal data that can identify Chinese citizens.
The ACCA recommends that “policymakers should not require data localization on security grounds,” arguing that the physical location of data does not contribute to their security from cyberattacks. The report argued that storing important data locally can weaken security.
Local storage creates gold mine data centers that can be targeted by hackers, the authors said. More flexible storage regimes allow companies to implement moving-target security approaches such as the Melbourne shuffle, which aims to hide patterns that arise from using data in the cloud by by rearranging it across data centers in different locations.
The report also argued that decreasing competition among IT companies around the world will “reduce incentives” to secure infrastructure and make best-in-class cybersecurity solutions less available.
The report says that where data is stored is not as important as how it is stored, and that policies which place restrictions on the location of data could draw resources away from building more effective defenses against hackers.
Kevin Ji, senior director of research at Gartner, an international research and advisory firm, said that China’s goal is not localization but rather data sovereignty. The Chinese state seeks absolute control over data generated within its borders; localization keeps this data within Chinese jurisdiction but is not an absolute measure.
Many companies are concerned about China’s rules on the transfer of personal data, Ji said. However, it is legal to transfer metadata about individuals, so long as it is not raw data that can be associated with a Chinese citizen’s identity. “If you want to perform data analytics on personal information and move [the metadata] outside China, that is okay,” Ji said.
China’s physical size alone justifies holding data within the country, Ji said: “If companies leverage global sites, the latency would be unacceptable.” China is so big that storing data abroad would cause severe delays in signal transmission between the host server and cloud tenant.
“The challenge is not technical anymore, it is about compliance,” Ji said, referring to the various localization and sovereignty laws that have popped up around the world, such as the EU’s General Data Protection Regulation. Cloud providers must now see how their data is classified according to local laws, and secure them as different legal frameworks require, many of which demand localization. For this reason, “data sovereignty has a negative impact on globalization,” Ji said.
]]>Google Is Moving More Hardware Production Out of China – Bloomberg
What happened: Google is preparing to move the production of smart thermostats and motherboards away from China to avoid the 25% import tariff on Chinese-made goods and to mitigate the risk of a volatile and often hostile government in Beijing, Bloomberg reported, citing anonymous sources familiar with the issue. The Silicon Valley company has already moved a significant portion of hardware production outside China. Motherboards are being migrated to Taiwan and smart thermostats to Taiwan and Malaysia, the anonymous sources said.
Why it’s important: The report shows the growing impact of the Trump administration’s tariffs on the Chinese economy, as US tech giants are caught in the crossfire and forced to explore alternatives to manufacturing in China. Yesterday, Foxconn, the largest assembler of iPhones in the world, declared it is ready to move iPhone production away from China. Google is reportedly trying to increase its foothold in China, allegedly developing a search engine that caters to Chinese censors and lobbying in Washington to continue supplying the Android OS to the blacklisted Huawei.
]]>Foxconn, the world’s largest electronics manufacturing contractor and China’s biggest private sector employer, announced significant organizational changes in a conference on Tuesday as its founder, Terry Gou, prepares to run in Taiwan’s 2020 presidential election.
The company also sought to reassure investors that a plan to expand its manufacturing capacity outside China is at the ready should US-China trade tensions affect its supply chain. Chairman of Foxconn’s telecom business Sung-Ching Lu said at the conference that the firm is ready to expand its international factories should tariffs render products made in China too expensive in the US.
In its first investor conference in Taipei, the Taiwan-based conglomerate announced that it is forming a new leadership committee to make major business decisions. It also outlined an “agile” plan to deal with the escalating US-China trade war and the rise of artificial intelligence (AI).
Foxconn revealed the long-awaited news of a nine person “operation committee” which will make decisions on major business matters, overseen by the board of directors. More executives will participate in daily operations under the new structure. Gou announced his candidacy in the upcoming Taiwanese presidential elections in April and has said that he will step down from the board of directors when a new board is elected in June.
Foxconn’s stock price has fallen by more than 7% since Gou, known to be an aggressive businessman, announced his resignation.
The Taiwanese firm also said it will be holding investors conferences twice a year to increase transparency. One of the members of the operation committee could eventually replace Gou on Foxconn’s board of directors. The committee will include executives from many of Foxconn’s units, such as Foxconn CFO Chiu-Liang Huang and Zheng-Hui Ling, head of Foxconn’s giant iPhone-assembling facility in central China.
Its youngest member is Young-Way Liu, 63, who has led Foxconn’s budding semiconductor business and is a board member at Sharp Corp, the Japanese electronics manufacturer Foxconn acquired in 2016, as well as Terry Gou’s former assistant. Due to his personal relationship with Gou and his relative youth, there is speculation that he could replace Gou on the board.
The 5G arm will be led in the committee by Fang-Ming Lu, corporate executive vice president of Foxconn, and Sung-Ching Lu will lead the charge in electric vehicles (EV) manufacturing.
Foxconn manufactures electronics for some of the world’s largest tech firms, such as Acer, Hewlett-Packard, Xiaomi, Sony, Blackberry, Nintendo, and Huawei. It makes popular products such as Amazon’s Kindle and Apple’s iPhone. More than China, it has factories across South and North America, eastern Europe, Australia, and Asia, including in its home of Taiwan.
But the company is facing headwinds. In the last year, Foxconn stock has lost 20% of its value, and has fallen to the lowest level seen since early 2014.
A big part of Foxconn’s business are iPhones, and Apple’s flagship product has seen its market share in the US shrink in 2018 to 15.8% from 17.9% in 2017, according to research intelligence firm Gartner. The new 25% tariffs on Chinese goods announced by the White House could render iPhones prohibitively expensive in the US, but Foxconn has a plan.
“If Apple needs us to move our supply chain, we can do that with the fastest speed. US-China relations are changing dramatically and we are closely monitoring them, and so does Apple,” (our translation) Liu said at the conference.
“We have been seeing some of the orders [for Apple products] are shifting [from one country to another], but as long as the global consumption level maintains, it won’t affect our business,” Liu added.
In January 2019, Foxconn announced it would be investing more than $200 million in India and Vietnam, shifting production away from China as rumors of new tariffs began heating up.
The new tariffs have not affected the growth of its network products, Sung-Ching Lu said at the conference.
With additional reporting by Rachel Zhang.
]]>China’s internet censor shuts financial news aggregator wallstreetcn.com amid worsening US relations over trade and tech – South China Morning Post
What happened: China’s internet censors have shut down Wallstreetcn.com, one of China’s most popular news aggregating apps dedicated to financial news, over unspecified breaches of cybersecurity laws. A photograph of the government order circulated online shows that the order was stamped by the Cyberspace Administration of China. It neither revealed why the app was shut down, nor whether the suspension was permanent. The app confirmed the shutdown and said it was working to resolve issues.
Why it’s important: Wallstreetcn.com has faced regulatory trouble before. In March, it was fined for posting news without a license. The app has also had disputes with Bloomberg, Caixin Global, and Dow Jones over copyright violations. The shutdown comes amid a crackdown on US-China trade war discussions on Chinese social media. Research by the University of Hong Kong suggests that three of the top 10 most-censored WeChat topics include the trade war, Huawei CFO Meng Wanzhou’s arrest, and US sanctions against Chinese telecom manufacturer ZTE.
]]>Confucius felt truly conflicted. He had watched humans spark the engine of the first train and boot the first computer, but nothing had given him such chills of uncertainty as watching them race to build an artificially intelligent decision-maker.
Of course, the Old Master was skeptical of their self-assurance that they could create such a machine, but he couldn’t help pondering its implications for the system of ethics he had created.
He saw enormous potential in AI’s ability to process vast amounts of data—but also gigantic risk. The AI could make informed decisions, using “information” on scale unfathomable to finite humans. Rid of the all-too human emotions that have been corrupting politics over millennia, this machine showed promise in weighing situations towards the golden mean. Perhaps it would bring about real harmony if it was allowed to make crucial political decisions.
The more he thought about it, the more his sense of uneasiness grew. Hard as he tried, he couldn’t predict how AI would interact with the often frivolous humans. Their spontaneity, after all, is a condition for an ethical life. Creating themselves as they go through life, their sociability enables them to learn from the virtuous how to be ethical, cultivate virtue within themselves and apply it. How could, an emotionless automated decision-maker achieve truly anything beyond the simulation of an ethical mindset. More importantly, how could it ever inspire and teach virtue to the analog humans?
In an unusual moment of self-doubt, the man who clarified righteousness in China’s infancy, thought to himself, “Perhaps the digital lies beyond the limits of my comprehension.” And with this thought, he plunged back into the real world.
He landed in Shenzhen; he figured a good place to start his probe into man-made intelligence was this freshly state-planned city. Dressed in postmodern threads he wandered between the glass towers and spoke to ordinary people. He asked them why they prefer to give up everyday decisions to smartphones.
A common reply ran along the lines of “It makes my life easier.” It seemed the humans were enamored by algorithms’ speed in figuring out the most efficient way to return home or what products they would like to buy. “There is no other way,” others replied, defeated.
These answers perplexed Confucius even further. It was clear to him that computers could process an astounding amount of information. Issues of governance and judicial disputes could be resolved more harmoniously by a being that could deliberate using all this data. But these conclusions were solely based on quantitative data, which failed to capture a critical part of the human experience.
He met an engineer working on autonomous vehicles. The man kindly explained to him that in order to prevent harm, they coded principles into the car’s algorithm, which in turn learned from a variety of situations how to uphold the coded values. Even though the car did not understand why causing injury was discouraged, even though the technology wasn’t perfect yet, one day it will have analyzed so much data that will outperform human drivers at preventing accidents.
“By applying this method to different cases where decisions are necessary, we can create the perfect ruler! The most accurate decision-maker of all time,” the engineer exclaimed.
Confucius asked the engineer, “If human drivers are not learning why they should prevent accidents, then how are they learning to make all the everyday decisions that demand their empathy and care for others?” To this, the man had no adequate response.
The Old Master was almost offended by the engineer’s naiveté. He regarded good government entirely as a matter of accuracy, neglecting the vital ripple effect of virtue: inspiring individuals to be the best they can be.
After this conversation, the Old Master thought he had heard enough. He knew that, fundamentally, government is about making choices. There are few—if any—instances where one policy can be quantitatively determined as the best, and the drive behind implementing policy is not factual, but moral. Even the smallest government move is underlined by a moral judgement: “we should provide a welfare state to the poor,” or “we should uphold the free market.”
Regardless of how big the data AI could process, they could never grasp human emotion, and it is emotive intelligence that can bring about judgements, as opposed to decisions. Seeing the virtuous judge situations over time empowers and teaches ordinary people to become benevolent.
Of course, he thought, there are factual reasons why some propositions will bring about a better, more harmonious society, but facts are not the main drivers of the human condition. People believe in things; in human rights or the scientific method. These beliefs spur their behavior.
If any leader wishes to change society for the better, they can’t only preach with facts. That is AI’s biggest shortfall. The digitalized approach might be successful in coming up with factual decisions, but it will never succeed in inspiring people to be better; to judge fairly.
Already, humans have relinquished the future to these smart machines, as if they have no choice. So many have stopped fighting for what they believe in, as if their belief muscle has been numbed by social media.
The Old Master returned to the heavens, hoping that the human race would deliberate carefully before they let machines call the shots.
]]>If you can’t see the YouTube player above, try watching here instead.
Artificial intelligence (AI) is now an inescapable and often unnoticed part of daily life, and everyone can and should take part in developing its applications.
Max Pechyonkin, a deep learning engineer and dean of the China School of AI, an AI-focused education program, spoke at the Emerge by TechNode conference in Shanghai in May about his work in teaching people the fundamentals of an omnipresent technology that is vastly misunderstood.
“If you use a smartphone, you are using AI everyday,” he said, including any app with a content recommendation feature.
The technology has become so ubiquitous that its very definition has changed, he said. Twenty years ago, navigation apps like Google maps were considered AI, today, they are just “path-finding algorithms,” he explained. Perhaps in another 20 years what is considered cutting-edge AI at the moment, like computer vision, will be so commonplace that it is not labelled as such any longer, he added.
But as AI becomes part of our everyday lives, people focus too much on the technology itself, resulting in an “overhyped” concept, Pechyonkin said. People forget to talk about particular applications of AI, and focus on debating far-fetched scenarios instead of tangible possibilities, he explained.
People can’t really ground their ideas about AI because they are not very familiar with it, “when you don’t know about the technology in detail, you have no idea what it can and cannot do,” he said.
In fact, learning the basics of this technology is easier than ever before, it doesn’t require a doctorate, and there are plenty of online resources that can help anyone get a working understanding, Pechyonkin said. This is the biggest myth about AI these days, he has found. There is no need, for instance, to complete an online course just to have informed conversations about the ethics of applications.
]]>Two years after China released its landmark cybergovernance framework, cybersecurity is beginning to take root in the country’s internet. However, many in China’s tech scene are still scratching their heads.
The Cybersecurity Law, which went into effect on June 1, 2017, is broader than comparable privacy-focused measures such as the EU’s General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR). “Unlike GDPR or privacy laws in other countries, the law is not just about privacy or personal data. The purpose is to govern the whole internet space,” Keith Yuen, Greater China Advisory Cybersecurity Leader at Ernst & Young (EY), told TechNode. His firm produces an annual report surveying cybersecurity professionals around the world.
In the past two years, the law has made real-name identity verification a standard across Chinese internet services, brought Chinese companies closer to the global best practices of network security and data management, established a personal data regime, reformed content moderation policies, and enforced data localization policies that Beijing believes will support national security.
With major regulations set to take effect later this year, many crucial details are still unknown, including which companies are covered by the law. The legislative process is not complete; new rules and standards will continue to come out in the next year or two. The legal schemes set up under the law will have tech firms consulting with regulators about many aspects of their operations, yet lawyers working on China are still puzzling over several key questions.
TechNode read through law blogs and talked to experts, trying to make sense of one of the most important laws to land upon China’s cyberspace. Many refused to be quoted.
In 2017, the landmark legislation established a legal framework, upon which regulations have built standards and specifications. “The law is evolving, and the clarifications keep coming,” Richard Watson, EY’s Asia-Pacific Cybersecurity Risk Advisory Leader, told TechNode.
However, compliance remains tricky as regulators continue to fill in the details—and in the meantime, companies are getting penalized for bad outcomes. Distinct boundaries between the jurisdictions of different agencies remain fuzzy, as does the meaning of a term that is commonly used in various regulations: “social public order.”
Under the law, the State Council can restrict network communications in an area if it’s deemed necessary for “social public order,” but no definition nor examples of the term are given.
The law also makes network operators responsible for information transmitted through their systems, which can be controlled by other “legal or administrative regulations.” Network operators can be fined up to RMB 500,000 (about $72,000) for the dissemination of content that authorities deem inappropriate.
The highest possible fine that a company can face is RMB 1 million, for breaking rules relating to “critical information infrastructure.”
Other, non-infrastructure-related fines range from RMB 10,000 to RMB 500,000—figures which might sting small and medium-sized enterprises but are unlikely to hurt tech giants. By contrast, the GDPR spells out fines of up to $22.4 million or 4% of annual revenue. But China’s Cybersecurity Law threatens severe punishment through other means.
“If you fail to do something or you violate the law very seriously, they can shut down your business, take away your license, blacklist you, and also maybe stop you from registering another business,” Yuen said.
Since the law went into effect, one of the largest security-related fines targeted utility operator Luoyang Beikong Water Group in central China’s Henan Province. When the company’s remote data monitoring platform was hacked, law enforcement determined that their data had not been sufficiently secure, and subsequently fined the company RMB 80,000 and three managers a total of RMB 35,000.
Thus far, the BAT trio—Baidu, Alibaba, and Tencent—and other big players in China’s internet have seen trouble over content moderation policies. In September 2017, the Cyberspace Administration of China fined Baidu and Tencent for failing to manage pornographic and violent content on their platforms, as well as content that authorities deemed as promoting “ethnic hatred.”
In January 2019, Baidu, Alibaba, and Bytedance’s Toutiao were asked to meet with authorities for failing to respect their users’ right to know what data was collected. Later that month, Sina Weibo was asked to correct its moderation of content that was deemed unsuitable for children and offensive to minorities.
Foreign companies have yet to suffer severe punishments under Chinese cybersecurity law, analysts said.
The law got executives’ attention by threatening to fine them personally if their companies got in trouble over cybersecurity or content moderation.
“Holding directors accountable for cybersecurity has helped move the issue from being an IT problem to a whole organization problem,” said Watson.
The cybersecurity market has yet to reach maturity, but the law has gone a long way in bringing about better cybersecurity practices, Watson said. “A lot of the homegrown cybersecurity activity in China tends to have a manual flavor to it while in places like the US or Israel the processes are more automated,” Watson said.
The Cybersecurity Law has spurred significant investment to automate cybersecurity practices. Watson expects that “it’s only a matter of time before some of those technologies begin to penetrate China.”
According to EY’s 2018 Global Information Survey, 94% of companies operating in Greater China have incorporated cybersecurity into their management strategy, a figure which is well above the world average. But the report also found that spending on cybersecurity lags behind global peers, suggesting that many of these strategies never get beyond paper.
The EY report also found that Chinese companies prefer to outsource cybersecurity practices. For example, 82% of companies in Greater China outsource risk assessment of vendors, as opposed to 35% worldwide. This is in part explained by the fact that Chinese companies have had to build cybersecurity systems from scratch since past regulations were neither clear nor strictly enforced.
As a result of this need for cybersecurity services, new companies have been popping up around China. Under the law, in order to legally perform cybersecurity tasks, they must be accredited by Chinese authorities.
“Foreign firms have a different focus. They try to see how they can make their existing global cybersecurity program fit with this regulatory environment,” Yan Luo, a Beijing-based lawyer who advises companies on cybersecurity compliance, told TechNode.
On December 1, the first piece of this legislative puzzle goes into effect, but many companies are still unclear on whether it applies to them or exactly how to comply with it. The Multi-Level Protection Scheme (MLPS) divides network operators into five levels of sensitivity based on national security, privacy, and “social public order”— those designated level 3 and above are subject to enhanced security requirements.
Firms must carry out self-assessments regularly to find where they fall on this scale. If they determine that they are at level 3 or above, they must submit their assessment for review to the Ministry of Public Security.
The scope of this requirement is ambiguous, since “network operators” in the law are defined as the owners and administrators of “systems comprised of computers and other information terminals” that gather, process, exchange, and store data, according to a widely used translation of the law by Jeremy Daum, senior fellow at Yale Law School’s Paul Tsai China Center.
This definition could apply to most network information systems, including home WiFi networks or the CCTV at a neighborhood convenience store. The MLPS adds additional controls for internet of things (IoT) devices, cloud computing, industrial control, and mobile network systems, according to an analysis of the law published by Covington & Burling, an international law firm.
It’s not entirely clear how to figure out which level of the scale a network operator falls on, since the levels are outlined using terms such as “serious harm” and “damage” without further specification, according to China Business Review, a journal published by the US-China Business Council. The definitions also hang on the aforementioned “social public order,” a term which remains unexplained throughout the law.
The MLPS creates a legal framework that asks for encryption, backup of data, system monitoring, and network defense for all network operators, which would entail significant costs for small- and medium-sized enterprises. Because “network operators” have not been well defined, the exact scope of the scheme depends upon implementation, but noncompliance could lead to fines of up to RMB 100,000. Other measures that are not yet mandatory, such as data localization for cloud computing operators, could have international companies scrambling to comply.
The Ministry of Public Security has said it plans to release further guidance in the coming months.
The law has created a tool for Chinese authorities to block tech imports on national security grounds. Companies defined as Critical Information Infrastructure (CII) providers must submit any purchase of foreign hardware or software to review by the Cyberspace Administration of China and 11 other agencies.
The measures have not been finalized yet and are expected to apply to network operators in the telecoms, utilities, energy, e-government, finance, transport, and other industries, according to Covington & Burling.
Released only days after the US ban on Huawei was signed, the regulations for CII were seen by many observers as retaliation. However, “this has been in the books for a long time,” said Luo. The government review requirement for such deals existed in the past, but the review process was a “black box” and the new standards “make sure that operators are more aware of their obligations,” she said.
Experts agreed that the CII provisions can be used as a tool to block deals for reasons that are not clearly cybersecurity-related. Even though the information that CII operators must submit for a review is specified, how the deals are reviewed remains an opaque process, meaning there will be no way of knowing why certain procurements are scrapped. A few weeks later, China also announced plans for an “entity list,” mirroring the US restrictions that threaten Huawei’s access to critical technology.
The CII draft measures highlight the importance of the supply chain, which could affect the availability and operation of critical infrastructure. The draft guidelines call for CII operators to consider geopolitical stability, directing them to build infrastructure that cannot be held hostage by international politics. References to “control” by foreign governments as well as “political, diplomatic, and trade” risks mirror similar laws in the US according to New America, a Washington DC-based think tank. The inclusion of personal data is a novelty in the Chinese context, signaling that regulators are starting to consider personal data security as integral to national security.
However, the definitions of these terms are absent from the draft, leaving much room for interpretation.
Armed with the provision that a review can be triggered if administration officials across several agencies “believe” that a purchase could jeopardize national security—even if the network operator is not classified as a CII—regulators have a lot of leeway when assessing the risks of these deals.
CII operators which do not follow the review process can be fined up to RMB 100,000 and the purchases from foreign entities can be frozen. The highest fines for CII operators will be levied for not following the mandated cybersecurity principles, which can incur damages of up to RMB 1 million.
In 2017, strict rules on the transfer of Chinese data through international borders caused such a stir in the World Trade Organization (WTO) that authorities had to hit the brakes on the rollout.
If implemented, those rules will require all network operators to assess the security of any cross-border transfers they wish to conduct—and, depending on the nature of the data, to get government permission should they wish to transfer them outside China.
The regulation appears to be an attempt to balance business with security concerns. The Chinese government recognizes that data flows are the norm nowadays, but also considers control of data fundamental to national cybersecurity. On paper, its regulations allow for cross-border data transfer, as long as it doesn’t include information that could damage national security.
Network operators wishing to transfer data that is “important” to national security and “social public order” must have the transfer reviewed by the government if:
In addition, the owners of personal data must be informed of the international transfer of their information.
Even before they come into effect, the regulations on cross-border data transfer have provoked a negative reaction from international organizations. In September 2017, the US submitted a formal complaint to the WTO, claiming that the measures effectively promote Chinese internet companies over foreign competitors.
Under pressure from trading partners, the Chinese government suspended the implementation of the regulations ahead of US President Trump’s visit to China in 2017, responding to the WTO complaint by saying “the controversy and compromise has not yet been resolved, which will continue to test the technological and coordinating capabilities of the legislature.”
A final regulation on cross-border data transfer is pending.
Along with the 2017 rules on cross-border data transfer came guidelines on personal information and privacy. Further measures were drafted in 2018. A set of standards was released for public comment in May 2019.
Personal data has been defined in line with GDPR, strengthening the protection of individual privacy against tech companies. The rights to consent and to know when data is harvested, as well as to control targeted advertising, have been asserted.
One provision that has been scrutinized abroad is the requirement of real-identity authentication for online services. Registering for apps in China now almost always requires a valid mobile phone number, which diminishes people’s ability to stay anonymous to government authorities.
Overall, the law “expands the scope of privacy protection, strengthens the protection of privacy, and stipulates more detailed obligations and responsibilities for relevant subjects, making privacy regulations more clear, and has greatly protected privacy protection in China,” Qi Aimin, a professor at Chongqing University School of Law, told TechNode.
The law has gone a long way in establishing directives for cyberspace, where rules had previously been either absent, unclear, or fragmented. Clarifications will continue to roll out over the next year at least, and as implementation takes place, firms will get a better sense of how to comply.
Nonetheless, every new draft measure includes ambiguous new categories, which apply to new entities and require additional compliance measures. Every list of justifications for review and punishment ends with a provision that leaves an open window for administrators to exercise unforeseen juridical control.
Additional reporting by Chris Udemans and Wei Sheng. With contributions from Rachel Zhang.
]]>Chinese AI start-up Megvii rethinks IPO plan this year – The Financial Times
What happened: Alibaba-backed Chinese AI facial recognition startup Megvii is rethinking its plans for an initial public offering in Hong Kong later this year, the FT reported citing anonymous bankers and investors. It had been targeting raising as much as $1 billion. As the US-China trade war escalates and the tech industry finds itself increasingly in the eye of the cyclone, Megvii’s future relationship with the US are uncertain. The company’s main business is surveillance and security, and it is a key supplier of China’s surveillance systems. Amid a backlash against the country’s use of such technologies, Megvii is reportedly being considered for the US’s entity list, which would block business from the world’s largest economy. The company sees this as “unhelpful speculation,” but tech sector bankers told the FT that as a result, the company will at least have a hard time convincing the Hong Kong stock exchange to accept their listing.
Why it’s important: The report points to two concerning trends in China’s tech scene, the impact of the souring US-China relations and tech firms’ underwhelming financial results. Founded in 2011, Megvii has been called “China’s AI rising star” and its last funding round announced on May 8 saw its value skyrocket to more than $4 billion. However, its role in supplying surveillance in China and worldwide, along with other key Chinese surveillance manufacturers, has been criticized heavily abroad. Subsequently, some analysts expect that these types of companies could soon follow Huawei onto the American entity list. Another risk for Megvii is the disappointing performance of Chinese tech companies going public in the past year: Xiaomi shares have nearly halved in value since listing in July while Meituan Dianping shares have fallen 14% from its IPO price.
]]>Tim Cook on tariffs, immigration and whether we spend too much time on our iPhones – CBS News
What happened: Neither Chinese nor American authorities have targeted Apple with import tariffs, the company’s CEO Tim Cook said in an interview with CBS News last night, adding that he doesn’t expect they will. He argued that because iPhone components are manufactured in several countries and the final product is assembled in China, tariffs on iPhones would hurt many countries, but especially the US. Should American authorities decide to impose a tariff on the smartphone, which is assembled in China, the company’s business would certainly suffer a blow, Cook said, but he thinks that this scenario is unlikely. He added that he doesn’t expect China to use Apple as a retaliation tool as the Huawei standoff escalates.
Why it’s important: Cook’s comments come at a time when Apple’s position in global smartphone manufacturing is facing difficulties. New tariffs launched by the US against China earlier in May could affect iPhone sales, increasing the price of Apple’s line of smartphones by more than $100. At the same time, if Apple becomes a target of the Chinese government in an attempt to retaliate for banning Huawei, the Silicon Valley tech giant could face strong headwinds. Apple’ s revenue fell in the first quarter of 2019, largely due to decreased sales in greater China.
]]>Huawei to sell 51pc stake in undersea cable business after US trade blacklist – South China Morning Post
What happened: Huawei’s parent company has signed a letter of intent to sell a majority stake in its international undersea telecoms arm, which builds underwater cables that support transnational internet connections. The deal will see Hengtong Optic-Electric, a manufacturer of optical communication network products based in China’s eastern Jiangsu Province, take a 51% holding in Huawei Marine Technology. According to Hengtong’s filing to the Shanghai Stock Exchange, however, the deal has not been finalized, and the size of the acquisition remains unspecified. According to its website, Huawei Marine Technology has laid 50,000 kilometers of undersea internet cables across the world’s oceans, but accounts for a small part of Huawei’s overall business, making just $17 million in 2018, around 0.2% of the company’s total profits.
Why it’s important: Last month, the US Commerce Department added the Shenzhen-based telecoms giant to the ‘entity list‘, citing national security as its primary concern. The move effectively bans American companies from selling products to Huawei. It is unclear how Huawei’s telecoms business will fare after the ban, but the company claims its inclusion on the list is not a severe blow. The sale of its submarine cable arm could be a sign that Huawei is trying to minimize its business in telecoms infrastructure and diversifying towards new industries. Huawei’s global role in the development of communication networks has come under scrutiny as a result of Washington’s campaign, which aims to exclude the company from 5G network deployment. Finnish telecoms manufacture Nokia claims to have secured 42 commercial 5G contracts, two more than Huawei.
]]>US Universities And Retirees Are Funding The Technology Behind China’s Surveillance State – Buzzfeed News
What happened: Some of the US’s oldest and most prestigious institutions are funding SenseTime and Megvii, two of China’s largest surveillance tech companies, a Buzzfeed analysis of investment data has found. The Massachusetts Institute of Technology, the Rockefeller Foundation, and the Alaska Retirement Board hold limited partnerships with private equity funds which have invested in the two companies. Buzzfeed also reported that another dozen US universities, retirement plans, and charitable foundations including the Mayo Clinic and Princeton and Duke Universities contributed to some of SenseTime and Megvii’s sky-high funding rounds through a Chinese venture capital firm called Qiming Ventures.
Why it’s important: China’s use of surveillance technology has aroused international scrutiny, especially with regards to minorities. Such criticisms have been common in Washington in the past year. Last week, The New York Times reported that Hikvision, a Chinese manufacturer of video surveillance equipment and software, could join Huawei in Washington’s trade blacklist, in part because of its alleged human rights violations. SenseTime and Megvii products are used in commercial authentication products but also by Chinese law enforcement.
]]>If you can’t see the YouTube player above, try watching here instead.
Private and public sector actors should cooperate internationally to come up with a framework for ethical implementation of artificial intelligence (AI). “If we ignore those options for constructive dialogue and cooperation because there are other things where it is harder to make progress, then we are doing ourselves a disservice, collectively,” said Chris Byrd, research fellow at the Future of Humanity Institute at Oxford University at last week’s Emerge by TechNode conference in Shanghai.
Despite the different problems China may face in comparison to the rest of the world, there is a lot of overlap. Byrd pointed to the example of algorithm bias: China has a more ethnically homogeneous population so bias is stronger in the initial data sets. This doesn’t mean that nothing can be done, merely that more legwork is required to find data points signaling ethnic minorities, much like US companies must do.
These common points present an opportunity to learn from one another. However, Chinese AI companies and relevant institutions have not been as involved in the global conversation because, in part, the west hasn’t made serious attempts to include them, Byrd said in an interview after the AI panel. This is slowly changing; Baidu, for example, was the first Chinese company to enter the Partnership on AI, a global industry consortium seeking to establish best practices in the AI field.
China has some advantages in implementing policy because it has a more unified system, according to Byrd. At the same time, all of the problematic implications of AI must be treated as a its own topic; algorithm bias, job loss, and safety require different kinds of solutions and thinking.
“Governments are slightly out of their depth when it comes to emerging technologies,” Byrd said. Those with technical skills who understand how the technology will be used don’t know how to solve governance problems, and vice versa. To construct laws and regulations that will bring about AI without unforeseen, negative effects, the two sides must work together.
]]>What happened: Three incidents have raised suspicions that China could soon curb its exports of 17 rare earth elements, which are immensely valuable to technology manufacturers, as a retaliation in the US-China trade war. After President Xi Jinping visited rare earth mines and processing facilities last week, an official from China’s National Development and Reform Commission told CCTV that using rare earth minerals mined in China against them would displease the Chinese people. Another official told Xinhua News on Tuesday that the government would prioritize domestic demand of the precious materials. Hu Xijin, Editor-in-Chief of the Global Times, a newspaper that is close to the Communist Party, said on Twitter that given his knowledge, Chinese authorities are seriously considering this measure.
Why it’s important: China is by far the largest exporter of these precious raw materials, which are used in anything from iPhones to renewable energy solutions and oil refineries. China accounts for about 70% of global output of rare earths, and 80% of US imports. It would be almost impossible for the US to quickly find a replacement source which could supply the volume of rare earth imports it requires. US exports of processed rare earths to China are already facing a 25% import tariff, a similar measure that China took during another trade dispute with Japan in 2010.
]]>Shanghai moves to boost key tech sectors amid trade war, to green light first three listings on new Nasdaq-style board – South China Morning Post
What happened: The Shanghai Stock Exchange has said that the first three IPO applications for China’s New Technology and Innovation Board will be heard on June 5, according to a statement released after market close on Monday. The three companies, Shenzhen-based ChipScreen Biosciences, Shanghai-based Anji Microelectronics, and Suzhou-based Tztek Technology, operate in the fields of biotechnology, semiconductors, and AI. They are among 110 firms eager to list on the new Nasdaq-style exchange.
Why it’s important: The date of the expected application correlates with speculation that the new stock exchange will launch in the middle of this year. The exchange is a strategic move by Beijing to keep China’s tech companies, as well as their capital, from listing abroad, and comes as the battle over tech between the US and China is heating up. The three companies announced work in three key areas where Chinese authorities are looking to create their own world-class players.
]]>Trump Administration Could Blacklist Chinese Surveillance Technology Firm – The New York Times
What happened: On Tuesday, The New York Times reported that Hikvision, a Chinese surveillance equipment manufacturer, may be banned from buying American technology, citing anonymous sources familiar with the issue. The company’s products include artificial intelligence (AI) software for tracking individuals, and they are used in China and abroad. According to the report, the Commerce Department will require approval from other US government authorities for American companies seeking to supply the Hangzhou-based surveillance giant with components. Hikvision’s stock fell as much as 10% on Wednesday. A final decision is expected over the coming weeks.
Why it’s important: The ban will place Hikvision on a US government trade blacklist, which as of last Friday includes telecom equipment maker Huawei. The blacklist is among a list of measures by the Trump administration aimed at curbing China’s global influence in technology industries, including charging Huawei and its CFO Meng Wanzhou with a series US criminal charges over alleged Chinese espionage and trade secret theft. It is likely to further inflame tensions between the world’s superpowers, which have been rising after extended bilateral tariffs. The Hikvision ban will be the first instance of US actions aimed at China’s domestic use of surveillance, a topic which has sparked heated international debate.
]]>Schumer asks government to probe rail tech from China – Reuters
What happened: The US Senate Democratic majority leader Chuck Schumer has asked the federal government to investigate whether plans to install new subway cars to the New York City underground system designed by CRRC Corp Ltd, a Chinese state-owned firm, poses a national security threat. A bipartisan bill was introduced to the US House last week that would cut federal funding to transit agencies who secure contracts with the CRCC. The world’s top passenger train maker is eyeing a $500 million deal in the Washington D.C. metro and has secured contracts in Los Angeles, Philadelphia, Boston, and Chicago to provide new subway cars.
Why it’s important: The move comes as tensions escalate in the US-China trade war with both countries increasing tariffs, and just days after the US President placed Chinese telecoms giant Huawei on a trade blacklist, limiting its access to American technology. More than cybersecurity concerns, this move is aimed towards the CRCC’s takeover of the global rail market, which US lawmakers are scrutinizing as a security and economic threat. It won over the US market by aggressively underbidding competitors, and allegedly has its eyes set on the freight market.
The same day US Republicans introduced a bill to Congress restricting study visas for Chinese nationals, one of Mexico’s top STEM universities, Tecnológico de Monterrey, opened a technology exchange center in Hangzhou.
The tech hub is co-funded by the university and the Hangzhou Jianggan government, and will act as a showroom and facilitator for Mexican technology and science research seeking to enter the Chinese market.
“The tech hub is the first overseas center of its kind for Mexico, and the opening is the proudest moment of my life,” Alfonso Araújo, director of the center, told TechNode. The new center in Hangzhou, which opened Thursday, will tap into the more than 100 research facilities in Mexico.
The private university was founded in 1943 and strives to become a leader in technology and innovation in Latin America by launching startup accelerators and partnering with banks and tech companies. It has since expanded into 32 campuses in 25 cities across Mexico.
The Hangzhou center’s first task is to introduce Mexican science to China and to materialize research, taking it from the lab into the market, according to the director, who has lived in China for the last 20 years. The center will open with 12 research projects, and there are around 30 more in the pipeline.
“It’s a very good moment to match their [China’s and Mexico’s] interests in technology development. Mexico has very good science development, China has a lot of resources and interest in doing so,” Araújo said.
The absence of lobbying and the government’s support for scientific research makes China a great place to develop new research. “In the USA, this happens at the level of the scientists themselves, but the government is invaded by lobbyists who tell you that climate change is not real,” the director said.
He is betting that China will continue “being reasonable in the next generation, as it has been in the past.”
The technologies the hub will take on will shape its work in the next 20 to 30 years, Araújo said. It is not geared towards new ways to manufacture something or “a new comfortable chair,” the director said. The center’s main areas are life sciences, such as medicine, environment, biotechnology, genetics, food safety, and next-generation technologies, like artificial intelligence, computer science, nanotechnology, advanced engineering. The latter are high on China’s priority list, the director said.
World-class science is bred in Mexico, but it lacks the environment which can successfully bring it into market, said Araújo. In places like Silicon Valley, next to the scientists is an entire ecosystem of financiers, lawyers, and marketing specialists, Araújo explained.
To create these conditions the university opened an office in Mexico last year which turns the research projects into business pitches, before the projects and their researchers are brought to China. First, they pick projects from around the country and then equip them with all the necessary expertise to make their research into a viable business.
The various projects are at different stages of development, and through the Hangzhou tech hub are paired with agents in China that fit their needs. The director explained that those which are almost ready for the market, or are already in the market but are still quite small, are connected to companies that can help them grow. Those which still need funding to finalize research, licensing or compliance are linked with government programs and grants.
“If China realizes how great our scientific developments are in Mexico, they will be eager to invest more, even make joint funds. This will help a lot the Mexican research environment,” the director told TechNode.
At the opening, three Mexicans research projects will sign contracts with two Chinese companies and a Chinese university. The projects include next-generation education, food safety for live fish transport, and nanotechnology-based oil which decreases at least 50% of CO2 emissions.
]]>US President Donald Trump is expected to sign an executive order this week that will prohibit US firms from doing business with Huawei, Reuters reported citing three unnamed US officials.
If signed, the order will not name any specific names or companies, but bars US companies from using telecoms equipment made by foreign firms that pose a national security risk. Washington considers Huawei to be one of these companies, citing its ties with the Chinese government. The order has been in the works for over a year, but has been delayed several times, Reuters reported. It could be delayed again.
In response to the potential ban from the US market, Huawei’s President of ICT Strategy and Marketing Wang Tao stated Wednesday at an event in Beijing, “We are a global company, and we don’t have too much business in the US. Any change in any country won’t affect our global businesses.”
Just over half of Huawei’s total revenue last year was earned in China, with revenue from Europe, the Middle East, and Africa (EMEA) its second-largest region comprising 28% of sales. Revenue from North and South America region were a small but rapidly growing portion of the company’s total revenue in 2018, driven by a boom in “new digital infrastructure” construction in Latin America, according to the company.
The executive order will invoke the International Emergency Economic Powers (IEEP) Act, a federal law that grants the president authority to regulate commercial activity if there is a threat to national security. Invoking the IEEP Act essentially declares a national emergency over an “unusual and extraordinary” foreign threat to the US. It has been used to stop funding to terrorist organizations and prohibit trade with North Korea, among others.
A similar but different order was signed by President Trump in August 2018, banning US government agencies from using Huawei and ZTE equipment. This ruling was part of the National Defense Authorization Act of 2019, a bill that is passed annually by Congress dictating the Department of Defense budget and thus only applies to government agencies and contractors, not all commercial activities. The ban on ZTE was eventually lifted.
The new executive order comes at a sensitive time for US-China relations, only a few days after new tariffs were announced by both sides in lieu of a trade deal that had been in negotiation for months. Washington has been lobbying globally against the deployment of Huawei equipment in 5G networks, citing national security risks.
On the home front, the US government is conducting legal and regulatory efforts against what it perceives as Chinese companies infiltrating key US networks and industries to advance foreign interests. Less than a week ago, the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) voted unanimously to bar China Mobile from offering its services in the US market.
In January 2019, US prosecutors charged Huawei in two separate cases. The first alleges theft of trade secrets from T-Mobile, a cellular network provider that Huawei was providing phones to that is based in Washington state, where the charges were filed. The second case is a 13-count indictment filed against Huawei and its CFO Meng Wanzhou for reportedly planning to circumvent US sanctions on Iran.
Meanwhile, Huawei is trying to build relationships and secure contracts with other governments and companies around the world.
On Tuesday, Huawei’s chairman said that the Chinese telecoms giant is willing to sign no-spy deals with governments, including the UK.
“Cybersecurity is primarily a technical issue… We have seen some governments mislead the public by turning cybersecurity into a political and ideological issue,” Wang said.
Additional reporting by Eliza Gritsi.
]]>China’s regulator urges brokerages to monitor investors’ funding needs to trade on Nasdaq-style market – South China Morning Post
What happened: The China Securities Regulating Commission asked brokerages to ensure that investors in the new Technology Innovation Board have a minimum investment capital of RMB 500,000 ($72,900), SCMP reported. The move is intended to shield the new Nasdaq-style stock exchange from small players; an estimated 85% of Chinese investors do not meet the capital requirement. Brokerages will also be required to check the origin of funds deposited in trading accounts. The SCMP found that, as of Monday, 108 tech firms had submitted applications to list on the Shanghai Stock Exchange.
Why it’s important: The new board is a momentous reform to China’s capital market. For the first time in history, unprofitable companies will be allowed to list on Chinese stock exchanges. This change will support the up-and-coming startup sector but may also create significant share price fluctuations, which could translate into high losses for small investors. Stocks listed on the new board will be allowed to trade freely for the first five days, and then will face a 20% upside or downside limit.
]]>Tech stocks tumble as China retaliates in latest salvo of the trade war – TechCrunch
What happened: Stocks of US and European tech companies sank yesterday after China retaliated in equal measure to new US tariffs. Beijing announced 25% import tariffs on $60 billion of US goods starting on June 1. European companies shed 1.2% of share value, but the Dow Jones Industrial Average and S&P 500 fell by 2.4%, and Nasdaq by 3.4%, the worst daily percentage loss it has seen in the past year. Apple fell 5.8%, Netflix by 4%, Amazon by 3.6%, Facebook by 3.6%, and Alphabet by 2.7%.
Why it’s important: At the beginning of last week, an agreement between the world’s two largest economies seemed possible but, on Friday, import duties Trump had threatened to hike on $200 billion worth of Chinese goods from 10% to 25% were triggered. Industrial chemicals, machinery parts, and consumer goods are amongst the worst hit. Tech products like iPhones will face higher manufacturing costs, while tariffs on finished goods will make them more expensive for Chinese consumers.
]]>At Friday’s Ali Day, Alibaba’s annual event to celebrate employees, Jack Ma said that employees’ sexual activity should happen six times every six days, and that it should last a long time. The remarks make reference to the 996 working regime, for which Jack Ma’s harsh attitude has received significant criticism in the past.
Ma got in trouble in April after condemning an online movement against the 996 working schedule in the tech industry, which forces employees to work 9 a.m. to 9 p.m., six days a week. Tech workers took to GitHub to speak out against the long hours, saying that eventually they will lead them to the ICU. Ma responded that having the opportunity to work 996 is a “blessing.”
At Ali Day, the richest man in China followed up on his 996 proclamations with a wordplay. The Chinese word for “long” is a homophone with the word for “nine,” so he flipped the notorious 996 quote to encourage daily sexual activity with a long duration.
This year’s Ali Day featured the weddings of 102 employee couples. Ma, Alibaba’s founder, acted as the witness to the weddings, which were performed simultaneously on stage.
At the end, he gave a speech where he pronounced “We emphasize the spirit of 996 at work. We want 669 in life. What is “669?” Six times over six days a week, the key is to last long.”
Ma said that the purpose of marriage is solely to produce babies, which led several Chinese netizens to assume that he was promoting an increased birth rate, one of the key aims of the Chinese government. “Jack Ma is following the state in promoting having more babies,” one Weibo user said.
“If an ordinary person said this it would be considered as part of the “straight man cancer,” a post on Weibo reads which raised 6,500 likes by May 11. “Straight man cancer” is a Chinese term used by netizens to describe men who are self-righteous and indifferent to the value of and the obstacles faced by women.
Another user said “996 during the day, 669 during the night, I guess after less than a month I might have to stay in the ICU forever.”
In a statement, an Alibaba spokesperson said that “Jack offered lighthearted life and marital advice” to the newlyweds that included the tip “that the value of love, unlike coding, can’t be measured or calculated.”
With contributions from Shi Jiayi.
UPDATE: This story has been updated to reflect comment from Alibaba.
]]>US indicts two people in China over hacks – CNN
What happened: The US Justice Department charged two Chinese nationals over the 2014 hack of an American insurance company and three other unnamed US businesses in tech, raw materials, and communication services sectors. The indictment was unsealed on Thursday and named one individual, Wang Fujie, 32, from Shenzhen. The second accused remained anonymous under the pseudonym John Doe. The pair was charged with targeting employees of an Anthem subsidiary using spear-phishing emails and obtaining, within about a year, more than 80 million customer records and employee Social Security numbers, birth dates, addresses, email, and employment and income information, including information belonging to the CEO.
Why it’s important: The indictment called the attack “a brazen China-based computer hacking group that committed one of the worst data breaches in history.” It is the latest in a series of attempts by the US judiciary to crack down on trade secrets and personal data theft by China. Because Anthem’s data never appeared on the internet, security professionals speculate that it was stockpiled, potentially by the Chinese government. However, in the Anthem case, neither the Justice Department nor the security firms hired to investigate the breach could directly link the hackers to a state or military agency in China.
]]>Following a recent report that cast doubt over Huawei’s claim that it is wholly owned by its employees, the Shenzhen-headquartered tech giant called a press conference on Thursday aimed at clearing the air.
During that briefing, Huawei reiterated that it is fully owned by its employees, describing, once again, its intricate corporate structure. The company, however, produced little new information that could put the ownership issue to bed once and for all and didn’t fully address questions about who effectively controls Huawei.
An academic paper arguing that Huawei’s claim of employee ownership is implausible under Chinese law was published on April 15, stirring major debate around Huawei and any ties it might have to the Chinese government.
In it, authors Christopher Balding of Fulbright University Vietnam and Donald Clarke of George Washington University examined publicly available sources, which showed that Huawei’s operating company belongs to a holding company, with Huawei founder, Ren Zhengfei, holding a 1% share.
The remaining 99% is held by a “trade union committee,” which was established under China’s Trade Union Law. However, under Chinese law trade unions answer to the state, which could mean that 99% of Huawei is effectively controlled by Chinese authorities, the academics asserted.
Earlier this week Huawei dismissed the report by Balding and Clarke, saying that it was “based on unreliable sources and speculations, without an understanding of all the facts.” To which the authors Huawei replied that the company didn’t specify what it considered to be “unreliable or wrong, or from which we drew the wrong conclusions.”
At the press conference, Jiang Xisheng, chief secretary of the Huawei’s board of directors, said that a company of Huawei’s size is legally obliged to establish a trade union, which organizes social and recreational functions for the employees and has to abide by Chinese law.
As a result, it is registered under the Shenzhen Federation of Trade Unions, the body which is responsible for overseeing Shenzhen’s trade unions. The federation certifies trade unions and carries out annual audits, but this doesn’t mean that Huawei’s trade union takes orders from it, Jiang said.
Huawei has assigned an additional function for the trade union committee by making it the owner of 99% of the holding company, thus legally entrusting it to implement the company’s employee shareholding scheme. That program covers some 97,000 Huawei current and former employees, and entitles them to shares and related dividends.
Employees buy into this employee shareholding scheme using money from their own pockets. Should they wish to forgo the shares, they can only sell them back to the company.
“Because of this employee shareholding scheme, Huawei is owned and controlled by its shareholding employees,” Jiang said during the press conference. “That is why we have maintained our independence over the past three decades, allowing us to stick to our strategies.”
But the two academics argue that the shareholding scheme amounts to, at most, a profit-sharing scheme, far from actionable ownership, which would give the employees some real control over the company.
At the press conference, Huawei said that the shareholders run the risk of seeing their shares depreciating, and that this proves that the shares are more than contractual interests in a profit-sharing system.
“Huawei’s share capital comes from our employees’ own money. Our employees will not allow external influences to compromise their own interests or damage the company’s long-term development,” said Jiang.
Huawei claims that the shareholders’ voting powers puts them at the helm. They vote for a “representatives’ commission,” which in turn votes for the Huawei board of directors, the body that makes operational decisions.
But founder Ren Zhengfei is entitled to veto power in both bodies, meaning he can dismiss the shareholders’ majority vote at any time.
Jiang said that there were seven members in the trade union committee, and none of them were members of the company’s board of directors.
The question of who controls the company is at the center of an international debate, as the US is trying to shun Huawei from the development of 5G networks.
Washington has tried to convince governments around the world to ban the Chinese company from the next generation of the internet, claiming that Huawei’s links to the Chinese government could have serious national security implications.
With additional reporting by Eliza Gkritsi.
]]>On Monday, a GitHub user called on those who condemn 996 to respond to Jack Ma’s endorsement of the widely criticized work schedule by sending an official copy of China’s labor law on May 4 to the Alibaba headquarters.
The post calls the action “performance art” aimed at raising awareness over the harsh and arguably illegal working conditions in China’s tech industry. Chinese labor law states that staff shouldn’t work more than 36 hours of overtime a month. But the demands of the industry have employees working 9 a.m. to 9 p.m., six days a week.
Ma, founder of Alibaba and the richest man in China, dismissed outcry on social media over the grueling working hours in China’s tech industry in a blog post on April 12. “To be able to work 996 is a huge blessing,” he said.
The GitHub post estimates 1,000 participants will participate. As of Thursday afternoon, the post has received 710 stars on GitHub, which work as bookmarks on the code-sharing platform.
One of two hashtags that translate into #SendLaborLawToJackMa disappeared earlier today along with hundreds of posts, according to Weibo users who posted under the second hashtag.
Ma, founder of Alibaba and the richest man in China, dismissed outcry on social media over the grueling working hours in China’s tech industry in a blog post on April 12. “To be able to work 996 is a huge blessing,” he said.
The GitHub post explained, “This is a low-cost, humorous, artistic protest that mimics sending blades, but is completely legal compared to sending blades” (our translation).”Sending blades” is a slang term, which literally means mailing a blade to someone, but often denotes an attack against a public persona who has somehow upset the public.
The post explained that under civil law, it is difficult for this act to be found illegal, since only letters that “endanger national security, public interests, or the legitimate rights and interests of others” are outlawed. Further, the cost of purchasing an official copy and sending the document are estimated to be less than RMB 5 (around $0.74), according to the post.
Official copies of the law are published by the Law Press, an entity managed by the Ministry of Justice, and can be purchased at bookstores for a nominal fee of RMB 4, on average.
The “performance art” organizer invites participants who can spare more than $0.75 to also send the official copies to Richard Liu, founder and CEO of JD.com, and Ren Zhengfei, founder of Huawei, and provides addresses to all three company headquarters.
The day the protest will happen holds particular significance. It is China’s National Youth Day, which was established by the CPCC, a legislative body, in 1949 to celebrate the May Fourth Movement, a student protest against imperialism that started on May 4, 1919, at the end of of the first world war.
Ma’s comments came in response to a GitHub post that went viral, protesting 996. In late March, a user created a repository called “996.icu” which explained the exhaustion caused by the 996 schedule and the potential health dangers; “996 working, ICU [Intensive Care Unit] waiting.” It ended with “Developers Lives Matter,” a reference to the “Black Lives Matter” movement in the US.
The post quickly gained over 30,000 stars, and became the number one trending topic as overworked tech employees expressed their frustration on the site, which is not censored by the Great Firewall, the China’s vast censorship system.
The call for “performance art” also calls for a push in Chinese social media under a hashtag which translates into #SendLaborLawToJackMa, inviting participants to post videos of themselves sending the labor law on video-sharing platforms and post on micro-blogs on May 4, in order to help the action go viral.
]]>Made in China, Exported to the World: The Surveillance State – The New York Times
What happened: Surveillance systems supplied by Chinese companies, including Huawei and state-controlled C.E.I.E.C., to the police in Ecuador have come under fire. The system’s effectiveness is being questioned despite cross-border training and instructions by the two Chinese companies due to an insufficient number of cameras and personnel. The New York Times said that Ecuadorian intelligence agencies, which carried out the previous president’s autocratic orders against political enemies, are allowed access to the footage and data. Governments of three countries partnering with China’s ambitious Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) with tainted human rights records—Venezuela, Bolivia, and Angola—have bought replicas of the network, according to the report.
Why it’s important: The article runs parallel with widespread worries in Western media about the role Chinese companies will play in authoritarian regimes around the world as it perfects and exports its AI technology. It underlines a common criticism of the BRI: the development program often takes away asset rights from developing countries, giving them to China, which gains both financially and politically. On social media, many have pointed out that such concerns ignore the fact that the US is the largest supplier of weapons globally, and many of its customers are authoritarian regimes.
U.S. accuses pair of stealing secrets, spying on GE to aid China – Reuters
What happened: An indictment by the Justice Department unsealed on Tuesday reveals that two Chinese nationals, former General Electric (GE) engineer Zheng Xiaoqing and businessman Zhang Zhaoxi, have been accused of spying on the company to benefit China, allegedly with the Chinese government’s “financial and other support.” The charges for economic espionage and trade secret theft claim that Zheng encrypted proprietary data on GE’s turbine design and embedded them in a picture of a sunset, before sending them to Zhang, who was based in China. The indictment alleges that they used the information at two turbine manufacturing companies in China, through which they also received the support of the government. The Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) said that Zheng confessed the theft and the government’s involvement in July 2018.
Why it’s important: This is the latest in a series of cases pursued by the Justice Department, as the Trump administration tries to crack down on Chinese theft of corporate secrets to hamper China’s technological and economic power. In their view, such tactics enable “Chinese companies to replace the American company first in the Chinese market and later worldwide,” John Demers, the justice department official who runs the China initiative, told the Financial Times.
Hundreds sign online petition supporting woman suing JD.com CEO in rape case – Reuters
What happened: More than 500 of people have signed an online petition supporting Liu Jingyao, the Chinese University of Minnesota student who last week filed a civil lawsuit against Richard Liu, founder and CEO of JD.com, China’s second largest e-commerce operator, whom she had accused of rape. It remains unclear who launched the petition under the hashtag #HereforJingyao. Chinese students at overseas as well as domestic universities signed the petition, which states, “We believe in survivors, we believe in your bravery and honesty, we will always stand with you.”
Why it’s important: Liu Jingyao first accused the JD founder in August, but criminal charges were dropped on lack of evidence. Last week’s lawsuit comes at a difficult time for the company, when the founder’s ability to lead through a tumultuous time has come into question. The online outrage is part of a budding #MeToo movement, whose growth in popularity has been slow in a country where sexual harassment and abuse are often shoved under the rug.
]]>A report studying global artificial intelligence (AI) trends points to progress for AI research in China in the last year, as well as persistent roadblocks.
The study, published by academic journal and research firm Elsevier, analyzed over 600,000 scholarly publications from 1998 to 2017 and found that Chinese publications are increasing in volume and show enhanced performance in some markers of quality.
Between 1998 and 2002, Chinese researchers wrote only 9% of academic publications, compared to 24% in the 2013 to 2017 time period. Europe lost 5 percentage points and the US 8 percentage points in the same time period but combined, accounted for more than half of the AI research worldwide.
Chinese research has mostly grown in the area of computer vision. In 2011, this topic overtook neural networks as the most popular among Chinese academics. That year, Chinese researchers wrote 3,000 papers on computer vision. Six year later, they wrote approximately 6,500, more than double than on the second most-popular topic, neural networks.
Europe follows a similar trend on computer vision research, but the consistent growth of this field is matched by that of planning and decision-making. In absolute numbers, the latter category maintains a lead in European research over computer vision, with approximately 750 more papers being published in 2017.
Another source of growth for Chinese research are conference papers. China’s AI-related academic publications increased by 13.8% between 2008 and 2018, compared with a 7.7% increase in Europe and 5.3% in the US.
The US may be lacking in volume of papers, but it is winning in research impact. Elsevier used the field-weighted citation impact (FWCI) to measure how often a paper is cited in other publications, adjusted for the average of the field.
Papers published from American institutions are cited 1.5 times more than the mean of the related field, a figure that has held and even increased since 1998. By contrast, European institutions started at the mean in 1998, and have progressed to about 1.25 in 2017.
China’s growth in this respect is “tremendous,” the study finds. China’s FWCI in AI research has galloped from half the world average in 1998 to reaching the mean in 2017.
This trend held true in the years from 2013 to 2017, when the top Chinese universities in terms of impact are, in order, the Chinese Academy of Sciences, Tsinghua University, Harbin Institute of Technology, Shanghai Jiao Tong University, and Zhejiang University.
Professor Chuan Tang of the Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS) was interviewed for the paper. He finds three main obstacles in China’s contribution to global AI research. First, it is lacking the chip technology to support AI technology.
Second, “China lacks long-term efforts in AI basic research,” and scholars tend to follow Western trends, he told Elsevier. Third, it lacks experts of high quality, as only 38.7% of researchers working in China with more than 10 years of experience, he said.
Globally and in all academic disciplines, papers have higher impact, as measured by the FWCI, when they are published in partnership with industry professionals. Only 3.4% of AI-related papers worldwide involve academic-corporate collaboration, but they achieve, on average, a 2.53 FWCI score.
The US is leading in cross-sector collaboration; it is responsible for 8.9% of papers involving industrial partners worldwide. This share of American papers has an astounding academic impact, with an FCWI score of 3.41.
Europe and China have yet to work with corporate partners in AI research to this extent, with shares of 3.6% and 2.3% of global academic-corporate papers published, respectively, involving academic-corporate collaboration.
Chinese studies that involved corporate partners achieved an FWCI score of 2.64, slightly ahead of their European counterparts at 2.46.
China is also lagging behind in international collaboration. It holds the highest percentage of researchers who never leave the region, while the US has the largest number of researchers who migrate out of or into the country. Researchers who tend to stay within their region have the lowest impact and productivity on the field, compared with their migratory counterparts.
Slightly more researchers migrated to China for around two years between 1998 and 2017 to work on AI academia. China gained 0.1% more researchers in this period, close to the US’s net inflow of 0.3%.
However, researchers who stayed in the US in these two decades have the highest impact on the field, which “might indicate a reason for international inflow into the country,” the paper concludes.
Finally, the paper includes a case study of graduates from the Chinese Institute of Automation and the Chinese Academy of Sciences. The research indicates that graduates from AI-related fields are far more likely to end their education with a dispatch, meaning they are employed in jobs that the university or research institute helped them find.
]]>China goes all-in on home grown tech in push for nuclear dominance – Reuters
What happened: China plans to deploy its own nuclear reactor, called “Hualong One,” in new power plants built around the country, instead of using foreign designs, government officials announced on Wednesday. Beijing has settled on using the Chinese design over the American AP1000 to meet its goal of increasing total installed nuclear capacity to 58 gigawatts and to have another 30 gigawatts under construction by 2020. Nuclear plant construction had been halted for three years due to a suspension of approvals, but the National Nuclear Safety Administration confirmed it will resume this year.
Why it’s important: China is the world’s biggest energy consumer, and as it gears up to meet its emission goals and replace coal-fueled plants for 2020, it looks to invest in clean energy solutions. It has long looked to foreign companies for technology, seen as a “shop window” for France, Russia, the US, and Canada to show off their new designs. In 2006 it signed a deal with the US to make the AP1000 the “core of its nuclear program,” but when it finally arrived in China, homegrown designs had evolved to the point of viable deployment.
Renewed rape allegations against Richard Liu, the founder and CEO of JD.com, China’s largest retailer and second-largest e-commerce operator, represent only the tip of the iceberg when it comes to the Chinese tech behemoth’s problems.
In 2018, Liu was arrested in Minneapolis, Minnesota, on suspicion of rape. He was not criminally charged, but the fallout of the highly publicized case contributed to a downward slide in the company’s share price.
On Tuesday, Liu faced renewed allegations as the alleged victim decided to pursue a lawsuit seeking damages of more than $50,000. The suit names JD as a defendant.
Reports of massive layoffs, steep pay cuts, and constant comings and goings in JD’s C-suite have Alibaba’s nearest competitor in an uneasy position, prompting many to ask what’s next for JD and to question whether Liu is fit to stay on as leader.
The company has an excellent track record in terms of providing high-quality e-commerce services and logistics. However, the recent unwanted attention has brought closer scrutiny to JD’s business in general, including the company’s efforts to move into new areas such as cloud computing, finance, and new retail.
JD declined to comment for this story.
The turmoil has been reflected in the company’s stock price performance, which hit a historic low in November 2018 at $19.27, less than five months after notching a high of around $43. The company’s shares have more or less bounced back. At market close on April 16, the stock price was $29.91.
JD is at a turning point. The question is whether the company can develop existing lines of business in logistics, its core strength, while succeeding in new ones, such as cloud computing. Many recent announcements indicate that the company is restructuring, shedding staff, and trying to adapt quickly to new business models and opportunities.
JD’s reported year-on-year growth of net revenue in 2018 was 27.5%, though exact gross revenue figures are undisclosed. By contrast, Alibaba witnessed a 40% year-on-year growth for its core e-commerce business. In 2014, JD went public on Nasdaq, raising $1.78 billion. Four months later, Alibaba made history with the largest IPO on the NYSE at $25 billion.
JD might come in second from a numbers perspective, but it has amassed valuable assets in supply chain and logistics. As far back as 2007, JD began to build out its own logistics network. Dissatisfied with China’s existing delivery infrastructure, it established delivery hubs of its own, starting in Beijing, Shanghai, and Guangzhou.
While its competitors mainly relied on third-party couriers to deliver their goods, JD’s in-house logistics arm allowed it to control the quality of its service. In 2010, it became one of the first e-commerce companies to launch same-day and next-day delivery service.
However, building logistics infrastructure across a country as expansive as China is not cheap. It is believed that more than 70% of the $1.78 billion proceeds JD raised in the 2014 IPO was spent on logistics construction, according to a paper from a Shanghai-based consultancy that was reviewed by TechNode.
In 2017, JD founded a separate logistics business group, raising $2.5 billion during its first financing round in 2018. After the deal, Jingdong Group, as JD is also known, still held an 81.4% stake in JD Logistics, which is currently valued at over $10 billion. The remainder was held by a consortium that includes Hillhouse Capital, Sequoia China, and Tencent.
But JD’s asset-heavy approach to logistics is gradually losing traction in a massive market where rivals like Alibaba’s Cainiao Logistics are also raising the bar in terms of service quality, while enjoying greater nimbleness by creating a network with courier companies outside of the Alibaba group.
Despite its physical assets, JD Logistics recorded a $343 million loss in 2018. In a leaked internal memo, Liu said that if the trend continues, the subsidiary’s funding would last only two years.
What is more, efficient delivery has proved insufficient to boost growth in the current landscape of e-commerce. “JD has not kept up with the new trends in the Chinese market: drawing online traffic and entertaining younger users. Its e-marketplace simply looks like an online shopping mall, which makes people feel bored,” said a longtime observer of JD who goes by the name Youkaku and who claims to have insider knowledge.
As one of the rare tech companies in China without an official co-founding team, JD has been characterized by Liu’s absolute rule. Unlike companies like Alibaba, JD’s operations are not safeguarded by partnerships or succession planning.
Fang Hao, former editor-in-chief of Chinese media Cyzone, wrote that JD’s management team is considered “barely nothing” compared to Tencent, known for its president Martin Lau and WeChat head Allen Zhang, or Alibaba, where Jack Ma has laid out a succession plan featuring Alibaba CEO Daniel Zhang.
For a decade, Liu almost singlehandedly led JD’s employees in the charge for market share. This situation did not change even after 2011, when, in preparation for their IPO, the company welcomed a long line of executives for the first time.
Leading the charge once again, Liu vowed in a Tencent Tech report in February 2017 that JD’s strategy over the next 12 years would be highly driven by technology. He hoped that people would recognize JD as “a successful technology company.”
This year, within the course of a month, three top JD executives have stepped down, including CTO Zhang Chen. The former Yahoo vice president had been expected to lead a fundamental technology revolution in the company.
General counsel Rain Long Yu and chief public affairs officer Lan Ye also recently quit JD. Experiencing this many high-profile exits in such a tight timeframe is considered highly unusual for China’s tech industry.
Youkaku told TechNode Zhang’s leaving reflected that JD’s long-entrenched political culture complete with “fiefdoms and cliques,” which was criticized by Liu himself recently in an internal meeting, according to Chinese media. This makes the integration of new hires difficult. Youkaku believes the executives’ departures will not have a large impact on the organization, since “only one person is the leader.”
According to a JD employee who asked to remain anonymous because of company policy, the organization is overly centralized with inefficient layers of accounting, reporting, and resource allocation.
“Goals and purposes are barely conveyed to each staff member in an accurate and effective way,” this employee told TechNode. JD is run more like a traditional Chinese state-owned enterprise than an agile tech company, she said.
To be sure, JD has made attempts to boost the vitality of certain parts of the organization. In January, the company upgraded its main segments—retail, logistics, and digital technology—into three independent units, with Xu Lei, Wang Zhenhui, and Chen Shengqiang named as chief executives, respectively.
The restructuring was later highlighted by Richard Liu as part of a decentralization push. In an internal New Year’s memo obtained by Tencent Tech, Liu announced that the company headquarters would relinquish some management control and give greater autonomy to the units. “Each business group will fight battles with its own will,” the memo stated.
Liu was raised in a family that worked in the coal shipping business. He refers to the nearly 100,000 (predominantly male) delivery personnel as his “brothers” and has often expressed pride in their employment conditions, which gives them higher compensation and better treatment than JD’s competitors.
Those employed at the company for five years or more enjoy unemployment insurance, medical insurance, accommodation, and full medical expenses. Such benefits are unusual for the industry.
“JD will never fire any one of our brothers,” Liu said in a trade conference in May 2018, as cited by Leiphone.
Yet less than a year later, the layoffs began. In February 2019, the e-commerce giant unveiled plans to cut the 10% lowest-performing executives. It later claimed to be eliminating three types of employees, including those who “could not work hard” for any reason, be it health or family.
Last Friday, a report revealed that Liu took a tough tone in his WeChat Moments, saying, “Those who mess around without achieving anything are not my brothers any more.”
“Mass layoffs are happening right now, and everyone is anxious,” said the JD employee. She told TechNode that many of her colleagues are planning to jump ship for other jobs.
For its part, JD disputes the job cut claims, preferring to point towards its plan to create 15,000 new positions this year as part of its organizational overhaul.
One relatively new business area for the company is cloud computing. In April 2016, JD entered China’s fast-growing cloud market by establishing a dedicated subsidiary, JD Cloud.
IDC Consulting expects China’s cloud market to become the largest in the world by 2023, accounting for a quarter of global spending on cloud infrastructure.
In 2015, Alibaba invested $1 billion in its cloud computing arm Aliyun, which it had launched in 2009. The investment proved wise. Since then, Aliyun’s revenue has boasted double—and often triple—digit growth, carrying Alibaba’s growth despite a slowing economy.
“In e-commerce, everybody knows the cloud is important. If you don’t offer it, your clients will look at your competitors,” said Chris Dong, research director at IDC China. “They want to retain their relevance.”
Much like Amazon internationally, Alibaba’s early mover advantage crowned it the king of the Chinese cloud services, holding 43% of the market, according to IDC figures for the first quarter of 2018. The same report indicates that it is followed by Tencent at 11%, China Unicom at 8%, and Amazon at 6%.
“Everyone is looking at powerhouses,” Dong said, referring to companies which dominate the market, like Alibaba and Amazon. However, he added, with plenty of potential customers who are not serviced by their cloud offerings, there’s still room for new arrivals. Still, Dong does not foresee JD Cloud aggressively competing with Alibaba, as that would require major investment.
For a long time, people have compared JD with Alibaba, but it appears that comparison is no longer apt. While Alibaba has found success and profit expanding to new areas such as the cloud, finance, and entertainment, JD is still essentially an e-commerce company. The company has been slow to adapt to emerging trends in its core business.
Its unyielding organizational structure, alongside its “macho” and rigid company culture, have also slowed its response to market needs. Meanwhile, Alibaba’s Taobao launched a live-streaming tool in April 2016. Pinduoduo has established a market presence by offering social tools for group-buying models to consumers seeking lower prices.
One possible option for JD to catch up with the e-commerce trends driven by China’s rising millennials could be a merger with Pinduoduo. JD’s presence is strong in higher-tier cities where Pinduoduo is weak, and vice versa. They are also both Tencent-backed and individually outmatched by Alibaba. But this scenario seems far-fetched, given that they are similar-sized entities that appear to lack the financial muscle to make the deal work.
JD’s plan to seek growth in the cloud market, however, takes advantage of its superior logistics network to deliver digital services to areas not yet saturated by the top cloud providers.
JD holds the strongest logistics chain in the countryside, so it is well-positioned to deliver digital services in these areas. “This is where JD Cloud could step in—to build a cloud foundation to help rural governments establish e-commerce capabilities for locally produced goods, so that they can be sold more broadly and effectively on the JD platform,” Dong said.
If it can develop an inclusive and agile corporate culture, and attract a more dynamic team of executives who can implement necessary changes, JD could do a better job of keeping up with or even anticipating technological and internet trends.
A key factor is whether Richard Liu—assuming he holds on to the leadership role—can navigate the changes essential for the company’s long-term survival. Because he has been JD’s indisputable leader, much depends on his standing within the company, as well as his public image.
In March, Liu requested leave from the Two Sessions, China’s biggest annual political event, for unspecified reasons. In contrast, senior executives from China’s other tech giants—Baidu, Tencent, Huawei, and Xiaomi—were all present.
Additional reporting by Jill Shen and Eliza Gkritsi. With contributions from Elliott Zaagman.
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Shanghai Takes on Hong Kong in a Battle for Unicorn IPOs – Bloomberg
What happened: Three Chinese unicorns are expected to scrap their plans to list in Hong Kong in favor of Shanghai’s new tech board, which features relaxed trading rules and listing requirements announced in late January. Qingdao Haier Biomedical Co., Sun Car Insurance Agency Co. and Certusnet Information and Technology Co. gave a vote of confidence to the Shanghai stock exchange, which loosened its financial regulations pertaining to high-tech companies in order to encourage key homegrown and foreign tech players to trade in China.
Why it’s important: The Shanghai tech board marks a monumental change in China’s financial policy, waiving the valuation cap, a de facto rule since 2014 that has led many local publicly traded companies to take their business to the US or Hong Kong. It also loosens the rules on first day trading and allows for shares with different voting rights, a measure which gives founders greater control. The financial authorities’ bet seems to be working, but analysts have said the companies who are among the board’s list of 60 candidates are similar to those traded over-the-counter in Beijing. Whether big tech players will be convinced by Shanghai’s offering remains to be seen.
]]>Senior Republicans criticise Microsoft’s China work – Financial Times
What happened: Between March and November of 2018, Microsoft researchers in Beijing co-wrote and published three papers on artificial intelligence with a university run by China’s top military body. The revelations about the American company’s involvement in building surveillance systems for the Chinese government, a possible breach of US laws, has sparked alarm from leading China hawks in Washington DC. One of the papers delineates an AI method to create accurate environmental maps by using facial recognition. Microsoft defended the academic papers, saying that they are the result of a collective effort involving an international team of scientists and academics researching key technologies.
Why it’s important: The revelation comes as American government agencies, including the FBI, are scrutinizing US academic collaborations with parties linked to the Chinese government, fearing that the resulting research could assist China’s military interests. US authorities are considering increased vetting for Chinese partners, a measure implemented last week by the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. After cutting ties with Huawei, the top university announced that potential Chinese collaborations will face an “elevated risk” review process.
]]>Two recent examples of poor cybersecurity practices could weigh heavily on Huawei, as the Chinese tech giant tries to cast itself as a reliable purveyor of international telecom infrastructure to gain ground in the race to 5G.
On March 9, Dutch cybersecurity researcher Victor Gevers revealed that he had discovered a publicly available trove of what appears to be Huawei enterprise network credentials on the open-source software development platform GitHub. The type of credentials posted, which typically grant access to potentially sensitive company data, may have been posted late last year.
Less than a month later, on March 28, the UK’s Huawei Oversight Board (HCSEC) said in its annual report that Huawei’s cybersecurity suffers from “underlying defects” in software development, “bringing significantly increased risk to UK operators.” HCSEC is Huawei’s self-evaluation subsidiary in the UK, working under the oversight of British authorities.
The US government alleges that Huawei poses a national security threat because of its ties to the Chinese government. Any question regarding the company’s ability to competently handle cybersecurity issues could further complicate Huawei’s efforts to win the trust of key governments and potential partners overseas—something it is increasingly trying to accomplish.
“The issue identified applies only on an isolated, virtual test environment. No Huawei or customer networks or data has or will be affected by this issue,” a spokeswoman for Huawei told TechNode in response to queries about the GitHub leak.
Regarding the HCSEC report, a spokesman for Huawei countered some of the claims in the report in an emailed statement that, saying the document had attested that “Huawei’s equipment has no backdoors.”
The same statement highlighted that, in November, the company’s board of directors had set aside $2 billion for a “transformation program” to enhance Huawei’s software engineering capabilities.
Still, the HCSEC report noted that, more than three months since it was announced, the transformation plan remained short on details, describing it as “a proposed initial budget for as yet unspecified activities,” and added that it hadn’t found any evidence to inspire confidence in Huawei’s capacity to successfully carry out the transformation program.
In the GitHub case, both the post and related account were deleted soon after Gevers publicized his findings on Twitter.
GitHub repositories can only be removed by the author or the site’s moderators. The open-source software development platform only removes content if it infringes on copyright or trademark, or if it “poses a security risk.”
The code posted on GitHub showed the password of an administrator account of a Lightweight Directory Access Protocol (LDAP) for a Splunk app.
LDAP is an open directory standard that provides an interface to access and structure data. The database can contain anything, such as contact lists, but it is commonly used to manage passwords, said Nils Weisensee, founder of Frontier Intelligence, a Shanghai-based cybersecurity consultancy.
The Splunk platform is a big data analytics and visualization tool that companies can use to tailor apps to their purposes. The front-end of a Splunk app is a user-friendly web-style interface that visualizes data analyzed in the back-end, which connects directly to applications and devices to collect, index, analyze, and correlate big data.
The code could not be examined directly by TechNode.
Splunk is commonly used in IoT, business analytics, and security. It has a wide range of applications, including using AI to analyze the data that a company collects, Weisensee explained.
The code on GitHub indicates that the credentials granted access to Huawei’s enterprise network, not a separate test domain. Huawei.com, the enterprise network, is named as the domain controller, the server that controls access to resources; the user shown has admin privileges, meaning it handles all security requests to access the network.
According to standard security practices, if the app were a test, the directory would have identified a separate test network, Gevers said. “You do this because accidents like this can happen. You don’t want anyone to access the enterprise network, because you lose all control,” he added.
“Either they were sloppy and testing in their enterprise network or their enterprise credentials were found online,” he said.
Taken together, the GitHub incident and the HCSEC report shed further light on how security breaches can and do take place, pointing to a lack of understanding of basic cybersecurity principles, even by tech leaders like Huawei.
“These incidents are not inspiring for a company that claims to be secure,” Gevers told TechNode, referring to the GitHub post.
Gevers, the co-founder of the Dutch NGO GDI Foundation, has been the source behind many recent revelations about security lapses involving well-known Chinese companies like Huawei, Alibaba, and SenseNets, as well as a cache of data on 1.8 million Chinese women that included information about their “breedready” status.
The GDI Foundation says that because its aims are to address security flaws with responsible disclosure, not provide hackers with paths into sensitive information, they neither attempted to log onto Huawei’s Splunk app nor publicly revealed the credentials.
Since neither Gevers nor anyone else—to the extent that could be determined by TechNode—tried to use the credentials, there is no way of knowing exactly what doors the data credentials opened.
Screenshots from Gevers show that the file was created on Sep. 1, 2018. It is likely that they were posted around that time on GitHub, said Gevers, meaning that by the time he discovered them they could have been available online for as long as four months. “Those files were there for a long time,” increasing the security risk posed to Huawei, Gevers said.
On March 7, two days before Gevers’s revelations, Huawei sued the US government. In a press conference held at Huawei’s Shenzhen headquarters, the company’s rotating chairman, Guo Ping, claimed that the US government had hacked into the company’s servers and “stolen emails and source code.”
Guo was alluding to a 2014 New York Times investigation that revealed that the US’s National Security Agency was spying on the conversations of Huawei’s top executives and accessing proprietary information about its network equipment.
Gevers’s main concern is not backdoors or malicious attacks, but the fact that people employed in positions that touch on security—not only at Huawei—may not be properly versed in cybersecurity principles.
In its report, HCSEC said Huawei’s systems exhibit “extensive non-adherence to basic secure coding practices, including Huawei’s own internal standard,” severely increasing cybersecurity risk. System vulnerabilities may be obscured because Huawei suppresses warnings from static analysis tools, which check source code against programming rules before software is run, and does not properly manage or update software.
Moreover, the HCSEC report found that Huawei uses an old version of a well-known third-party operating system for the key function of processing incoming data flows in real-time, a function similar to Splunk apps. This attracts risk and a single point of failure can compromise the entire OS, the report stated.
According to Weisensee, out-of-date software is a common problem in China. “There is a lot of outdated software in China—pirated software—that is not properly patched,” he explained.
Weisensee pointed out that for companies of Huawei’s size, it is difficult to ensure perfect security. A combination of factors exposes them to high security risks, he said. Most security breaches are due to human error, and Chinese tech giants like Huawei work with many complex databases, departments, and high employee turnover, which makes it easy for things to slip through the cracks.
In Weisensee’s view, it is too big a logical leap to assume that Huawei purposefully left the LDAP credentials on GitHub. “If someone wants to leak access to data, they will do it in a more obvious way.”
Gevers added, “Someone used the Git repository without actually knowing how it works. It’s like having the key to your front door sticking [out from] under the doormat.”
]]>China Floats Cloud Concession to Foreign Tech Firms in U.S. Trade Talks – The Wall Street Journal
What happened: Chinese Premiere Li Keqiang briefed on Monday about 36 heads of foreign corporations, including IBM and BMW, on a proposal which will open up the country’s cloud computing market by allowing foreign tech companies to own data centers in China in a pilot free-trade zone. The pilot program is part of a larger compromise Beijing is pursuing to ensure a trade deal with the US. Until now, China had refused to budge on its cloud computing restrictions, citing national security, despite pressure from international tech giants and the US government.
Why it’s important: Data localization laws are notoriously strict in China, especially after a new cybersecurity law that came into effect in June 2017 which regulates data flow and storage facilities. Foreign cloud providers like Apple and Amazon must either partner with a local company and license their technology and data, or give up on China’s market altogether. The pilot proposal is a discretionary concession, under which the government will maintain control over the cloud industry but unleash some forces of liberalization. Beijing hasn’t addressed whether it will allow data to flow freely from the zone to the rest of the country.
]]>Rela, a Chinese lesbian dating app, exposed 5 million user profiles – TechCrunch
What happened: Dutch security researcher Victor Gevers found an unsecured database containing 5.3 million user profiles on a popular gay and queer Chinese dating app, Rela. The profiles included nicknames, dates of birth, height, weight, ethnicity, sexual preferences, interests and, in some cases, geolocation. The data were found on a server that was not password-protected. Gevers believes the user records have been exposed since June 2018.
Why it’s important: The LGBTQ+ community in China still faces stigmatization and discrimination. Gay dating apps have found a big market by enabling individuals to connect in the safety of the online world. Established apps like Blued have attracted multiple rounds of investment and boast large user bases, but many others face legal obstacles. Rela disappeared from app stores in May 2017 amid reports that the government shut it down, though officials never confirmed. It reappeared a year later. Zank, a well-known app for gay and bisexual men was shut down because of laws against pornographic content.
]]>What happened: In his testimony to Congress on Wednesday, the US Secretary of State said that he is “hopeful” EU countries would follow US advice and shun Huawei from their 5G networks. He added that progress has been made convincing them and that the US will not partner with or share intelligence with countries which use Huawei equipment.
Why it’s important: The statements come two days after a deal-packed meeting in Paris between China, France, Germany, and the EU Commission which paved the way for strengthened EU-China relations. The US has been trying to exclude Huawei from building next-generation internet infrastructure around the world. Europe is a key battleground due to its market size and 5G readiness. Germany launched its 5G spectrum auction on Mar. 19, refusing Washington’s request to ban Huawei. The Chinese telecoms giant is fighting back with a global public relations campaign and a lawsuit filed Mar. 7 against the US government for banning its agencies from using Huawei equipment.
]]>What happened: A court in the eastern city of Ningbo found Lu Wei, who served in top government posts for more than 15 years, accepted bribes worth RMB 32 million ($4.77 million). He pleaded guilty after being accused of corruption in October, and was sentenced to 14 years in prison on Tuesday. The court also confiscated all assets he acquired through his abuse of power. He served as the first director of the Cyberspace Administration of China (CAC) from 2013 to 2016, where he pursued pervasive internet controls.
Why it’s important: Lu was widely seen as the face of China’s internet censorship after a long career in media. He worked his way up through China’s official Xinhua news agency, beginning in Guangxi province, was appointed the vice mayor of Beijing and then minister of the Beijing Propaganda Department before being made head of the CAC. His unexplained resignation from this influential position in June 2016 came as a shock since he had become the face of internet censorship in China. In 2015, Lu was named one of the World’s 100 Most Influential People by Time Magazine.
]]>Tesla accuses self-driving startup Zoox and former employees of trade secret theft – The Verge
What happened: On Wednesday, Tesla filed two lawsuits in California courts. One accuses Guangzhi Cao, a former member of Tesla’s Autopilot 40-member team, of sharing source code for its driving assistant feature with Chinese electric vehicle maker Xiaopeng Motors (XPeng). The company claims that Cao moved 300,000 files and directories related to Autopilot, some of which were copies of Autopilot-related source code. He then abruptly announced he was moving to a job at XPeng on Jan. 3 and tried to delete his browser history. XPeng responded by saying that it “was not aware of any alleged misconduct by Mr. Cao.”
Why it’s important: Experts and media reports found that XPeng’s electric SUV G3, which was released in December 2018, oddly similar to Tesla’s Model X. Many of the features were the same, but the price tag was much lower. As Tesla is trying to enter the biggest automobile market in the world, even building a Gigafactory in Shanghai, competition from Chinese manufacturers can be detrimental to its success. In the past, high import taxes prevented Elon Musk’s ambitions from spreading through China. By cutting such costs, it hopes for a competitive price tag in the Chinese market, in which case, proprietary technology will be crucial to its edge.
]]>AT&T CEO says China’s Huawei hinders carriers from shifting suppliers for 5G – Reuters
What happened: On Wednesday, Randall Stephenson, AT&T’s CEO said in a speech in Washington that Huawei is making it very difficult for European internet carriers to drop the Chinese tech giant from their supply chains for 5G. “If you have deployed Huawei as your 4G network, Huawei is not allowing interoperability to 5G—meaning if you are 4G, you are stuck with Huawei for 5G,” he said, adding that the US government could do a better job of explaining security risks related to using Huawei.
Why it’s important: Stephenson’s statements add to the brewing row between Huawei and the US. As the Chinese company tries to convince foreign governments to allow internet carriers to use its equipment in building the next generation of the internet, Washington is advocating that this would come with huge security risks. Europe is a key battleground due to its market size and 5G readiness. The discord has mainly revolved around data privacy, but Stephenson’s remarks point to national security risks related with IoT infrastructure.
Huawei Takes Nearly a Quarter of EMEA Smartphone Market and Closes Gap to Samsung in Fourth-Quarter 2018, Says IDC – International Data Corporation
What happened: Huawei significantly widened its share of the smartphone landscape during the fourth quarter of 2018 in the EMEA region, which comprises Europe, the Middle East, and Africa. Smartphone volume for the Chinese smartphone maker grew to more than a fifth of the market, according to US market intelligence firm International Data Corporation (IDC), narrowing the gap with market leader Samsung, which led at 28.0%, falling 3.8% year-on-year. Huawei surged 73.7% to 21.2% in the fourth quarter of 2018 compared with 12.2% during the same period in 2017. Apple’s share fell 14.8% year-on-year to 16.6% market share during the same period. Xiaomi smartphone shipments also grew by 70.5% year-on-year to 4.3% market share.
Why it’s important: The EMEA region is a key battleground for smartphone producers because it is projected to grow steadily over the next few years. While Europe might see a decrease in shipments, the Middle East and Africa are expected to see steady annual growth of 2.8%. “Eyes in the industry have been on Huawei, to see how much it would grow, but also on Apple, to see how much it might fall after the company’s recent profit warning,” said Marta Pinto, research manager at IDC EMEA. Huawei’s rapid growth is rare for the region, and indicates the effectiveness of strategic moves such as launching its lower-priced Honor brand and diversified distribution channels.
Data: China has the most blockchain patents, despite banning cryptocurrency – The Next Web
What happened: The Next Web analyzed data made available by the UN’s World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO) and found that, to date, the majority of patents related to blockchain technologies were approved in China, followed closely by the US. However, Chinese entities were not among the top four institutions holding patents; Alibaba ranked fifth. Americans dominate the top 15 companies whose applications were granted. The total number of approved patents skyrocketed in 2017, when 917 blockchain-related patents were granted. In 2018, during the bitcoin crash, the number of patents continued to increase. It is unclear how many of the patents are related to virtual currency or other blockchain applications.
Why it’s important: Blockchain is increasingly relevant, especially for banks. Global spending on blockchain technologies is expected to reach $12.4 billion by 2022, most of which will be used for finance, particularly cross-border ($453 million) and trade ($285 million) payments, according to US market intelligence firm International Data Corporation. As with patents, the US will spend the most ($1.1 billion), followed by Western Europe ($674 million) and China ($319 million). Patents are important for protecting intellectual property in this burgeoning sector, especially for ambitious companies participating in a global economy. China banned cryptocurrency exhanges and initial coin offerings (ICOs) in 2017. However, following a 2014 Supreme Court decision, it is US law that poses the strictest scrutiny to patent requests which apply an abstract idea via computing, such as the distributed ledger.
]]>Casualties of trade war: Chinese in US denied licences to work with sensitive technologies – South China Morning Post
What happened: Chinese nationals working tech jobs in the US with national security implications are increasingly being denied government licenses to do so, SCMP reports. “Deemed export” licenses allow non-US nationals access to otherwise classified technology, more than half are generally approved. But as the US-China trade war plods on and bi-partisan concerns linger about China as a competitor in technological dominance, Chinese nationals are seeing their licenses expire without renewal or are being denied licenses altogether. The trend is likely to continue, Doug Jacobson, a lawyer who specializes in the licenses, told SCMP.
Why it’s important: As the trade war continues, concern deepens in Washington D.C. about the presence of Chinese nationals close to home. Reports about spies frequently surface in American media. Approximately one out of every 350,000 Chinese who study in the US seek insider access to its science and technology for China’s benefit, experts told CNN in February. FBI Director Christopher Wray testified before the Senate Intelligence Committee the same week that Beijing was recruiting spies at American universities.
]]>What happened: On Thursday, Tesla announced it secured a loan for up to RMB 3.5 billion ($521 million) to fund its electric car plant in Shanghai, the first Tesla factory outside the US. The funds will be available for 12 months and comprise about a quarter of the $2 billion estimated total necessary to build the factory. Construction started in January and, according to Shanghai authorities, it is expected to be completed in May.
Why it’s important: CEO Elon Musk’s car-making dream has faced headwinds during the US-China trade war. The company has had to reduce prices for cars manufactured in the US but sold in China and faces fluctuating import tariffs. Chinese consumers who bought the car before the price cut were dissatisfied. A factory in China precludes the company’s domestically produced vehicles from such issues, allowing Tesla to enter the Chinese automobile market without interruptions. The stakes remain high, as Musk has been a cause for concern among investors and consumers after retracting his promise of profits in the first quarter of 2019.
]]>What happened: Huawei opened a new lab in Brussels on Tuesday where government, industry, and standards institutions will collaborate on cybersecurity research. Internet and wireless client companies will be able to test the Chinese tech giant’s network equipment on the lab grounds. To facilitate this bid at transparency, Huawei will make available its source code, Huawei global cybersecurity and privacy officer John Suffolk told AP News. The lab has been interpreted as an attempt to convince European governments that the company’s 5G equipment is safe to use due to its proximity to the EU Commission, which has criticized Huawei in the past. The Commission was cautious in its response, emphasizing “reciprocity in terms of market openness” and that the EU is “rules-based.”
Why it’s important: The US has been trying to undermine Huawei’s bid to build 5G infrastructure around the world, claiming that the firm’s ties to the Chinese government pose a security threat to the nations that take up its offer. Huawei continues to eye other markets despite the Trump administration’s staunch campaign and a ban on US federal agencies using Huawei products, for which the Chinese company is allegedly planning to sue the White House. The EU is a key battleground; it is Huawei’s biggest market outside China, and has prioritized 5G development as part of its Digital Single Market initiative.
]]>Tiger Global and Ant Financial lead $500M investment in China’s shared housing startup Danke – TechCrunch
What happened: Alibaba’s fintech spinoff Ant Financial and NY-based investment firm Tiger Global Management invested $500 million in Danke Apartment, valuing the Chinese startup at nearly $2 billion. Danke targets young professionals for its co-living urban housing model, renovating and partitioning houses for three to four people in upmarket areas, and providing maintenance and cleaning services. It has properties in 10 major cities at present.
Why it’s important: China’s housing market has boomed in recent years due to speculative buying, especially in large urban centers like Beijing and Shanghai. Municipal governments struggle in major cities to provide affordable housing; the Beijing government recently promised 2,400 dorm rooms for delivery drivers. Danke aims to stabilize rental prices through AI-driven pricing, providing much-needed affordable housing and contractual transparency to fight predatory landlord practices. Competitors Ziroom and 5I5J use the same model, but Danke has by far secured the most funding.
]]>On Feb. 23, four days after its release, popular PC game Devotion is unavailable for download in China after it sparked charged debate online. The game initially captivated Chinese netizens, until Weibo users pointed out hidden political messages.
Update: The developer behind Devotion has removed the game from the Steam store across all regions today, citing technical issues that cause unexpected game crashes. It also said that it wants to use the opportunity to ease the pressure in its community and further review the game for other unintended references. The statement comes on the heels of an apology dated Monday, which called the hidden references an “awfully unprofessional mistake” and asked players for time to address it.
The Taiwanese “first-person horror game depicting the life of a family shadowed by religious belief” was released on Feb. 19 on PC game distribution platform Steam. In the days following Devotion’s launch, the relevant hashtag #还愿 (huanyuan, #Devotion in English) quickly received over 120 million views on Weibo. The hashtag and original posts have disappeared from the popular Chinese social media platform.
Online discussion on the distribution platform, the world’s largest PC game online distributor, quickly turned sour on Feb. 23. Unlike other social media, Steam only allows users who have downloaded the game to comment on its page.
For instance, one player with the handle “xia,” or “summer” in English, gave the game a positive review in simplified Chinese on Feb. 21, calling it “possibly the best horror game in China.” On Feb. 25, the user, who identified as a Chinese national, added that they felt “shocked by the insidiousness of the developer” but wouldn’t change the review, calling upon people to take the matter more rationally. Other Steam users responded with fierce criticism, saying that summer’s comments show a lack of integrity for a Chinese person.
Before that, the comments in simplified Chinese that were rated as “most helpful” showed a positive view of the game. Currently, reactions on Steam are divided. Based on TechNode’s observations, players who comment in English and traditional Chinese generally give positive reviews, citing its “quality art design,” “polished details,” and “great atmosphere,” whereas players who comment in simplified Chinese condemn the developer for slipping politically charged content into a game with great potential.
On the day that Devotion disappeared from the Chinese version of Steam, the developer company, Red Candle Games, issued a public apology on its Facebook and Steam pages. It addressed players and netizens who were offended by references to highly controversial topics pertaining to Chinese authorities. The game’s publisher, Indievent, announced that it ceased all partnership with the developer.
The debate revolved around hidden references in the game to Chinese President Xi Jinping. These “Easter eggs” are obscured, minute details that are not easily spotted in the gameplay, but are perceived as intentional. Among them is a seal that appears on a wall, featuring a traditional Chinese symbol for sinister spells. Next to the seal are the characters of the President’s name and those of a popular children’s cartoon that he is sometimes likened to.
The developer company claimed that an unnamed employee was responsible for this and other critical references to Chinese authorities and that their actions went undetected by the rest of the team.
As of Feb. 24, information about the game posted after Feb. 23 cannot be found on Chinese search engine Baidu. The website returns zero results for searches of the game in Chinese, and searching for it English will only yield results posted before Feb. 23. Video playthroughs of the game have also disappeared from Chinese video sharing websites AcFun and Bilibili.
Discussions about the game on Twitter and Facebook are also heated. In addition to taking sides, many users are confused about what the developer is trying to achieve with what they consider to be a childish way to express political views.
“It’s okay to express your own views, even political ones. But if you know your [sic] audience are [sic] not with you and it’s meaningless to provoke them, you don’t insult them by calling who they support idiot,” said a Twitter user with the handle “Sinner7122”, whose profile claims that she is an environmental engineer based in Beijing.
Update: This article has been updated to reflect two announcements from Red Candle Games dated February 25 and 26.
]]>China’s Xiaomi unveils $680 5G smartphone, sees growth in Africa – Reuters
What happened: Xiaomi, the world’s fourth-largest smartphone manufacturer revealed its first 5G smartphone at a conference in Barcelona. At $680 (about RMB 4,500), the Xiaomi model boasts a new Qualcomm chipset, the same one found in Samsung’s Galaxy 10, a 94.3 screen-to-body ratio and two back cameras which shoot video at 960 frames per second. The Mi Mix 3 5G makes 5G affordable to “normal consumers,” Xiang Wang, the company’s Senior Vice President explained and added that Xiaomi is looking towards Africa as an area with growth potential.
Why it’s important: Last week Huawei and Samsung revealed their newest models adapted for 5G networks, which are priced at $2,600 and $1,980 respectively. Smartphone producers are trying to claim their stake in the next generation of wireless technology, which promises increased speed and decreased latency, paving the way for the Internet of Things. A recent Cisco report expects 5G to account for 422 million mobile connections by 2022. This makes up only 3% of total mobile connections but will account for 12% of internet traffic. Since its founding, Xiaomi has stormed Asian markets, most notably in India, where it overtook Samsung’s phone sales in 2018. In 2017, it launched its products in the UK, Spain, France, and Italy.
]]>China sees ‘enormous potential’ in Saudi economy as crown prince visits – Reuters
What happened: Today, Chinese State Councillor Wang Yi sees “enormous potential” in the Saudi emerging market, during Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman’s two-day visit to Beijing. He is willing to support the kingdom’s effort to transition its economy away from oil and towards high-tech industries, outlined under Saudi Arabia’s state plan, Vision 2030, by enhancing the relationship between the two countries. China’s increasing involvement in the tumultuous region is intended to be “pure friendly cooperation,” the State Councillor added.
Why it’s important: Saudi Arabia has fallen out with many Western countries after its alleged implication in the murder of journalist Jamal Khashoggi, a prominent critic of the government. This has hindered its plan to make the kingdom an international tech hub. Its Future Investment Initiative conference in October was shunned by major players including Richard Branson, SoftBank and Siemens. The Crown Prince is now pivoting towards Asia, beginning his tour with a $20 billion investment pledge to Pakistan. The delegation includes top executives from state-owned Saudi petroleum company Aramco, whose long-awaited IPO worth $2 trillion is rumored to fund innovative renewable energy projects. Its CEO has stated plans for a key role in Saudi Arabia’s goal to become a “solar powerhouse,” one which matches Chinese ambitions. When the offering was announced in 2017, the company went looking for Chinese investors. The kingdom also holds a strategic position for the Belt and Road Initiative.
]]>Ciaran Martin’s CyberSec speech in Brussels– UK Cyber Security Centre
What happened: Ciaran Martin, Director General of Cyber security for Britain’s Government Communications Headquarters, defended Huawei’s bid to develop 5G networks. In a speech in Brussels on Wednesday, he confirmed an anonymous report published in the Financial Times earlier this week, saying that UK authorities have been mitigating potential threats to networks from Huawei for 15 years and that their regime is “arguably the toughest” in the world. He added that this is a question of setting a national standard, and not indicative of hostile activity from China.
Why it’s important: The US is trying to push Huawei out of the race for 5G, claiming that its links to Beijing pose national security risks. Some governments are convinced, others remain doubtful. New Zealand is carrying out an independent assessment, whereas German authorities released a preliminary ruling in favor of Huawei on Tuesday. The UK and New Zealand rulings could sway other countries because they are privy to sensitive US intelligence as members of the Five Eyes intelligence alliance. The Chinese tech giant is a key element in the US-China trade talks, and it is unclear how its 5G stake will affect the negotiations. Earlier this week Huawei’s founder, Ren Zhengfei, said the firm would not carry out espionage, even if it meant defying Chinese law.
]]>Chinese Tech Giants Seek Further IPO Rule Changes in Hong Kong – Bloomberg
What happened: The biggest Chinese technology firms are lobbying the Hong Kong Stock Exchange to change its rules, to their advantage. Citing two people familiar with the matter, the report points to Mayoan Entertainment—owned by Meituan’s Wang Xing—as one example. Before its IPO on Feb. 4, it threatened to leave Hong Kong, unless Tencent, its lead investor, was allowed to buy shares in the public offering. This tactic, known as double-dipping, inflates share value, attracting more investors. Chinese tech companies are also seeking waivers for super-voting stock.
Why it’s important: Hong Kong is in a tough competition for new IPOs with the world’s biggest stock markets. In 2014, it lost the world’s most valuable IPO, Alibaba, to New York, because of its voting rights rules. A large proportion of listed companies are Chinese, many of which are subsidiaries of tech titans, and is thus wary of how it would fare in their absence. Its rules were tailored to its traders: HKSE has more retail traders than other big stock exchanges. Now, these regulations are pulling them out of the good graces of some of the world’s biggest investors. Almost one year ago, it amended its rules to allow dual-class shareholders in a bid to attract more tech capital.
]]>UK says Huawei is manageable risk to 5G – Financial Times
What happened: The Financial Times reported that UK National Cyber Security Agency has concluded that security risks posed by Huawei in 5G networks can be mitigated. Quoting two anonymous sources close to the investigation, the report runs contrary to US claims that Huawei should be barred from future 5G networks because its close ties to Beijing jeopardize national security.
Why it’s important: As a member of the Five Eyes Intelligence Network, an intelligence-sharing alliance that also includes the US, Canada, New Zealand, and Australia, the UK has unique access to sensitive US intelligence. Earlier on Monday, New Zealand announced it will conduct an independent assessment. If the UK endorses Huawei publicly, it could sway governments across the European continent in favor of the Chinese telecoms giant. Most recently, the US approached Canada and Eastern European states, arguing that 5G is a greater liability to national security since it will embed a range of objects to the internet, notably cars. China claims that the US is trying to hinder Huawei’s development, which last year overtook Apple in terms of smartphone sales. Despite Washington’s efforts, Huawei has secured 25 commercial contracts to supply 5G technology. It is running tests with a further 50 companies worldwide.
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