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Google updates Search to show crypto wallet balances across bitcoin and EVM networks Arbitrum, and others

Abner Li / 9to5Google:

 

 

—  Google Search is home to various tools and the latest lets you look up Bitcoin addresses to show the balance of any wallet.

 

Announced on Tuesday, you can “Search for any of your wallet addresses across bitcoin and five new EVM networks.” The latter (Ethereum Virtual Machine) is a component of another cryptocurrency.

 

Enter a Blockchain address into Google Search and the first result will be a card noting your Bitcoin balance and when it was last updated. Google notes that this is the “Balance as of last transaction. Supported formats include: P2PKH, P2SH, and Bech32. Extended public key addresses are not currently supported.”

 

https://x.com/rajanpatel/status/1772804743745921131?s=20

 

All Bitcoin transactions are public on a distributed ledger, the “blockchain.” Knowing an address cannot reveal the owner, while the private key is what’s needed (and has to be kept secure) to retain control.

 

Meanwhile, Google Search will also show Ethereum balances. It’s looking at Arbitrum, Avalanche, Fantom, Optimism, and Polygon. This joins other tools like searching for the price of Bitcoin (e.g., BTC USD) like you would with any other stock.

 

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Emerald Bay Risk Solutions launches with strategic investment from Bain Capital Insurance

  • Company receives “A-” Stable (Financial Size category VIII) rating by AM Best
  • Specialty program insurance carrier focused on leveraging core underwriting expertise and data-driven approach to align interests across the entire risk value chain

 

 

MORRISTOWN, N.J. — (BUSINESS WIRE) — Emerald Bay Risk Solutions (“Emerald Bay” or the “Company”), a collaborative underwriting carrier, today announced its formal launch with a significant strategic investment from Bain Capital Insurance, the dedicated insurance investing unit of Bain Capital.

 

Emerald Bay is an innovative program specialist that seeks to create an alignment of interests across the entire risk value chain through integrated solutions and disciplined underwriting enhanced by a proprietary data-driven technology platform.

 

Emerald Bay uses a unique blend of established competencies to deliver tailored insurance solutions, consistent underwriting results, and long-term, mutually valuable partnerships with a select group of high-performing managing general agents (MGAs) and market-leading reinsurance partners.

Emerald Bay begins operations with a strong financial foundation, having secured a rating of “A-“ Stable, Financial Size category VIII, from AM Best. The Company will initially focus on executing its actionable pipeline of highly reputable, established MGA programs within the Excess & Surplus (E&S) markets, but will be positioned to write both admitted and non-admitted business on a nationwide basis. Emerald Bay is led by Chief Executive Officer Dave Ingrey and Chief Risk Officer Miles Allkins, who have deep insurance expertise and demonstrated track records of successfully partnering with and driving long-term results for blue-chip reinsurers and high-performing MGAs.

 

“In a rapidly evolving program insurance market, we’re excited to have the opportunity, with the support of Bain Capital Insurance, to pave the way for a progressive underwriting organization,” said Ingrey. “We are built on the principle of mutual accountability and transparency, aimed at aligning interests across the entire value chain through a collaborative engagement model and access to real-time risk exposure data.”

 

“Our strategy offers a high degree of alignment through meaningful risk retention alongside our capacity partners and a focus on optimizing the profitability and longevity of our MGA and reinsurance partnerships,” said Allkins. “Bain Capital Insurance embraces the complexity of our industry, appreciates the nuanced, but powerful, differentiation of our model, and brings the resources and experience to shepherd our vision to fruition.”

 

“Dave, Miles, and the entire Emerald Bay team bring a complementary blend of deep experience, strong relationships, and a diverse range of skills to quickly scale a value-added and partnership-centric model,” said Matt Popoli, Global Head of Bain Capital Insurance. “We’re thrilled to support Emerald Bay and believe that this is an excellent time for a proven management team with a differentiated operating approach to address the market demand for more consistent underwriting performance.”

 

As part of its launch, Emerald Bay has appointed a number of leading insurance and technology specialists to its senior leadership team:

  • George Dragonetti, formerly of Navigators Re and RLI Re, has joined the team as Lead of Property Underwriting.
  • Kris Hill, formerly of Safeco / Liberty Mutual and QBE North America, has joined the team as Chief Financial Officer and Chief Operating Officer.
  • Ken Ingrey joins as Head of Business Development. Previously, Ken Ingrey co-founded Spinnaker Insurance, a market-leading hybrid fronting insurance carrier, with Dave Ingrey.
  • John Lucking, Chief Technology Officer, will lead the development of the Company’s proprietary technology platform. He most recently served as Global Tech Lead, Insurance, at Amazon Web Services.
  • Emily Miner, General Counsel, brings expansive regulatory and transaction experience within the insurance industry, having served as General Counsel and Chief Compliance Officer at The Navigators Group.
  • Ken Sharp will head the Company’s casualty insurance department, bringing expansive insurance experience from QRe and Arch Re.

 

The transaction is subject to customary approvals and other closing conditions. Bain Capital Insurance was advised by McDermott Will & Emery and Debevoise & Plimpton LLP.

 

About Emerald Bay Risk Solutions

Emerald Bay Risk Solutions, a “Collaborative Underwriting Carrier,” is a specialty insurance firm, co-founded by industry veterans Dave Ingrey and Miles Allkins. With Bain Capital Insurance providing the flexibility to take advantage of market opportunities and a core of established programs, Emerald Bay’s emphasis on alignment of interests for all parties and on collaborative underwriting cultivates trust and mutual accountability. The company is structured to deliver quality admitted and surplus lines insurance solutions, working to bring optimized program offerings to the reinsurance market. For more information, visit www.emeraldbayrisk.com

 

About Bain Capital Insurance

Bain Capital Insurance is the dedicated insurance investing business of Bain Capital, a leading global private investment firm with approximately $180 billion under management across 23 offices on four continents. We seek to collaborate with leading insurance businesses and management teams to unlock value and drive innovation across the insurance industry, specializing in insurance investing strategies that span the entire value chain and growth spectrum – from catalyzing transformational change, creating new platforms, and stepping into capacity-driven dislocations, to partnering with industry participants to meet their long term strategic and investment return targets. Learn more at www.baincapitalinsurance.com

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How Ukraine recreates Soledar Salt Mine, let players compete for prizes, plus donate to restore school hit by Russian missile

—  The Soledar Salt Mine in eastern Ukraine shut down in early 2022 amidst the Russian invasion.  The Ukrainian government recreated it in Minecraft to raise funds to restore a school hit during the war.

 

Justin Ling / Wired:

 

— On Feb. 24, 2022, Stepan Bandrivskyi woke up before dawn and got ready for a special day: his birthday.

 

It wouldn’t be a particularly happy one. Hours earlier, a couple dozen miles away, Russian tanks had rolled across the borders of his native Ukraine. The full-scale invasion had begun.

 

Like so many other Ukrainians, Bandrivskyi didn’t know what to do. So he went to work, to the Soledar Salt Mine, a cavernous state-run operation in Eastern Ukraine. Kyiv says it is the biggest such mine in Europe. His manager told him to go home: The mine was closed. It hasn’t resumed operations since.

Bandrivskyi fled the region not long after, as Russian forces advanced. After nearly a year of fighting, during which the mines were turned into bunkers, Russia seized and occupied the town of Soledar—although fierce fighting continues nearby. Over time, Bandrivskyi came to the painful realization that he may never see the salt mine, and its eerie and isolated beauty, ever again.

 

Last year, Bandrivskyi received a phone call from a colleague. “He invited me to participate in a very interesting project,” he says.

 

The Ukrainian government wanted to completely map the mine “and translate it into a game environment,” he says. Bandrivskyi seized the opportunity. “I wanted to keep it in my memory, and I wanted other people to be able to kind of immerse themselves in this world as well,” he says.

With that, Minesalt was born.

THE IDEA FOR Minesalt comes from United24, the official crowdfunding arm of the Ukrainian government. For nearly two years, United24 has raised funds to rebuild apartment blocks and purchase de-mining equipment. Last year, United24 began shipping batches of salt to donors, through its “Soledarity” campaign—raising some $3 million to purchase reconnaissance drones.

 

But as the war drags into its third year, donor fatigue has set in. That has pushed United24 to come up with new and innovative ways of attracting the world’s attention—and support.

 

Minesalt, which launches last Thursday might be their most inspired effort yet.

 

A recreation of the mine in Minecraft.

 

“It is important for us to remember and talk about every Ukrainian city that is under temporary Russian occupation,” Yaroslava Gres, chief coordinator of United24, told WIRED in a statement. Last summer, when a team suggested bringing Soledar to life as a video game, it was a very easy idea to say yes to.

 

Built for the wildly popular sandbox game Minecraft, Minesaltchallenges players to race through the mine, collecting 140 hidden salt crystals as fast as possible. At the end of the run, a quiz tests players’ recollection of details from Soledar. But, like in the rest of Minecraft, Minesalt players can also opt to wander at their own pace.

 

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Leaders from 20 EU countries sign the Quantum Pact to recognize the importance of quantum tech for enhancement of  Europe’s scientific and industrial competitiveness

—  Thomas Skordas of the European Commission describes the Quantum Pact as the EU’s attempt to make Europe the ‘Quantum Valley’ of the world.

 

 

Vish Gain / Silicon Republic:

 

 

EU leaders have gathered today (22 March) to sign what they are calling a Quantum Pact that recognises the importance of advancing quantum computing technologies to enhance the bloc’s scientific and industrial competitiveness.

 

Quantum computing has been rapidly advancing with major breakthroughs taking place around the world. The emerging technology has potential to transform a range of sectors, including medicine, energy, communications, cybersecurity, space, defence, as well as climate and weather modelling.

 

“It will enable huge productivity gains, revitalise industry and open up new markets, applications and job opportunities,” said Thomas Skordas, deputy director-general responsible for communications networks, content and technology in the European Commission.

 

Skordas was filling in for EU commissioner Thierry Breton at the Shaping Europe’s Quantum Future conference held in Brussels, Belgium today. He describes the Quantum Pact as the EU’s attempt to make Europe the “Quantum Valley” of the world.

 

“Only by building on our strengths, by working together, by being ambitious, by targeting the whole spectrum of activities – research, industry, infrastructures, talent, external partnerships and more – can we transform Europe into the leading region globally for quantum excellence and innovation. Quantum will help us to challenge the boundaries of what is possible.”

 

The event featured keynotes, panel discussions and workshops on EU quantum strategy and was held at the Belgium Institute of Natural Sciences.

 

A declaration was first signed in December, setting the stage for cooperation, investment and innovation in quantum computing technologies in the EU and positioning it as a global leader in the space.

 

The pact today has been signed by 20 European countries: Croatia, Cyprus, Czech Republic, Denmark, Estonia, Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Hungary, Italy, Latvia, the Netherlands, Poland, Romania, Spain, Slovakia, Slovenia, Spain, and Sweden. Ireland has not signed the pact.

 

Last month, the EU and Canada announced intentions to boost their strategic digital partnership to address “new challenges in digital transformation” such as in the areas of AI, quantum science, semiconductors, public policy related to online platforms, secure international connectivity, cybersecurity and digital identity.

 

For quantum science, the regions intend to expand “mutually beneficial collaboration” to improve and accelerate research, development and innovation in the area, while also promoting jobs and the use of quantum tech in the broader economy.

 

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Chinese officials have begun to follow the new PC, laptop, and server guidelines to phase out Intel/AMD processors and Windows from government PCs and servers 

Microsoft’s Windows and foreign database programs also sidelined as Beijing favors Chinese hardware and software

 

 

Financial Times:

 

 

—  China has introduced new guidelines that will mean U.S. microprocessors from Intel and AMD are phased out of government PCs and servers, as Beijing ramps up a campaign to replace foreign technology with homegrown solutions.

 

The stricter government procurement guidance also seeks to sideline Microsoft’s Windows operating system and foreign-made database software in favor of domestic options. It runs alongside a parallel localization drive under way in state-owned enterprises.

 

The latest purchasing rules represent China’s most significant step yet to build up domestic substitutes for foreign technology and echo moves in the U.S. as tensions increase between the two countries. Washington has imposed sanctions on a growing number of Chinese companies on national security grounds, legislated to encourage more tech to be produced in the U.S. and blocked exports of advanced chips and related tools to China.

 

Officials have begun following the new PC, laptop and server guidelines this year, after they were unveiled with little fanfare by the finance ministry and the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology (MIIT) on Dec. 26.

 

They order government agencies and party organs above the township level to include criteria requiring “safe and reliable” processors and operating systems when making purchases.

 

On the same day in December, the state testing agency, China Information Technology Security Evaluation Center, published its first list of “safe and reliable” processors and operating systems, all from Chinese companies.

 

Among the 18 approved processors were chips from Huawei and state-backed group Phytium. Both are on Washington’s export blacklist. Chinese processor makers are using a mixture of chip architectures including Intel’s x86, Arm and homegrown ones, while operating systems are derived from open-source Linux software.

 

Beijing’s procurement revamp is part of a national strategy for technological autarky in the military, government and state sectors that has become known as xinchuang or “IT application innovation.”   The standards “are the first nationwide, detailed and clear instructions for the promotion of xinchuang,” said a local government official managing IT system substitution.

 

State-owned enterprises were similarly told by their overseer, the State-owned Assets Supervision and Administration Commission, to complete a technology transition to domestic providers by 2027, according to two people briefed on the matter.

 

Since last year, state groups have begun quarterly reporting on their progress in revamping their IT systems, though some foreign technology would be allowed to remain, the people said.  The state-led march away from foreign hardware will dent US companies in China, starting with the world’s dominant PC processor makers, Intel and AMD.

 

China was Intel’s largest market last year, providing 27 per cent of its $54bn in sales and 15 per cent of AMD’s $23bn in sales. Microsoft does not break out China sales but president Brad Smith last year told the US Congress that the country provided 1.5 per cent of revenues. Microsoft and Intel declined to comment. AMD did not respond to a request for comment.

 

It may be difficult for Intel or AMD ever to make the list of approved processors. To be evaluated, companies must submit their products’ complete R&D documentation and code. The top criteria for evaluation is the level of design, development and production completed within China, according to a notice from the state testing agency.

 

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DOJ has analysis for against Apple; Sources: Apple to roll out its system to update packaged iPhones’ software for its US stores in April 

Mark Gurman / Bloomberg:

 

 

—  With its lawsuit against Apple, the Justice Department focuses on outdated issues and irrelevant points, missing an opportunity to address more pressing concerns.

— Apple Chief Executive Officer Tim Cook holding an iPhone 15 Pro Max. — Photo by David Paul Morris/Bloomberg

 

Also: Why the company is talking to generative AI partners; Sonos readies a fresh Roam speaker; and Apple prepares a wide rollout of a nifty new retail store feature.

Last week in Power On: Apple’s new CarPlay becomes its last hope to crack the automotive industry.

The Starters

— Merrick Garland, the US attorney general, unveiled the antitrust case against Apple last week. — Photo by Nathan Howard/Bloomberg

Despite the friendly image that Apple Inc. cultivates, it’s a hard-driving company behind the scenes. Just ask the many suppliers that Apple has abruptly dropped or the app developers it has put out of business.

 

Apple also hasn’t been one to welcome openness or competition. It refused to bring its iMessage app to Android phones and only agreed to adopt the cross-platform RCS messaging system under mounting pressure. Apple makes developers use its in-app purchase system, shuns cloud-gaming services and has been reluctant to open up its tap-to-pay chip to outside apps — all because it wants to protect its kingdom from rivals.

That’s provided the US Department of Justice with plenty of fodder for its antitrust lawsuit, which was filed on Thursday. But the case relies mostly on outdated arguments and cites problems that Apple is already resolving. It even levels the dubious claim that Apple makes its products worse in order to harm rivals. (The DOJ also takes credit for Apple’s success, attributing the company’s rise to a Microsoft Corp. antitrust settlement in 2001).

But perhaps the biggest flaw in the case: It does little to prove that Apple has harmed consumers.

The lawsuit claims that the main reason people hold on to their iPhones is because Apple makes it difficult to switch, not because people — I dunno — actually like their iPhones. The DOJ goes as far as to claim that Apple is trying to hurt automakers with a new version of CarPlay that takes over more of the instrument panel. But that service is completely optional for both consumers and auto brands (and, let’s face it, not at risk of being widespread anytime soon).

The government even makes the fairly silly assertion that Apple’s control over the iPhone led to the very public failures of Amazon.com Inc. and Microsoft in smartphones. It argues that cloud-gaming apps were barred in order to sell pricier iPhone hardware and that Apple is responsible for the learning curve that makes it more difficult to switch to Android.

There are very real concerns with some of Apple’s practices. But the Justice Department spends less time on those issues, focusing instead on half-baked claims that suggest a lack of familiarity with modern technology.

 

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How the restructure of Diamond Sports, with lifeline from Amazon, might offer new model for on air local sports fixtures that stream in this digital era

—  A lifeline to the bankrupt Diamond Sports Group might offer a new model for airing local fixtures in the streaming era

 

Financial Times:

 

Diamond Sports Group, a consortium of a few dozen regional sports networks scattered across the U.S., was valued at $11bn as recently as 2019.

 

By the end of last year, however, it was in bankruptcy and near ready to liquidate. What then ensued could be described, in baseball terms, as a bottom-of- the-ninth-inning rally. In a surprise move in January, Amazon agreed to pump in $115mn in cash into Diamond, an infusion that is the centrepiece of a newly-crafted, intricate restructuring plan.

 

If approved by a bankruptcy court in the coming weeks, the deal will allow the broadcaster to continue airing basketball, hockey and baseball fixtures across American cities. The Diamond saga is more than just a run-of-the-mill corporate restructuring. The case has become a proxy war for the future of live sports and television broadcasts in the U.S., as leagues and distributors debate the proposition of when, or even if, live fixtures migrate entirely away from linear television and on to digital streaming platforms.

 

The number of subscribers to cable and satellite pay-TV packages in the US has dipped from about 100mn a decade ago to roughly 60mn today. Diamond’s portfolio of live sports is accessed almost exclusively through cable television packages and its subscriber count has fallen by almost a quarter since it was acquired by Sinclair Broadcast Group from Fox just before the pandemic, near the high-water mark of the pay-TV market. “Sports leagues have to figure out the right pricing models to watch their games,” said longtime media analyst and consultant Brian Wieser.

 

“The risk of getting that wrong is turning into a niche sport like boxing, which decided its best fights would only be on pay-per-view.”

 

At the time of its bankruptcy filing last year, 40 clubs across three major professional sports leagues — Major League Baseball, the National Basketball Association, and the National Hockey League — had contracts with Diamond to air local fixtures.

 

The regional sports network is a quirk of U.S. broadcasting, given the nation’s size and span across four time zones in the contiguous 48 states alone. With multiple MLB, NBA and NHL matches airing simultaneously each night, a cable subscriber in Kansas City wants access to a different 7pm game than a subscriber in Milwaukee. The strongest and largest media markets in the U.S., including in New York, Boston, and Los Angeles, have successful standalone regional sports networks supported by millions of local subscribers.

 

By contrast, Diamond Sports Group consolidated dozens of regional networks in midsize markets from Texas to Florida to Arizona. But the continuing shift from linear broadcast and pay television to digital streaming had shattered Diamond’s business model, which depended on elevated levels of pay-TV subscribers.

 

In the run-up to its 2023 bankruptcy filing, Diamond halted some contractual payments it owed to many of those teams, leaving leagues and club owners scrambling to find emergency broadcasting options, in some cases in the middle of their seasons.  Some, such as the NBA’s Phoenix Suns, yanked their fixtures off Diamond-owned Bally Sports and put the games on free-to-air television. The MLB also took the opportunity to test out something new: pulling the local rights of the Arizona Diamondbacks and San Diego Padres away from the individual clubs and into its own control.

 

Diamond’s creditors, who collectively held $8.9bn debt, were, at the nadir, probably set to recover only a few nickels on the dollar. At one point, the sides had even favoured a “wind-down” plan where Diamond would collect fees for the final 2023-2024 sports season, pay out the meagre proceeds to stakeholders and then cease operations for good. In that scenario, Major League Baseball could then have had the opportunity to centralise individual franchise streaming rights for clubs that had been contracted to Diamond into a league-controlled bundle.

 

MLB declined to comment. Diamond’s bankruptcy advisers approached Amazon as they were exploring their options last year, according to a person familiar with the matter. Diamond bondholders such as Prudential and Hein Park Capital were also scrambling to assemble a go-forward plan that could save their investment. The tech giant saw a strategic opportunity to capture more of the US live sports market, for which it currently has a hodgepodge of rights ranging from Thursday night National Football League games to an assortment of U.S. professional women’s soccer and basketball. Media and technology observers believe Amazon’s sports push has two motivations.

 

First, by adding another plank to its Prime service, it can create more loyalty among customers who are charged nearly $200 a year for free package deliveries as well as streaming video. Second, Amazon in recent years has become a digital advertising powerhouse and the addition of streaming hundreds of games would provide even more inventory to pitch marketers. Amazon declined to comment.

 

By mid-January, Diamond had surprised Wall Street and the sports world by announcing it had struck a deal with a majority of its creditors to stand up a reorganised company. As a part of the deal, Amazon would buy a $115mn convertible note that could swap into 15 per cent of the equity of the new Diamond as well as a separate option to put in another $50mn of equity at a $500mn equity valuation.

 

In addition to the Amazon investment, junior creditors are providing $450mn of bankruptcy process and exit financing that will give them the bulk of the ownership of new Diamond. Sinclair has also agreed to pay Diamond $495mn to settle claims that the parent had siphoned billions in fees and dividends from the subsidiary.

 

Recommended LexStreaming services Disney, Fox and Warner sports streaming platform foreshadows consolidation Premium content However, much of the cash infusion is already spoken for in repayments to senior creditors and money owed to teams. It is also unclear how much critical mass Amazon can really accumulate as Diamond only has the streaming rights for five baseball teams. Diamond will publish its targeted valuation as a reorganised company in the coming weeks.

 

In January, projections disclosed in the Amazon negotiations showed that Diamond expected its linear revenue to fall from $2.5bn to $1.8bn between 2023 and 2026. Streaming revenue, however, is to jump from $50mn to nearly $700mn over that period. These projections may be revised in April to account for any new deals struck.

 

Sports teams will have their respective linear TV agreements with Diamond while five of those baseball teams, as well all Diamond’s more than 25 NBA and NHL franchises, have given the network its streaming rights. This Diamond direct-to-consumer content will be distributed via Amazon Prime. The reorganised Diamond is expected to be valued at about $1bn based on previous debt trading levels and guidance from people close to the deal.

 

For Amazon, the modest investment could, if successful, set a new standard for distributing streaming sport content. One person involved in the Amazon negotiations for Diamond described the deal with the Seattle-based behemoth using a sports analogy: Diamond was like a player with an expiring contract acquired at the midseason trade deadline.

 

If there were long-term synergies, a longer arrangement could be later struck, leaving the interim period as like a trial period. “This way they get to see if there is a cultural fit,” said this adviser. “Amazon loves live sports. The deal puts them in position to be the provider down the road.”

 

 

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Some TikTok fans in India still question its gov’t 2020 decision to ban the app, not satisfied with others like YouTube Shorts and Instagram Reels due to lack of similar allure 

—  Young adults in India who came of age on the app are still angry at their government 

 

Wall Street Journal:

 

—  NEW DELHI — Gayatari Mohanty always wanted to be a dancer.

 

But her father, who washes cars for a living, and her mother, a domestic helper, didn’t have enough money for lessons. So the 19-year-old New Delhi native taught herself.

— PHOTO: T. Narayan/BLOOMBERG NEWS Artists at a pop-up studio for collaborating creators and artists inside Meta’s offices in Gurugram, India, in 2022.

One day in 2019, Mohanty discovered TikTok. She and a friend were drawn to the platform’s lighthearted videos. They often rushed home from school to upload clips of Mohanty’s spirited dancing to retro Bollywood songs from the 1960s and 70s.

Soon Mohanty had gained some 5,000 followers. That didn’t make her a star or earn her any money, but it was enough to boost her confidence.

“My skill gave me my biggest achievement in life,” she said. “TikTok became my stage where I could show my dancing skills and get appreciated for it.”

That all ended suddenly the next year, when India’s government banned the Chinese short video-sharing titan, citing cybersecurity concerns.

“It felt like a personal loss, like someone close to me was no more,” she said.

The South Asian nation provides a case study in what happens when the wildly popular service goes away, as it might in the U.S. A bipartisan bill that sailed through the House this month would force parent company ByteDance to sell the platform’s U.S. operations or face a ban. President Biden has said he supports such legislation, which will now go to the Senate, where its fate is uncertain.

— PHOTO: Dhiraj Singh/BLOOMBERG NEWS Some TikTok fans in India say rival domestic services aren’t as appealing.

ByteDance was founded in Beijing, and some worry that Chinese authorities could compel the company to turn over TikTok data on American users. TikTok has said it hasn’t received any such requests and wouldn’t comply if it did.

ByteDance didn’t respond to queries about its ban in India or a potential ban in the U.S.

Some TikTok fans in India question the decision to kick out the social-media app. New Delhi undertook the move because it feared the Chinese-owned app, along with others such as messaging app

WeChat, could be used to harm India’s defenses, a senior government official said at the time. The move came after a border clash between troops from the two countries left 20 Indian soldiers dead.

 

Mohanty was one of around 150 million people who used the app every month in India then, according to market-intelligence firm Sensor Tower. It was TikTok’s largest market by users at the time.

Today, some of the platform’s fans in the South Asian country still mourn its absence. They say rival Indian services that sprung up in TikTok’s wake aren’t as appealing. While new short-video offerings from YouTube and Instagram have offered alternatives, some feel they lack TikTok’s allure. And some fans are still angry at the government for booting out TikTok.

Mohanty didn’t use any other social-media platforms beyond TikTok at the time of its ban. After a year without the service, she tried a local TikTok clone, called Moj, which launched the month after TikTok was ousted. But she says it proved harder to use, and uploading videos was more difficult.

“We feel a little lost since the ban” four years ago, said her friend, 18-year-old Moni Sharma. “We have been struggling to adjust to alternate apps.” Sharma has accounts on YouTube and Instagram, but says that it is harder to lip sync to songs on those platforms and that they have gained fewer followers there.

“It’s likely that U.S. users will follow in India’s footsteps should TikTok be banned,” flocking to short-video equivalents from YouTube and Instagram, said Jasmine Enberg, a principal analyst at Insider Intelligence.

— PHOTO: Sunil Kataria/REUTERS Residents of an Indian village film a scene in 2022 for a social drama for their YouTube channel.
   

Americans are more likely to already use YouTube today than they are to use Instagram, so Instagram could see additional adoption because it has more room to grow, said Simon Kemp, founder of digital consulting firm Kepios.

Today, Moj and another local TikTok-like app, Josh, now have a combined 641 million downloads in India, according to Sensor Tower. Monthly active users for Instagram have risen 91% to 511 million since TikTok’s ban, while YouTube’s are up 55% to 653 million.

The ban has sparked questions over free speech similar to those being raised in the U.S. now.

“India is a free and democratic country and authorities can’t just force decisions and restrict freedom of speech and expression just because you have political disagreements with another country,” said 18-year-old Noushad Ali, who used to make TikTok videos about teenage romance.

“Why did the Indian government ban it?” asked Ritik Tannk, a former TikTok creator who made comedy videos, one of which garnered 16 million views. “Our data gets passed on through other apps also, like Facebook and YouTube. Why ban just TikTok for data privacy?”

India’s Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology didn’t respond to a request for comment.

Some former TikTok users have moved on. Twenty-year-old Shivam, who goes by one name, never had an account on TikTok, but he used to spend at least four hours a day watching comedy videos on the service.

He and his friends would hardly socialize with classmates who weren’t into the app, he said. “It felt cool to be talking about TikTok—what you had watched or who was the most popular,” he said. “In a way you can say it was also under peer influence that I wanted to be connected to TikTok.”

 
 — Ritik Tannk, a former TikTok creator who made popular comedy videos, says he doesn’t understand why TikTok was banned in India. Ramesh Gupta, seen pouring tea at his New Delhi snack shop, once did a brisk business selling food and drinks to TikTok fans making videos nearby, but sales have fallen since the ban. (L) Ritik Tannk, (R) Ramesh Gupta

 

Now Shivam watches YouTube Shorts, Instagram Reels and videos on Moj. In retrospect, he says, TikTok was mostly just a reason to hang out with friends.

One of Shivam’s friends, 19 year-old Satyam Sinha, had a TikTok account but only amassed a couple of hundred subscribers. He made silly videos, eating burgers in a funny way or mimicking dialogue from a Hindi-language movie.

“I felt like I was being given some sort of recognition by unknown people,” he said. “It made me feel good about myself.”

When TikTok was banned, he mourned the loss for a few months, but quickly moved to other services like Reels and Moj. “We can’t keep crying all our lives,” he said.

TikTok’s absence in India is felt by local vendors working in New Delhi’s Connaught Place, a shopping district where crowds of creators once gathered to shoot their videos.

Ramesh Gupta runs a snack shop in the area. His sales have fallen about 20% since the TikTok ban, he said. He enjoyed watching young men and women with colorful hair and shiny sunglasses dance and sing, and liked serving them meals when they rested between shots.

“They would break for lunch and have tea and snacks like noodles, samosas and cutlets at my shop,” he said.

“Those days are gone now.”

 

 

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— Techmeme

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Chemical engineer, Kara Branch, 34, travels the US to put more Black girls into STEM education and careers

Kara Branch, 34, is an award-winning chemical engineer and founder of Black Girls Do Engineer, a nonprofit dedicated to getting more Black and Brown girls into STEM (science, technology, engineering, mathematics) through the power of access, representation, hands-on education, mentorship and scholarships.

Chemical engineer, Kara Branch, 34, gives back to STEM education for Black girls with her program, Black Girls Do Engineer, BGDE.
PHOTO: BGDE Middle school members working in their science lab

 

Growing up in a single parent home with limited resources, Kara fought her way into high school honors programs, eventually earning a scholarship to attend HBCU Prairie View A&M University. An engineering major, Kara found that she was one of only a handful of women in her program, and in many of her classes, she was the only Black woman in the room. Throughout her subsequent engineering career, she has seen this disturbing trend continue, often being the only Black woman in important rooms she steps into.

 

The statistics back up her experience. According to the National Science Foundation, “as of 2023 only 35% of people in the STEM workforce are women, 5% are women of color, and a miniscule 2.9% are Black women.” (new.nsf.gov)

 

Kara believes this comes down to a lack of representation and mentorship, lack of access to quality STEM programs, and financial constraints for families in underserved communities.

 

In 2019, she launched the 501c3 nonprofit, Black Girls Do Engineer, an application-based educational program for girls in K through college to learn about and participate in STEM programs led by successful working professionals in these fields who look like them.

 

Black Girls Do Engineer program is vitally important

 

PHOTO: BGDE members at Greentown Labs Accelerator in Houston, Texas
PHOTO: BGDE members attending a STEM lecture

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Demand for professionals across Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics is skyrocketing and it is expected to continue to soar, especially as A.I. expands. According to this 2023 CNBC article, “STEM jobs remain among the highest in-demand jobs overall with STEM-related jobs pay over $100,000, especially mathematics and computer positions.” The article also states that “STEM-related jobs are expected to increase by nearly 800,000 by 2031.”

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Brands ride the wave of video ads to revolutionize growth

In the digital age, it is crucial to optimize short-form video content for mobile, where 75% of people prefer viewing it.

 

Platforms like YouTube, TikTok, and Facebook have made mobile videos accessible and engaging, emphasizing the need for brands to prioritize mobile-friendly formats.

 

“This paradigm shift toward video marketing strategies underscores a fundamental transformation in how brands connect with their audience,” explains Derek Chew, CEO of Fullmoon Digital. “In today’s dynamic landscape, passive advertising falls short; consumers now actively seek interactive and compelling content that resonates on a deeper level.”

 

These strategies reflect a growing trend in digital marketing strategies for businesses – the importance of authenticity and transparency. They help brands boost visibility and build consumer loyalty, leading to sustained revenue growth.

 

“Through dynamic video ads, brands can craft immersive experiences that go beyond simply capturing the attention of consumers,” concludes Chew.

 

Derek Chew is an expert on how video ads can boost brand visibility, enhance consumer loyalty, and drive business growth, positioning businesses to effectively tackle the challenges of the digital marketing landscape.

 

About Fullmoon Digital

Fullmoon Digital Media, founded by Derek Chew, a former early Yahoo! employee, is one of the few 100% independent digital marketing agencies in the United States. The firm is cross-functional, with deep experience in media planning and buying, digital consultancy, SEO, digital strategy, programmatic, analytics, performance marketing, paid media, social advertising, and creative. They push the envelope of what is possible in terms of marketing and technology, all the while providing best-in-class digital marketing service to their “pack” of clients. For more information, please visit www.fullmoondigital.com