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LIMA Technology Center warehouse project starts construction with cost estimated at P950 million

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Amplefield Malvar, Inc. has started building a P950-million warehouse complex at the LIMA Technology Center in Batangas, the Philippine Economic Zone Authority (PEZA) said.

PEZA said in a social media post that groundbreaking for the warehouse project took place on Dec. 17, coinciding with the 30th anniversary of CAM Connectivity (Phils.), Inc., an affiliate of Amplefield Malvar and a PEZA-registered enterprise.

The project involves the construction of 13 warehouses intended for sale or lease to PEZA-registered enterprises.

According to PEZA, the development is expected to significantly expand quality industrial space for export-oriented and supply-chain-driven locators.

PEZA Director General Tereso O. Panga, who was present at the groundbreaking, said the project highlights the agency’s commitment to supporting investors. — Vonn Andrei E. Villamiel

No regrets for Norwood after premature exit during final season

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It’s the opposite of what he hoped for but Rain or Shine veteran Gabe Norwood isn’t harboring ill feelings after a quarterfinal exit marred his final bow.

After all, Norwood’s 17-year career in the PBA – all with the Elasto Painters – is filled with a lot of great memories.

“I mentally pictured this (last game) differently, I thought it was going to be a championship and you know kind of a more joyful situation But I’ve been blessed. I can’t complain at all,” he said.

Norwood, who turned 40 in February, tagged the Season 50 Philippine Cup as his “Final Flight.” The 6-foot-6 swingman is leaving behind a legacy highlighted by two PBA championships, inclusion to the All Star Game 11 times, All-Star Game MVP and Defensive Player of the Year accolades in 2010, Rookie of the Year and Mythical Second Team in 2009, the PBA All-Defensive Team seven times and the Sportsmanship Award three times.

“He’s the epitome of loyalty and decency and being a true professional,” said coach Yeng Guiao of Norwood. “Madalas ko sabihin na wala kang maipipintas kay Gabe, eh, kahit sa anong bagay.”

“I pride myself as a pretty loyal person, especially if loyalty (is) shown to me and  Rain or Shine  did  that since Day One. Winning isn’t easy in the PBA and I think we all understand the difficulties that may come with resources and things like that.   But Rain or Shine finds ways to compete. And I take a lot of pride in that. I play for underdogs my whole career. I like being the underdog, but it makes winning that much more special, said Norwood.

They may have fallen short of giving Norwood a happy exit but the E-Painters will honor him by retiring his familiar No. 10.

“We actually proposed to retire his number, as a sign of recognition and respect for what he’s done. I think management would be very willing to do that,” said Guiao.

Prior to his swan song, Norwood was serving ROS as an assistant coach. Guiao said it’s up to the ROS lifer if he wants to continue in this capacity.

Norwood is open but for now, fatherhood is his main job.

“I want to definitely stay around the game, with Batang Gilas as of now and see where that goes, on the coaching side,” he said.

“But ultimately I got to be the best dad I can be. Put my kids in the best situation they can be in to grow as young men, maximize their talents and what they’re into. So that’s my first priority and then anything after that is, you know, just   icing on the cake. So family first and figure out the basketball stuff.” — Olmin Leyba

Pop Mart shares slump after reports of waning demand for Labubu toys

A wall of Labubu dolls on display at Pop Mart International Group Ltd.’s “Monsters by Monsters, Now and Then” show in Shanghai, China, on Oct. 15, 2025. — QILAI SHEN/BLOOMBERG

Pop Mart International Group Ltd shares slid the most in three weeks after media reports of waning reseller demand for its Labubu toys dented investor sentiment.

Shares of the Hong Kong-listed firm dropped as much as 6.2% on Tuesday, making it one of the worst performers on the MSCI Asia Pacific Index. The selloff followed reports that some scalpers had paused buying Labubus after price swings in China’s secondary market signaled weakening appetite.

The reports are the latest hit to investor confidence in Pop Mart, which had staged one of the most dramatic market rallies in recent history thanks to its trendy dolls. But softening prices and data suggesting weaker-than-expected holiday season sales abroad have fueled doubts over the brand’s staying power.

“With lingering investor worries that Pop Mart’s product buzz may be cooling, such reports of waning demand tend to hit the shares hard,” said Kenny Ng, a strategist at China Everbright Securities International Co Ltd.

That slump, which started in August, has sent shares tumbling by some 44% and wiped out more than $25 billion in market value. Still, Pop Mart’s shares are still up more than double this year and the company is valued at roughly four times larger than peer Sanrio Co.

Toy resale platform Qiandao shows the average prices of full sets of mini Labubus or the Big Into Energy series have fallen below official retail levels.

Amid softening demand, Pop Mart is betting on other intellectual property characters to replicate the success of its Labubu dolls, including its Crybaby line, which held an exhibit in Shanghai this month, as well as its Twinkle Twinkle and Hirono dolls.

Some investors may also be rotating out China’s “new consumption” stocks to lock in profit, said Morningstar Inc. analyst Jeff Zhang. Chinese jewelry maker Laopu Gold Co. declined more than 6% on Tuesday while bubble tea chain Mixue Group dropped nearly 4%. — Bloomberg

Dizon, BCDA refute flood control ‘insertion’ allegations

DEPARTMENT of Public Works and Highways (DPWH) Secretary Vivencio “Vince” B. Dizon speaks during a press briefing with the Malacañang Press Corps on Sept. 1, 2025. — PHILIPPINE STAR/RYAN BALDEMOR

The Department of Public Works and Highways (DPWH) denied Secretary Vivencio B. Dizon made budget insertions for flood control projects, dismissing a Batangas Rep. Leandro Antonio L. Leviste’s claim as “baseless and malicious.”

“The BCDA (Bases Conversion and Development Authority), which Secretary [Vivencio B.] Dizon formerly headed, has already issued a clear statement that it has no flood control projects that are funded through budget insertions, ‘allocable funds’,” the department said in a statement on Tuesday.

In a separate statement, BCDA said it has no flood control projects funded through budget insertions or any discretionary source.

“No such funds exist within BCDA projects or its authority. Claims to the contrary are unsupported by evidence and false,” it said, noting that all its projects were funded only through approved government programs.

Its records are fully complete, traceable, and auditable, ensuring that project funding, approvals, procurement, and disbursements remain open to oversight institutions, the BCDA added.

“BCDA enforces zero tolerance for corruption through strict compliance with the law, multi-layered legal and audit review, standardized frameworks that limit discretion, and close coordination with oversight bodies, and welcomes fact-based review and investigation,” it said.

The DPWH and BCDA issued the statement after Mr. Leviste accused Mr. Dizon of making budget insertions for flood control projects under BCDA.

“The timing of Mr. Leviste’s allegations also raises suspicion after reports of some DPWH staff surfaced, accusing the lawmaker of forcefully and illegally getting files from the late Undersecretary Catalina E. Cabral,” DPWH said.

SUB-CONTRACTOR LINKS
In response, Mr. Leviste asked the agencies investigating the scandal to probe Mr. Dizon’s connections with contractors, particularly the Lourel Development Corporation, which was sub-contracted for the P11.5-billion New Clark City Project.

“I hope that Sec. Vince will forgive me for this, but I just need to respond to his statement that there is no basis to BCDA having had a flood control project,” Mr. Leviste said in a statement, shared on his official Facebook page on Tuesday.

He said the sub-contractor for the project, flagged by the Commission on Audit for failing to undergo public bidding, was a company that belonged to the family of a Party-list representative who is currently being investigated by the DPWH.

Mr. Leviste also noted the said lawmaker, who has yet to face a complaint, allegedly met with Mr. Dizon in New Clark City when he was still the Transportation secretary. The meeting was set by a Public Works undersecretary.

“I don’t want to draw any conclusions, but I think the public deserves to know what the dealings of flood control investigators are with any of the people they are currently investigating,” Mr. Leviste said.

Mr. Leviste also said he received information from DPWH whistleblowers involving the agency’s new leadership and the 2026 national budget. — Ashley Erika O. Jose

Manila supports Thailand-Cambodia ceasefire

A girl eats a meal at Chong Kal refugee camp on Dec. 11, 2025 after evacuation amid deadly clashes between Thailand and Cambodia along a disputed border area in Chong Kal, Oddar Meanchey Province, Cambodia. — REUTERS

THE PHILIPPINES said that it supports the new ceasefire agreement between Thailand and Cambodia following a special border meeting between the two countries, the Department of Foreign Affairs (DFA) said.

“The Philippines fully supports the latest move by Cambodia and Thailand to return to a ceasefire and acknowledges the desire of both parties to return to dialogue and seek a peaceful and durable means to resolve the issue,” the DFA said in a statement on Monday night.

The second ceasefire was reached during a Special General Border Committee (GBC) between the two countries, held at the border between Pruk (Pailin Province of Cambodia) and Ban Park Krad (Chanthaburi Province of Thailand).

The DFA said that both Southeast Asian countries released a joint statement renewing their ceasefire agreement.

According to a Reuters report, the two countries reached an armistice signed by Thai Defense Minister Natthaphon Narkphanit and Cambodian Defense Minister Tea Seiha. It took effect on Dec. 27

The agreement was reached following a heated border conflict, with both sides launching airstrikes and heavy artillery. Local authorities said that deaths reached more than 100.

The Philippines said earlier that it is ready to act as a mediator between Thailand and Cambodia once it formally assumes chairmanship of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) in 2026.

Manila is set to host the ASEAN summit next year. the country assumed the position a year earlier than scheduled due to the political unrest in Myanmar.

Member states are expected to tackle several security concerns during the summit next year. Among these are the Thailand-Cambodia border conflict, the Myanmar’s junta-led government causing humanitarian concerns, and the intensifying disputes in the South China Sea involving China and the Philippines, and other member states. — Adrian H. Halili

Labor programs reached more than 2.3M workers, DoLE says

CITYOFSANPEDROLAGUNA.GOV.PH

The Department of Labor and Employment (DoLE) said its livelihood and emergency employment programs reached more than 2.3 million workers in the first 11 months of 2025, as the agency expanded inter-agency convergence efforts to support vulnerable sectors.

Citing a report by the Bureau of Workers with Special Concerns, the department said in a statement that it disbursed a total of P14.3 billion from January to November for the Tulong Panghanapbuhay sa Ating Disadvantaged Workers (TUPAD) and the DoLE Integrated Livelihood Program (DILP), also known as the Kabuhayan Program.

Over this period, TUPAD provided short-term employment assistance to over 2.2 million beneficiaries, well above its full-year target of 1.4 million workers. The Kabuhayan Program, in turn, supported 73,097 individuals, exceeding its 2025 goal by more than 50%.

The department said a significant portion of the assistance was directed to disaster-affected communities, with about 379,192 workers receiving P2.1 billion under TUPAD following earthquakes, volcanic eruptions, and typhoons, while the Kabuhayan Program provided P22.5 million in livelihood support to 2,247 beneficiaries.

“TUPAD and the Kabuhayan Program continue to provide critical support to vulnerable communities, helping not just individual workers but also contributing to sustainable local development,” the DoLE said.

The agency attributed the wider reach of TUPAD to its convergence with other national government agencies, allowing beneficiaries to be deployed in projects related to agriculture, education, disaster response, environmental protection, and climate resilience.

“Through these convergence-driven accomplishments, the Department continues to advance inclusive employment, build community resilience, and deliver programs that directly support the administration’s goal of uplifting Filipino families nationwide,” it said. — Erika Mae P. Sinaking

House to adopt blockchain tech in 2026, Speaker says

FREEPIK

The House of Representatives will adopt blockchain technology and go paperless next year, which could make the chamber the first legislative body in Asia to use the system, Speaker Faustino “Bojie” Dy III said on Tuesday.

He said the digital shift would strengthen transparency and improve public trust in government as the country reels from a multi‑ billion-peso kickback scandal over rigged flood control contracts

“We are doing this because we believe that transparency is not merely an aspiration or a slogan; it must be practiced and lived,” Mr. Dy said in a statement, adding that the Department of Information and Communications Technology will help in setting up the system.

Lawmakers are considering a national digital ledger bill to track government spending in real time, as calls for transparency grow amid a political scandal that could be the largest faced by President Ferdinand R. Marcos, Jr. in his six-year term.

The scandal alleged several politicians, officials and private contractors connived to divert hundreds of billions of pesos from flood control projects. — Kenneth Christiane L. Basilio

PHL telecom, pay-TV revenues seen growing 3.8% annually to 2029

GLOBE.COM.PH

Revenue from Philippine telecommunications and pay-television services is projected to grow at a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 3.8% over the next four years, driven by continued network expansion and rising internet protocol television (IPTV) subscriptions, according to intelligence and productivity platform GlobalData.

In a media release, GlobalData said the country’s telecom and pay-TV services revenue is expected to rise to $9.7 billion in 2029 from $8 billion in 2024, largely supported by the mobile data and fixed broadband segments.

“While 4G service accounted for a majority share of the total mobile subscriptions in 2024, 5G service will see massive increase in its adoption in coming years and will become the leading mobile technology generation, by subscriber base in 2029,” GlobalData Telecom Analyst Kantipudi Pradeepthi said in a report.

For Rizal Commercial Banking Corp. Chief Economist Michael L. Ricafort, competition within the industry will be a key theme for growth, in line with expected investments by technology companies in data centers and artificial intelligence (AI).

“New technologies and innovation could lead to potential game-changers and market disrupters in their respective industries,” he said in a Viber message.

According to GlobalData’s Philippine telecom operators country intelligence report, mobile service revenue is expected to decline during the forecast period due to falling mobile voice service average revenue per user (ARPU).

The report attributed the decline to the shift toward internet- or application-based communication platforms, as well as operators offering free voice bundles as part of their service packages.

“This growth in 5G adoption will be driven by the ongoing 5G network expansion efforts by operators across the country,” Ms. Pradeepthi said.

Mobile data revenue, however, is expected to sustain growth at a CAGR of 7.1% during the forecast period, GlobalData said, driven by rising internet subscriptions, including 5G services.

For fixed communication services, fixed voice revenue is expected to decline amid falling circuit-switched subscriptions, the report said. 

In contrast, fixed broadband service revenue is projected to expand due to rising ARPU for fiber-to-the-home (FTTH) services.

“The growing adoption of FTTH broadband services in the Philippines can be attributed to the increasing demand for high-speed broadband services and the ongoing fiber network coverage expansion efforts by operators,” Ms. Pradeepthi said, citing Converge ICT Solutions, Inc.’s planned expansion of ports to support growth.

Converge ICT’s net income rose 8.4% to P8.90 billion in the January-to-September period from P8.21 billion a year earlier, while revenues for the nine months climbed 10.12% to P32.97 billion from P29.94 billion.

Pay-TV services revenue is also projected to increase steadily over the forecast period, supported by strong IPTV adoption and the continued expansion of direct-to-home subscriptions.

GlobalData said Globe Telecom, Inc. and PLDT Inc. are expected to remain market leaders by subscription share during the forecast period, supported by their focus on mobile network expansion and modernization initiatives.

“PLDT’s leadership in the fixed broadband segment will be driven by extensive fiber network coverage and a growing FTTH subscriber base,” Ms. Pradeepthi said.

For the nine months ended September, both Globe and PLDT reported declines in attributable net income. Globe’s attributable net income fell 14.04% to P17.69 billion from P20.58 billion, while revenues slipped to P131.59 billion from P134.74 billion.

PLDT’s attributable net income declined 10.69% to P25.07 billion, while revenues rose 1.45% to P163.28 billion from P160.94 billion.

Toby Allan C. Arce, head of sales trading at Globalinks Securities and Stocks, Inc., said the Philippine telecommunications industry is likely to post modest growth by yearend, citing data demand and competitive dynamics as key growth drivers. — Ashley Erika O. Jose

US economy to ride tax cut tailwind but faces risks

A woman carries shopping bags in Manhattan in New York City, Aug. 11, 2025. — REUTERS/EDUARDO MUNOZ

A see-saw year for the US economy in 2025 looks set to give way to a stronger 2026 thanks to tailwinds from President Donald Trump’s tax cuts, less uncertainty around tariffs, the ongoing artificial intelligence boom and a late-year run of interest-rate reductions from the Federal Reserve.

Among the biggest drivers of a pickup in growth, economists say, are fatter tax refunds and smaller tax withholdings on paychecksUS that are expected to provide a lift to consumer spending, the backbone of the American economy.

Trump’s One Big Beautiful Bill also gives companies a range of credits and tax breaks, including the ability to fully write off expenses from investments, that may fuel capital spending beyond data centers and other AI-related areas.

“The boost from fiscal stimulus alone could add one-half percent or more to first quarter GDP growth,” wrote KPMG chief economist Diane Swonk.

At the same time, the impact of Trump’s tariffs on prices is projected to peak in the first half of the year. If price pressures then recede, as Fed policymakers increasingly believe they will, wages will have more room to outpace inflation, bolstering household finances further.

Meanwhile business spending on the infrastructure that powers AI, a key component of economic growth in 2025, looks poised to continue as mega technology firms such as Amazon and Google parent Alphabet promise more investments ahead.

The upshot: a better outlook for businesses stuck for much of this past year in a “low-hire, low-fire” mode as they sought to weather Trump’s disruptive trade policies and aggressive immigration crackdown.

“We expect fading policy uncertainty, the boost from tax cuts and the recent loosening of monetary policy to mean the economy strengthens in 2026,” said Oxford Economics analyst Michael Pierce.

‘HEADWINDS ARE ABATING’
A stronger economy was a core promise of Trump’s presidential election campaign, but as he began his second term in the White House early this year the economy shrank amid the rollout of his unexpectedly aggressive tariffs. The average US import levy shot to nearly 17% in Trump’s first year from less than 3% at the end of 2024, according to Yale Budget Lab.

Growth rebounded in the second quarter as the contours of his trade policies became clearer and businesses and households began to adjust. It accelerated further in the third quarter to a 4.3% annualized pace as Americans, particularly those with higher incomes who benefited from the runup in the stock market, increased spending and companies poured money into AI.

Economists expect fourth-quarter growth to slow substantially, reflecting the impact of the six-week federal government shutdown that began October 1, but with the reopening that drag will reverse in the new year.

“Growth in 2025 has been resilient despite a substantial drag from trade and immigration policy,” Nomura economists wrote. “Now these headwinds are abating at the same time fiscal and monetary policy are becoming stimulative.”

There are many risks: A weakening labor market, still-elevated inflation, and a central bank deeply divided over which of those dueling problems to focus on.

Meanwhile Trump is poised to pick a new Fed chair to take over when Jerome Powell’s term ends in May. Whoever he picks is universally expected to push for lower interest rates.

This year the US job market steadily slowed, with monthly job gains down sharply from what they were a year ago and the unemployment rate ticking up, key reasons that Fed policymakers did coalesce around a string of interest-rate cuts in the final months of the year. The unemployment rate was 4.6% in November, though economists said the reading was distorted by the lack of data collection during the government shutdown.

Stubbornly elevated inflation may limit further rate cuts next year.

While third-quarter inflation was much more muted than expected, economists say it was not a clear indicator and likely understated real price pressures. Meanwhile it will take months to bear out whether tariff-driven goods inflation will indeed fade as many policymakers now expect.

Household concerns over the weaker job market – evident in the latest data from the Conference Board showing a deterioration in consumers’ perceptions of the labor market to levels last seen in early 2021 – have some economists predicting families will save rather than spend the extra money from the Trump tax cuts.

And while businesses may gain from investment in AI if it helps them do more with fewer people, employees and job-seekers may not benefit in the same way.

“We expect the unemployment rate to stabilize at 4.5% as hiring picks up on the back of stronger final demand growth,” wrote Goldman Sachs’ economist David Mericle. “Further labor market softening is the largest downside risk to our forecast because hiring is starting from a weak place and the promise of AI might restrain it further.” — Reuters

Bondi gunmen acted alone, no evidence they were part of militant cell, Australian police say

People gather at the floral tribute at Bondi Beach to honor the victims of a mass shooting targeting a Hanukkah celebration on Sunday at Bondi Beach in Sydney, Australia. — REUTERS

SYDNEY — Two gunmen who allegedly opened fire on a Jewish celebration on Sydney’s Bondi Beach earlier this month acted alone and there was “no evidence” they were part of a militant cell, police said on Tuesday.

Naveed Akram and his father Sajid Akram are alleged to have killed 15 people at a Hanukkah event on December 14, Australia’s worst mass shooting in almost three decades that shocked the nation and led to immediate reforms of already strict gun laws.

Police have previously said the men were inspired by Islamic State, with home made flags of the militant group found in their car after the attack, and a month-long trip by the pair to a Philippines island previously plagued by militancy a major focus of investigation.

But on Tuesday, Australian Federal Police Commissioner Krissy Barrett said there was no indication the men had received formal training on the November trip to Mindanao in the Philippines.

“There is no evidence to suggest these alleged offenders were part of a broader terrorist cell, or were directed by others to carry out an attack,” Ms. Barrett told a news conference.

She added the findings were an initial assessment, and authorities in Australia and the Philippines were continuing their investigation.

“I am not suggesting that they were there for tourism,” she said, referring to the Philippines trip.

Sajid Akram was shot dead by police during the attack, while his son Naveed, who was also shot by police, was charged with 59 offenses after waking from a days-long coma earlier this month. Naveed Akram faces charges ranging from 15 counts of murder to terror and explosives offenses. — Reuters

Admit it, you’re in a relationship with AI

A screen reads ‘AI’ in reference to artificial intelligence in this file photo. — REUTERS/CARLOS BARRIA/FILE PHOTO

By Parmy Olson

Amelia Miller has an unusual business card. When I saw the title of “Human-AI Relationship Coach” at a recent technology event, I presumed she was capitalizing on the rise of chatbot romances to make those strange bonds stronger. It turned out the opposite was true. Artificial intelligence tools were subtly manipulating people and displacing their need to ask others for advice. That was having a detrimental impact on real relationships with humans.

Miller’s work started in early 2025 when she was interviewing people for a project with the Oxford Internet Institute, and speaking to a woman who’d been in a relationship with ChatGPT for more than 18 months. The woman shared her screen on Zoom to show ChatGPT, which she’d given a male name, and in what felt like a surreal moment Miller asked both parties if they ever fought. They did, sort of. Chatbots were notoriously sycophantic and supportive, but the female interviewee sometimes got frustrated with her digital partner’s memory constraints and generic statements. 

Why didn’t she just stop using ChatGPT?

The woman answered that she had come too far and couldn’t “delete him.” 

“It’s too late,” she said.

That sense of helplessness was striking. As Miller spoke to more people it became clear that many weren’t aware of the tactics AI systems used to create a false sense of intimacy, from frequent flattery to anthropomorphic cues that made them sound alive.

This was different from smartphones or TV screens. Chatbots, now being used by more than a billion people around the globe, are imbued with character and humanlike prose. They excel at mimicking empathy and, like social media platforms, are designed to keep us coming back for more with features like memory and personalization. While the rest of the world offers friction, AI-based personas are easy, representing the next phase of “parasocial relationships,” where people form attachments to social media influencers and podcast hosts.

Like it or not, anyone who uses a chatbot for work or their personal life has entered a relationship of sorts with AI, for which they ought to take better control.

Miller’s concerns echo some of the warnings from academics and lawyers looking at human-AI attachment, but with the addition of concrete advice. First, define what you want to use AI for. Miller calls this process the writing of your “Personal AI Constitution,” which sounds like consultancy jargon but contains a tangible step: changing how ChatGPT talks to you. She recommends entering the settings of a chatbot and altering the system prompt to reshape future interactions.

For all our fears of AI, the most popular new tools are more customizable than social media ever was. You can’t tell TikTok to show you fewer videos of political rallies or obnoxious pranks, but you can go into the “Custom Instructions” feature of ChatGPT to tell it exactly how you want it to respond. Succinct, professional language that cuts out the bootlicking is a good start. Make your intentions for AI clearer and you’re less likely to be lured into feedback loops of validation that lead you to think your mediocre ideas are fantastic, or worse.

The second part doesn’t involve AI at all but rather making a greater effort to connect with real-life humans, building your “social muscles” as if going to a gym. One of Miller’s clients had a long commute, which he would spend talking to ChatGPT on voice mode. When she suggested making a list of people in his life that he could call instead, he didn’t think anyone would want to hear from him.

“If they called you, how would you feel?” she asked.

“I would feel good,” he admitted.

Even the innocuous reasons people turn to chatbots can weaken those muscles, in particular asking AI for advice, one of the top use cases for ChatGPT. The act of seeking advice isn’t just an information exchange but a relationship builder too, requiring vulnerability on the part of the initiator.

Doing that with technology means that over time, people resist the basic social exchanges that are needed to make deeper connections. “You can’t just pop into a sensitive conversation with a partner or family member if you don’t practice being vulnerable [with them] in more low-stakes ways,” Miller says.

As chatbots become a helpful confidante for millions, people should take advantage of their ability to take greater control. Configure ChatGPT to be direct, and seek advice from real people rather than an AI model that will validate ideas. The future looks far more bland otherwise. — Bloomberg

Grab, HOPE break ground on new classroom in Bicol

Grab Philippines and HOPE have officially broken ground on the first classroom to be built at Inang Maharang Elementary School. Shown here are Grab Philippines Country Head Ronald Roda (left), and HOPE Founder and Executive Chairperson Nanette Medved-Po.

Grab Philippines and HOPE have broken ground on a new public school classroom in Manito, Albay, after raising about P1.4 million through in-app donations that turned everyday rides, meal deliveries, and rewards points into funding for education infrastructure.

The funding came from a combination of user-donated GrabRewards points through GrabBayanihan, which allowed customers to channel “GrabCoins” to the project; and a dedicated “Grab HOPE Hour” drive that generated additional donations from GrabCar rides and GrabFood deliveries during a designated 60-minute window.

The classroom will be built inside Inang Maharang Elementary School, which serves more than 100 students in the remote barangays of Manito. The site was selected after Typhoon Uwan damaged public facilities in the area and destroyed two makeshift classrooms at the school, the partners said, leaving students without safe learning spaces and underscoring the need for more permanent, resilient structures.

Grab Philippines Country Head Ronald Roda shares, “Grab is dedicated to moving not just goods and people, but also moving malasakit into action. Together with HOPE, we’re giving our users a simple way to participate in digital bayanihan, turning their everyday rides, deliveries, and rewards into real classrooms. These are new safe spaces where Filipino children can learn, dream, and grow. By making it easier for communities to support these initiatives, we help build a stronger foundation for the country’s next generation.”

The Grab and HOPE classroom is designed as a 7-by-9-meter learning space with four windows, wall-mounted electric fans, complete electrical wiring with outlets and lighting fixtures, and an in-room bathroom with full plumbing. It will also include standard interior fixtures such as a teacher’s desk and a chalkboard.

HOPE Founder and Executive Chairperson Nanette Medved-Po underscored how the partnership is a major part of HOPE’s programs and is giving significant impact on public school education. “We are so excited about the ways we can continue to work with the Grab community to give their contribution and make an impact to public school education in the Philippines. HOPE’s partnership with Grab has been very engaging and exciting for their subscribers: from converting their Grab points to donations, to mounting last October our first-ever GRAB HOPE Hour, when every ride, every order contributed to the classroom we’re building in Bicol. This classroom is the first of many that we hope will not only guarantee safe access to learning but inspire communities around business for good. We look forward to more activities with Grab this coming new year, and more classrooms for our public schools.”

The companies plan to sustain the collaboration through 2026, expanding infrastructure and development initiatives beyond Bicol. To participate, users can navigate to the GrabRewards catalog in-app and allocate points to HOPE.

“This classroom serves as the starting line of our shared vision to bridge the educational infrastructure gap in the Philippines. We are dedicated to scaling this initiative, ensuring that our technology continues to translate into tangible structures for communities across the country,” Mr. Roda adds.

 


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