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More than 4,000 likely impacted by massive landslide in Papua New Guinea

SYDNEY — More than 4,000 people were likely impacted by a massive landslide that flattened a village in northern Papua New Guinea on Friday, humanitarian group CARE Australia said.

Hundreds are feared dead in the landslide in the Pacific nation north of Australia that levelled Kaokalam village in Enga Province, about 600 km (370 miles) northwest of capital Port Moresby, around 3 a.m. on Friday (1900 GMT on Thursday).

According to Australia’s Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade (DFAT), more than six villages have been impacted by the landslide in the province’s Mulitaka region, which local media said buried more than 300 people and over 1,100 houses.

CARE Australia said late on Saturday that nearly 4000 people lived in the impact zone, with the total number of those affected probably higher as the area was “a place of refuge for those displaced by conflicts” in nearby areas.

In February, at least 26 men were killed in Enga Province in an ambush amid tribal violence that prompted Prime Minister James Marape to give arrest powers to the country’s military.

CARE said Friday’s landslide has left debris up to 8 metres (26 feet) deep across 200 square km (77 square miles), cutting off road access, which was making relief efforts difficult.

Helicopters were the only way to reach the area, according to the Australian Broadcasting Corp., which reported on Saturday that four bodies had been retrieved from rubble.

“More homes could be at risk if the landslide continues down the mountain,” a CARE spokesperson said in a statement.

Mr. Marape has said disaster officials, the Defence Force and the Department of Works and Highways were assisting with relief and recovery efforts.

Social media footage posted by villager Ninga Role showed people clambering over rocks, uprooted trees and mounds of dirt searching for survivors. Women could be heard weeping in the background. — Reuters

SB19, BINI, SunKissed Lola, Flow G & Puregold debut the ultimate OPM collaboration with the ‘Nasa Atin ang Panalo’ music video

After weeks of building anticipation and dropping hints on their social media platforms, Puregold has finally unveiled the music video to the new song “Nasa Atin ang Panalo.”

Released this past May 25, the video is a must-watch for Pinoy pop fans. It serves as the ultimate collaboration of four of the country’s most sizzling musical acts: SB19, BINI, SunKissed Lola, and Flow G.

“These four artists are the powerhouse acts in Philippine music today. Collaborating with them is an excellent opportunity to reinforce Puregold’s brand message,” said Vincent Co, President of Puregold Price Club, Inc. “Puregold proudly celebrates their achievements and is dedicated to continuously uplifting Filipino talent. And as we look forward to our 500th store milestone, it’s a privilege to have these artists produce a song that authentically represents our core values.”

The music video shows all four acts together singing and dancing along in a stylized Puregold store. They flaunt their diverse talents: harmonizing, dancing to exciting choreography, playing instrumental solos, or, in the case of Flow G, writing and rapping their own verses.

Beyond just the monumental feat of having all four mega acts in a single music video for the same song, ‘Nasa Atin ang Panalo’ also celebrates the people of Puregold. Dancing alongside them and sharing the spotlight in the music video are the everyday shoppers and store staff that keep Puregold a running success from day to day. Puregold’s very own Aling Puring even makes an appearance to jam with the country’s biggest stars.

The song perfectly captures the ‘panalo’ spirit that has defined Puregold’s long history in the retail business. Beyond that, it also speaks to the ‘panalo’ stories of the artists involved in creating it. Each one has come into this project with their own stories of success.

SunKissed Lola’s relentless ascent in the industry affirms their commitment to turning dreams into reality. BINI’s growth and coming-of-age narrative serves as a reminder of the profound value of transformation and evolution over time. Flow G’s unwavering determination in the face of constant obstacles demonstrates his resilience and resolve to forge ahead. SB19’s journey, filled with triumphs and trials, is a powerful example of the ability to bounce back and confront each new day.

The collaborative song combines all of these elements in a single that can be enjoyed online now and soon on streaming platforms like Spotify.

Excitingly for Pinoy pop fans, there’s even more looming on the horizon. All four artists have already teased solo tracks that will soon drop with Puregold in the forthcoming weeks. Each new original song will dive further into the artists’ individual qualities that have allowed them to reach their “always panalo” dreams. Fans are encouraged to keep a close eye on Puregold’s social media accounts for further developments.

Stay tuned in! Subscribe now to Puregold Channel on YouTube, like @puregold.shopping on Facebook, follow @puregold_ph on Instagram and Twitter, and @puregoldph on TikTok for more updates.

 


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Philippine defense chief says Taiwan Strait situation an ‘internal matter’

DND

MANILA – The situation in the Taiwan Strait, where China has carried out military exercises, is an “internal matter,” Philippine Defense Secretary Gilberto Teodoro said on Friday, declining to comment on drills that Taiwan has condemned.

China’s military conducted a second day of war games around Taiwan on Friday, with drills to test its ability to “seize power” and control key areas. Beijing has said the exercises were launched to punish Taiwan’s new president, Lai Ching-te.

“I will not comment on anything on the Taiwan Strait, as that’s an internal matter for them,” Mr. Teodoro told reporters on the sidelines of a Philippine Navy anniversary event.

China views democratically governed Taiwan as its own territory and denounces Mr. Lai as a “separatist”. It strongly criticized his inauguration speech on Monday, in which he urged Beijing to cease threats and said the two sides of the strait were “not subordinate to each other”.

Philippine President Ferdinand Marcos Jr drew China’s ire in January when he congratulated Lai after winning an election, referring to him as president.

China in response summoned the Philippine ambassador and warned the country “not to play with fire”, calling the message from Mr. Marcos gross interference and a serious violation of the “One China” principle.

Mr. Marcos later defended his remarks, stressing that his message was “common courtesy” and he did not endorse Taiwan independence. US ally Manila has said it wanted to recognize the Philippines and Taiwan’s “mutual interests”, including 200,000 Filipino workers on the island. — Reuters

Domestic trade value, volume climb in Q1

BW FILE PHOTO

The domestic trade in goods in the first quarter grew by 46.7% year on year to P389.42 billion, the Philippine Statistics Authority (PSA) said on Friday.

This was also faster than the 12.8% growth and larger than the P326.56 billion recorded in the fourth quarter of 2023, preliminary data from the PSA showed.

By volume, domestic trade rose by 19.7% to 7.73 million tons in the first three months of the year from 6.45 million tons in the same period a year ago.

Domestic trade in the regions: Which have (un)favorable trade balances?However, this was lower than the 8.41 million tons posted in the fourth quarter of 2023.

Commodity flow includes all goods transported by water and air with shipping accounting for the bulk of the commodities.

Cid L. Terosa, senior economist at the University of Asia and the Pacific (UA&P), said in an e-mail that the growth in both value and volume can be attributed to the growth of the economy in the first quarter.

“Domestic trade was fueled by robust domestic consumption spending, which wasn’t constrained as much by inflation since the inflation rate fell within the 2-4% target during the first quarter. Both consumers and producers appeared to have adjusted to the high interest rate environment, inducing greater movement of goods and services across the country,” he added.

The Philippine economy expanded by 5.7% in the first quarter despite easing consumption and government spending.

Inflation averaged 3.3% for the first three months of the year, lower than the 8.3% average recorded in the same period last year and within the Banko Sentral ng Pilipinas’ (BSP) 2-4% target.

Among the traded commodities in the country, food and live animals posted the highest growth in value reaching P225.08 billion in the January-to-March period, 226.3% higher than a year ago.

This was followed by crude materials, inedible, except fuels and animal and vegetable oils, fats and waxes growing by 62.2% and 18.3%, respectively.

Chemicals and related products posted the largest decline with 47.5%, a reversal from the 20.3% growth a year earlier, followed by miscellaneous manufactured articles and manufactured goods classified chiefly by material declining by 44.4% and 27.5%, respectively.

Western Visayas recorded the largest trade balance — difference between outflow value and inflow value — with a P193.68-billion surplus.

It also accounted for the most goods traded by value with an outflow of P223.33 billion, accounting for 57.4% of the total.

The National Capital Region posted the largest inflow value with P160.13 billion, accounting for 41.1% of the total.

Mr. Terosa expects growth to continue next quarter.

“Domestic trade will continue to grow in the second quarter, but at a slower rate due to increasing inflationary pressure. The BSP has indicated that inflation could breach the 2-4% target in the second quarter,” he said. — Karis Kasarinlan Paolo D. Mendoza

Philippines says China Coast Guard rules a provocation

PHILIPPINE COAST GUARD FILE PHOTO

MANILA – Philippine Defense Secretary Gilberto Teodoro said on Friday that China’s rules about how its Coast Guard can operate in the South China Sea were a matter of international concern, describing them as a provocation.

China, which has maritime sovereignty disputes with the Philippines and other claimant countries in the South China Sea, has issued new rules that would enforce a 2021 law explicitly allowing its Coast Guard to fire on foreign vessels.

“Such behavior is not only a violation of UNCLOS, but also a violation of precepts the UN charter which lays upon each responsible state the duty to refrain from the use of force or aggression to enforce, particularly in this case, illegal territorial claims in the maritime domain,” Mr. Teodoro said in a speech at the Philippine Navy’s anniversary.

“That is a provocation insofar as I am concerned,” he added.

The Philippines and China have had several maritime run-ins in the South China Sea in the past few months that included the use of water cannon by Chinese coast guard vessels that damaged Manila’s boats and injured crew members.

Responding to concerns, the Chinese foreign ministry has said this week the new rules were meant to protect the maritime order, and that there was no need to worry if there was no illegal behavior by the individuals and bodies involved. –– Reuters

Luxury real estate prices soar in Manila

Prime property prices surged by 27% in Manila. — BLOOMBERG

Luxury home prices in select Asian cities are soaring, bucking a downward trend in more established markets including New York and London.

Prime property prices — defined as the top 5% of the market — fell more than 2% in New York and London in the first quarter compared to the same period a year ago, according to real estate consultancy Knight Frank. Hong Kong, Frankfurt and Berlin also posted declines. But in Manila, Tokyo and Mumbai, luxury home prices surged, gaining 27%, 13% and 12%, respectively.

Higher borrowing costs and recession fears have hampered some high-end property markets in the US and Europe. But globally, prime real estate prices have bounced back this year amid strong economic growth and demand from wealthy investors, posting average annual growth of 4% in the 44 cities analyzed in the report.

Housing prices have soared in Manila, with the overall economy in the Philippines growing at the strongest rate in all of Southeast Asia. In Tokyo, a weaker yen and lower borrowing costs have boosted demand from foreign investors. And in Mumbai, luxury housing growth has been in line with India’s booming economy, which is expected to become the world’s top contributor to global GDP growth by 2028.

Knight Frank’s prime property posted zero growth at the end of 2022, as higher interest rates cooled demand. But now, 78% of markets are seeing annual price growth. With those recent gains, Knight Frank’s prime property index is inching closer to its long-term annual growth rate of 5.4%.

“Rather than heralding a return to boom conditions, the index indicates that upwards price pressures are stemming from relatively healthy demand, set against continued low supply volumes,” said Liam Bailey, Knight Frank’s global head of research. — Bloomberg

Mexico’s ‘heat dome’ has already killed dozens of people as hotter days loom

 – The extreme heat smothering much of Mexico has killed dozens of people across multiple states over recent weeks, the country’s health ministry said in a report published on Thursday, with hotter temperatures forecast for coming days.

Mexico has been reeling from a high-pressure weather phenomenon known as a “heat dome,” which has trapped hot air over much of the country, creating record-breaking temperatures that have surpassed 45 degrees Celsius (113 degrees Fahrenheit) in some places.

Heat-related causes killed 22 people between May 12 and 21, according to preliminary figures shared by Mexico’s health ministry.

The 10-day period overlapped with the second and third heat waves out of five forecast for March to July by the country’s top weather agencies. The third heat wave is ongoing.

The new deaths bring the toll from the extreme temperatures to 48 since the hot season began on March 17, mostly due to heat stroke and some to dehydration. At the same point in Mexico’s hot seasons of 2022 and 2023, the health ministry had reported just two and three heat-related deaths, respectively.

Health ministry data also shows hundreds more people have survived heat stroke, sunburn, dehydration and other heat-related conditions.

Sweltering heat has exacerbated a nationwide drought and strained Mexico’s power grid, with monkeys dropping dead from trees due to suspected dehydration.

Imminent relief is not yet on the horizon, according to researchers at the National Autonomous University of Mexico.

Mexico could experience its hottest temperatures on record in the next 10-15 days, the researchers said on Wednesday. – Reuters

Trump, without evidence, claims migrants in US illegally ‘building army’ to attack Americans

REUTERS

 – Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump claimed without evidence on Thursday that immigrants from Africa, the Middle East and elsewhere were “building an army” to attack Americans “from within,” once again using inflammatory rhetoric about migrants in the US illegally.

During a rally in the mainly Hispanic and Black neighborhood of New York City’s South Bronx, Mr. Trump sought to portray migrants from China, the Democratic Republic of the Congo and other countries as a violent threat, even as studies show immigrants are not more likely to engage in criminality.

“Almost everyone is a male and they look like fighting age. I think they’re building an army,” Mr. Trump said to a few thousand supporters who gathered to hear him in the South Bronx’s Crotona Park. “They want to get us from within.”

Throughout his campaign, Mr. Trump has repeatedly used incendiary language to accuse immigrants in the US illegally of fueling violent crime, calling them “animals” responsible for “poisoning the blood” of the country. As evidence, he points to individual instances of crimes, rather than aggregate data.

“We are not going to let these people come in and take our city away from us and take our country away,” Trump said, vowing to carry out “the largest criminal deportation operation in our country’s history” if re-elected to the White House.

Mr. Trump also sought to tie record levels of migrants caught crossing the US-Mexico border illegally with the economic plight of Black and Hispanic voters, arguing, without evidence, that migrants were taking their jobs.

Mr. Trump’s decision to speak in the Bronx was in part a matter of convenience. His campaign schedule has been crimped by his trial in New York on charges he falsified business records to hide a hush money payment to a porn star. In April, he made a campaign appearance at a convenience store in Harlem, New York.

Mr. Trump is locked in a tight race with Democratic President Joe Biden ahead of the Nov. 5 election. The Bronx rally was part of his effort to exploit Biden’s weakening support among Hispanic and Black voters.

Roughly 55% of Bronx County residents are Hispanic and about one-third are Black, and the crowd on Thursday was more racially mixed than his usual rallies, which are predominantly white.

Mr. Trump’s campaign had a permit for up to 3,500 people to attend the rally, the New York City Parks Department said.

 

‘HISTORIC’ RALLY IN THE BRONX

Recent polls suggest the Trump is gaining ground with Blacks and Hispanics, who were critical to Mr. Biden’s win in 2020. Trump strategists see a chance to grab enough of their votes to make the difference in swing states in November.

Mr. Biden has had a flurry of actions and events focused on bolstering support among African American voters. He has singled out Mr. Trump and other Republicans for attacking programs aimed at improving diversity, equity and inclusion, and on Thursday the president’s campaign released a pair of TV and radio ads criticizing Mr. Trump’s treatment of Black people.

Reuters interviewed nine Hispanic and Black rally attendees who said they will vote for Mr. Trump in 2024. Of the seven who were voting age in 2020, six voted for Mr. Trump. They cited the economy and immigration as their main reasons for supporting him.

“It’s historic that he’s here,” said Steven Suarez, 46, who is Puerto Rican, a reference to Mr. Trump being the first Republican presidential candidate to make a stop in the Bronx since Ronald Reagan in the 1980s. “He could have gone anywhere in New York City. He could have gone to Manhattan. He chose to come here.”

In a New York Times/Siena College poll in March, Mr. Trump was selected by 23% of Black and 46% of Hispanic respondents in a one-on-one matchup with Mr. Biden. That is far higher than the 12% of Black and 32% of Hispanic voters Trump won in 2020, according to Edison Research exit polls.

Political analysts have attributed weakening support for Mr. Biden among voters of color in part to the outsized impact of inflation on people living paycheck to paycheck.

Attending his first Mr. Trump rally on Thursday, Ed Rosa, 60, said he was a longtime Democratic voter but felt his vote for Biden in 2020 was a mistake. He said the Democratic Party had “become too socialist” and was not handling the economy or the southern border well. – Reuters

What OpenAI’s deal with News Corp means for journalism (and for you)

REUTERS

Disclaimer: This asset – including all text, audio and imagery – is provided by The Conversation. Reuters Connect has not verified or endorsed the material, which is being made available to professional media customers to facilitate the free flow of global news and information.

SOURCE: THE CONVERSATION

 

by Senior Lecturer in Visual Communication & Digital Media, RMIT University, and Research Fellow, Technology, Communication and Policy Lab, RMIT University

OpenAI, the makers of ChatGPT, and News Corp, the international media conglomerate, have signed a deal that will let OpenAI use and learn from News Corp’s content.

In practical terms, this means when a user asks ChatGPT a question, the results might be informed by previous reporting in News Corp outlets, including Australian mastheads such as The Australian and The Daily Telegraph. It’s unclear whether the agreement includes only editorial or also opinion content.

OpenAI has licensed News Corp content because generative artificial intelligence (AI) is a ravenous beast: it needs data to learn from and generate useful outputs in return. Its ability to do this is impacted by the size and quality of its training data.

But could the media be signing its own death warrant by sharing its journalism? Or do we all benefit from the wider availability of reliable information?

ChatGPT, OpenAI’s major service, has learned from consuming books, articles and publicly available web content. This includes online news articles from across the internet.

However, there are unresolved questions over who owns the content. The New York Times, for example, is suing OpenAI over alleged copyright infringement. By inking deals with media companies, generative AI services like ChatGPT can ensure they stay clear of legal questions by paying to learn from their content.

The quality and provenance of the training data also matter and can lead to biases in what generative AI produces. So it is notable that while some news media organizations are trying to stop their content from being used, others, including Associated Press, are signing deals.

ChatGPT is a complex technical system. Just because some outlets opt in to licensing deals and others don’t won’t mean the technology will sound more like The Australian than The New York Times.

However, at a broader level, where ChatGPT gets its news content from may affect how it responds to questions about current events.

Working out what sort of news content gets included from each publication may also have an impact on how ChatGPT answers queries. Opinion articles are often more sensationalist than straight news, for example, and sometimes do not accurately reflect current issues.

It also remains to be seen how deals like these will affect the human labor of journalists and editors.

On one hand, since generative AI needs more and better content to provide better answers, journalists and content creators will be needed to ensure there is ongoing training data for AI to learn from.

On the other hand, it’s not clear how many journalists organizations like News Corp think are necessary to do that job as further cuts at the organization are expected next week.

At the same time, the ability for AI to “hallucinate,” or make things up, is well-known. The role of editors in fact-checking content, and critical thinking among those consuming content, is paramount.

In all this, small and medium-sized players in the media landscape seem once more to be pushed to the side, as the big players battle for lucrative content deals while smaller organizations fight for scraps or are left hungry.

These deals also raise questions about the role of ABC and SBS in a changing media environment. Australians pay for public service media through their taxes, but OpenAI is not rushing to do deals with these organizations.

However, companies like OpenAI are gradually accepting the principle that producing quality news costs money and that they need to secure licenses to use content. If they want to be consistent, there is strong case to be made that such companies should not just include public service media content in their models, but recompense these organizations in the process, much like Google and Meta organized deals with the ABC through the News Media Bargaining Code.

Where you get your news matters. More people may use AI services for news in the future, but right now it is an underwhelming source of reliable information. Signing content-sharing agreements with companies like News Corp may help improve the quality of answers and increase the relevance of ChatGPT outputs for Australian users.

News Corp also doesn’t have journalists in every community, so supporting independent media in your local area can help you get quality information and prevent news deserts from increasing.

At the end of the day, generative AI doesn’t always get it right (and often gets it wrong) so treat outputs with a healthy level of caution and compare results with those from reputable sources before using AI-generated content to make decisions.

We analysed 30 years of Australian media articles – and unearthed some glaring gaps in the coverage

STOCK PHOTO | Photo by Suzy Hazelwood: https://www.pexels.com/photo/red-framed-eyeglasses-on-newspapers-3886870/

Disclaimer: This asset – including all text, audio and imagery – is provided by The Conversation. Reuters Connect has not verified or endorsed the material, which is being made available to professional media customers to facilitate the free flow of global news and information.

SOURCE: THE CONVERSATION

 

by Associate Professor, Journalism, RMIT University

The news media play a vital role in shaping the public conversation and covering complex issues such as war, the economy, climate change and technology.

Yet our new research has found the news media in Australia have failed to meet the news coverage needs of those often most affected by these issues.

Our multidisciplinary team gathered by RMIT’s Innovation Catalyst used machine learning techniques to examine 114,739 articles on financial wellbeing (including personal and family finance) published since 1990. We unearthed new insights on how Australian media coverage leaves behind key groups – particularly women and those struggling financially – when covering society’s big issues.

The findings, published this week, are detailed in a report focused on how the media has covered financial wellbeing.

Data scientists working with the team at RMIT accessed the Dow Jones database of all news stories printed or published online in the Australian media in the past three decades. They employed a machine learning technique called topic modelling.

This method groups articles into topics, which are then interpreted by subject matter experts from the research team. This approach allowed us to examine a much larger data set than human researchers could alone.

We found the news media have consistently allowed their coverage to be dominated by male voices and high and middle income earners.

Coverage has also tended to overlook a range of equity issues impacting women, financially disadvantaged people, and the environment.

Our team was particularly interested in how the media covered financial wellbeing. This includes people’s ability to manage day-to-day and future expenses, and to live free from financial stress. It also means having resilience to cope financially with life’s unexpected events.

Stable housing is one vital component of financial wellbeing.

We found media coverage of household financial issues over the past 30 years has focused overwhelmingly on the needs of middle and upper income earners. Three topics tended to dominate Australia’s financial coverage: property, investment advice and retirement funds.

General investing advice (on issues such as the stock markets, exchange traded funds or bonds) was the most dominant topic covered by the financial media articles we studied, until September 2016 when it was overtaken by property as the dominant topic.

Social services, welfare and financial services coverage made up a very small proportion of Australia’s financial journalism.

Coverage of investment advice peaked at 140 articles in February 2013, constituting almost 45% of the total number of financial wellbeing articles we analyzed from that month.

Coverage of retirement funds peaked at 72 articles per month in May 2015. That topic constituted almost 22% of the total number of financial wellbeing articles we analyzed from that month. The top financial wellbeing topic for that month was investment advice (at 37%).

Property articles peaked at almost 175 per month in May 2022, constituting almost 51% of all financial wellbeing articles we analyzed for that month.

Our analysis also showed the media can play an important role in providing trusted information when trust in financial institutions is low.

As trust in financial institutions was eroded during the banking royal commission and financial services inquiries of the 2010s, the media stepped up their coverage of money matters to help people negotiate complex financial decision-making.

But as we note in the report:

There is lots of room for the financial media to report more on the financial wellbeing of a greater range of people in our communities, not just women and gender minorities, but First Nations people, cultural and racial minorities, people with disabilities, and many others. The healthiest economies are those in which all citizens enjoy financial wellbeing, not just the wealthy.

Reporting on workplace gender equality in the context of financial wellbeing peaked at a meagre 13 articles in December 2017, according to our study.

And Australian media coverage has, over the past 30 years, largely missed the critical financial and social issues associated with financial abuse and family violence. However, this has started to change.

We presented our data to a roundtable of academics and community groups, which included Good Shepherd, Infoxchange and Brotherhood of St Laurence. The resulting discussion revealed an intersection between various topics not readily seen in general media coverage.

For example, as lower income Australians struggle to afford insurance in areas affected by storms, floods and fire disasters (which have become more frequent and more severe as the climate changes), agencies and governments are increasingly called on to support people who have lost everything. Lower income people are disproportionately affected by natural disasters.

The rising costs of energy are making it harder (or, for some, impossible) to cool houses during heatwaves built to standards based on outdated temperatures. This means higher living costs and a more pronounced burden on the health system. This impact, however, is not generally felt by wealthier Australians, whose issues and interests are more often represented in the news media.

This analysis showed issues such as financial wellbeing, media coverage and climate change do not exist in silos. They are interconnected. And the media has a role to play in promoting financial wellbeing for all, not just the already wealthy.

Canva gets new UI makeover, AI-powered magic studio upgrade

Source: www.canva.com

All-in-one visual communication platform Canva, Inc. announced its new user interface makeover, workforce tools, and upgraded artificial intelligence (AI) powered magic studio feature.

“Every part of Canva from the editor to the homepage has had a glow-up. It’s a clutter-free editor, we’ve thought about hero in your content and making sure that you can personalize the experience” Cameron Adams, Canva Co-founder and Chief Product Officer, said in a virtual press briefing on May 21.

The revamped UI design features a new contextual editing toolbar and customizable workspaces on the homepage.

Canva said users can favorite top designs, folders, and brand templates, while organizations can pin company or team-wide content to the top of the page.

“Our AI products, which were most recently launched have been used over 6.5 billion times. There’s been over 25 billion designs created,” said Mr. Adams.

Improved features

Among the newest improvements is the expansion of the “supercharged” AI-generation tool Magic Studio, which has been used more than five billion times since its launch in Oct. 2023.

The upgrade capabilities are magic media, text to graphic tool, magic design generating three times higher quality presentations, and the resize and magic switch.

This converts any design to any custom document, by entering a prompt or choosing from new options like a video script, LinkedIn post, or presentation outline.

Aside from its renowned AI-powered photo editor, the AI-powered Highlights cuts a selection of eye-catching clips from longer videos, while Enhance Voice reduces background noise.

“AI tools are very fragmented, having texts and videos and images and coding and 3d in speech means a whole another tool to learn and hold another platform… which is challenging,” said Canva Co-founder and Chief Executive Officer Melanie Perkins.

Mr. Adams added that Canva “truly sees AI as the next wave of democratizing design and creating a beautifully simple but powerful experience for every type of design user.”

Additionally, the platform introduced Canva Work Kits, an industry-curated collection of hundreds of craft-specific templates, from presentations to documents.

The Work Kits offer resources customized for the needs of marketing, human resources, sales, and creative departments.

Meanwhile, upgrades on Visual Suite include suggested editing, where users will be able to track changes and collaborate in edits. There have been 375 million Canva Docs created since 2022.

Applications built by the largest ad platforms offer instant feedback on designs, data autofill, and uploading CSV or Excel files to bulk create to speed up marketing workflow.

 

Canva Enterprise

The newly introduced Canva Enterprise has a subscription offering designed for large organizations with complex security, reporting, administration, and brand management requirements.

“Canva for enterprise allows organizations to do that with all the security and trust they need for such a large scale and important projects,” he said.

Mr. Adams noted that Canva is the trusted platform of over 90% of Fortune 500 companies across the globe.

“FedEx has great decreased brand, review submissions by 77% and increased productivity workdays saved over 33,000 hours by implementing Canva and allowing a lot of their design to scale,” he added.

According to the company, the new homepage and editing experience will be available to the first one million users who will find the ‘secret portal’ hidden in their homepage while general availability is set to start in August.

Canva has 20 million paying subscribers which led to over $2.2 billion annual revenue.

The platform has more than 185 million monthly users across 190 countries in more than 100 languages. – Aubrey Rose A. Inosente

US senators urge Canada to increase defense spending to NATO guideline

CHRIS ROBERT-UNSPLASH

 – US Democratic and Republican senators signed a letter to Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau on Thursday urging his government to increase its defense spending to the 2% of gross domestic product agreed to by NATO allies in 2023.

The letter from the 23 senators called Canada a valued ally that has contributed to NATO operations around the world but added that the alliance “now faces one of the most severe threat landscapes in its history.”

The letter urged all NATO allies and Canada specifically to uphold their NATO commitment and accelerate efforts to reach the 2% defense spending target.

Sent ahead of a NATO summit in July in Washington, the letter writers were led by Democratic Senator Jeanne Shaheen and Republican Senator Thom Tillis, the co-chairs of the US Senate NATO Observers Group.

Canada’s Defense Minister Bill Blair, asked about the letter on Thursday, pointed to a policy update announced in April in which the Trudeau government pledged billions more for the armed forces and said military spending was set to hit 1.76% of GDP by 2030, up from the current 1.4%.

“We recently came up with a defense policy that I think applies a very significant and necessary focus on continental defense, which I would share with the concerned senators,” Mr. Blair told reporters in Ottawa.

The failure of many of NATO’s 31 members to meet a defense spending target of at least 2% of gross domestic product has long been a source of tension with the United States, whose armed forces form the core of the alliance’s military power. NATO estimates have shown that only 11 members are spending at the target level.

Canadian government officials have previously said there was no target date to hit the 2% threshold.

Mr. Blair said Canada would inevitably get to the 2% mark as the government works on bolstering defense capabilities and its “timeline will be based on the requirements of our Armed Forces, and we do that in consultation very closely with our Allies and then determine what’s available on the market.” – Reuters