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German cabinet OK’s landmark bill over legal cannabis use

REUTERS

BERLIN — Germany’s cabinet passed a contentious bill on Wednesday to legalize recreational marijuana use and cultivation, one of the most liberal cannabis laws in Europe that could potentially provide further momentum for a similar worldwide trend.

The legislation, which still has to pass parliament, would allow adults to possess up to 25 grams (0.88 oz) of the drug, grow a maximum of three plants, or acquire weed as associates ofnon-profit cannabis clubs.

The center-left government of Chancellor Olaf Scholz hopes the law will curb the black market, protect consumers against contaminated marijuana and reduce drug-related crime.

A key pillar of the plan, which removes the taboo around cannabis use, is also a campaign to raise awareness about the risks, which should ultimately curb consumption, said Health Minister Karl Lauterbach, of Olaf Scholz’s Social Democrats (SPD).

Such a campaign would not gain the same level of attention if it were introduced without a change in the law, he said.

“With the current procedures we could not seriously protect children and young people, the topic has been made a taboo,” Mr. Lauterbach told a news conference in Berlin to present the law.

“We have rising, problematic consumption, we couldn’t simply allow this to go on,” he said. “So this is an important turning point in our drug policy.”

The number of adults in Germany aged between 18 and 25 years old that consumed cannabis at least once nearly doubled in 2021 from the previous decade to 25%, according to the health ministry.

Young adults are considered more vulnerable to the health risks of cannabis. The new legislation will limit the amount of cannabis young adults can buy to 30 grams a month, compared to 50 grams for older adults.

CRITICISM FROM BOTH SIDES
Opposition to the legislation is fierce, with conservative policymakers in particular warning that it will encourage marijuana use and that the new legislation will create even more work for authorities.

“This law will be linked to a complete loss of control,” Armin Schuster, conservative interior minister for the state of Saxony, told media group RND.

A U.N. narcotics watchdog said in March moves by governments to legalize the recreational use of marijuana have led to increased consumption and cannabis-related health problems.

Mr. Lauterbach said Germany had learned from other countries’ mistakes, however.

Mr. Scholz’s government had already watered down original plans to allow the widespread sale of cannabis in licensed shops after consultations with Brussels.

Instead, it said would launch a pilot project for a small number of licensed shops in some regions to test the effects of a commercial supply chain of recreational cannabis over five years. For that, it will need to present separate legislation in a second phase.

Similar such projects already exist or are planned in the Netherlands and Switzerland.

Many countries in Europe have already legalized cannabis for limited medicinal purposes, including Germany since 2017. Others have decriminalized its general use.

Malta became the first European country to allow limited cultivation and possession of cannabis for personal use in late 2021. Germany would become the first major European country to do so.

The legislation presented on Wednesday includes strict rules for growing weed — cannabis clubs of up to 500 associates must have burglar-proof doors and windows, with greenhouses fenced off. Associates will not be allowed to smoke weed at the clubs or in the vicinity of schools, nurseries, playgrounds or sports grounds.

Germany’s hemp association said the rules were “unrealistic” and the black market could only truly be fought with the introduction of cannabis sales in shops. — Reuters

Singapore arrests 10 foreigners, seizes S$1-B assets in money laundering probe

NAMCHA PH-UNSPLASH

SINGAPORE — Singapore police have arrested 10 foreigners for alleged money laundering and forgery offences, in a case involving about S$1 billion ($737 million) of cash, properties, luxury cars and other assets.

The police conducted simultaneous raids on Tuesday across the city-state to arrest the suspects, their statement said on Wednesday.

Prohibition of disposal orders were issued against 94 properties and 50 vehicles, with a total estimated value of more than S$815 million.

Other seizures included bank accounts, cash, luxury bags, jewelry, watches, electronic devices and some documents with information on virtual assets.

The foreigners were aged between 31 and 44, and their nationalities include Chinese, Turkish, Cypriot, Cambodian and Ni-Vanuatu, Singapore police said.

In a separate statement, the Singapore central bank said it has been “in touch with the financial institutions (FIs) where the potentially tainted funds have been identified. Supervisory engagements with these FIs are ongoing”, without naming the FIs. — Reuters

Meet Ghana’s online romance scammers

REUTERS

ACCRA — As a teenager, Kasim was the star striker of his school’s football team in Ghana, earning him the moniker Starflex. But the 22-year-old has since abandoned both his studies and football for a vocation that keeps him up at night: finding and luring victims into online romance scams.

In one bedroom in Accra, Starflex and his two friends Suleiman, 19, and Patrick, 18, huddle over their phones and laptops, exchanging intimate messages with “pals”, their code name for potential victims they meet on dating sites.

To bait a suitor, they comb Facebook and Instagram, swiping photos of influencers, actresses and adult film actors to create fake accounts on dating sites.

“We use photos or videos of you shopping, cooking or hanging out with friends to keep up the format,” Starflex told the Thomson Reuters Foundation, referring to their playbook to trap and defraud victims globally.

Starflex and his sidekicks are known as the Sakawa boys – meaning ‘putting inside’ in the Hausa language, a young generation of school drops-outs in Ghana who dabble in identity theft and romance scams on social media.

Their activities can be traced to the Yahoo boys, or fraudsters in Nigeria. Ghana’s Cyber Security Authority estimates victims have lost 49.5 million Ghanaian cedi ($4.5 million) to identity theft schemes since the beginning of the year.

Starflex is posing as Joan, a 23-year-old masters’ student from Turkey, while chatting with an American realtor he befriended on online dating site Zoosk.

Joan’s boyfriend believes her parents died of COVID-19 and has been convinced to cover her $5,000 tuition lest she get deported.

“He sends me $500 for my monthly upkeep from the US. What work in Ghana will pay me $50 a day?” Starflex said, grinning.

When he cashes the money through his crypto wallet in Ghana, Starflex said he shares the proceeds with his crew of keyboard warriors running shifts to keep the web of lies.

Such scams are becoming increasingly common in Ghana due to persistent poverty and a youth unemployment rate of more than 30%, while the country fights its way out of a generational economic crisis.

“If you pick eight out of every 10 children in any of the slums in Greater Accra, they are into internet fraud,” said Kwadwo Agyemam, an IT teacher in a public school in Accra, the capital.

“Just go through their phone, and you’ll see those nude pictures they’re using to entice men online.”

GRINDING POVERTY
Starflex and Suleiman grew up in New Town, an impoverished area of Greater Accra. Both said economic hardship forced them to fend for themselves as teenagers and turn to scamming.

When his father became sick following a stroke, and his mother, a petty trader, could no longer put food on the table, Suleiman said Starflex introduced him to the criminal trade.

“To come to school was hard … there was no money for breakfast or lunch,” Suleiman said. “He said he was getting paid by white men. I could make money that way, too,” he added, pointing at Starflex.

Agyemam said students who should be in classes can be found chatting with foreigners in internet cafes, hoping to extort cash.

In July, the government launched a national school program to educate students about social media use and cyber risks.

Earlier this year Ghana and Nigeria pledged to ramp up efforts in tackling transborder crime, especially cybercrimes such as online scams.

Both countries have cyber laws and regularly investigate offences, but prosecutions are rare, said forensic and internet litigation expert Mike Roberts, who founded Rexxfield, a firm specializing in cybercrime investigations.

“The biggest disincentive to fraud is justice. If you feel you’re not going to get caught defrauding others, you won’t stop,” Roberts said.

SCAM TACTICS
In 2022 the Cyber Security Authority said identity theft accounted for most reported cases of online fraud, attributing the trend to the ease of creating social media accounts.

The agency did not respond to a request for comment.

Sean Gallagher, a researcher at Sophos X-Ops, a British cybersecurity firm, said West African criminals are borrowing techniques from Chinese romance scams, including using crypto accounts to send money.

“There’s a marketplace to purchase hacked Facebook and Twitter accounts, and you can buy these with crypto or cash. Then some people create a full persona using clip art or photos from other social media accounts,” Gallagher explained.

“Then people are paid to generate the content for that profile. And you get to the 15 and 16-year-olds in West Africa doing the keyboard work and pretending to be this person. It’s an industrial-level operation,” he added.

Roberts said conmen are becoming more brazen, teaching victims to open crypto accounts to bypass scrutiny from banking institutions.

Single mother-of one Tina, who owns a medical billing company in New York state, said she met a gemmologist who called himself Ray Dixon on Tinder in 2019.

Over two years, her online boyfriend swindled her of $200,000, claiming he needed money for plane tickets, rent and upkeep, among other reasons.

“I borrowed from friends, my bank, and I only stopped sending money when I had nothing left,” Tina, 57, said in a video interview.

Frequent requests for money prompted her to search for his name online. “It didn’t come up at first, but I later found it on a Turkish dating site,” Tina said, adding that when she confronted him, he denied faking his identity.

Tina said she contacted Roberts – whose company works with law enforcement and victims to investigate and trace crypto scams to help her recover her money.

Roberts said his team of investigators tracked Tina’s scammers to criminal networks in Ghana.

When he thinks of women like Tina, Suleiman says he hates himself.

He has decided to quit scamming within a year, and is putting aside $200 monthly to pay his way through college.

“I have no option for now. I have to care for my sick dad and help my mum,” he said. – Thomson Reuters Foundation

The Thomson Reuters Foundation is the charitable arm of Thomson Reuters.

Indonesian’s Rebricks, turns plastic into bricks

NICK FEWINGS-UNSPLASH

JAKARTA — Ovy Sabrina fights plastic waste in Indonesia by spreading noodle packets, coffee sachets, straws and other trash around the sprawling archipelago — entombed in eco-friendly bricks.

Her family knows not to stand in her way on environmental issues, especially five years ago when she came up with the idea of making bricks using single-use plastic to counter pollution and the capital Jakarta’s high-emissions building boom.

Using machinery from her family’s conventional brick factory and tapping into her zero-waste lifestyle, Ms. Sabrina and her friend Novita Tan launched their green construction materials startup Rebricks in 2018.

“My family usually tell me to go ahead and do whatever I want. If people disagree with me, I will do it,” said the 37-year-old, who regularly locks horns with her siblings over sorting household waste and recycling in their shared home.

“’Just do it’ is what we always tell people who want to get into recycling initiatives.”

With more than half the region’s population living in cities and rising, Asia’s urban population is soaring as wealth increases and people seek better lives — putting huge pressure on infrastructure, public services and affordable housing.

Bustling Jakarta, which has 10 million inhabitants, is dotted with construction sites that emit high levels of greenhouse gases, working on new train lines, malls, leisure complexes, apartments and offices.

But on the ground, residents vie with street-hawkers for space, and struggle with the city’s notorious traffic jams, regular flooding and choking air pollution.

As Indonesia’s capital grows, waste collection and recycling services have struggled to keep pace.

Single-use plastics — such as drinking straws, confectionery packets, plastic bags and coffee sachets — are usually sent to already full landfill sites, burned by informal trash collectors, or simply thrown into the city’s canals.

Looking to tackle Indonesia’s twin challenges of trash and polluting urban growth, Rebricks made a breakthrough in late 2019 by creating a brick using single-use plastic waste that meets industry standards.

The company mixes volcanic ash, mountain stones, plastic waste donated from households across Indonesia, and cement to make its bricks, which do not contain sand like regular ones.

It supplies charities and other groups that build affordable homes and sanitation buildings for poorer communities.

The firm’s prices are competitive, while its bricks — long-lasting and strong as conventional bricks — are non-combustible, and the paving stones it also makes do not get slippery when wet, Sabrina said.

Rebricks’ website says it has production capacity of 100 sq meters (1,076 sq ft) a day.

But Sabrina declined to give details of sales, adding that production is limited by the company’s basic brick-making technique and labor-intensive machinery, with plastic waste donations often outstripping demand for bricks.

The startup — which uses social media to appeal for plastic waste — is in talks with the government to supply materials for subsidized housing projects.

“As a developing country, it’s impossible for us to say ‘don’t develop’,” said Sabrina.

“Development will keep on going, but at least if you recycle waste at the same time, it can help.”

CONSTRUCTION, BUILDINGS PART OF CLIMATE SOLUTION
The buildings and construction sector is responsible for about 40% of global energy-related emissions — and reducing this will be vital for countries to meet their international climate and environmental pledges, industry experts said.

About half of the sector’s emissions come from construction and the rest from how buildings are heated or cooled, and powered, once in use.

The industry also accounts for 50% of all extracted materials, while cement production alone is responsible for 7% of global carbon emissions, said Lea Ranalder, part of the climate change team at UN-Habitat, a U.N. agency that promotes sustainable human settlements.

Less than 9% of the materials consumed by the sector are circular — recycled or re-used — leading to a “we build, we throw away” mentality, she noted.

“The buildings and construction industry is the overlooked giant when we talk about climate change and how we tackle climate change,” she said.

“Without really tackling the sector, when we talk about the climate crisis, we will not get there.”

Reforming the fragmented industry is complex. And many developers in Asia are focused on profits and affordability, with the perception that greener designs and building materials are expensive, industry experts said.

Constructing greener buildings pushes costs up by 3%-5% depending on the type of building, said Jonathan Duwyn, a buildings and construction expert at the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP).

But over time, it becomes cheaper as the buildings cost less to run, he said, adding that “overall the cost is not much higher and the more we do it, the costs will go down”.

In addition, training the industry’s workforce — and ensuring that universities and architecture schools promote sustainability — is a huge opportunity to create well-paid green jobs, experts said.

“If governments make a commitment to invest and expand green building developments, this will incentivise construction workers to pursue these types of skills, knowing that there will be guaranteed work for them in the future,” said Nick Jeffries of the Ellen MacArthur Foundation, which advocates for circular economies.

MIX TRADITIONAL AND MODERN FOR GREENER CITIES
Indonesian architect Andi Subagio’s next project will be a pedestrian plaza outside one of Jakarta’s new mass rapid transit stations.

Sitting in a Jakarta restaurant he designed and built using Rebricks materials, Mr. Subagio — who is passionate about making his city more sustainable — said the eatery makes better use of natural ventilation rather than installing air conditioning.

The 33-year-old sees great benefits in combining both modern and traditional designs and building materials, adding that towering structures built with steel, concrete and glass are a relatively new trend.

“Traditional (designs) are where we can learn how to live more sustainably,” said Mr. Subagio, founder of SASO architecture studio.

UNEP’s Duwyn also said the industry should use fewer new materials in construction, and do more to extend the lifespan of existing buildings. Natural ventilation, using nature and adding shade are also vital to help cooling in a warmer world, he said.

For construction materials, he pointed to bio-based waste for insulation and sustainably logged wood as options.

Socially, however, it is often difficult to revive older technologies because many people feel that living in a modern concrete building signals success in life, he added.

Asia is home to some of the fastest-growing construction markets, and projects are picking up pace after a pause during the COVID-19 pandemic.

“There are plenty of green buildings being built but their construction is outpaced by less well-planned, less sustainably sourced, less well-designed projects at a variety of scales,” said Eli Elinoff, a lecturer in cultural anthropology at the Herenga Waka-Victoria University of Wellington.

Back in Jakarta, entrepreneur Ms. Sabrina said larger developers she has spoken to are often more focused on costs than the environment.

Such developers, which may build a thousand new homes for example, usually have preferred vendors for materials and often view trying something new as risky, she said.

Undeterred, Ms. Sabrina’s company plans to open a second factory in Central Java and another on the resort island of Bali this year — and she hopes to start teaching awareness of plastic waste in schools next year.

“Maybe we can replicate this on smaller islands in Indonesia, so we can create bigger impact,” she said. — Reuters

AI adoption to lead to 65% job role change by 2030 — LinkedIn 

BW FILE PHOTO

Professionals can expect their job responsibilities to change by at least 65% by 2030 due to the adoption of artificial intelligence (AI), according to employment-focused social media platform LinkedIn Corp. 

“Globally, the skills required for jobs have changed by 25% since 2015,” LinkedIn said in an e-mailed statement on Thursday, citing its “The Global Future of Work Report: State of AI @ Work.”

In the Asia-Pacific region, this rate of change has been even more rapid. Skill requirements for the same positions have transformed by 36% in Singapore, 31% in the Philippines, 30% in India, and 27% in Australia since 2015, according to the platform.

As per LinkedIn, some of the most sought-after skills in the Philippines are soft skills.

“Companies prioritize skills such as customer service, management, and communications to help their workforce navigate complex work situations, build relationships, and achieve results,” it said.

Many professionals are already looking to expand their skill sets and leverage AI, it noted. “Companies, too, are already increasing their hiring of professionals with AI skills.”

It said that the portion of global English job postings that mention GPT or ChatGPT has risen 21 times since November last year.

AI talent recruitment has grown faster than general hiring in the APAC region. This shows that companies are currently hiring more AI professionals compared to 2016, with figures like 24% in Japan, 20% in Indonesia, and 14% in Singapore, according to LinkedIn.

“In 2016, only three out of every 1,000 members globally could be considered AI talent. By 2022, that number had increased to 17 in 1,000 (based on the median share of AI talent across 25 countries),” it said.

An individual, according to LinkedIn, qualifies as AI talent if he has incorporated AI skills like machine learning into his profile, or if he is in an AI-related job.

On a worldwide scale, there has been a 75% rise in members including generative AI-related keywords on their profiles every month from January to June 2023.

In the Philippines, approximately 5,000 professionals have indicated “artificial intelligence” as a skill in their profiles, LinkedIn said. — Arjay L. Balinbin

Reskilling urgency grows as AI integration ramps up — IBM study

BW FILE PHOTO

Some business leaders in the Philippines have recognized the need for their workforce to undergo reskilling due to the growing adoption of artificial intelligence (AI), according to a study by the International Business Machines (IBM) Corp.

In the IBM report titled “Augmented Work for an Automated, AI-Driven World,” the availability of external skills (58%) and the development of new skills for existing talent (48%) were recognized as the most pressing concerns among Filipino executives. 

“AI is about people and skills, not just technology,” the study said. “Competitive advantage comes from scaling employee expertise and transforming how work is done.”

“Organizations have to make human talent central to their AI strategy.” 

Meanwhile, according to IBM’s study on the global CEO’s guide to generative AI, 77% of entry-level workers will experience job shifts by 2025, along with approximately 25% of executives. 

However, an additional hurdle to the adoption of generative AI among businesses is the lack of a foundation of trust due to its ambiguous data sources, which can result in ‘hallucinations,’ according to IBM. 

“Trust is the key barrier and requirement for building AI outcomes,” said Kieran Hagan, principal technical sales leader for data, AI, and automation at IBM, at a press conference on Wednesday. “If you can’t find the source or confidence index, that is risk.” 

Mr. Hagan noted that bias detection is the solution to the trust issue — building and providing a platform grounded by a data confidence level with trackable results to elevate the stakes of accuracy.

“Technology now allows you to simplify that. It augments human intelligence,” said Aileen Judan-Jiao, president at IBM Philippines. 

In the Tech Innovation Forum 2023, IBM showcased Watsonx, its new self-service AI and data platform for businesses equipped with scalable and flexible models to address key concerns with AI. 

“If we’re going to use it for business, AI insights have to be explainable,” Ms. Judan-Jiao said. “You have to know where the data comes from and have a scored confidence level because real business decisions affecting jobs are made.” 

However, Ms. Judan-Jiao noted businesses’ fear trickling down to the risk of falling behind AI-augmented competitors. “They would need to put AI to work at the strategic core of their businesses to meet tomorrow’s elevated customer expectations,” she said. 

The global AI market size is expected to reach $407.0 billion by 2027, with a compound annual growth rate of 36.2% during the forecast period of 2022-2027, according to a report by analytics firm MarketsandMarkets. 

“In the enterprise sector, AI has to be validated for accuracy and ultimately, to solve real life problems,” said Felix Ayque, founder and chief executive officer of Komunidad, an AI-powered climate and environmental resilience startup.

Mr. Ayque mentioned that Komunidad uses AI as a backend solution to deliver predictive alert text messages to fisherfolk in Calaguas Islands and address natural disaster preparedness.

“When you look at the entire ecosystem [of startups], it’s fertile ground for innovation,” said Fatima Pasion Yambao, co-founder and chief executive officer of Digiteer Inc., on the expanding applications of AI among startups. 

Ms. Yambao noted that AI is seeing more localized practices to improve certain process and pain points in industries of human resources, fintech, and education, among others. 

“AI can be applied anywhere,” she said on maximizing AI use cases to identify talent opportunities and improve the startup and business ecosystem. — Miguel Hanz L. Antivola

Globe enables Megaworld’s transition to Zoom for elevated customer experience

From left to right: KD Dizon, Head of Globe Business; Lino Victorioso Jr., Head of Corporate Financial Services Group for Megaworld; and Xav Desmet, Asia Enterprise Sales Head, Zoom.

Voice over Internet Protocol (VoIP) technology is becoming the norm for businesses following the move of tech giants such as Zoom Video Communications, Inc. to modernize communication. The real estate Industry in the Philippines, being one of the key drivers of the economy, is now taking advantage of these technologies, moving forward in their digital transformation journey to better serve the country.

Property giant Megaworld, which introduced live-work-play townships in the Philippines in the late 90s by launching Eastwood City, is strengthening its foothold at the forefront of innovation in real estate by embracing technology to elevate the customer experience. Sharing a common goal to utilize digital innovation as a business enabler, Megaworld joins hands with Globe Business and Zoom to transform communication.

“Communication holds a paramount significance for Globe, having our roots as a telco. But now that we’ve become a TechCo, or tech company, we understand the need for digital tools that work together in an ecosystem, which is what Zoom provides,” said KD Dizon, Head of Globe Business. “By enabling industries, such as real estate through this partnership with Megaworld, we can help shape the future and achieve more things in service of the Filipino people.”

Megaworld has redefined the business of real estate in the Philippines by creating vibrant and dynamic townships that integrate residential condominiums, offices, hotels, and lifestyle malls for their communities. As the real estate development arm of the Andrew Tan-led Alliance Global Group, Inc. (AGI), Megaworld has consistently shaped the nation’s urban landscape.

“Megaworld is now venturing into a new chapter of sustaining our business with technology as a valuable enabler. As a company, our purpose has always been to create ecosystems where people and our partners, particularly our clients, can grow as we elevate their customer experience,” said Lino Victorioso Jr., Head of Corporate Financial Services Group for Megaworld. “With this collaboration with Globe Business and Zoom, we intend to do just that as we fulfill our mission of uplifting lives, impacting society, and helping shape the nation.”

With the Zoom Phone licenses provided by Globe Business, Megaworld’s employees have access to modernized and reliable communication tools. This solution enables enterprises to enjoy numerous benefits, including obtaining a dedicated direct dial number for effortless two-way voice calling and facilitating smooth connections with partners and stakeholders.

Zoom expressed their excitement for this collaboration with the real estate industry. Zoom has evolved into an all-in-one intelligent collaboration platform designed to support limitless human connection that empowers modern collaboration and elevates the customer experience. “We are committed to helping our customers streamline their communication processes and reimagine their employee and customer experience,” Xav Desmet, Asia Enterprise Sales Head said. “We are delighted to team up with Globe Business and Megaworld to help shape the real estate industry in the Philippines by leveraging the unified platform experience provided by Zoom and its ecosystem.”

This collaboration is an important step in helping the Real Estate Industry embrace digital transformation. This aligns with Globe’s dedication to supporting the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals, specifically UN SDG No. 9, which emphasizes the importance of innovation as a driver of economic growth and development.

Partner with Globe Business today to utilize Zoom. Check their website for more information or contact your Globe Business Account Manager.

 


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Kumon Instructor: Empowering the youth through education 

 

Youth empowerment comes through education, for developing the next generation’s abilities is an impactful means to drive them toward future successes. While young students get to learn different fundamental skills in school, Kumon and its educators further empower them through its unique supplementary education program.

Being one of the top-notch education franchises in the world, Kumon has provided a space for a lot of educators to empower the young generation by advancing their capacities in Math and Reading through the application of the Kumon Method of Learning.

Practicing the Kumon Method involves letting students work at the “just-right” level through worksheet study with instructors’ guidance only when needed. As such, instructors franchising with Kumon and helping children study with its distinct way of learning can empower the youth in their respective communities not only by improving the necessary skills of doing math and reading but also by developing the ability to self-learn.

Professionals who are passionate about empowering students by enriching their learning skills can find an avenue to do so by becoming a Kumon instructor-franchisee.

How Kumon empowers franchisee-instructors

For instructors to pursue their passion for youth empowerment and education, Kumon empowers them by providing training, learning opportunities, and support in opening an education business.

Interested applicants would have to go through several phases of training to become a Kumon instructor-franchisee. Once they pass the initial stage of screening, Kumon Philippines, Inc. (KPI) franchise arm would provide hands-on training about the Kumon Method as well as business strategies needed to run their Kumon Centers.

Kumon also helps Instructor-franchisees in ensuring their Kumon Centers are well-situated by providing a List of Open Areas found to have good prospects for an education business to thrive in.

Sustaining instructors’ operations

When instructor-franchisees have initiated their operations, they can still expect continued support from Kumon for the growth and development of their Kumon Centers through constant and aggressive communication and marketing. Kumon also encourages consultations between instructor-franchisees and area managers to maintain quality instruction and management of their Kumon Centers.

To ensure that students find learning empowering through its program, Kumon maintains the quality of the Kumon Method by always safeguarding, reviewing, and updating the materials supplied to Centers.

Kumon further enhances the skills of their instructor-franchisees by offering learning opportunities – both local and overseas – where they could also meet other instructor-franchisees and get good practices and insights from them.

By providing support in running an education business while spreading Kumon’s unique learning method and materials to more communities, Kumon instructors are equipped to further develop the skills and potential of younger generations.

Empower the young generation with education as an instructor at Kumon. Apply for a franchise at https://ph.kumonglobal.com/openkumoncenter/.

 


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New York City bans TikTok on government-owned devices over security concerns

STOCK PHOTO | Image by amrothman from Pixabay

WASHINGTON – New York City on Wednesday banned TikTok on government-owned devices, citing security concerns, joining a number of US cities and states that have put such restrictions on the short video sharing app.

TikTok, which is used by more than 150 million Americans and is owned by Chinese tech giant ByteDance, has faced growing calls from U.S. lawmakers for a nationwide ban over concerns about possible Chinese government influence.

TikTok “posed a security threat to the city’s technical networks,” the administration of New York City Mayor Eric Adams said in a statement.

New York City agencies are required to remove the app within 30 days and employees will lose access to the app and its website on city-owned devices and networks. New York State had already banned TikTok on state-issued mobile devices.

TikTok said it “has not shared, and would not share, US user data with the Chinese government, and has taken substantial measures to protect the privacy and security of TikTok users.”

Top US security officials including FBI Director Christopher Wray and CIA Director William Burns have said TikTok poses a threat. Wray said in March that China’s government could use TikTok to control software on millions of devices and drive narratives to divide Americans, adding the app “screams” of national security concerns.

Former President Donald Trump in 2020 sought to bar new downloads of TikTok, but a series of court decisions blocked the ban from taking effect.

Many US states and cities have restricted TikTok on government devices. Montana recently passed a bill banning the app across the state, a rule set to go into effect on Jan. 1 and being challenged legally.

Close to half of American adults support a ban on TikTok, according to a new Reuters/Ipsos survey released on Wednesday. — Reuters

Optimism emerges among Hollywood writers over talks with studios

PEDRO MARROQUIN-UNSPLASH

LOS ANGELES – After three months of walking the picket lines, striking Hollywood writers expressed optimism on Wednesday about the reopening of contract talks with major studios and the possibility they could be back at work in weeks.

Details of the latest proposal from the Alliance of Motion Picture and Television Producers (AMPTP), the trade group representing Walt Disney DIS.N, Netflix NFLX.O and other major studios and streamers, remain shrouded in secrecy. Still, members of the Writers Guild of America see reason for hope.

“I’m feeling cautiously optimistic. I was here for the 2007-8 strike and talking can go very slowly, talking can break down or talking, if they come with a real deal, can go pretty quickly,” “Flashpoint” writer Pam Davis told Reuters outside Amazon Studios in Culver City.

“So, I’m kind of in the camp where I think we’re gonna be back to work in September,” she added. “But if we’re not, we’re okay with that. If it’s not the right deal, we’re not going to take it,” she added.

Writers went on strike on May 2 over an impasse on compensation, minimum staffing in writers’ rooms, residual payments and curbs on artificial intelligence. They were joined on the picket lines on July 14 by members of the Screen Actors Guild, effectively halting much of U.S. film and scripted television production.

In what would be a sign of progress in a months-long labor dispute, negotiators for the WGA and AMPTP met on Tuesday to discuss the latest contract proposal, more than 100 days into the strike.

“They’re talking again when they weren’t a couple of weeks ago,” said WGA liaison and “Physical” writer K.C. Scott. “That’s what I’m holding onto.”

Scott added that while he doesn’t know what AMPTP offered the guild, the WGA is preparing a counteroffer that he trusts will be in the best interest of the writers.

While “Law and Order” writer and WGA liaison Terri Kopp is also upbeat about talks with studios continuing, she is concerned about information leaking from their confidential negotiating sessions.

“It makes us suspicious because the leaks are designed to make them (the studios) look good and the WGA look bad,” Ms. Kopp said. “I think there’s a possibility they’re trying to get our hopes up and then pull the football out like Lucy.” — Reuters

US summit with South Korea, Japan, will seek to lock-in progress -US official

WASHINGTON – A US summit with Japan and South Korea on Friday will include an ambitious set of initiatives to lock in progress between the allies, White House Indo-Pacific coordinator Kurt Campbell said on Wednesday.

Mr. Campbell said the US relationship with Japan and South Korea would be a “defining trilateral relationship for the 21st century.”

Senior US administration officials have told Reuters the summit will launch joint initiatives on technology and defense, amid mounting shared concerns about China and North Korea.

“What you will see on Friday is a very ambitious set of initiatives that seek to lock in trilateral engagement, both now and in the future,” Mr. Campbell told a Brookings Institution event.

The summit, at the Maryland presidential retreat of Camp David will be the first standalone meeting between the US and its two allies. Mr. Campbell said plans would be announced to make it an annual event and also to invest in technology for a three-way crisis hotline.

US President Joe Biden invited Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida and South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol to Camp David as the Asian nations work to mend their tattered diplomatic relations in the face of rising regional threats.

Washington has formal collective defense arrangements in place with both Tokyo and Seoul separately, but it wants them to work closer together given growing concerns about China’s mounting power and intentions.

However, US officials said the meeting will stop short of any formal three-way security framework and Mr. Campbell acknowledged domestic political constraints in the countries.

He said agreements reached at the summit would be “a substantial step forward in recognizing the common security picture that each of the countries are facing” and recognizing that “it will require common actions.”

“I think we can imagine a future with more ambition, but … the key is not to get too far over your skis, to take this a step at a time to build appropriately to not get beyond the domestic context of which we’re dealing.”

Mr. Campbell said the three would explore how to extend their security cooperation but do so “prudently,” “carefully” and “responsibly.”

He praised the courage of Mr. Yoon and Mr. Kishida in mending ties fraught with historical baggage, stemming particularly from Japan’s past colonial rule of Korea, calling it “a breathtaking kind of diplomacy.”

“It belongs on the top tier with respect to diplomatic initiatives of modern times,” he said.

Mr. Campbell said the aim of the summit was to “try to embed this in our politics in such a way that it will be hard for any leader in either of the three countries” to back out of.

His comment alluded both to the perceived fragility of the Seoul-Tokyo rapprochement and to concerns about the stance of a future US government after former President Donald Trump voiced skepticism about whether Washington benefits from its traditional alliances. — Reuters

Philippines casino revenue seen doubling by 2028 as tourists flock in

PHOTO BY ALICIA A. HERRERA

MANILA – The Philippines’ gambling industry is set to double its gross gaming revenue by 2028, as the country attracts more tourists such as wealthy Chinese gamblers, the gaming regulator’s chief said on Wednesday.

At least six new casino facilities worth roughly around $3 billion are in the pipeline to boost the Southeast Asian nation’s freewheeling gaming industry ahead of competition from Japan, which has a sprawling casino set for construction, and Thailand, which is planning to legalize gambling.

The country’s gaming sector will likely post at least 10% annual growth in gross gaming revenue (GGR), which is projected to post a new record high this year and hit P450 billion to P500 billion ($7.9 to $8.8 billion) in five years’ time, Philippine Amusement and Gaming Corp (Pagcor) Chairman Alejandro Tengco told Reuters.

Total GGR, a key metric in the industry representing the amount players wager minus their winnings, hit a record P256 billion in 2019 and was poised for further growth until the coronavirus pandemic decimated the industry. GGR started recovering in 2021 and reached P214 billion in 2022.

“Currently, the strong performance is supported by a stable of local players,” Mr. Tengco said. “There is still an opportunity for the foreign market to increase further due to improving foreign travel guidelines.”

However, long-term projections could be dampened by headwinds such as more armed conflicts between countries, proliferation of illegal gambling, and an economic downturn, Mr. Tengco said.

The Philippine gambling scene, which includes a smaller version of the Las Vegas gaming strip located in the capital, attracts high rollers from countries like China, Japan and South Korea. It has enticed foreign and domestic firms to set up billion-dollar integrated casino-resorts.

Adding to four sprawling casinos operating in the capital, six more gaming facilities are expected to be put up across the country, Tengco said.

It includes an up to $2 billion casino and golf course in Pampanga province, a $300 million project by Bloomberry Resorts in Cavite province, and a $300 million by Global-Estate Resorts in holiday island Boracay, Pagcor data shows.

While planned casinos in Thailand and Japan are seen as threats, the Philippines is beefing up its status as a preferred destination by privatising state-owned casinos, new gaming projects, and policy reforms, Mr.Tengco said. — Reuters

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