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It’s Zuckerberg and Facebook’s time to bend

By Tae Kim and Alex Webb

MARK ZUCKERBERG has a problem, and he can fix it.

Public furor over Facebook, Inc.’s content policies has led some of its biggest advertisers to take action, with brands from Starbucks Corp. to Unilever, Coca-Cola Co. and Verizon Communications, Inc. all vowing to pull ads from the social media giant’s namesake Facebook platform as well as Instagram for at least the month of July. The move was initially spurred by a campaign led by a coalition of civil rights groups — including the Anti-Defamation League and NAACP — to force Facebook to do more to curb hate speech and language promoting violence. As the effort has gained traction, the numbers joining the boycott are increasing on a daily basis. On Monday afternoon alone, Best Buy Co. said it would pause its ad spending on Facebook, while Axios reported that Microsoft Corp. had suspended its advertising as well.

Facebook has come in for criticism about its practices before and got past it largely by riding out the negative publicity while offering some incremental fixes. For example, Facebook already survived the Cambridge Analytica data-privacy scandal a couple years ago without serious long-term ramifications. And so, Zuckerberg may be tempted to hunker down this time as well. On a purely short-term financial basis, it would make sense. According to Pathmatics data, the top 50 advertisers on Facebook accounted for just 4% of the company’s sales last year. The vast majority of the rest comes from millions of small- and medium-sized businesses that are less affected by any public shaming from activists, and arguably more reliant on the exposure they get from buying ads on Facebook and Instagram. But a decision based purely on dollars and cents would be short-sighted in this instance, and bad for business.

More and more, it’s becoming clear that the recent wave of protests over racial injustice isn’t a short-lived phenomenon, but one that appears to reflect a sea-change in perception and beliefs, and — like the #MeToo movement before it — demands a change in behavior. The backlash that started at the grassroots level and moved on to corporate action is likely to move next to the political and regulatory sphere. Wouldn’t it be better for Facebook, already in the public glare, to bend and make its own meaningful policy changes instead of being forced to accept more punitive prescriptions at further potential damage to its reputation and business?

Facebook is already facing growing regulatory scrutiny in the US. Politicians from both sides of the aisle have made proposals to reform Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act, which shields internet companies from legal liability over user-generated content. For now, Republicans and the Department of Justice are focused on issues of conservative speech censorship, while Democrats have asked for the faster removal of misinformation and false claims inside political ads. The disparate points of emphasis likely means nothing will happen in Congress before the November election. However, if one party controls both houses of Congress and the White House next year, the probability of regulation will rise considerably.

In the near term, the risk for Facebook may be greater from Europe than the US. The region’s authorities have identified antitrust as the more effective way to tackle Silicon Valley’s shortcomings than regulation, whose limits have been exposed by the General Data Protection Regulation that kicked in two years ago. It has done little either to change the business practices of Google or Facebook, or to reduce their market power. And discussions about data or content are always questions of regulation, rather than antitrust.

But antitrust is far more of an existential threat to Facebook than is regulation. That’s not simply because it could, in the most extreme circumstances, result in a breakup of the Menlo Park, California-based company. It’s because antitrust by definition seeks to tackle a company’s business practices.

Just last week, Germany’s highest civil court ruled that Facebook must stop logging browsing activity outside of its platforms without users’ explicit permission, and that such permission couldn’t be a condition of using its other services. Crucially, though, the decision was based not in data protection but antitrust laws: it said that Facebook was abusing its market power to force users to accept the terms because it is the dominant social network. And the ruling fundamentally attacked the company’s business model, which is built on using such data to target ads effectively. An effort by Britain’s Competition and Markets Authority is even less ambiguous: It’s carrying out a study into online platforms and digital advertising.

While the UK is no longer a member of the European Union, the bloc’s regulators are following the findings of the study closely. After years of tackling Google, Facebook is now high on the European agenda. The two firms’ dominance of digital advertising is fueled by their low incremental costs. Tackle their business models, and you might resolve the harmful content problem, runs the argument. The EU plans new rules by the end of the year on content regulation and platform liability, while Margrethe Vestager, the EU’s antitrust and tech chief, is seeking new powers to break companies up. And the European Commission has more power than US regulators: it can impose decisions unilaterally, which companies can then challenge in court. In the US, regulators generally need court approval first before any ruling is imposed.

So, Zuckerberg needs to acknowledge the growing uproar is symptomatic of new and lasting societal, political, and regulatory crosscurrents. While he has long been adamant it is not Facebook’s job to be the “arbiter of truth,” there is no better climate, in the face of pressure from advertisers, politicians, and civil rights groups alike, to alter that stance — he can change tack without losing as much face.

Serious changes are needed — from being more effective in taking down hate speech quickly to clamping down on false claims and disinformation from all users. Such moves would help the company get ahead of future actions from regulators. That would be wise as government regulation will likely be far more punitive — whether it be from the European Union or a potentially new American administration.

Simply, Facebook’s traditional hands-off approach isn’t good enough anymore. It’s time for Zuckerberg to show some real leadership.

BLOOMBERG OPINION

China passes HK security law

HONG KONG/BEIJING — China’s parliament passed national security legislation for Hong Kong on Tuesday, setting the stage for the most radical changes to the former British colony’s way of life since it returned to Chinese rule almost exactly 23 years ago.

State media is expected to publish details of the law — which comes in response to last year’s often-violent pro-democracy protests in the city and aims to tackle subversion, terrorism, separatism and collusion with foreign forces — later on Tuesday.

Amid fears the legislation will crush the global financial hub’s rights and freedoms, and reports that the heaviest penalty would be life imprisonment, prominent pro-democracy activist Joshua Wong said he would quit his Demosisto group.

“It marks the end of Hong Kong that the world knew before,” Mr. Wong said on Twitter.

The legislation pushes Beijing further along a collision course with the United States, Britain and other Western governments, which have said it erodes the high degree of autonomy the city was granted at its July 1, 1997, handover.

The United States began eliminating Hong Kong’s special status under US law on Monday, halting defense exports and restricting the territory’s access to high technology products.

Hong Kong leader Carrie Lam, speaking at her regular weekly news conference, said it was not appropriate for her to comment on the legislation as the meeting in Beijing was still going on, but she threw a jibe at the United States.

“No sort of sanctioning action will ever scare us,” Ms. Lam said.

Lau Siu-kai, vice-president of a think tank under the Beijing cabinet’s Hong Kong and Macau Affairs Office, told Reuters the internationally criticized law was passed unanimously with 162 votes.

The editor-in-chief of the Global Times, a tabloid published by the People’s Daily, the official newspaper of China’s ruling Communist Party, said on Twitter the heaviest penalty under the law was life imprisonment, without providing details.

Authorities in Beijing and Hong Kong have repeatedly said the legislation is aimed at a few “troublemakers” and will not affect rights and freedoms, nor investor interests.

It comes into force as soon as it is gazetted in Hong Kong, which is seen as imminent.

‘REGRETTABLE’
This month, China’s official Xinhua news agency unveiled some of the law’s provisions, including that it would supersede existing Hong Kong legislation and that the power of interpretation belongs to China’s parliament top committee.

Beijing is expected to set up a national security office in Hong Kong for the first time to “supervise, guide and support” the city government. Beijing could also exercise jurisdiction on certain cases.

Judges for security cases are expected to be appointed by the city’s chief executive. Senior judges now allocate rosters up through Hong Kong’s independent judicial system.

It is unclear which specific activities are to be made illegal, how precisely they are defined or what punishment they carry.

Police have banned this year’s July 1 rally on the anniversary of the 1997 handover, citing coronavirus restrictions. It is unclear if attending the rally would constitute a national security crime if the law came into force by Wednesday.

South China Morning Post, citing “police insiders,” said about 4,000 officers will be on stand-by on Wednesday to handle any unrest if people defy the ban.

Hong Kong is one of many developing conflicts between China and the United States, on top of trade, the South China Sea and the coronavirus pandemic.

Britain has said the security law would violate China’s international obligations and its handover agreement.

A Japanese official said that if China had passed the law, it was “regrettable.”

Democratically ruled and Chinese-claimed Taiwan said it “strongly condemns” the legislation, while the European Union has said it could take China to the International Court of Justice in The Hague over it.

China has hit back at the outcry, denouncing “interference” in internal affairs. — Reuters

Gilead prices remdesivir at $2,340 per patient for wealthier countries

GILEAD SCIENCES, Inc. on Monday priced its COVID-19 (coronavirus disease 2019) antiviral remdesivir at $2,340 per patient for wealthier nations and agreed to send nearly all of its supply of the drug to the United States over the next three months.

The price tag is slightly below the range of $2,520 to $2,800 suggested last week by US drug pricing research group the Institute for Clinical and Economic Review (ICER) after British researchers said they found that the cheap, widely available steroid dexamethasone significantly reduced mortality among severely ill COVID-19 patients.

Remdesivir is expected to be in high demand as one of the only treatments so far shown to alter the course of COVID-19. After the intravenously administered medicine helped shorten hospital recovery times in a clinical trial, it won emergency use authorization in the United States and full approval in Japan.

The drug is believed to be most effective in treating patients earlier in the course of disease than dexamethasone, which reduced deaths in patients requiring supportive oxygen and those on a ventilator. Still, remdesivir in its current formulation, is only being used on patients sick enough to require hospitalization as a five-day treatment course.

The company is developing an inhaled version that could be used outside a hospital setting.

For US patients with commercial insurance, Gilead said it will charge $3,120 per course, or $520 per vial. That is a 33% increase over the $390 per vial Gilead said it will charge governments of developed countries and US patients in government health care programs.

‘OUTRAGEOUS PRICE FOR A VERY MODEST DRUG’
In an open letter, Gilead Chief Executive Daniel O’Day said the price is well below the value it provides given that early hospital discharges could save around $12,000 per patient in the United States.

Patient advocates have argued that the cost should be lower since remdesivir was developed with financial support from the US government.

US Representative Lloyd Doggett, a Democrat from Texas, said it was “an outrageous price for a very modest drug, which taxpayer funding saved from a scrap heap of failures.”

Remdesivir had previously failed as an Ebola treatment and has not shown that it can reduce COVID-19 deaths.

Gilead also said it agreed to continue to send most of its supply of remdesivir to the US Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), with the agency and states set to manage allocation to US hospitals until the end of September.

There are currently more cases of COVID-19 in the United States than in Europe, with several US states hitting new records for numbers of cases.

HHS has been distributing the drug since May and was due to run out after this week. A senior HHS official said the agency expects the drug will soon be a scarce resource, and so it wanted to remain involved in allocating it.

The agency said it secured more than 500,000 remdesivir courses for US hospitals through September. That represents all of Gilead’s projected production for July and 90% of its production in August and September, in addition to an allocation for clinical trials, HHS said.

Once supplies are less constrained, HHS will stop managing the allocation, Gilead said. The company did not discuss its supply strategy for developed nations outside the United States.

Remdesivir’s price has been a topic of intense debate. Experts have said Gilead would need to avoid appearing to take advantage of a health crisis for profits.

Gilead shares were about flat on Monday.

Analysts at Royal Bank of Canada forecast the drug could generate $2.3 billion in revenue by 2020, helping offset more than $1 billion in development and distribution costs. They said additional profits could be limited because vaccines and better treatments are on the horizon.

The European Union’s health care regulator last week recommended conditional approval of the drug when used in the critically ill.

Gilead has linked up with generic drugmakers based in India and Pakistan, including Cipla Ltd. and Hetero Labs Ltd., to make and supply remdesivir in 127 developing countries.

Cipla’s version is priced at less than 5,000 Indian rupees ($66.24), while Hetero Lab’s version is priced at 5,400 rupees ($71.54). — Reuters

Chinese researchers warn of new virus in pigs with human pandemic risk

SHANGHAI — A new flu virus found in Chinese pigs has become more infectious to humans and needs to be watched closely in case it becomes a potential “pandemic virus,” a study said, although experts said there is no imminent threat.

A team of Chinese researchers looked at influenza viruses found in pigs from 2011 to 2018 and found a “G4” strain of H1N1 that has “all the essential hallmarks of a candidate pandemic virus,” according to the paper, published by the US journal, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS).

Pig farm workers also showed elevated levels of the virus in their blood, the authors said, adding that “close monitoring in human populations, especially the workers in the swine industry, should be urgently implemented.”

The study highlights the risks of viruses crossing the species barrier into humans, especially in densely populated regions in China, where millions live in close proximity to farms, breeding facilities, slaughterhouses and wet markets.

The coronavirus that caused the worldwide COVID-19 (coronavirus disease 2019) pandemic is believed to have originated in horseshoe bats in southwest China, and could have spread to humans via a seafood market in Wuhan, where the virus was first identified.

The PNAS study said pigs are considered important “mixing vessels” for the generation of pandemic influenza viruses and called for “systematic surveillance” of the problem.

China took action against an outbreak of avian H1N1 in 2009, restricting incoming flights from affected countries and putting tens of thousands of people into quarantine.

The new virus identified in the study is a recombination of the 2009 H1N1 variant and a once prevalent strain found in pigs.

But while it is capable of infecting humans, there is no imminent risk of a new pandemic, said Carl Bergstrom, a biologist at the University of Washington.

“There’s no evidence that G4 is circulating in humans, despite five years of extensive exposure,” he said on Twitter after the paper’s publication. “That’s the key context to keep in mind.” — Reuters

ABAP confident of adding more boxers for Olympics

THE COUNTRY is assured of at least two boxers competing in the rescheduled Olympic Games in Tokyo in 2021 but the Association of Boxing Alliances in the Philippines (ABAP) is confident more could be added to that number once qualifying tournaments resume.

Served as guests on Tuesday’s online Philippine Sportswriters Association Forum, ABAP President Ricky Vargas and Secretary-General Ed Picson said that they have a rich crop of boxers who are capable of qualifying for the Summer Games and join already-qualified Eumir Felix Marcial (welterweight) and Irish Magno (women’s flyweight).

The ABAP officials named world boxing champion Nesthy Petecio, Carlo Paalam, Rogen Ladon and Ian Clark Bautista as some of the fighters with strong chances to book a spot in the Olympics, which was unfortunately pushed back to next year because of the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic.

“We have a rich crop of boxers who nearly qualified in previous qualifying tournaments. They are working as hard as they can and we are confident they can qualify,” said Mr. Vargas, also the chairman of the Philippine Basketball Association.

With COVID-19 still a concern in the country, Mr. Picson said training has been a challenging one for the Filipino boxers but they are finding ways to make things happen, primarily online for now.

“Currently, on the lead of Australian coach Don Abnett and the rest of the coaching staff, the athletes are training arduously online. It’s different but they are making it happen,” said Mr. Picson.

The ABAP officials expressed hope that current quarantine restrictions be eased soon so that national boxers can resume with their normal training, or for them to be at least granted exemptions to train for the Olympics under needed health and safety protocols. “It’s not the same doing things online. We lost steam [in preparations] and we have to go back to the gym,” said Mr. Vargas.

Messrs. Vargas and Picson said they are also looking at fielding some of the country’s boxers in various tournaments abroad later this year and early 2021 to jack up their preparations for the Olympics.

HIGH ON MARCIAL, MAGNO
Meanwhile, Mr. Vargas said they are very high on the chances of Mr. Marcial and Ms. Magno, owing to the commitment the boxers are showing in training and determination to succeed.

Both boxers earned their tickets to the Olympics last March at the 2020 Asia and Oceania Olympic boxing qualifiers in Amman, Jordan.

Mr. Marcial, the ABAP president said, has shown great commitment to see his Olympic dreams through despite his decision to turn professional, although still unsigned, while Ms. Magno is training very hard and is not content on just making it to the Olympics but bringing home a medal.

“I really hope that the Olympics push through next year because we have a good set of boxers who can deliver,” said Mr. Vargas.

“Eumir has a 90% chance of winning a medal and 80% winning a gold while Irish has more than 50% chances of bringing home a medal,” he added.

In the 2016 Olympic Games in Rio, Brazil, the Philippines had two boxer representatives in Mr. Ladon and Charly Suarez. — Michael Angelo S. Murillo

Formula One fires up, four months late and sans a crowd

LONDON — Formula One starts its season in Austria this week, nearly four months later than planned due to the COVID-19 pandemic and against a very different backdrop even if Lewis Hamilton’s targets remain the same.

The six-time world champion can equal Ferrari great Michael Schumacher’s record seven while his Mercedes team is bidding for an unprecedented seventh successive drivers’ and constructors’ title double.

The Briton, who has used his profile to campaign for greater diversity in the sport and against racism, is raring to compete but aware he faces new and unexpected challenges.

“We are preparing the best way we can for what is going to be the most difficult season that Formula One and all of us have experienced,” the 35-year-old said in a Mercedes video.

Since the traditional Australian opener was cancelled in March, Formula One has agreed changes to help teams hard hit by COVID-19.

Driver moves for 2021 have been announced already, including the departure of Hamilton’s old rival Sebastian Vettel from Ferrari at the end of 2020.

This year’s only rookie, Canadian Nicholas Latifi, could find his Williams team is under new ownership before his first campaign is over.

Car liveries unveiled with fanfare in February have changed again to keep up with the changing times.

There is also lingering uncertainty about how many grands prix the season will hold with seven cancelled so far and more likely to follow.

Eight rounds, all in Europe and without spectators for the first time, feature on a provisional calendar but the sport still hopes to muster 15–18 races, even if that means several circuits hosting two each.

TWO RACES
Sunday will be the first time Austria has hosted a season-opener, at Spielberg’s scenic Red Bull Ring, and the following weekend will see another milestone when the circuit becomes the first to host two F1 championship races in the same season.

That could be good news for Dutch crowd-pleaser Max Verstappen, who has brought a home victory for Red Bull for the past two years.

There will be no fans, no sponsors, no hospitality units or VIPs and no socializing between teams within a paddock “bubble” where safe spacing and face masks are the “new normal” and everything will take a little longer.

Where the teams stand in the pecking order is also unclear. They have not run their cars in anger since February testing, and have not raced since December.

Hamilton, who needs seven more wins to equal Schumacher’s record 91, should have a faster car than would have been the case had the season started in Australia on March 15 but so too will rivals bringing months’ worth of updates.

Vettel, a four-time world champion, has an uncertain future and will want to go out on a high in his last campaign for Ferrari.

McLaren’s Carlos Sainz will take the German’s place alongside Charles Leclerc in 2021, with Australian Daniel Ricciardo moving from Renault to replace the Spaniard. — Reuters

SBP welcomes rescheduling of 3×3 Olympic qualifiers

By Michael Angelo S. Murillo, Senior Reporter

THE SAMAHANG BASKETBOL ng Pilipinas (SBP) welcomed the rescheduling of the FIBA 3×3 Olympic Qualifying Tournament to May next year as it gives the team from the Philippines added time to prepare.

Originally set for March this year, the 3×3 OQT was decided to be postponed to a later date because of the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic.

It also came after the postponement of the Olympic Games in Tokyo to 2021 as the global pandemic rendered it impossible to be staged this year.

In an announcement made last week, FIBA said the 3×3 Olympic qualifiers will now take place from May 26 to 30 in Graz, Australia, from its original site of Bengaluru, India.

The development was welcomed by the SBP, seeing it as an opportunity for the Philippine team to sharpen its game.

“If the tournament took place as scheduled, I don’t think we have enough preparation [time] because it coincided with the schedule of the PBA and with the other schedules of the players,” Ryan Gregorio, special assistant to SBP President Al Panlilio, was quoted as saying by the Philippine Basketball Association website.

“Now because it was moved, the 20 countries and its players are back to zero when it comes to conditioning and in preparation,” he added.

Among the squads competing at the OQT is Team Philippines, led by the country’s top two 3×3 players Joshua Munzon and Alvin Pasaol. They are joined by Southeast Asian Games gold medallists CJ Perez and Mo Tautuaa from the PBA.

The team, assembled in February, will try to book a spot in the Olympics, where 3×3 basketball is making its debut.

Currently the team is not practicing as government measures and restrictions to combat COVID-19 prevent it from doing so.

But Mr. Gregorio said that once they get the go-ahead to proceed with their activities from the Inter-Agency Task Force for the Management of Emerging Infectious Diseases (IATF) they will immediately buckle down to work.

“As soon as we’re given clearance by IATF to resume basketball and return to play, we will take advantage of that and work on the team’s chemistry and camaraderie,” Mr. Gregorio said.

In the Graz qualifiers, 40 teams (20 in each gender) coming from 36 different countries will compete for the six tickets (three per gender) to Tokyo.

As per the draw, the Philippines will open its OQT bid in Group C along with Slovenia, France, Qatar and the Dominican Republic.

The local organizers of the Graz qualifiers said they will build a temporary outdoor venue of a 2,000-seat capacity for the occasion and are already looking forward to the event.

Local football making adjustments for possible return

While waiting for the go-ahead for the community to resume activities amid the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic, local football officials have started the ball rolling in preparation for a possible resumption by crafting guidelines to follow.

In an update released on Monday, the Philippine Football Federation shared that it has began moves towards a return to action for the sport and made adjustments with the conduct of its affairs, including crafting a set of protocols as guide which has been submitted to the Inter-Agency Task Force for the Management of Emerging Infectious Diseases (IATF) for consideration.

The PFF said that along with other stakeholders it has made representations to the Games and Amusement Board (GAB) for guidance to convince the IATF, the lead body in the country’s fight against COVID-19, to allow the sport to return gradually, first with practices and then for matches to resume in leagues like the Philippines Football League.

Its recommendations were included in a 26-page operations protocol it submitted to GAB in May, which, in turn, forwarded it to the IATF.

The PFF said in coming up with the health and safety protocols it also took direction from the guidelines set by football world-governing body FIFA and the World Health Organization.

The National Capital Region, as of this writing, remains under General Community Quarantine where mass gatherings like sporting events are still not allowed to stop the spread of the COVID-19 virus, which has 36,438 confirmed cases in the country.

To adjust as well to the situation it is currently in with COVID-19, the PFF deemed it fit to reschedule some events under its watch to dates still to be determined.

Among those affected are the Regional Festival of Football 2020, PFF Women’s League 2020, U15 Boys Championship 2020, U17 Boys Championship 2020, U16 Girls Regional Championship and U18 Girls Regional Championship.

The local sports federation said the start dates of said competitions will be dependent on the government’s guidelines for COVID-19.

The PFF also reaffirmed its commitment to the campaign of the Philippine national men’s football team, whose matches in the FIFA World Cup Qatar 2022/AFC Asian Cup China 2023 Preliminary Joint Qualification Round 2 fixtures are now slated in October and November 2020.

The Philippine Azkals will take on Guam on Oct. 8, China on Nov. 12 and Maldives on Nov. 17.

The Azkals are currently in third spot in Group A of the joint qualifiers with seven points built on a 2-1-2 record.

Syria (5-0-0) is on top of the heap with 15 points, followed by China (2-1-1) with seven. Maldives (2-0-3) is fourth with six points while Guam (0-0-5) has no points and is already eliminated in the race.

The top teams in the groupings in round two advance to the third round of the World Cup qualifiers and earn a spot in the Asian Cup.

The Philippines last faced Syria in the qualifiers in November where it lost, 1-0. — Michael Angelo S. Murillo

Lakers finalizing deal with JR Smith, reports say

THE LOS ANGELES Lakers are finalizing a deal with guard JR Smith to add him to their roster for this month’s season restart in Orlando, Florida., multiple outlets reported Monday.

According to ESPN, the Lakers have been in talks with Smith since Avery Bradley opted out of the restart last week in order to stay with his family.

The National Basketball Association transaction window closes at 11:59 p.m. ET on Tuesday, with teams required to submit their final rosters by Wednesday.

Smith, 34, has not played in the NBA since an 11-game stint with the Cleveland Cavaliers at the start of the 2018–2019 season, when he accused the team of tanking before eventually parting ways.

His last full season came in 2017–18 with the Cavs, when he averaged 8.3 points and 2.9 rebounds in 80 games (61 starts) in LeBron James’ final season before he left to join the Lakers. In Game One of the NBA Finals that year, Smith infamously lost track of the score in a gaffe that ultimately led to Cleveland losing to Golden State in overtime.

Across 14-plus seasons, Smith has career averages of 12.5 points and 3.2 rebounds in 971 games (395 starts).

NBA players already have reported to their teams and begun testing for the coronavirus, with mandatory individual workouts beginning Wednesday. Teams will travel to Orlando between July 7–9 to begin training camps before restarting the season July 30.

The Lakers will play their first game that day against the Los Angeles Clippers. When the season was halted on March 11 because of the coronavirus pandemic, the Lakers held a 5.5-game lead over the Clippers in the Western Conference standings.

DINWIDDIE TESTS POSITIVE
Meanwhile, Brooklyn Nets standout guard Spencer Dinwiddie has been diagnosed with the coronavirus, he told The Athletic on Monday.

Dinwiddie told the publication he may not be able to play when the NBA season resumes.

Dinwiddie said he will remain in quarantine and be reevaluated in 14 days.

The 27-year-old is averaging career bests of 20.6 points, 6.8 assists and 3.5 rebounds in 64 games (49 starts) during his sixth NBA season.

The news about Dinwiddle comes one day after Brooklyn forward Wilson Chandler announced he won’t play in the restarted season at the ESPN Wide World of Sports Complex near Orlando. Chandler cited a desire to remain with his family. Guard Kyrie Irving (shoulder surgery) and Small Forward Kevin Durant (Achilles) also won’t participate. — Reuters

Bubble challenge

The news that 16 of 302 players tested positive for the novel coronavirus is among the biggest pieces accompanying the National Basketball Association’s announcement of the restart of its 2019–20 campaign. Lost in the excitement of pro hoops returning to the mainstream come July 30: the fact that nearly six percent of the base got flagged. It’s a hefty number, particularly when juxtaposed with national and worldwide totals. On the other hand, the sample size is admittedly too small to make a determination one way or the other; for corrective purposes, it holds value only as a reminder of the need for the league to continue taking extraordinary precautions in ensuring the well-being of its stakeholders.

To be sure, the procedure in and of itself underscores the NBA’s commitment to safety from the get-go. Those who tested positive immediately went into quarantine, and only after clearance based on additional checks will they be allowed to enter the bubble environment at the ESPN Wide World of Sports Complex in Walt Disney World Florida. Its resolve to finish the season for financial reasons notwithstanding, it understands that under no circumstance will its plan work other than that which keeps the virus at bay.

Make no mistake. More setbacks are in the offing, and, the closer these come to the restart, the bigger the problems that require attention. And there have been significant opt-outs, leading to compounded hurdles. The Nets, for example, are at a crossroads; already without the injured Kyrie Irving and reeling from the decision of Wilson Chandler to sit out the bubble, they’re left to decide their future after Spencer Dinwiddie and DeAndre Jordan’s positive tests. With the latter begging off from playing and the former possibly staying in the sidelines as well, their competitiveness becomes suspect. Why, then, should the rest risk their health?

Thusly, the decision to travel to Florida has become a deeply personal decision. Money is on the line, and its importance cannot be understated. That said, it’s dwarfed by far more pressing concerns: Quality of life is trumped by life. In the final analysis, there is no right or wrong in staying or playing. Meanwhile, fans know better than to complain; the NBA Playoffs will be a sight for sore eyes whether or not the usual suspects burn rubber. The sacrifice isn’t theirs, but on their hardcourt heroes who crave for some semblance of normalcy amid upheaval on and off the court.

 

Anthony L. Cuaycong has been writing Courtside since BusinessWorld introduced a Sports section in 1994. He is a consultant on strategic planning, operations & Human Resources management, corporate communications, and business development.

India bans TikTok and 58 other Chinese apps citing security concerns

For ByteDance, which counts India as its biggest market with over 200 million TikTok users, the banning of the viral short-video service is a particular blow. ByteDance faced a brief ban in India last year, and is being scrutinized in Europe. It also faces mounting questions from US policy-makers over whether it jeopardizes national security.

India banned ByteDance Ltd.’s viral short-video service TikTok and 58 other Chinese apps, citing threats to its sovereignty and security as relations between the world’s two largest populations worsened.

The unprecedented moratorium, announced days after border tensions in the Himalayas left 20 Indian soldiers dead, deals a blow to the most prominent names in Chinese technology. The banned services included e-commerce giant Alibaba Group Holding Ltd.’s UC Web, social media leader Tencent Holdings Ltd.’s WeChat and Baidu Inc.’s map and translation platforms.

The move marks another attempt by India to reduce dependence on its neighbor’s products and hampers efforts by China’s largest corporations to expand beyond their own borders — a collective endeavor encapsulated by TikTok’s phenomenal success abroad and particularly in India, ByteDance’s largest international market. The world’s most valuable startup responded by saying it will meet with Narendra Modi’s government to discuss the matter.

“TikTok continues to comply with all data privacy and security requirements under Indian law and has not shared any information of our users in India with any foreign government, including the Chinese government,” said Nikhil Gandhi, the company’s local chief, in a tweet on its official account. “Further if we are requested to in the future we would not do so.”

In an e-mailed statement, TikTok also said that its “team of around 2,000 employees in India is committed to working with the government to demonstrate our dedication to user security and our commitment to the country overall.”

The ban threatens to ramp up tensions between two of Asia’s largest economies. As the border standoff that had simmered for nearly two months worsened, customs officials began halting clearances of industrial consignments coming in from China at major Indian ports and airports. The ban announced Monday also includes smartphone maker Xiaomi Corp.’s Mi Video Call and Weibo, a Chinese Twitter-like service.

The unauthorized transmission and storage of Indian users’ data in overseas servers and “its mining and profiling by elements hostile to national security and defense of India” is a matter of deep and immediate concern requiring the emergency measures, the Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology said in a statement on Monday. Representatives for Alibaba, Tencent and Baidu didn’t have immediate comment when contacted.

Still, it’s unclear how the ban will be implemented as most of these apps already reside on users’ phones. The government might need to block the app servers and prevent new users from downloading them. One in three smartphone users in India will be impacted by this ban, Tarun Pathak, associate director with Counterpoint Technology, told BloombergQuint.

Meanwhile, the government’s decision to bar the apps began garnering support on social media.

“It’s time to take some hard decisions to get out of China’s cyber clutches,” Nirmal Jain, chairman at financial services conglomerate IIFL Group, tweeted.

While banning other Chinese-made products and hardware is challenging in Asia’s third-largest economy, the blockade of a wide swath of Chinese apps ranging from gaming and news content to music streaming and online retail is particularly significant.

India, with its half-billion internet users, is an emerging arena for global technology companies from the US to China. As hundreds of millions of first-time users come online in India, they do so on Chinese smartphones. Myriad Chinese apps are their doorway to the internet.

For ByteDance, which counts India as its biggest market with over 200 million TikTok users, the move is a particular blow. ByteDance faced a brief ban in India last year, and is being scrutinized in Europe. It also faces mounting questions from US policy-makers over whether it jeopardizes national security.

“Some of these Chinese apps are not just for commerce but have deeply entrenched into the social fabric of our lives,” said Anil Kumar, chief executive officer of technology researcher RedSeer Consulting. “They know what you do, what you say, where you go. In the current context, they can be viewed as a threat to our national security.” — Bloomberg

With coronavirus under control, Vietnam and New Zealand see different travel trends

LONDON/HANOI — Laura Douglas’ tourism start-up, a farm surrounded by snow-tipped mountains in southern New Zealand, was attracting hundreds of mostly foreign visitors a month until the coronavirus pandemic brought it to a sudden halt in March.

“It’s like I’ve been mourning the loss of my business,” Ms. Douglas, 33, said in a phone interview with Reuters, adding she had to take on a second job as a vet to pay the bills during a strict lockdown that included sealing the country’s borders.

The rebound for New Zealanders who are reliant on tourism is expected to be slow, in marked contrast to how the tourism sector is faring in Vietnam, another nation that was hailed as a success story in Asia for containing the coronavirus.

Both countries have emerged from lockdown virtually virus-free, lifting all restrictions except those on international travel. While New Zealand’s tourism sector is struggling pending arrivals from abroad, Vietnam’s has rebounded, according to travel data and industry members.

This is thanks to how much domestic tourism has filled the gap, reflecting in part how badly the coronavirus hit the two economies. While New Zealand’s economy is expected to contract by as much as 20% in the first half of the year, according to the central bank, Vietnam has kept its yearly growth target above 5%.

July is normally a peak travel season in New Zealand, along with Christmas, but scheduled flights are down 40% compared to the same month last year and even many of those are being canceled, according to figures from travel analytics firm Cirium.

Weekly demand for Airbnb and Vrbo properties through July are down 55% from last year and a recovery is unlikely until later this year, according to forward-looking bookings from AirDNA.

Across the ocean in Vietnam, the story is very different. In July, more than 26,000 flights are expected to transport 5 million people, increases of 16% and 24% from last year.

Nguyen Thi Thuy Anh, owner of a travel agency called Minh Viet Booking, says he is handling a surge in bookings as businesses slash prices to attract local travelers.

“Many people who couldn’t afford five-star services before are taking advantage of the programs to experience the services,” he said, referring to central and provincial government efforts to boost mass domestic tourism.

In a country with poor rail and road infrastructure, air travel is already a popular mode of transport, and even more so now, with airlines adding routes and offering tickets for as low as 69,000 Vietnamese dong (US$3).

A Reuters analysis of flight data from FlightRadar24 shows that Ho Chi Minh and Hanoi, along with Phu Quoc island and Cam Rahn bay — both tourist hotspots — were top destinations through mid-June after lockdowns were lifted in late April.

WEEKEND ROAD TRIPS
In New Zealand, Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern is asking people to “experience your own backyard.” She is urging employers to consider four-day work weeks and has said the government is actively considering more public holidays this year so people can travel.

On Friday, Ms. Ardern is launching the country’s ski season in the tourist destination of Queenstown, hoping that will give another boost to domestic travel.

Some New Zealanders appear to be heeding her encouragement and taking weekend road trips.

Demand for hotels and short-term rentals, while depressed overall, still ticks up over the weekends according to STR, an analytics firm that looks specifically at the hotel industry.

But tourism business owners say a pot of NZ$400 million (US$257 million) set aside by the government to subsidise wages and other costs for the industry will not be enough to tide it over while foreign tourists are still barred.

Foreigners account for around half the NZ$16.1 billion (US$10.34 billion) that tourism contributes to GDP in New Zealand, a hole economist Peter Clough says will be difficult to plug with just domestic travelers.

“Whatever we do, we’re not going to fill that hole just by drumming up domestic travel or the Trans-Tasman bubble,” he said, referring to a proposal that was touted last month to allow movement between Australia and New Zealand.

For Ms. Douglas, the downturn means digging deep in her own pockets and pivoting as much as possible to attract local travel to her 15,000-hectare (37,000-acre) farm.

“The farming mentality is that you’re not always going to have good seasons,” she said. “Right now, Kiwis are going to be the best gift for us and I’m hoping they will come with their gumboots on.” — Reuters