/__origami

  • US urged Ukraine to halt strikes on Russian oil refineries
    https://www.ft.com/content/98f15b60-bc4d-4d3c-9e57-cbdde122ac0c

    Washington told Kyiv that drone attacks risk driving up crude prices and provoking retaliation

    The US has urged Ukraine to halt attacks on Russia’s energy infrastructure, warning that the drone strikes risk driving up global oil prices and provoking retaliation, according to three people familiar with the discussions.

    The repeated warnings from Washington were delivered to senior officials at Ukraine’s state security service, the SBU, and its military intelligence directorate, known as the GUR, the people told the Financial Times.

    Both intelligence units have steadily expanded their own drone programmes to strike Russian targets on land, sea and in the air since the start of the Kremlin’s full-scale invasion in February 2022.

    One person said that the White House had grown increasingly frustrated by brazen Ukrainian drone attacks that have struck oil refineries, terminals, depots and storage facilities across western Russia, hurting its oil production capacity.

    Russia remains one of the world’s most important energy exporters despite western sanctions on its oil and gas sector. Oil prices have risen about 15 per cent this year, to $85 a barrel, pushing up fuel costs just as US President Joe Biden begins his campaign for re-election.

    Washington is also concerned that if Ukraine keeps hitting Russian facilities, including many that are hundreds of miles from the border, Russia could retaliate by lashing out at energy infrastructure relied on by the west.

    This includes the CPC pipeline carrying oil from Kazakhstan through Russia to the global market. Western companies including ExxonMobil and Chevron use the pipeline, which Moscow briefly shut in 2022.

    “We do not encourage or enable attacks inside of Russia,” an NSC spokesperson said. The CIA declined to comment. In Kyiv, a spokesperson for the SBU declined to comment. Officials at GUR and Zelenskyy’s office did not respond to requests for comment. 

    After the Financial Times published news of the US warnings on Friday Olha Stefanishyna, Ukraine’s deputy prime minister for European and Euro-Atlantic integration, was asked how Kyiv had responded to the Biden administration’s appeals to stop attacks on Russian refineries.

    She said: “The Ukrainian side responded, I think, precisely by achieving its goals and by very successful operations conducted on the territory of the Russian Federation.”

    “We understand the appeals of our American partners,” Stefanishyna told an audience at the Kyiv Security Forum. “At the same time, we are fighting with the capabilities, resources and practices that we have today.”

    #nan_paske_fô_pas_déconner_quand_même !

  • The Israel-Hamas war in maps : latest updates
    https://www.ft.com/content/42bbe534-8a0d-4ba8-9cc6-f84936d87196
    De nombreuses cartes, graphiques, animations et vidéos très intéressants. Un certain nombre étant animés il n’est pas possible de le reproduire directement dans Seenthis

  • Inside France’s courtship of Binance
    https://www.ft.com/content/47fe6542-d000-4051-86d9-feb0055697da

    “Honored to have dinner with (a few hundred people and) President Macron. @ Choose France”, CZ tweeted in July 2022 © @cz_binance on X

    Akila Quinio

    Ten years ago, France had an innovation problem. Despite training top engineers and financiers, the country struggled to build successful homegrown start-ups and attract venture capital. Its boldest scientists were flocking to Silicon Valley.

    Then came Emmanuel Macron. Vowing to make France a “start-up nation” the former financier set out to shake things up. He brought in tech visas, boosted public grants and relaxed investment rules to foster entrepreneurship.

    Their zeal to attract tech companies to invest in Paris has attracted US giants like Google and Netflix, as well as helping establish a stable of domestic “unicorns”. But in seeking to cure its innovation problem Macron’s government has taken risks. The open-door policy might yet become an embarrassment around crypto in particular, as its courting of Binance has shown.

    It all started when Changpeng “CZ” Zhao met Macron at the Elysée palace in November 2021. That same month, Binance said it would invest €100mn into France’s burgeoning crypto scene — a pledge dubbed “objective moon” by its founder. The courtship culminated with France’s Autorité des Marchés Financiers, the financial watchdog, granting the exchange regulatory approval last May — a move that contrasted sharply with other national regulatory stances.

    Cue the honeymoon phase. In October last year, CZ headlined France Fintech’s flagship conference in the business district of La Défense. The industry’s best-known founders, including Cyril Chiche of payment app Lydia, lined up to shake hands and be photographed next to him.

    A person familiar with the discussions told the FT that the French government granted Binance more than a hundred tech visas to help it grow its operations on French soil. On stage, CZ joked that he was spending so much time in France that he had started to buy his socks in Paris. (I later asked if he also paid taxes there, to which he said he had no awareness of his own fiscal residency.)

    French Minister of Economy and Finance Bruno Le Maire last year told BFM Business that he was “proud” of Binance’s French registration. Attracting foreign players including Binance was key to France’s bid to become a “European hub of the crypto assets ecosystem”, he said.

    This initial courting was taking place when crypto was still hot. The industry has since suffered a few reputational hits. Sam Bankman-Fried fell from grace and was convicted of fraud and money laundering in the US. Regulators were also scrutinising Binance, leading to its guilty plea last month to criminal charges related to money laundering and breaching international financial sanctions. In France, authorities are investigating the exchange for having allegedly advertised and promoted its services before it was allowed to operate there.

    One may expect recent events to have rocked the nascent relationship. But the French government appears to have remained under Binance’s charm.

    Following the collapse of FTX, French legislators beefed up the requirements for newcomers wishing to set shop in the country. Getting an Autorité des Marchés Financiers registration will from January take into account new criteria including having a resilient and secure IT system and a process to manage conflicts of interest. But such requirements will not apply to companies already registered with the AMF, including Binance.

    The government also resisted pressure to bring forward to October 2023 the deadline by which registered crypto companies are forced to apply for a regulatory licence, claiming it might make investors “flee” the country.

    Under the revised legislation and European law, Binance’s French regulatory status means it is set to benefit from an 18-month grace period before it has to apply for a licence as mandated by upcoming European law, meaning it is able to keep operating on a local registration until July 2026.

    For companies that are already registered, “the least I can say is that the government was not in favour of making the regulatory framework tougher,” said Hervé Maurey, a senator who was involved in the negotiations. “What we are putting in place will allow us to control the arrival of new players but not so much those who are already here.”

    Last month I spoke with a member of Macron’s parliamentary majority who reiterated that France had been right to embrace the exchange. Binance’s presence was a testament to the country’s changed attitude towards innovation, he said. I suggested it may also be a testament to its changed attitude towards alleged financial crime. You never know who might become “the next Google”, he replied.

    Less than three weeks later, CZ resigned as Binance CEO and pleaded guilty to a US criminal charge related to money laundering. He could face up to 18 months of imprisonment.

    The parliamentarian also made a fair point: French regulators were among the first to create a regulatory framework for digital asset providers, which formed a template for Europe’s upcoming Mica regulation. Under a two-tier system, Binance has only been granted a registration rather than a full-fledged licence that offers consumer protection. Only the exchange’s French operation is allowed to operate in the country and certain activities such as futures trading are banned in France.

    But a closer look at Binance’s activities suggests the exchange may have pushed the limits of its strict regulatory mandate.

    Behind a seemingly benevolent charity programme, Binance has used aggressive tactics to solicit people to use its services in some of France’s most deprived areas. Far from its glitzy office in Place de la Bourse, the company has targeted banlieues such as Aulnay-sous-Bois and Montreuil.

    Its promise was to train students from all walks of life with the technical skills required to find employment in blockchain-related industries, including as engineers. The goal was to reach 10,000 students by the end of this year.

    Last October, I attended one such “awareness” course in Aulnay-sous-Bois, a suburb of Paris known for its poverty and crime rate. It lasted half a day and consisted of a slideshow on blockchain technology followed by a short practical exercise with Solidity, a blockchain programming language.

    In class, students received Binance goody bags with branded hats, promotional leaflets, pens and notebooks. They were asked to download MetaMask wallets, software that allows access to decentralised applications and storage of digital assets including unregulated financial instruments.
    Binance said its charity initiative would “provide training for 10,000 people in Web3 application, awareness and software development.”

    French regulation does not allow registered crypto companies such as Binance to make unsolicited approaches to prospective customers for marketing purposes. Doing so is a criminal offence which can result in fines of up to €7,500 for individuals and €37,500 for companies, according to Henry des Horts, a financial regulation lawyer at Addleshaw Goddard.

    Binance France said: “We recognise that digital education and skills development can be out of reach for many, resulting in a blockchain industry that lacks diversity and talent. The Binance Scholar Program helps to change that, covering the costs of tuition and course fees at some of the world’s leading universities, colleges and vocational training providers.”

    Bryan Houblon, a then-24-year-old attendee from Bondy, was retraining as web developer after his philosophy degree failed to secure him a job. “They told us that a junior blockchain developer could earn 100K per year so obviously we all had starry eyes — it’s attractive,” he said.

    For Terry Jenly, a student from Aulnay-sous-Bois who was part of the same cohort and was 20 years old at the time, the gifts were a sign of CZ’s charitable streak. “The Binance T-shirt I got is of amazing quality so it’s always a nice touch,” said Jenly. “Maybe CZ had a childhood like us in the banlieues and that’s why he wants to share with the less fortunate.”

    In class, Houblon was told that he needed a Binance account in order to receive his NFT diploma after the half-day course — a proof of ownership and security, said his teachers. He started the registration process during the lesson but did not complete it.

    “I started to create the Binance account because they asked me to and now they are harassing me with follow-up emails,” said Houblon, who received 17 promotional emails, seen by the FT, in the month that followed his lesson. More than a year later, Houblon is still receiving emails from the exchange, including some urging him to redeem cryptocurrency vouchers on the platform.
    More than a year later, Houblon is still receiving advertisements from Binance urging him to redeem crypto vouchers on the app

    Neither student had signed up to take the class voluntarily. They were made to participate as part of a retraining course subsidised by the government and hosted by coding school Simplon.

    “This looks more like a marketing operation than anything else,” said French MEP Aurore Lalucq who last June opposed France’s registration of Binance. To her, the initiative looked like an attempt by the platform to find new users in vulnerable areas disguised as an educational project.

    “Many companies set up foundations to work on projects which are normally unrelated to their commercial interests like fighting discrimination, or advocating for women . . . but I struggle to see the educational value in this”.

    Out of the 10,000 people Binance has targeted to train by the end of 2023, less than a hundred will have received coding lessons. The rest are set to receive “awareness courses”.

    One person familiar with the outreach programme who asked not to be named said Binance’s main “KPI” (key performance indicator) for the charity initiative was “user acquisition”.

    Asked about his due diligence, Simplon founder Frédéric Bardeau said he felt safe partnering with Binance because the trading shop had been vetted by both France’s government and its market regulator.

    When I rang him about publishing this piece, Bardeau said he has since demanded Binance would stop issuing students with their attendance certificates by NFT that could only be obtained on Binance digital wallets.

    “Our mission was to make people understand and like blockchain and all its use cases beyond crypto,” he said. “Not mixing genres and hard-selling.” The next day, promotional content about the Binance partnership had disappeared from Simplon’s online homepage.

    France’s ministry of finance said: “The French government’s position remains very clear: regulation must apply with strength to Binance just like it must apply to all other financial entities while supervisors; and law enforcement if need, are charged with the enforcement of this regulation”.

    The French ministry of labour, employment and economic inclusion has been asked for comment. The AMF declined to comment.

    Thierry Philipponnat, who sat on the board of the AMF at the time of Binance’s registration, said Binance Charity’s education initiative could be the subject of legal wrangling in the future.

    “One thing is certain: the [AMF crypto registration regime] does not allow direct solicitation of customers,” he said. “I imagine that the practices [described] could give rise to a fine debate between lawyers as to whether or not they should be considered as marketing.”

    #Cryptomonnaies #Arnaque #Binance #Chômeurs #Etat_complice

  • What we get wrong when we talk about global warming | Financial Times
    https://www.ft.com/content/de449d0d-0558-48da-90b9-5bb4fe809dab


    https://www.ft.com/__origami/service/image/v2/images/raw/https%3A%2F%2Fpublic.flourish.studio%2Fvisualisation%2F14500807%2Fthumbnail%3Fca

    These figures are not estimates of excess mortality coinciding with extreme heat, where different methodologies can produce different figures. They are specific individuals whose death was judged by a medical examiner to have been directly caused by extreme heat. Some are people who suffered severe burns when their skin came into contact with pavements superheated to as much as 82C (180F). This is not a forecast for 50 years time, it’s happening today.

    As climate anxiety grows, the risk that humanity continues to be the frog in a slowly boiling pot of water is only exacerbated by the fact that we continue to emphasise abstract statistics instead of things that people can really see and feel.

    I understand the focus on the 2C limit, but it a) sounds small, b) refers to some date in the future, c) lacks any connection to human experience and d) does a pretty bad job of describing what is happening with temperatures.

    In much the same way that focusing on the average US lifespan of 76 years encourages one to think about older people and obscures the tens of thousands of young adults who died to create that tragic statistic, focusing on average temperature growth obscures the extremes that drive loss of life and total transformation of living.

    • @olaf : non ce n’est pas « la faute » aux statistiques mais les prospections statistiques ne suffiront pas à faire appréhender le problème ici et maintenant.
      L’échéance 2100 n’est pas un bon signal à l’échelle humaine. Tout comme les moyennes statistiques ne peuvent rendre compte de façon adéquate des impacts déjà en cours sur nos vies quotidiennes.

    • French riots show how entrenched inequalities have become

      The gulf between immigrants and those born in the country is larger than in almost any other developed nation

      Imagine two countries. The first is proudly Christian, it allowed racial segregation in living memory and racism is mentioned more frequently in its media than anywhere else in the developed world. The second is strictly secular and legally prohibits the collection of data on people’s race, a conscious effort by its leaders to avoid using ethnicity to differentiate or divide.

      Which do you think would offer people from diverse racial and religious backgrounds the best prospects of success? Of becoming equal participants in society? The answers revealed in the data are surprising.

      In 2021, US unemployment was 5.5 per cent for those born in the country, and 5.6 per cent for those born overseas. Black and white employment rates are now neck and neck. In France, unemployment is seven per cent among those born in the country, but 12 per cent for immigrants, rising past 17 per cent among those who arrived in the last ten years. Comparisons with Britain, whose demographics and colonial history perhaps make for a fairer benchmark, are similarly damning.

      Following a week of rioting across France, spurred by the death of a teenager of North African descent shot dead by police at a traffic stop, these statistics are worth revisiting. While the number of arrests has declined this week, the need for a serious conversation about how France continues to fail its immigrant communities and their neighbourhoods remains.

      Just as in France’s 2005 bout of urban violence, or London’s own riots in 2011, fractious relations between police and ethnic minorities provided the spark for unrest fuelled by deprivation and social exclusion. Rioters tend to come disproportionately from disadvantaged neighbourhoods: those who don’t have a stake in society have little to lose in burning it down.

      Across the west, young black and brown men have grown bitterly used to being disproportionately targeted by police stop and searches, but the magnitude of the disparity in France is shocking. In London, black people are between two and three times as likely to be apprehended as their white counterparts, but in Paris the figure rises to six times, and almost eight times for those of Arab origin.

      Encounters with French police are more lethal, too, as officers are routinely armed and are allowed to shoot at people who don’t comply with traffic stops if they are deemed to pose a safety risk. There were 26 fatal police shootings in France in 2022, compared to just 2 in the UK, and in the past 18 months French police have shot dead 17 people during traffic stops such as that which sparked the latest riots.

      Last Friday as the unrest escalated, the two largest police unions released a statement declaring they were “at war” with “vermin” and “savage hordes”. This culture of hostility has grown since Nicolas Sarkozy abandoned neighbourhood policing two decades ago, in favour of more repressive tactics. A future government led by Marine Le Pen’s far-right party would surely only lean into the adversarial approach.

      And there is little sign of improvement on integration. One in five of France’s foreign-born population believe they are discriminated against, the joint highest with Italy in the developed world. Meanwhile France’s immigrants are almost three times as likely as those born in the country to be in poverty. In the UK, the poverty rates between immigrants and others are the same.

      This French disparity is compounded by decades of failed urban policy resulting in immigrant communities being concentrated in the banlieues, emphasising their otherness and hampering social mobility. The cheek-by-jowl nature of wealth and poverty in London comes with its own problems, but has been a buttress against the ossification of inequality seen in France. Twenty-eight per cent of recent French immigrants are now in the lowest tenth of earners, compared to just eight per cent of non-immigrants. In the UK, the figure is ten per cent regardless of country of birth.

      Despite claims that France is race-blind, the data tells a different story. Without reforms in both policing and social exclusion, there is little hope that these violent episodes will cease any time soon.

      john.burn-murdoch@ft.com, @jburnmurdoch

    • Les langues se délient dans la presse étrangères. Très bien. Mais à moins qu’une agence de notation dégrade à nouveau la France sur le marché de la dette, quels bénéfices pourrait-on retirer de ce « Macronie bashing » ?
      Sur un horizon proche, perso, je ne vois que des emmerdes. Les « investisseurs » se désinvestissent (trop d’insécurité). La France ainsi ostracisée perd tout crédit sur la scène internationale (n’est pas Donald Trump qui veut).
      Le gouverne-ment s’arqueboute sur un déni de plus en plus surréaliste. Pendant qu’une grande partie de la population tombe dans la précarité voire la misère, le pays « se tient sage » grâce à la propagande de Brave France Macronnienne (BFM) et consorts...
      {edit] j’oubliais grâce aussi au lobbying intense des « syndicats » du crime policier.

  • Peak social media: The ads machine | Financial Times
    https://www.ft.com/content/3c34d62d-20d3-47e3-b487-8d78edd0d4ac

    This is an audio transcript of the Tech Tonic podcast episode: ‘Peak social media: The ads machine’

    [MUSIC PLAYING]

    Elaine Moore
    So here’s a question. Who does the founder of Facebook, Mark Zuckerberg, turn to for advice? There was a time when that person was Roger McNamee. He’s a veteran tech investor. And in 2006, he was sitting in his office in Silicon Valley when his phone rang. (Phone ringing)

    Roger McNamee
    I get a phone call from one of Mark’s senior executives who said, “My boss is facing a huge crisis and he needs to talk to somebody who is very experienced but not conflicted. Would you be willing to take a meeting with Mark?”

    Elaine Moore
    McNamee had been putting money into tech start-ups since the 1980s. He knew the scene well. His opinions were respected. Mark Zuckerberg had started Facebook just two years earlier, but his new social media platform was already taking off, gathering millions of users. And Zuckerberg had a big decision to make.

    Roger McNamee
    Mark came by my office. And keep in mind, he was 22. So this was the middle of 2006. He was 22. I was 50. And he looked just like Mark Zuckerberg. I mean, you know, he had the sandals and the skinny jeans, the grey T-shirt, the hoodie. And we opened the meeting by me introducing myself and saying, “Mark, if it has not already happened, either Microsoft or Yahoo is going to offer $1bn for Facebook. And everybody you know — your board of directors, your investors, your employees, your management team, your parents — are gonna tell you, Mark, sell the company. You’ll have $650mn of your own money. You can go out and change the world. Your venture capitalist will offer to back your next company. He’ll tell you it will be better than Facebook. And I’m here to tell you that that’s all garbage.”

    Elaine Moore
    McNamee had already watched several tech companies change the face of the internet. He’d seen Google dominate the search engine and Amazon master online shopping, and he thought Facebook had the potential to turn social networking into something just as big. So he told Zuckerberg, don’t sell — not even for $1bn.

    Roger McNamee
    You’re gonna have the first really huge social media platform that does a really good thing for society, and it’ll only happen if you see this through. If you sell the company, it won’t work that way. He doesn’t say a thing. He goes through a series of thinker poses. He’s obviously thinking really hard about what I said to him, you know, I mean, the presence of an Olympic-class thinker and . . . after five minutes he goes, “What you just said, that story you told, that’s why I’m here. Yahoo’s offered $1bn.” And I said, “Well, do you want to sell the company?” He goes, “I don’t want to disappoint everybody. But no, I don’t want to sell.” And so I explained to him how he could very gracefully explain to everybody that, “Hey, we’re doing really, really well. This is not a good time to sell the company. You signed up to back my vision, and I still believe in my vision, so let’s go for it.” And I was a true believer.

    Elaine Moore
    Zuckerberg didn’t sell. Instead, he went on to turn Facebook from a social network with a few million users into a global giant that ended up connecting 3bn people around the world. And in the process, he turned social media into a moneymaking machine and Facebook into one of the biggest and most powerful companies in the world. How did he do it? Well, as he told the US Congress years later: with advertising.

    Orrin Hatch
    Mr Zuckerberg, I remember well your first visit to Capitol Hill back in 2010. You said back then that Facebook would always be free. How do you sustain a business model in which users don’t pay for your service?

    Mark Zuckerberg
    Senator, we run ads.

    [MUSIC PLAYING]

    Elaine Moore
    This is Tech Tonic from the Financial Times. I’m Elaine Moore. This season of the podcast is about the future of social media. I’m asking whether the era of social media — one created by platforms like Facebook more than 15 years ago — is coming to an end. And if so, what comes next? In this episode, how Mark Zuckerberg used ads to turn social networking into a trillion-dollar business and why, after a decade of incredible growth, he now thinks the future of the company lies in a completely different direction.

    [MUSIC PLAYING]

    Advertising powers social media. That’s why the likes of Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp are free. But advertising wasn’t always going to be the dominant business model of the internet.

    Ethan Zuckerman
    It seemed really peculiar in the late ‘90s that we were going to use the same business model as, say, print magazines. Everyone felt like advertising was just a very poor compromise. Even in the late ‘90s no one liked it. We just couldn’t make anything else work.

    Elaine Moore
    Ethan Zuckerman is a professor at the University of Massachusetts. He focuses on public policy and media. But back in the ‘90s, he co-founded an internet start-up, a kind of precursor to social media, and it had a problem common to start-ups: how to make money.

    Ethan Zuckerman
    I was one of the founding team for a company called Tripod.com. Tripod was one of the very first user-generated content sites on the web, which is to say our business model was giving people a little bit of internet space with which they could build their own personal homepages. This turned out to be incredibly popular. We had millions and millions of users who wanted their own little piece of the web. They wanted to talk about their hobbies. They wanted to talk about their interests. What they did not want to do was pay.

    Elaine Moore
    Zuckerman and his colleagues hoped people might sign up for a subscription to use their platform. But no one was interested. They thought about some kind of system of micropayments, but that didn’t work either. The only way to make money was to sell space on the platform to advertisers. This led to some interesting early innovations in the world of online advertising, like the one that Zuckerman himself invented: the pop-up ad.

    Ethan Zuckerman
    Advertisers were not completely comfortable with the idea of being on content that didn’t have editorial control. They were very worried that users might say things that were racist or inflammatory or stupid or in some way in conflict with their brands. And so my boss asked me, can you find some way of putting some distance between the advertisement, which we need to survive and the user’s content, which is where we were getting all of our traffic? And in a fit of whatever is the opposite of genius, I came up with the pop-up ad. So the idea was, well, they’re not in the same window anymore. Your homepage is in one window, the ad is in a different window. Everyone will be happy. Spoiler alert: no one was happy.

    Elaine Moore
    If you used the internet in the late ‘90s and early 2000s, pop-up ads were the bane of your existence. Everywhere you went little adverts would appear all over your screen. It was like a game of Whac-A-Mole. You’d have to go around closing them before you could see the web page you were trying to visit. If that rings any bells, Zuckerman is full of remorse for the hassle he inadvertently caused you. By the early 2000s, browsers started to block pop-up ads. They’re now a relic of the ‘90s internet. But other innovations around advertising were more successful. Early internet builders like Zuckerman found that web pages made by users themselves, user-generated content, told you things about their creators. And it turned out that this information was really useful to advertisers.

    Ethan Zuckerman
    We were interested in targeting ads based on the content of a user’s page. We used very primitive, very early machine learning to say this is a page about cars or this is a page about video games, and tried to target based on that. Where it’s gone from here, of course, is it’s gotten vastly more surveillance. The way that ad targeting works now is we follow you all over the web and then we try to make guesses at who you are based on what you do.

    Elaine Moore
    When Facebook came along, it took this idea of targeted advertising to a whole new level. Facebook was attractive to advertisers because it had so many users. That meant a lot of potential customers to see ad, click on links and buy products. But it also had a lot of information about those users. When you signed up for a profile, you provided things like your birthday, your hometown, and your relationship status. Using the like button, you told Facebook all about your interests. But the real turning point came when Facebook started to absorb even more data — tracking the activity of its users, even when they weren’t on Facebook.

    Roger McNamee
    For the longest time, Mark’s view was “I’m only gonna use the data that people give us inside Facebook.” And Facebook gave advertisers access to things they couldn’t get anywhere else — all kinds of emotional and personal data. But in 2013, Mark changed his position.

    Elaine Moore
    For the Silicon Valley investor Roger McNamee, Zuckerberg’s decision to start gathering vast amounts of data on users from all over the web was the turning point for Facebook’s business. It could offer advertisers something they couldn’t get anywhere else.

    Roger McNamee
    They essentially went from not having third-party data to having every piece of third-party data imaginable. And with it, the targeting went from whatever it was, which was not good enough, to something that advertisers perceived as absolutely unique, better than anything available anywhere else. And Facebook, because it had more users than anyone else, could credibly argue in 2013 that they could provide an advertiser with the equivalent of the US Super Bowl, 365 days a year. And that changed everything overnight.

    Elaine Moore
    Facebook could build up a comprehensive profile of you, putting you into specific categories of consumer and then offering advertisers the opportunity to put exactly the right adverts tailored to you in front of you when you went online. After his first meeting with Zuckerberg in 2006, McNamee began regularly advising the new founder. He invested in the company and says he helped Zuckerberg recruit Sheryl Sandberg, credited with driving the growth of the ads business. But in recent years, McNamee has started to speak out against Facebook’s data-gathering habits and the way that he believes users can be manipulated by disinformation campaigns that undermine society. He says he tried to warn Facebook.

    Roger McNamee
    I reached out to my former advisees, Mark Zuckerberg and Sheryl Sandberg, in October of 2016 to warn them because I thought that it would be bad for the company to get a reputation for undermining civil rights and democracy. I don’t think any company wants that. But it turns out that the temptations offered by data and the ability to manipulate people’s choices, they were irresistible because in the end, every time you did one of the things that caused harm, your stock price went up a lot because those things were so profitable. And when I began talking about the harms of Facebook, people looked at me and go, “Roger, what are you talking about? The stock is going up every day.”

    Elaine Moore
    It turned out that using data to sell targeted ads was extremely lucrative. The money poured in. Along with Google, Facebook came to dominate global digital advertising. By 2021, it had become a trillion-dollar company. But lately, there are signs that Facebook’s astonishing growth is faltering. At the end of 2021, the platform’s user base shrank for the first time. Last year, for the first time ever, revenues also fell. It led investors and analysts to wonder: is Facebook running out of steam?

    Facebook turned itself into a social media giant by gathering huge amounts of data and perfecting the digital ads business.

    Steven Levy
    Facebook was able to get an amazing amount of information on people with relatively few inputs.

    Elaine Moore
    Steven Levy has followed Facebook since the beginning. He’s editor-at-large at Wired and spent years embedded with the company for his book Inside Facebook. He says the sophistication of the ads business that Facebook built is extremely impressive.

    Steven Levy
    One turning point was the like button. By simply indicating what pieces of content you liked, Facebook knew an incredible amount about you. One researcher figured out that with 10 likes, Facebook could figure out your political affiliation, your sexual orientation, and other things. With 30 likes, it would know you as well as a friend. With 100 likes, it would know you as well as a close friend. And with a couple hundred likes, it would know you as well as your spouse.

    Elaine Moore
    But today there are questions about whether targeted ads can keep delivering the same level of growth for Facebook. It’s getting harder for companies that rely on this business model to make money. Last year, social media companies saw their share prices plummet. Snap, the company behind Snapchat, fell 80 per cent, and Facebook, now rebranded as Meta, saw its market value fall 64 per cent. In response, Zuckerberg cut thousands of jobs.

    One problem is that there’s been a general downturn in the economy, which means companies have cut back on the money they spend on advertising. But there’s a broader cause for concern — that the endless stream of data gathered from users, the fuel that powers the whole digital advertising machine might be drying up.

    Recently, Apple made a small but significant change to its iPhone privacy settings. Before, apps like Facebook could track user behaviour automatically unless users opted out. Now users were being explicitly asked if they wanted to be targeted for ads. The majority appear to have said no. Meta estimated that this move alone could cost the company $10bn in lost ad revenue.

    Steven Levy
    When Apple made it more difficult for them, that was a blow because I think Facebook came to take it for granted that its . . . our business was inviolable. They thought that they keep raking it in through advertising and they would have that data that no one else had and deliver value to advertisers that no one else could match. And they wouldn’t have to worry about that.

    [MUSIC PLAYING]

    Elaine Moore
    The thing is, Apple changing its privacy settings may not be the last restriction on user data. Over the years, there’s been a growing concern about the amount of information that social media platforms gather. Around the world, regulators want to better police how that data is used. That could mean even less access to data for platforms like Facebook. And as a result, less ad revenue. But some people think there’s an even more fundamental problem — that targeted digital advertising was never as effective as it claimed to be. Maybe the model that helped to build the modern social media economy was always flawed.

    Tim Hwang
    The dream of digital advertising, you know, what Facebook was selling early on was, “Hey, we’re an advertising company, but we’re way better than traditional advertising. I can find the consumer that is just poised to buy your product. I can deliver this message to them at the right place at the right time, and they will go buy the product.” There’s a lot of research to suggest that those things might just fundamentally not be true.

    Elaine Moore
    Tim Hwang used to work for Google, the other major seller of digital ad space along with Facebook. He says the whole idea of targeted advertising — using data to offer effective ads — might be oversold.

    Tim Hwang
    It’s actually unclear whether or not the ad ever, in fact, reaches a person at all. So there’s some data to suggest that basically about 56 per cent of ads are never seen, right? Like it’s delivered to someone’s screen, but they just browse through it. They don’t see it. There’s also a lot of fraud in the system. So it’s actually unclear whether or not that click-through, right, actually belongs to a person or belongs to a bot. So some estimates suggest that even like one out of every $3 spent on the ad ecosystem is fraudulent. Actually, it’s delivered to a bot or delivered to what’s known as a click farm, or someone is sort of paid literally to kind of click on ads.

    Elaine Moore
    Hwang also says that even when ads do reach the right person, it’s not clear they actually encourage that person to buy the product.

    Tim Hwang
    What the advertiser sees is we put money into online ads and a person bought the product. One of the interesting things about those consumers is that they would have bought the product anyways even if you hadn’t advertised to them. And so actually in many cases you’re just targeting consumers that would have purchased anyways.

    Elaine Moore
    But surely digital advertising, it is going towards a more specific group than if you just put an advert into a newspaper?

    Tim Hwang
    Well, I would actually even challenge that as well. There’s a study that basically suggests about 41 per cent of ad data may be inaccurate. So, you know, the dream is, hey, you can target Tim Hwang. He’s a male, 25 to 35, you know, living on the East Coast of the United States. When actually the ad arrives, it turns out you’re targeting female, 75 to 95, living in the UK. And so I think there actually is real questions even about the veracity of the data collected and whether or not, in fact, you are getting better results.

    Elaine Moore
    Hwang thinks the entire digital advertising industry is in a bit of a bubble, and he says the current troubles in the ads market — advertisers spending less, worries about access to user data — could expose that.

    You talk about this idea that the digital advertising ecosystem is at risk of collapsing or potentially is about to collapse. Why is that happening right now?

    Tim Hwang
    So I think there’s a couple of things. First one is just the larger macroeconomic environment. The sort of downward pressure on the global economy is causing a lot of industries to pull back on their advertising spend. There’s kind of a question about, like, once you cut all this ad spend, is there actually a change in the bottom line of these businesses? That’s one thing that could really shake the confidence of the industry is, like, what was all this advertising for? If when we cut budgets, there’s not really a huge material impact on our outcomes.

    I think the second one that I’ll point out is that there is indeed a big push both on the government side, right, through, say, the EU GDPR or California’s CPRA, and also on the company side, right. Like Apple is increasingly implementing all of these privacy rules. And the worry that you’ve heard from the ad industry is, OK, well, once we lose access to all this data, we just won’t be able to get ads to work as well anymore. And they think we’re about to run this really big experiment, which is, is that the case? Are we actually gonna live in a world where, like, ads are way less effective than they used to be? We may just discover that, like, actually we didn’t need all this data to begin with for ads and that programmatic advertising might have been built on kind of the dream of targeted ads more than the reality.

    Elaine Moore
    Even if the digital ads market doesn’t crash, as Tim Hwang says it might, it’s no longer providing Facebook with the same levels of growth it once did. The Facebook platform is reaching saturation. It has nearly 3bn monthly active users around the world, but it looks like that might be the limit. Steven Levy, who wrote a book about Facebook, says this is a real problem for Mark Zuckerberg, who he says has been obsessed with growth above everything else since the beginning.

    Steven Levy
    There’s only so many billions of people on Earth. You can’t get to the people in China, which is the biggest user of the internet and social media in the world. And the last couple of billion are really, really hard to reach. They don’t have much money. And even if you got them on social media, they couldn’t deliver you much profits. So when he goes to Wall Street and announces that there’s no growth, the stock goes down, sometimes dramatically. Without growth, he’s in trouble.

    Elaine Moore
    Levy says this search for growth explains one of the biggest decisions Mark Zuckerberg has ever made. In 2021, he took his company, the most successful social media company in the world, and changed its name from Facebook to Meta. He announced that the company’s focus was now on building the metaverse.

    Mark Zuckerberg
    We believe the metaverse will be the successor to the mobile internet. We’ll be able to feel present like we’re right there with people, no matter how far apart we actually are. We’ll be able to express ourselves in new, joyful, completely immersive ways, and that’s going to unlock a lot of amazing new experiences.

    Steven Levy
    Zuckerberg’s holy grail is to move our social media to the metaverse. It makes sense if you’re obsessed with growth as the pillar of the way you operate a business, then when you can’t keep growing at the rate you were and you are really reaching the ceiling, move to someplace new where you could start from scratch and then grow billions from a few thousand rather than try to eke out the last billion or so.

    Elaine Moore
    Zuckerberg envisions repeating the success of Facebook in a completely new realm, with users wearing Meta VR headsets to access Meta-run virtual worlds.

    Meta video clip
    Oh, hey, Mark . . . Hey, what’s going on? Hey, Mark . . . Hi . . . What’s up, Mark? Whoa, we’re floating in space? Uh-huh. Who made this place? It’s awesome . . . This place is amazing.

    Elaine Moore
    Right now, the jury is still out on whether this huge bet will pay off. So far, take-up has been slow and costs have been high. Operating losses attributed to Meta’s Reality Labs — the part of the company working on the metaverse — exceed $37bn. But there are questions about whether any of us really want to spend our time wearing bulky VR headsets. If Zuckerberg is right, then maybe the future of social media will be in the metaverse. But in the meantime, Levy says all that time and money is adding to a sense that the old Facebook social media platform is stagnating. Not only is it not growing at the same pace, he says, it’s not innovating either.

    Steven Levy
    You could argue that the social media site has not been particularly innovative for probably a decade. They have generally been mimicking what seems popular in social media at the moment. So Snapchat comes up and Facebook, after unsuccessfully trying to buy it, comes up with a clone. Snapchat comes up with its stories feature, Facebook successfully copies that, first in Instagram, then in Facebook. Clubhouse, which is an audio-only social media product, looked like it was exciting and it’s going to be a big thing. And Facebook came up with its own version, right? You really would be hard-pressed to name a breakthrough product in social media in the last decade that Facebook came up with on its own.

    Elaine Moore
    Levy says Zuckerberg’s focus on the metaverse isn’t helping with this lack of innovation. He says all the talented people at Meta are working on metaverse projects rather than how to make the existing social media platforms better. So has Zuckerberg given up on Facebook?

    Steven Levy
    Well, Zuckerberg would never say that he has given up on Facebook, but he should be thinking just as innovatively in the social media as he is in the metaverse. It is a social media company. Its revenues come from social media. And if I were running that company, it would seem to me that my challenge would be to bring innovation to social media. And I don’t think that’s impossible. Maybe if that was your focus, they say, how can we reinvent social media without having to put a headset on but use just the tools of mobile and this connectedness to come up with something new like TikTok did. Maybe that would be the path for Meta.

    Elaine Moore
    If you want an example of peak social media, Facebook might be it. The breadth of its social connections will be hard for any company to ever replicate. But for many of us, it’s no longer engaging. Its ads business is less robust these days, and there are questions about its appeal to younger users. Even the man who made it all happen, Mark Zuckerberg, is more keen to talk about AI and VR than Facebook communities.

    Whether we do or choose to one day live in the metaverse or not, Facebook’s reign as the most important social media platform in the world may be over. But despite this, it’s worth remembering that Facebook is still the biggest social media platform by far. If this is the beginning of its decline, Facebook watchers say that it’s likely to be a long and slow one. And that might be true of social media as a whole.

    Steven Levy
    Well, giant platforms just don’t go away all at once. They slowly fade. But ultimately, I think people are questioning whether the social media era where social media is, like, a dominant force, is coming to an end where it’ll still exist but no longer be the growth platforms. So there is a sense that social media has sort of reached the end of its innovation and growth stage.

    Elaine Moore
    In the next episode of Tech Tonic, social media is supposed to be fun, but maybe it’s just not good for us.

    Emma Lembke
    Why? Like, why is it that my phone has so much control over me? How am I allowing it to do that? And why is no one speaking up about this?

    Elaine Moore
    US lawmakers are worried that social media is harming us and young people in particular. What does that mean for the future of the platforms?

    Katie Paul
    Kids are a huge market for these companies and it will really cut into their bottom line if they can no longer collect these data points on children.

    [MUSIC PLAYING]

    Elaine Moore
    You’ve been listening to Tech Tonic from the Financial Times with me, Elaine Moore. The producer is Josh Gabert-Doyon, and the senior producer is Edwin Lane. Manuela Saragosa is executive producer. Sound design is by Breen Turner and Samantha Giovinco. Original scoring by Metaphor Music.

    And before you go, we’re keen to hear more from our listeners about this show, and we want to know what you’d like to hear more of. So we’re running a survey which you can find at ft.com/techtonicsurvey. It takes around 10 minutes to complete, and we’d appreciate your feedback.

    [MUSIC PLAYING]

    #Publicité #Tim_Hwang #Médias_sociaux #Facebook

  • Is France on the road to a Sixth Republic? | Financial Times
    https://www.ft.com/content/b78f2a89-1062-4423-a4ba-fb4cdc56c683

    French anger transcends pensions and Macron’s high-handedness. There’s a generalised, long-term rage against the state and its embodiment, the president. After 20 years living here, I’ve become used to the French presumption that whoever they elected president is a moronic villain, and that the state, instead of being their collective emanation, is their oppressor. But Macron’s unpopular ramming through of a higher retirement age without a vote increases the risk that the French will follow Americans, Britons and Italians and vote populist: President Marine Le Pen in 2027. The far-right’s vote in presidential run-offs has gradually risen this century, to 41 per cent last year.

    France can’t go on like this. It’s time to end the Fifth Republic, with its all-powerful presidency — the closest thing in the developed world to an elected dictator — and inaugurate a less autocratic Sixth Republic. Macron might just be the person to do it.

    • inaugurate a less autocratic Sixth Republic. Macron might just be the person to do it.

      LOL 😂 and wishful thinking. He won’t.

  • European investors bet on defence as war creates opportunities for growth | Financial Times
    https://www.ft.com/content/d70982dc-ffec-4055-847b-49ab0b2dd843?list=intlhomepage

    Russia’s invasion of Ukraine has prompted a surge of interest from private investors in European companies in defence and related technologies as they bet that the coming boost in military spending in response to the conflict will offer growth opportunities.

    Private equity executives in France, including Sanofi chair Serge Weinberg and former Airbus manager Marwan Lahoud, are among those spearheading a move to consolidate the country’s fragmented aerospace and defence supply chain, which includes many small companies still suffering the effects of the Covid-19 pandemic.

    “The bigger defence companies are concerned about having a solid supply chain. This is becoming even more important given the perspectives of additional military spending that is set to come through with the next multiyear military budget,” Weinberg told the Financial Times.

    “There is a need for additional production capacity, ability to build up stocks, and therefore there is a need to strengthen the financial structures [of these groups],” he added.

    His private equity firm Weinberg Capital Partners has raised more than €100mn for a new fund that will invest in French defence companies, and hopes to double that amount as fundraising continues.

  • Russia in Africa: how Moscow bought a new sphere of influence on the cheap | Financial Times
    https://www.ft.com/content/0c459575-5c72-4558-821e-b495c9db9b6f

    Focusing on a strip of countries from Mali to Sudan, it is challenging the west and opening what some call a ‘second front’

    At Saint André’s Orthodox cathedral in Bangui, capital of the Central African Republic, Regis Saint Clair Voyemawa, the monsignor, has switched allegiance from the patriarchate of Constantinople to that of Moscow.

  • LNG tankers idle off Europe’s coast as traders wait for gas price rise | Financial Times
    https://www.ft.com/content/19ad9f9f-e1cb-40f9-bae3-082e533423ab

    More than 30 ships seek to maximise the return on their combined $2bn cargo

    More than 30 tankers holding liquefied natural gas are floating just off Europe’s shoreline as energy traders bet the autumn price reprieve prompted by robust supplies and warm weather will prove to be fleeting.

    The ships, which are hauling $2bn combined worth of LNG, are idling or sailing slowly around north-west Europe and the Iberian peninsula, according to shipping analytics company Vortexa. The number of LNG vessels on European waters has doubled in the past two months.

    The traders who control the tankers are holding out for higher prices in the coming months, when temperatures cool over the winter and the glut of natural gas in Europe’s storage now begins to be drawn down. Another 30 vessels are on their way, currently crossing the Atlantic and expected to join the queue ahead of the winter, Vortexa data show.

    The queue has come as European countries have filled their storage tanks to near their limits ahead of the winter. This has been achieved through voracious purchases of LNG to substitute for Russian gas that has been cut off in retaliation for western sanctions.

    Higher than usual temperatures for this time of year have also reduced heating demand, helping keep storage sites full and prices falling. As of end of October, European storage sites were at 94 per cent capacity, with Belgium reaching 100 per cent, France 99 per cent, and Germany 98 per cent, according to Gas Infrastructure Europe.
    […]
    With gas storage capacities full, “LNG vessels have been queued up outside European LNG receiving terminals, chasing what they expected to be the premium market for this LNG,” said Felix Booth, head of LNG at Vortexa, adding that it will probably take another month for the cargoes to find a terminal to offload.

    “For now these vessels have incentive to hold positions” in anticipation of higher prices as the weather gets colder, he said.
    […]
    But the market is now in a situation known in the industry as #contango, in which prices for delivery in the future are trading higher than for immediate delivery. TTF contracts for delivery in December are roughly 30 per cent higher than the level the November contract closed at, and January some 35 per cent higher, incentivising traders holding cargoes to deliver as late as possible.

    The hold up of cargoes has led to a scarcity in available vessels, leading to higher freight prices that has made LNG further out of reach for Asian buyers, which have been competing with Europe for cargoes throughout the year.

  • Musk orders Twitter staff to work day and night on ‘blue tick’ charge | Financial Times
    https://www.ft.com/content/ad4efd13-3e9e-4e76-968e-6d27b2c9346a?segmentId=2fbd1a9a-c8e3-7947-12ce-2a70795f5

    Elon Musk has ordered Twitter staff to work round the clock to implement a charge on users to keep their verified “blue tick”, as the new owner of the social media company seeks to stamp his mark on the business.

    The renewed push into subscription revenues comes as Twitter braces itself for a potential backlash from advertisers, as Musk considers loosening content moderation controls. On Monday, the Global Alliance for Responsible Media (GARM), a marketing industry group set up by the World Federation of Advertisers, warned Musk that keeping the platform free of inappropriate material was “non-negotiable”.

    Advertising made up more than 90 per cent of Twitter’s revenues in its last reported figures as a public company. Before Musk’s arrival, efforts were made to persuade users to pay $4.99 a month to subscribe to Twitter Blue, which enables them to access exclusive features including an edit button.

    Musk is said to want to increase the pricing of Twitter Blue and make it a condition of having a verified profile, signified by a blue tick next to a user’s name, on the social media platform. Hundreds of thousands of Twitter users have been verified, including big brands and corporate accounts, as well as celebrities and journalists. However, Twitter Blue is only available to users in the US, Canada, Australia, and New Zealand at the moment.

    Employees at Twitter have been working “24/7” to deliver Musk’s vision for verification, said two senior staff members. One person added that teams were told it was of the “utmost gravity”.

    Musk said in a tweet on Sunday that “the whole verification process is being revamped right now”.

    Twitter did not respond to a request for comment.

    One person familiar with Musk’s thinking ahead of completing the $44bn purchase of the social media site said several pricing options had been discussed, including $9.99 and $14.99 a month, adding that different groups of users could be asked to test pricing models.

    #Twitter #Elon_Musk #Blue_Tick

  • The unmaking of India | Free to read | Financial Times
    https://www.ft.com/content/80c18d5b-443e-48e4-9f28-3cc491df4260

    Despite his failures on the economic front, despite his mishandling of the pandemic, #Modi remains enormously popular among voters. An opinion poll conducted in late January showed “NaMo” as having approval ratings of above 70 per cent. Events of recent weeks may have caused a slide, but this is likely to be modest, rather than precipitous.

    How does one explain this disjunction between performance and popularity? One reason for Modi’s appeal is that his ideology of Hindu majoritarianism is widely shared by voters, particularly in the populous states of northern India. The BJP has been especially successful in getting lower-caste Hindus into their fold, by offering them cultural superiority over Muslims.

    #Inde #identité #idéologie #popularité #populisme

  • ‘It is much worse this time’: India’s devastating second wave | Financial Times
    https://www.ft.com/content/683914a3-134f-40b6-989b-21e0ba1dc403?desktop=true&segmentId=d8d3e364-5197-20eb-1

    Every night funeral pyres blaze on the banks of the Ganges, a grim symbol of the ferocious Covid-19 wave sparking a health crisis and human tragedy in India that is far surpassing anything seen last year.

    Patients are dying while their families search in vain for hospital beds. Supplies of oxygen and medicines are running low, leading to robberies of drugs from hospitals. Crematoriums and burial grounds cannot cope with the sheer number of corpses.

    The devastation has sparked outrage at the lack of preparation among officials who believed that the worst of the pandemic was over. Only two months ago, India was revelling in its success of reining in the spread of the virus. Now it is reporting about 294,000 infections and 2,000 deaths a day.

  • Health worker disillusionment threatens to hinder Covid recovery | Financial Times
    https://www.ft.com/content/dc7a9684-71e4-4ca9-b50f-415da5b4dad5

    ... the attempt to address under-investment in the French health system has not proved a panacea. “I’d say dissatisfaction at hospitals remains very strong,” Malâtre-Lansac said. “The impression many have is that #France doesn’t value hospitals enough and is always trying to reduce resources.”

    #choix #politique #budget #santé #hôpitaux #hôpital

  • Race and America: why data matters | Financial Times

    https://www.ft.com/content/156f770a-1d77-4f6b-8616-192fb58e3735

    When Yeshimabeit Milner was in sixth grade in Miami, Florida she was suspended for three days after talking back to the teacher in a technology class. Milner was devastated — but the episode also led to an epiphany. A few years later, she began to collect data on suspensions in a neighbouring school and found that black children like her were four times more likely to be suspended than white children. This was the beginning of her life as a data activist.

    –—

    Black students in US nearly four times as likely to be suspended as white students | US education | The Guardian

    http://www.theguardian.com/education/2016/jun/08/us-education-survey-race-student-suspensions-absenteeism

    lack students are nearly four times as likely to be suspended as white students, according to new federal data.The sweeping bi-annual survey of more than 50 million students by the US Department of Education found that suspensions overall have dramatically decreased by nearly 20% between the 2011-12 and 2013-14 school years.

    –---

    W.E.B. Du Bois’ Visionary Infographics Come Together for the First Time in Full Color | History | Smithsonian Magazine
    https://www.smithsonianmag.com/history/first-time-together-and-color-book-displays-web-du-bois-visionary-in

    fter three decades of emancipation, the gains made by African-Americans, those that existed at all, presented a decidedly mixed picture about the state of racial progress in the country. The political obstacles were voluminous, with the failure of Reconstruction still lingering, and Jim Crow institutional racism ascendant. In 1897, the United States Supreme Court would rule in Plessy v. Ferguson that separate was indeed equal. All the while, new generations of African-Americans found ways to uplift themselves, despite discrimination, through grassroots efforts in education, work and community building.

    #WEB_du_Bois #cartoexperiment #précurseurs

  • China rethinks the Jack Ma model
    https://asia.nikkei.com/Spotlight/The-Big-Story/China-rethinks-the-Jack-Ma-model

    Alibaba, Tencent and a host of internet giants face new scrutiny from the Party HONG KONG — When China’s business regulator accused Alibaba Group Holding of selling counterfeit goods over the internet in a report five years ago, the e-commerce giant did not hesitate to fight back. Alibaba openly challenged the investigation results, filing a formal complaint against a sub-department head responsible for the probe. Then, after a week-long public brawl, in which the company lambasted the (...)

    #Alibaba #JD.com #Baidu #Sina #Tencent #DidiChuxing #Meituan #WeChat #Weibo #Alipay #payement #WeChatPay #domination #BHATX (...)

    ##finance
    https://www.ft.com/__origami/service/image/v2/images/raw/https%253A%252F%252Fs3-ap-northeast-1.amazonaws.com%252Fpsh-ex-ftnikkei-3937bb4%