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China's birthrate has plunged, with the number of newborns in 2023 falling by 500,000, to about 9 million. AdvertisementDecades of China's one-child policy have created a demographic nightmare for the world's second-largest economy, and millions of school teachers could soon be left without a job as birthrates tumble. If those classes don't scale back, China could see a surplus of 1.5 million primary school teachers and 370,000 middle school teachers by 2035, according to a Tuesday report from the South China Morning Post. Last year marked the second consecutive year that China's population shrank, according to the country's National Bureau of Statistics. Total primary school students, too, declined in 2022 for the first time in a decade.
Persons: China's birthrate, , it's Organizations: Service, South China Morning, country's National Bureau of Statistics, Education, China National Academy of Educational Sciences, Terry Group, Terry, UN Locations: China, Beijing, Hangzhou
He really, really wants to play in China. “I promise we’ll play in China one day,” Martin said to the screaming crowd when he invited two lucky fans up on stage. “You know, we can’t get the permission (to play in China),” he told concertgoers. Chris Martin and Coldplay aren’t alone in wanting to serenade mainland Chinese audiences. Chinese authorities have also been known to vet the content of shows, including setlists and lyrics.
Persons: Hong Kong CNN — Coldplay, Chris Martin, , ” Martin, don’t, Coldplay, , Martin, concertgoers, “ Coldplay, China …, Paul Kane, Coldplay aren’t, Jon Bon Jovi, Jovi, Bon Jovi’s, Lama, Xi Jinping, , Xi, Golshifteh Farahani, “ Young, Bjork, Justin Bieber, Katy Perry's, Sam Yeh, Katy Perry, Madonna, James Hetfield, we’re Organizations: Hong Kong CNN, CNN, Coldplay, Tourism Ministry, Oasis, Communist Party, China’s Communist Party, Tibet, Municipal, of Culture, Getty, Taiwan, Chinese Culture Ministry, South China Morning Locations: Hong Kong, Thailand, China, Guangzhou, British, Asia, Tokyo, , Beijing, Shanghai, Macao, Covid, Bangkok, Singapore, Kuala Lumpur, Worth, Iranian, Buenos Aires, Iran, Taipei, AFP, Taiwan
Read previewTaiwan's new long-range cruise missiles are slow and easy to shoot down, Chinese media reports — claims whose truth depends on many unknowns. In the game, Taiwan used its missiles against the Chinese invasion fleet in the Straits of Taiwan, rather than striking ports. Could Taiwan's long-range cruise missiles penetrate Chinese defenses? As the Ukraine war has shown, subsonic cruise missiles can be intercepted by anti-aircraft missiles such as the U.S. Patriot and Russia's S-300. AdvertisementEither way, the technical capabilities of Taiwan's cruise missiles may not be the biggest issue.
Persons: , Feng, Tien, Yun Feng, Mark Cancian, Cancian, Russia's, Masao Dahlgren, Dahlgren Organizations: Service, Business, Ordnance Industry Science Technology, China Morning, Missile, Center for Strategic, International Studies, Abrams, Missiles, US, CSIS, U.S . Patriot Locations: Beijing, U.S, China, Taiwan, Washington ,, Straits, Ukraine
Scammers made off with about $25 million after they used deepfake technology to trick an employee at the Hong Kong branch of a multinational company, local media reported on Sunday, citing the city's police. The employee then had a video call with the company's CFO and other company employees — all of which turned out to be deepfakes. Based on instructions they got during that call, the employee transferred HK$200 million, or $25.6 million, to various Hong Kong bank accounts across 15 transfers, according to the SCMP. AdvertisementThe Hong Kong police did not name the company or employees involved. The employee who was scammed did not interact with the deepfakes during the video conference, according to the media outlet.
Persons: Scammers, scammers, scammed, Taylor Swift, Joseph Morelle Organizations: South China Morning Post, HK, Hong Kong, Democratic Locations: Hong Kong, South China
HONG KONG, CHINA - FEBRUARY 04: Fans react after not seeing Inter Miami's Argentine forward Lionel Messi play during the friendly match between Hong Kong Team and Inter Miami CF at Hong Kong Stadium on February 4, 2024 in Hong Kong, China. The Hong Kong government said it may cut funding for a friendly match after soccer legend Lionel Messi did not take the pitch on Sunday. The Miami Herald reported that Messi had an MRI last week ahead of a friendly match in Saudi Arabia. The friendly match had been awarded "M" Mark status which is granted to major sporting events held in the city. Hong Kong said it had awarded the event a matching grant of 15 million Hong Kong dollars ($1.9 million) and a venue grant of HK$1 million.
Persons: Lionel Messi, Messi Organizations: Inter Miami's Argentine, Hong Kong Team, Inter Miami CF, Hong Kong, Hong, Major League Soccer, Inter Miami, Argentine, Miami Herald, Florida, China, HK Locations: HONG KONG, CHINA, Hong Kong, China, ., Saudi Arabia
Read previewChina has bold ambitions to develop its own brain-computer products by 2025. The MIIT said it wants to achieve breakthroughs in hundreds of technologies by creating "iconic products" by 2025, and it includes making brain-computer interfaces like Elon Musk's Neuralink implant. China has been actively working on creating brain-computer interface devices in recent years, including ones that can rival Neuralink. AdvertisementThe SprialE brain-computer interface can be inserted without the need for surgery as it has a spiral design, allowing it to be slid in without an invasive method, the report says. The tech policy document outlining its ambitions comes after the MIIT published a road map in November of its plans to mass-produce humanoid robots by 2025.
Persons: , Neuralink, Musk Organizations: Service, Business, Ministry of Industry, Information Technology, Elon, FDA, Tianjin University, China Electronics Corporation, China Morning Post, Tsinghua University, Independent Locations: China, Tianjin, Beijing
A woman in China has cut her children out of her will as she felt they neglected her. Instead, she is leaving her $2.8 million fortune to her pets, says a Shanghai report. A pet clinic will administer the money and care for her dogs, cats, and their offspring. AdvertisementA wealthy woman in China has decided to leave her $2.8m fortune to her pets, and her three children will get nothing, say reports. Advertisement"We told Auntie Liu that if her children change their attitude toward her, she could always alter her will again," the official said.
Persons: , Liu, Auntie Liu Organizations: Service, China Morning Post, Zonglan, Registration, China Morning Locations: China, Shanghai
Read previewAs the cofounder and CEO of Nvidia, Jensen Huang is known for building the company into the world's leading AI chipmaker. AdvertisementNvidia CEO Jensen Huang visited the company's offices in Shanghai, Beijing, and Shenzhen last week, taking part in year-end festivities. He engaged in the traditional twist Yangge, a popular rural folk dance in northeast China, wearing a traditional flower-patterned vest. Huang's trip to China came amid intensifying rivalry between Washington and Beijing over a range of issues, including tech and geopolitics. The restrictions thrust Nvidia into a difficult position since China has typically accounted for about one-fifth of the company's revenue.
Persons: , Jensen Huang, He's, Huang, SCMP, Nvidia’s, , Biden Organizations: Service, Nvidia, Business, Business Insider, Bloomberg, China Morning Locations: China, Shanghai, Beijing, Shenzhen, Washington
China's stock market lost more than $6 trillion in valuation from 2021 through last week. The market is confused by Beijing's policy stance on the economy, per Nomura economists. AdvertisementA brutal downcycle in China's stock market has wiped out over $6 trillion in valuations since 2021 — and policymakers in Beijing may be adding to the turmoil. "There has been increasing confusion over Beijing's policy stance on the economy," wrote Nomura economists in a Monday note seen by Business Insider. While China's stock market is still in the dumps, some see opportunities ahead.
Persons: , Bloomberg's, Xi Jinping's, Ji Min Organizations: Bloomberg, Nomura, Service, CSI, People's Bank of China, Business, Economic Work, China Morning Locations: Beijing, China, Hong Kong, Shanghai, Shenzhen
Read previewAlibaba cofounder Jack Ma was once the invincible poster boy of Chinese tech. Now, it appears Ma is debuting a refreshed version of himself, in what you just might call Jack Ma 3.0. Jack Ma 1.0: A struggling teacher who wanted in on the tech sceneIt's easy to understand why Ma is so popular in the US and China alike. His first business — China Pages — failed, but he gathered a band of 17 friends in 1999 to set up Alibaba. AdvertisementMa himself cavorted with the biggest names in business, tech, and government globally — from Bill Gates and Softbank CEO Masayoshi Son to then president-elect Donald Trump.
Persons: , Jack Ma, Michael Jackson, Ma, Ma —, Xi Jinping's, he's, Ma Yun, He's, Brian Wong, Wong, Jack, it's, Alibaba.com, behemoth Goldman Sachs, Alibaba, Charlie Rose, cavorted, Bill Gates, Masayoshi Son, Donald Trump, Supakit Chearavanont, Ma hasn't, SCMP Organizations: Service, Business, Communist Party, Hangzhou Teachers Institute, KFC —, Economic, Big Tech, New York Stock Exchange, Financial Times, Tokyo College, Charoen, China Morning Locations: Beijing, China, Hangzhou, Davos, Switzerland, Alibaba, Asia, Spain, Netherlands, Japan, Thailand, Agriculture
Chinese EV maker BYD has unveiled its new AI-powered Xuanji smart car system. It's part of a $14 billion smart car bet that includes hands-free driving. BYD passed Tesla as the world's biggest EV maker and is now chasing Elon Musk's company on AI. AdvertisementBYD has overtaken Tesla as the world's largest EV maker. The Chinese EV maker unveiled its AI–powered Xuanji smart car system at its "Dream Day" event on Tuesday as it made a big bet on artificial intelligence.
Persons: BYD, Tesla, Elon, , it's eyeing Elon, Wang Chuanfu, Warren Buffett, Elon Musk Organizations: Elon Musk's, Service, Reuters, South China Morning, Bloomberg, Business Locations: Shenzhen
HONG KONG (AP) — Technology company Baidu on Monday refuted a newspaper report that said its artificial intelligence chatbot Ernie was linked to Chinese military research. The paper stated that the division had tested its artificial intelligence system on Baidu’s Ernie and on artificial intelligence firm iFlyTek’s Spark, both of which are language-based AI chatbots similar to ChatGPT. “Ernie Bot is available to and used by the general public,” the Chinese company said in its statement. Like ChatGPT, users can pose questions or requests to Ernie Bot, which would then generate content based on the initial prompt. The Beijing-headquartered firm said in December that it had more than 100 million users for Ernie Bot.
Persons: Ernie, Baidu, Ernie Bot Organizations: — Technology, Baidu, Hong, China Morning, People’s Liberation Army cyberwarfare, PLA Information Engineering University, China Morning Post, PLA, Huawei, U.S Locations: HONG KONG, Hong Kong, U.S, China, Taiwan, Beijing
Hong Kong CNN —Press freedom groups are voicing concern for veteran Hong Kong journalist Minnie Chan following a news report that she went missing after traveling to Beijing to cover a security forum in late October. The association, a trade union which advocates for press freedom, called for friends or relatives with information to get in touch. Chan is a highly regarded journalist in Hong Kong and among international audiences who closely follow China news. China ranks 179 out of 180 in the 2023 RSF World Press Freedom Index. It is the world’s largest captor of journalists and press freedom defenders with at least 121 detained, according to the organization.
Persons: Hong, Minnie Chan, , Chan, , Cheng Lei, Haze Fan Organizations: Hong Kong CNN — Press, Protect Journalists, Kyodo, China Morning, Beijing ”, China’s Foreign, Hong Kong Journalists Association, Bloomberg News, China Locations: Hong Kong, Beijing, China, Hangzhou
Donald Trump pushed back against claims made by Liz Cheney about his well-being after Jan. 6, 2021. In a Truth Social post, Trump rejected any notion that he wasn't eating after leaving the White House. Trump in the post said he was "angry" and was actually "eating too much" at the time. "They're really worried," McCarthy told Cheney, who at the time was the chair of the House Republican Conference. "Yeah, he's really depressed," McCarthy added, according to the book.
Persons: Donald Trump, Liz Cheney, Trump, , Kevin McCarthy, Keven McCarthy, Cheney, Harriet Hageman, McCarthy, Kevin, They're, Joe Biden Organizations: White, Trump, Service, Capitol, Social, Mar, Republican Party, GOP, House Republican Conference, Trump White House Locations: Wyoming, South Florida
ByteDance is launching a chatbot-building service to rival OpenAI, per the South China Morning Post. NEW LOOK Sign up to get the inside scoop on today’s biggest stories in markets, tech, and business — delivered daily. download the app Email address Sign up By clicking “Sign Up”, you accept our Terms of Service and Privacy Policy . AdvertisementByteDance is joining the AI arms race as it reportedly prepares to launch a rival to OpenAI's "GPTs." ByteDance did not immediately respond to a request for comment from Business Insider made outside normal working hours.
Persons: OpenAI, , Sam Altman, ByteDance Organizations: China Morning, Service, South China Morning, South China Morning Post, Baidu, Business Locations: Silicon, Montana
A partially removed company logo of China Evergrande Group is seen on the facade of its headquarters in Shenzhen, Guangdong province, China January 10, 2022. REUTERS/David Kirton/File Photo Acquire Licensing RightsHONG KONG, Dec 2 (Reuters) - A key offshore creditor group of China Evergrande Group (3333.HK) supports keeping the developer operating, the South China Morning Post (SCMP) reported ahead of a court hearing on Monday that could decide to liquidate the indebted firm. Evergrande, the world's most indebted property developer, and the advisers to the creditor group did not immediately respond to requests for comment. Evergrande has until the Hong Kong court hearing on Monday to present a "concrete" revised debt restructuring proposal for offshore creditors, a judge said last month after its original plan had lapsed. The creditors group responded by demanding a controlling equity stake in Evergrande and the two Hong Kong subsidiaries, a source familiar with the matter said on Friday.
Persons: David Kirton, Evergrande, Clare Jim, William Mallard Organizations: China Evergrande, REUTERS, HK, China Morning, Hengda, Kirkland &, Reuters, Hong, Thomson Locations: Shenzhen, Guangdong province, China, HONG KONG, Kirkland & Ellis, Hengda, Hong Kong, Evergrande
"Many protesters experienced being part of a civic collective for the first time," said Huang, who fled to Germany in March after narrowly avoiding detention during protests in Shanghai. Reuters was unable to confirm the total number of protesters detained last year, although some were since released. This year, on the weekend anniversary of the protests, there were no demonstrations in Beijing and Shanghai. During last year's Beijing protests, some demonstrators also called for press freedom, democracy and human rights. Some of the protesters that Reuters spoke to, as well as observers, said the events helped raise awareness of how much political power Chinese people actually wielded.
Persons: Huang, Xi, It's, Li, Li Keqiang, I'm, Laurie Chen, Jessie Pang, Casey Hall, Nicoco Chan, Brenda Goh, Tian, Miral Organizations: Reuters, Washington DC, Thomson Locations: BEIJING, HONG KONG, China, Germany, Shanghai, Beijing, New York, London, Tiananmen, Italy, Guangzhou, Hong Kong
Beijing's stock exchange is stopping major shareholders from selling stocks, Reuters reported. Sales are being blocked in a bid to sustain a market rally, sources told the news agency. AdvertisementThe Beijing Stock Exchange is stopping big shareholders from selling stocks in a bid to sustain a market rally, Reuters reported. It's not clear how long the policy, which appears to be an attempt by the authorities to ensure a recent market rally doesn't fade, will stay in effect, per Reuters. The Beijing Stock Exchange is the youngest of China's three major exchanges.
Persons: , didn't Organizations: Reuters, Service, Beijing Stock Exchange, Beijing Stock, CSI, China Securities Regulatory Commission, Business, China Morning Post, Financial Locations: Beijing, Shanghai, Shenzhen, Sichuan
Alibaba cofounder Jack Ma just set up a new company called "Hangzhou Ma's Kitchen Food," per media reports. AdvertisementFor years, Alibaba cofounder Jack Ma has been the poster boy for China's tech industry — but it looks like he's moving on to the food business. On Wednesday, Ma incorporated a company called "Hangzhou Ma's Kitchen Food" in the city where Alibaba is based, according to media reports. Hangzhou Ma's Kitchen Food is wholly owned by Ma's investment vehicle, Hangzhou Dajingtou. His foundation, the Jack Ma Foundation, did not immediately respond to a request for comment from Business Insider.
Persons: Jack Ma, It's, Ma, , He's, Supakit Chearavanont Organizations: Alibaba, Service, China Morning Post, National Enterprise, and Culture, Tokyo College, Charoen, Business Locations: Hangzhou, Alibaba, Hangzhou Dajingtou, Beijing, Spain, Netherlands, Japan, Thailand
The World Health Organization has requested more information from China about an illness affecting children. Reports of "undiagnosed pneumonia" in children in northern China circulated on November 21. AdvertisementThe World Health Organization (WHO) asked China for "detailed information" about a respiratory illness that's affecting children in the north of the country. The organization requested "additional epidemiologic and clinical information" following reports of "undiagnosed pneumonia" spreading among children, according to a statement released on Wednesday. Hospitals in northern China appear to be "overwhelmed with sick children," NBC News reported.
Persons: , GAO Organizations: World Health Organization, Service, Health Organization, WHO, China Morning Post, NBC, Getty Images China, Centers for Disease Control Locations: China, Beijing
[1/3] Chinese Premier Li Qiang (R) and French Foreign Minister Catherine Colonna shake hands at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing, China on November 24, 2023. Jade Gao/Pool via REUTERS Acquire Licensing RightsBEIJING/PARIS, Nov 24 (Reuters) - French Foreign Minister Catherine Colonna is set to meet the Chinese leadership in Beijing on Friday as she seeks to soothe ties after the launch of a European Union anti-subsidy probe backed by Paris into Chinese-made electric vehicles. France is also concerned about Chinese attempts to force French cosmetics companies to share manufacturing secrets with Chinese parties. Xi insisted that China welcomes investment from French firms in a telephone call on Monday with Macron, who urged fair treatment for foreign companies in China. Macron visited China in April with great fanfare, in an attempt to demonstrate France's strategic autonomy from the United States.
Persons: Li Qiang, Catherine Colonna, Jade Gao, Wang Yi, Ursula von der Leyen, Charles Michel, Xi Jinping, Emmanuel Macron, Xi, Macron, Colonna, Laurie Chen, John Irish, Raju Gopalakrishnan Organizations: French, of, People, REUTERS Acquire, Rights, European, European Commission, EU, Thomson Locations: Beijing, China, Rights BEIJING, PARIS, European Union, Paris, France, Ukraine, Iran, Gaza, North Korea, United States
[1/6] A man sings for customers touring the Erhai lake on a sightseeing bus, in Dali, Yunnan province, China November 10, 2023. Many are former city-dwellers in search of an elusive prize in authoritarian China: Space for open discussion and exchange of ideas. POLICE OVERSIGHTThe local government has sought to attract young tech talent and in September asked digital nomads for input on policies, two community organisers told Reuters. Many digital nomads who use co-working spaces are involved with technologies like blockchain, according to organisers, which they say has drawn scrutiny from local authorities. Since digital nomads, unlike university students, "are not subject to structured discipline, they are harder to manage", she said.
Persons: Florence Lo, DALI, Trump, Xi Jinping, Minhua Ling, Dali, Xi's, Bai Yunxi, Xi, Bai, Chen Zhengyun, Chen, Ling, Laurie Chen, Katerina Ang Organizations: REUTERS, Geneva Graduate Institute, Reuters, Communist Party, Thomson Locations: Dali, Yunnan province, China, China's, Israel, Gaza, Yunnan, Beijing
Alibaba cofounder Jack Ma walked back on plans to sell the company's stock. The Chinese tech giant's stock crashed last week after it nixed a plan to spin off its $11 billion cloud business. AdvertisementAlibaba cofounder Jack Ma reversed plans to sell the company's stock following a slump in its stock price last week. The company's stock sank in response, wiping out $26 billion in value over two days. But Ma isn't selling the stock since its current value is lower than its actual value, she said in the memo.
Persons: Jack Ma, , Alibaba, Ma, Jane Jiang Fang, Jiang, Ma's Organizations: Service, Reuters, Bloomberg, South China Morning, Big Tech, Baidu, Business Locations: Beijing, China,
Hong Kong CNN —Jack Ma has put off plans to sell hundreds of millions of dollars worth of Alibaba shares after the Chinese tech giant’s stock plummeted last week. Two regulatory filings from last Thursday revealed that Ma had been looking to offload 10 million shares, worth nearly $871 million. Ma believes that the Hangzhou-based firm’s stock “is currently significantly lower than Alibaba’s actual value, and he will not sell it,” she said. Alibaba co-founder Jack Ma. Since then, the entrepreneur has kept a relatively low profile while remaining an Alibaba shareholder.
Persons: Jack Ma, Ma, Jane Jiang Fang, Alibaba, Alibaba’s, Jiang, , Joe Tsai, Henri Szwarc, Ma’s Organizations: Hong Kong CNN, CNN, JC Properties, JSP Investment, Abaca, South China Morning Post, Hong Kong, Alibaba Locations: China, Hong Kong, Alibaba, New York, Hangzhou
3D printed clouds and figurines are seen in front of the Alibaba Cloud service logo in this illustration taken February 8, 2022. Two company sources told Reuters that Ma's move had generated a lot of discussion within the company, as did Jiang's post. Alibaba and the Jack Ma Foundation, the philanthropic organization that handles media queries for the billionaire, did not immediately respond to requests for comment. In her internal note, Jiang also repeated comments from Ma's family office shared with the Alibaba-owned newspaper South China Morning Post on Friday that Ma remained "very positive" about Alibaba and that his family trust eventually did not sell a single share. The company has also been grappling with some upheaval in its top ranks, welcoming a new CEO, Eddie Wu, in September.
Persons: Dado, Jack Ma's, Jiang Fang, Jiang, Jack Ma, Ma, Alibaba, Eddie Wu, Daniel Zhang, Casey, Jenny Wang, Brenda Goh, David Evans Organizations: REUTERS, Rights, HK, Reuters, Jack Ma Foundation, China Morning, Casey Hall, Thomson Locations: Rights SHANGHAI, BEIJING, Shanghai, Beijing
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