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Are AI hacking claims causing a dangerous divide among cybersecurity experts? | Business and Economy News

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An alarming watershed for artificial intelligence, or an overhyped threat?

AI startup Anthropic’s recent announcement that it detected the world’s first artificial intelligence-led hacking campaign has prompted a multitude of responses from cybersecurity experts.

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While some observers have raised the alarm about the long-feared arrival of a dangerous inflection point, others have greeted the claims with scepticism, arguing that the startup’s account leaves out crucial details and raises more questions than answers.

In a report on Friday, Anthropic said its assistant Claude Code was manipulated to carry out 80-90 percent of a “large-scale” and “highly sophisticated” cyberattack, with human intervention required “only sporadically”.

Anthropic, the creator of the popular Claude chatbot, said the attack aimed to infiltrate government agencies, financial institutions, tech firms and chemical manufacturing companies, though the operation was only successful in a small number of cases.

The San Francisco-based company, which attributed the attack to Chinese state-sponsored hackers, did not specify how it had uncovered the operation, nor identify the “roughly” 30 entities that it said had been targeted.

Roman V Yampolskiy, an AI and cybersecurity expert at the University of Louisville, said there was no doubt that AI-assisted hacking posed a serious threat, though it was difficult to verify the precise details of Anthropic’s account.

“Modern models can write and adapt exploit code, sift through huge volumes of stolen data, and orchestrate tools faster and more cheaply than human teams,” Yampolskiy told Al Jazeera.

“They lower the skills barrier for entry and increase the scale at which well-resourced actors can operate. We are effectively putting a junior cyber-operations team in the cloud, rentable by the hour.”

Yampolskiy said he expected AI to increase both the frequency and the severity of attacks.

Jaime Sevilla, director of Epoch AI, said he did not see much new in Anthropic’s report, but past experience dictated that AI-assisted attacks were both feasible and likely to become increasingly common.

“This is likely to hit medium-sized businesses and government agencies hardest,” Sevilla told Al Jazeera.

“Historically, they weren’t valuable enough targets for dedicated campaigns and often underinvested in cybersecurity, but AI makes them profitable targets. I expect many of these organisations to adapt by hiring cybersecurity specialists, launching vulnerability-reward programmes, and using AI to detect and patch weaknesses internally.”

While many analysts have expressed their desire for more information from Anthropic, some have been dismissive of its claims.

After United States Senator Chris Murphy warned that AI-led attacks would “destroy us” if regulation did not become a priority, Meta AI chief scientist Yann LeCun called out the lawmaker for being “played” by a company seeking regulatory capture.

“They are scaring everyone with dubious studies so that open source models are regulated out of existence,” LeCun said in a post on X.

Anthropic did not respond to a request for comment.

A spokesperson for the Chinese embassy in Washington, DC, said China “consistently and resolutely” opposed all forms of cyberattacks.

“We hope that relevant parties will adopt a professional and responsible attitude, basing their characterisation of cyber incidents on sufficient evidence, rather than unfounded speculation and accusations,” Liu Pengyu told Al Jazeera.

Toby Murray, computer security expert at the University of Melbourne, said that Anthropic had business incentives to highlight both the dangers of such attacks and its ability to counter them.

“Some people have questioned Anthropic’s claims that suggest that the attackers were able to get Claude AI to perform highly complex tasks with less human oversight than is typically required,” Murray told Al Jazeera.

“Unfortunately, they don’t give us hard evidence to say exactly what tasks were performed or what oversight was provided. So it’s difficult to pass judgement one way or the other on these claims.”

Still, Murray said he did not find the report particularly surprising, considering how effective some AI assistants are at tasks such as coding.

“I don’t see AI-powered hacking changing the kinds of hacks that will occur,” he said.

“However, it might usher in a change of scale. We should expect to see more AI-powered hacks in the future, and for those hacks to become more successful.”

While AI is set to pose growing risks to cybersecurity, it will also be pivotal in bolstering defences, analysts say.

Fred Heiding, a Harvard University research fellow who specialises in computer security and AI security, said he believes AI will provide a “significant advantage” to cybersecurity specialists in the long term.

“Today, many cyber-operations are held back by a shortage of human cyber-professionals. AI will help us overcome this bottleneck by enabling us to test all our systems at scale,” Heiding told Al Jazeera.

Heiding, who described Anthropic’s account as broadly credible but “overstated”, said the big danger is that hackers will have a window of opportunity to run amok as security experts struggle to catch up with their exploitation of increasingly advanced AI.

“Unfortunately, the defensive community is likely to be too slow to implement the new technology into automated security testing and patching solutions,” he said.

“If that is the case, attackers will wreak havoc on our systems with the press of a button, before our defences have had time to catch up.”

AS Watson CEO Malina Ngai states that younger consumers are returning to physical stores.

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AS Watson was established in 1841 in Hong Kong, the year the British took over the territory. Almost 185 years later, the brand is now a health and beauty retail giant, with close to 17,000 outlets across 31 markets, including mainland China, Malaysia, the UK, Turkey and even Ukraine.

“We are a people company,” Malina Ngai, group CEO of AS Watson, said at the Fortune Innovation Forum in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, on Monday. Ngai acknowleged the company’s long history–including how the company endowed Sun Yat-sen, who later led the 1911 revolution agaisnt the Qing dynasty, with a medical scolarship–yet argued that AS Watson had to remain forward-thinking.

“Heritage gives us credibility, so people trust us, but only if we stay relevant [will we] be able to stay alive,” Ngai said.

The secret sauce to successfully operating in so many markets, Ngai argued, came from understanding their customers. In Southeast Asia—which Ngai described as one of AS Watson’s “growth engines”— consumers are young, digitally-savvy and conscious about health and beauty. They also love new campaigns and product launches. As such, Watsons, AS Watson’s main drugstore brand, has rolled out campaigns such as “Kaw Kaw Deals” in Malaysia, replete with a catchy jingle of the same name by local personalities Jinnyboy and Ayda Jebat.

Through market surveys, Ngai also found that many young customers in the region enjoy shopping at brick-and-mortar stores, despite a variety of online shopping options. “For younger customers, they want to be in the store, they want to get consultancy, they want to be able to touch the product—and this is what we can offer,” she said. 

Aside from popular J-beauty and K-beauty products, Watsons also offers an array of halal-certified skincare and beauty items for Muslim consumers in markets like Malaysia and Indonesia.

C-beauty has also seen a spike in popularity among Southeast Asian consumers. Chinese beauty brands are “strong in technology and social media, and they get engagement and popularity within Southeast Asia very quickly,” Ngai explained.

People-first’

Ngai emphasized the importance of empowering employees. “In the company, if everyone is a leader, it will be a very powerful company. This means they know exactly the [company’s] purpose, they know how to collaborate, and they care for each other,” Ngai said.

Still, AS Watson is moving to adopt new technologies across its team, including launching a company-wide generative AI protocol in September. “AI used to be just with my data team, the programmers—but now Gen AI is for everyone,” Ngai said.

As the company approaches its 185-year milestone in 2026, Ngai shared her hopes for AS Watson’s future. “I don’t normally dream about work over the years. I sleep quite well, but recently, I dream a lot about 185 years,” Ngai said. “[I want AS Watson to] be an organization that can stay fit for the future, the next 180 years.”

Teddy Atlas Provides Predictions for Benavidez vs Yarde and Haney vs Norman Jr Fights

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Teddy Atlas has put forward his predictions for David Benavidez vs Anthony Yarde and Brian Norman Jr vs Devin Haney, two of four world title fights taking place this Saturday.

The card, which will be headlined by Benavidez-Yarde in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, also features two further intriguing matchups in the form of Jesse Rodriguez vs Fernando Martinez and Abdullah Mason vs Sam Noakes.

As far as the main event is concerned, many believe that the explosive styles of Benavidez and Yarde are likely to steal the show.

Entering their light-heavyweight encounter as a sizeable favourite, Benavidez was upgraded from interim to full WBC champion shortly after Dmitry Bivol vacated his green and gold strap earlier this year. He is now chasing a fight with the Russian to unify.

Prior to that, the 28-year-old has claimed comprehensive points victories over David Morrell and Oleksandr Gvozdyk in his only two outings at 175lbs.

Yarde, meanwhile, has previously challenged for world honours on two occasions, losing to both Sergey Kovalev and Artur Beterbiev in 2019 and 2022, respectively.

In this particular clash with Benavidez, iconic trainer Atlas has opined on his YouTube channel that Yarde must get his man out of there in the early rounds, or else he risks being trapped beneath a heavy bombardment of artillery.

“With rain comes mud. And the potential mud, with Benavidez, is, when he’s raining all those punches at you, sometimes he’s vulnerable.

“If you punch with him when he’s throwing, you can catch him. There are going to be spots, especially early, for the veteran and the good puncher – the strong, physical puncher – of Yarde… There’s going to be opportunities to catch and hurt Benavidez.

“Benavidez has a good chin, great heart, but there will be opportunities [for Yarde] to do that.

“[If it goes late], I think Benavidez, if he gets his way with the body work, the pressure, the volume, the bursts – he’ll wear down Yarde.

“At the end of the day, I like Benavidez to win [by stoppage in under nine-and-a-half rounds].”

As for the welterweight offering between WBO champion Norman and Haney, Atlas believes that the latter’s technical prowess could see him claim a convincing points victory over his aggressive opponent.

At the same time, though, he equally acknowledges that Norman carries enough firepower to end their scheduled 12-rounder at any given moment.

“Norman is the less experienced guy but very explosive, very talented. I think he’s going to go after Haney, [which] I think is going to give Haney a chance, style-wise, to be at his best – to be the old Haney, not the Haney that went in there with [Ryan] Garcia.

“It’s got to be the Haney that counterpunches; the Haney that makes you reach. If it’s that [version of] Haney, he wins a decision over Norman.

“[But] if Norman hurts him the way Garcia did, the night’s probably going to be over, because he’s a better finisher than Garcia.”

At the forefront of Europe’s confrontation with Russia’s covert navy

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Jessica Parker,Berlin correspondent, Baltic Sea and

Ned Davies,BBC Verify

Getty Images A coastguard looks into the distance next to an image of an oil tanker Getty Images

The BBC joined coastguards on the front line of Europe’s uneasy standoff with Russia’s so-called “shadow fleet”

Out on the western Baltic, a coastguard officer radios a nearby, sanctioned oil tanker.

“Swedish Coastguard calling… Do you consent to answer a few questions for us? Over.”

Through heavy static, barely audible answers crackle over from a crew member, who gradually lists the ship’s insurance details, flag state and last port of call – Suez, Egypt.

“I think this ship will go up to Russia and get oil,” says Swedish investigator, Jonatan Tholin.

This is the front line of Europe’s uneasy standoff with Russia’s so-called “shadow fleet”; a term that commonly refers to hundreds of tankers used to bypass a price cap on Russian oil exports.

After the Kremlin launched its full-scale invasion of Ukraine, many Western countries imposed sanctions on Russian energy, which Moscow is accused of dodging by shipping oil on aged tankers often with obscure ownership or insurance.

Three men in the Swedish coastguards uniform sit at the control desk of a ship. Two on the outside are sitting down while the man in the middle is standing and speaking on the phone.

European coastguards and navies are regularly coming in contact with vessels in Russia’s shadow fleet which they suspect are transporting oil

Some “shadow” ships are even suspected of undersea sabotage, illicit drone launches or “spoofing” their location data.

Out on the waves, where freedom of navigation is a golden rule, the ability and appetite of coastal countries to intervene is limited, even though the risk they face is escalating.

As the BBC has learned, a growing network of “shadow” ships are sailing without a valid national flag, which can render vessels stateless and without proper insurance.

That is a troubling trend, given many are practically “floating rust buckets”, says senior maritime intelligence analyst at Windward AI, Michelle Wiese Bockmann. If there is an accident, like a billion-dollar oil spill, “good luck with trying to find somebody responsible to pick up any cost”.

Driven by record sanctions and tighter enforcement, the number of falsely flagged ships globally has more than doubled this year to over 450, most of them tankers, according to the International Maritime Organization (IMO) database.

The BBC has been tracking one ship that appears to have sailed without a valid flag.

Commodore Ivo Värk wears a white shirt with epaulets and a tie with a pin. Behind him is the Estonia flag on a desk and a ships wheel mounted on the wall behind a desk.

The head of Estonia’s navy, Commodore Ivo Värk, says that vessels travel back and forth, past Estonia, to major Russian oil terminals

The head of Estonia’s navy, Commodore Ivo Värk, says they have seen dozens of such passing vessels this year whereas they used to see just one or two.

The rise is alarming, he tells me, as we talk in his office overlooking the Gulf of Finland, a narrow gateway to the major Russian oil terminals of Ust-Luga and Primorsk.

What’s more, he suggests, it’s brazen: “There’s no secret made about it.”

We spot the tanker Unity on the MarineTraffic app, the day we board an Estonian (British-built) Minehunter that is also used in Nato’s Baltic Sentry patrols to protect critical infrastructure.

Journeying east, Unity is over 100 miles away but sailing in our direction.

The BBC has investigated its history and it offers an illuminating insight into the enigmatic life of a shadow ship.

Tracking data shows that Unity has passed through the English Channel four times in the last twelve months, including journeys between Russian ports and India; a key oil customer that has not signed up to the price cap.

Originally known as Ocean Explorer, the tanker was built in 2009 and flew the flag of Singapore for more than a decade.

Back in 2019, it was named in a UN report for alleged involvement in a ship-to-ship transfer with a vessel that had been sanctioned for its role in transporting fuel to North Korea – which is among other countries also charged with utilising elusive shadow ships.

By late 2021, the vessel – which that year operated under the name Ocean Vela – took the flag of the Marshall Islands but was struck from that list in 2024, a registry spokesperson told us, because the ship’s then-operator and beneficial owning company had been sanctioned by the UK.

The tanker appears to have had three further names since 2021 (Beks Swan, March and Unity) and three further flags (Panama, Russia and Gambia) but always retains a unique IMO number.

In August, ship broadcasting data shows Unity claimed the flag of Lesotho which was designated as “false”. Lesotho is a small, landlocked African enclave kingdom that, according to the IMO, does not have an official registry.

The BBC has tried to contact Unity’s listed owner, a Dubai-registered company called FMTC Ship Charter LLC, but our emails and our calls went unanswered.

The beneficial owners of 60% of shadow fleet vessels remain essentially unknown, according to maritime intelligence company Windward AI.

Opaque ownership structures – and frequent name or flag changes – have become a signature trait of the shadow fleet as a means of avoiding detection.

Purged from reputable registries and having circled the drain of poor-quality alternatives, some ships are now at a point “where they just don’t even bother at all”, says Michelle Wiese Bockmann.

Unity’s most recent journey saw it sail through the North Sea in late October before entering the Baltic and passing countries including Sweden and Estonia – the point at which we spotted it.

By 6 November, it was anchored outside the Russian port of Ust-Luga where it remains at the time of publication.

The tanker was added to the UK and EU’s ever-growing list of sanctioned vessels earlier this year but, like so many others, continues to do business despite other difficulties.

Back in January, it reportedly sheltered in the English Channel after suffering a mechanical failure during a storm. The following August it was reportedly detained at a Russian port due to technical issues and unpaid wages.

Planet Labs A satellite image of a coastline which is surrounded by vessels. Planet Labs

At the time of publication the vessel was anchored just outside the major Russian oil port, Ust-Luga

Unity is just one of hundreds of vessels subject to UK and EU service and port bans as both London and Brussels try to increase pressure on the Kremlin.

Nevertheless, Russian revenues from crude and oil product sales were $13.1bn (£9.95bn) in October alone, according to the Paris-based International Energy Agency (IEA) – although this was down by $2.3bn when compared with the same month a year ago.

Analysis by the Centre for Research on Energy and Clean Air finds that “shadow” tankers, either sanctioned or suspected, account for 62% of shipped Russian crude oil exports, while China and India are by far the biggest customers for crude, followed by Turkey and the European Union itself.

While politicians talk of toughening action, navy and coastguard officers point out that a country’s power to act fades the further you go out to sea.

The right of innocent passage remains a cornerstone of maritime law, but stateless vessels technically are not entitled to it.

Countries such as France, Finland and Estonia have detained ships, and they can do so where a crime is suspected, however such drastic controls remain a relatively rare event.

“There’s a complexity associated with it,” argues Commodore Ivo Värk. “With the Russian presence next to our borders, the risk of escalation is too high to do it on a regular basis.”

Frans Sanderse Unity, a long oil tanker at sea.Frans Sanderse

Unity sailing under a former name, Ocean Explorer

The Estonians speak from experience.

When they attempted to intercept a flagless tanker in May, Russia briefly deployed a fighter jet and has “constantly” had about two naval vessels in the Gulf of Finland since, says Commodore Värk.

The fear of escalation sits alongside broader concerns of commercial retaliation if a more aggressive approach were to be taken.

“Every day in the Baltic, there’s suspicious activity,” a Nato official told the BBC, speaking on the condition of anonymity. Nevertheless, the official added, “we don’t want to be cowboys and jumping on ships. The act of monitoring ships is a deterrent in itself”.

“Freedom of navigation is the lifeblood of all of our economies.”

Back on the bridge of the Swedish coastguard ship, the radio call with the sanctioned tanker has wrapped up.

“Thank you for your co-operation,” says the officer as the vessel carries on towards Russia.

The exchange lasted just over five minutes.

“You need to see it in a larger perspective,” says investigator Jonatan Tholin when I suggest these measures appear less than muscular: “This information can be used in our maritime surveillance.”

But as Europe steps up checks and watches the waves, Windward’s Michelle Wiese Bockmann spies something else: “You can literally see the international rules-based order crumbling through the sanctions-circumventing tactics of these vessels.”

There is a lot at stake for the environment and on security, she says, and meanwhile “the dark fleet is getting darker”.

The BBC approached Russia’s embassy in London for comment. In response, a spokesman said that the West’s “anti-Russian sanctions” were “illegitimate” and “undermine established principles of global commerce”.

“Labelling ships used to export Russian oil as ‘shadow fleet’ is discriminatory and misleading,” the embassy said, and instances of invalid flags were typically down to “easily resolved” issues such as administrative delays.

It was sanctioning countries, the spokesperson said, that had “heightened” the risks by “forcing shipowners and operators to navigate an increasingly fragmented and restrictive regulatory landscape”.

Additional reporting by Adrienne Murray, Michael Steininger and Ali Zaidi

Three Gene Variants Linked to Increased ADHD Risk, Finds New Study

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Groundbreaking research has uncovered a set of just three gene variants that can increase the likelihood of attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) by up to 15 times. It’s a remarkable finding, considering that thousands of mutations only come with a nominal elevated risk.

An international team of scientists led by iPSYCH at Aarhus University has shown that three rare variants in the genes MAP1A, ANO8 and ANK2 play a significant role in ADHD, a condition that’s largely genetic and highly heritable.

“We can now, for the first time, point to very specific genes in which rare variants confer a high predisposition to developing ADHD,” said senior author Professor Anders Børglum from the Department of Biomedicine at Aarhus University. “The identified variants very likely have a highly damaging effect on the genes, and they show us precisely which genes and fundamental biological mechanisms may be affected.”

Professor Ditte Demontis, professor Anders Børglum and postdoctoral researcher Jinjie Duan (from left) show that rare high-effect genetic variants can explain part of the risk of ADHD

Simon Fischel/AU Health

The team analyzed the genetic data of nearly 9,000 people with ADHD who took part in the Danish iPSYCH study, and 54,000 individuals without the condition, and compared that with brain cell function data and reports on education and socioeconomic status of Denmark residents. People with these gene mutations line up with those who have, on average, lower educational achievements and poorer socioeconomic status – often seen in individuals with ADHD.

While rare, the mutations appear to disrupt communication between neurons, by affecting genes expressed in these all-important nerve cells in the brain. This interference is a hallmark of ADHD. The variants especially impact dopaminergic and GABAergic neuron function – the cells that play key roles in regulating attention, impulse control and motivation.

“Our findings support that disturbances in brain development and function are central to the development of ADHD,” said co-first author Ditte Demontis, Professor at the Department of Biomedicine at Aarhus University. “We have also analyzed which proteins interact with the proteins encoded by the three identified ADHD genes, and we have identified a larger protein network that also plays a role in other neurodevelopmental disorders – including autism and schizophrenia. This provides insight into the biological links across several psychiatric diagnoses.”

Importantly, these new findings only strengthen our understanding of ADHD’s genetic blueprint – something that current assessment protocols don’t account for. Right now, the US has no specific diagnostic tool, with clinicians instead compiling data through medical exams, interviews, family and personal history, school records and unofficial rating scales. Genetic markers – which are present even before birth – could help individuals, parents and healthcare professionals with risk awareness, diagnosis and treatment.

“The study provides a new and concrete direction for mapping the biological mechanisms involved in ADHD, because we now know causal genes with high-effect variants,” said Børglum. “They give us insight into some of the fundamental biological processes, which can guide the design of deeper mechanistic studies – for example, to identify new therapeutic targets.”

These findings, add the researchers, are by no means the complete story, with many more gene variants yet to be discovered that may play a small or, like these rare mutations, large role in the presentation of neurodivergence.

“Yes, and we are only at the beginning of uncovering these rare high-effect variants,” said co-first author and postdoctoral researcher Jinjie Duan. “Our calculations show that there are many more rare causal variants that can be identified in even larger studies. In the current study, we can already point to 17 additional genes with rare variants that are very likely to be causal.”

It’s the latest research to offer clues to the genetic nature of ADHD, which is still an emerging area of neurodevelopmental study.

The study was published in the journal Nature.

Source: Aarhus University

Pinkfong’s stock market debut sees shares surge before experiencing a drop back to initial levels

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Pinkfong, the South Korean children’s entertainment company behind the Baby Shark phenomenon, saw its share price soar on its stock market debut on Tuesday (November 18), before falling back down to close 9% above its IPO price.

The company’s stock, which is now trading on South Korea’s small-cap Kosdaq market, jumped to 61,500 won (USD $42) in intraday trading, marking a nearly 62% jump from its opening price of KRW 38,000 ($26). It ended the trading day at KRW 41,550, up about 9.4%.

Ultimately, the IPO raised $53 million, with demand for the stock at one point 600 times higher than the available shares, Bloomberg reported.

It comes in the wake of a series of successful listings on the Kosdaq, analysts told Reuters.

Baby Shark, which has been irritating parents since 2016, is the most-watched video on YouTube of all time, with more than 16 billion plays. The track has been Diamond-certified by the RIAA in the US, and 5x Platinum-certified by the BPI in the UK. It has just short of 1 billion streams on Spotify.

Pinkfong leveraged Baby Shark’s success to create a Baby Shark TV show, Big Show! (co-produced with Nickelodeon Animation Studio), and to create new characters like Bebefinn and Sealook. Bebefinn is now a larger content revenue generator than Baby Shark, Bloomberg reported citing Pinkfong CEO Kim Min-seok.

Now Pinkfong – which signed a publishing deal with Sony Music in 2020 covering its entire children’s music catalog – aims to expand into entertainment for older kids and teens as well, Forbes reported. Its IPO prospectus said it aims to create three new IPs by 2028. The company also aims to open pop-up stores worldwide.

Kim co-founded the company in 2010 with Son Dongwoo, now Pinkfong’s Chief Technology Officer. Kim’s father is known as the head of Samsung Publishing, which owned 16.8% of Pinkfong prior to the IPO, per Bloomberg. Kim himself held 18% of Pinkfong prior to the stock market debut.

Whether or not the company’s rising stock price can maintain momentum will depend on future earnings performance, Zian Investment Management CIO Kim Dojoon said.

“The key will be how effectively the company can monetize its existing IPs — Baby Shark, Bebefinn — and how well its new IPs perform.”

“Their top-line growth and profits next year will be driven by licensed and merchandise goods sales of their popular IP products…”

Korea Investment & Securities

Pinkfong clocked an operating profit of KRW 18.8 billion last year, equating to $13.8 million at the average exchange rate for 2024. Its revenues came in at KRW 97.4 billion ($71.4 million).

Analysts at Korea Investment & Securities expect Pinkfong to post stable revenue growth on the back of international expansion and IP diversification.

“Their top-line growth and profits next year will be driven by licensed and merchandise goods sales of their popular IP products even if their profit growth slows this year due to increased expenses,” they wrote, as cited by the Financial Times.Music Business Worldwide

Russia-Ukraine war: Recap of significant events on day 1,364 | Latest updates on Russia-Ukraine conflict

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Here are the key events from day 1,364 of Russia’s war on Ukraine.

Here is how things stand on Wednesday, November 19:

Fighting

  • Russian drones struck two central districts – Slobidskyi and Osnovyansk – in Ukraine’s second largest city Kharkiv, injuring five people in an apartment building and triggering a fire, authorities said.
  • Kharkiv Mayor Ihor Terekhov said 22 residents had been evacuated from one section of the damaged apartment building while another drone struck an area outside a medical facility, injuring a doctor and damaging the building and nearby cars.
  • The Kharkiv region’s governor, Oleh Syniehubov, said 11 drones were deployed in the attack and seven people were injured in total.
  • Russia’s civil aviation authority said it was temporarily halting flights at Krasnodar International Airport in southern Russia on Wednesday morning, saying only that it was for flight safety.
  • Russian air defences shot down four Ukrainian drones en route to Moscow on Tuesday, the city’s mayor said. Moscow’s two largest airports, Sheremetyevo and Vnukovo, stopped all air traffic for a time before later reopening, Russia’s aviation watchdog said.
  • Ukrainian drone attacks have caused extensive damage to the power grid in the Russian-occupied part of the Donetsk region. Denis Pushilin, the Moscow-appointed head of the self-proclaimed Donetsk People’s Republic, said about 65 percent of consumers were without power in the region.
  • Ukraine attacked two thermal power stations in Russian-occupied Donetsk, according to a Telegram post by the commander of Ukraine’s drone forces. Major Robert Brovdi said the Starobeshivska and Zuivska power plants had been hit by his forces.
  • Ukraine said it attacked military targets in Russia with United States-supplied ATACMS missiles, calling it a “significant development”. The military said in a statement that the “use of long-range strike capabilities, including systems such as ATACMS, will continue”.
  • Russian Defence Minister Andrei Belousov conducted a regular inspection of troops fighting in eastern Ukraine, his ministry’s outlet, Zvezda, reported. Video posted by Zvezda showed Belousov presenting awards to military servicemen.

Military aid

  • The Trump administration has approved a $105m arms sale to Ukraine to help it maintain existing Patriot missile air defence systems. The sale includes upgrading from M901 to M903 launchers, which can fire more missiles at once.
  • Spain will provide Ukraine with a new military aid package worth 615 million euros ($710m), Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez announced on Tuesday.
  • “Your fight is ours,” Sanchez said alongside Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, adding that Russian President Vladimir Putin’s “neoimperialism” seeks to “weaken the European project and everything it stands for”.

Regional security

  • The United Kingdom lacks a plan to defend itself from military attack, members of parliament warned while at least 13 sites across the UK have been identified for new factories to make munitions and military explosives, according to a report.
  • Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk said authorities have identified two Ukrainian nationals who had collaborated with Russia for “a long time” and were responsible for an explosion on a Polish railway route to Ukraine.
  • “The most important information is that … we have identified the people responsible for the acts of sabotage,” Tusk told lawmakers. “In both cases, we are sure that the attempt to blow up the rails and the railway infrastructure violation were intentional and their aim was to cause a railway traffic catastrophe,” he said.
  • The Kremlin accused Poland of succumbing to Russophobia after Warsaw blamed the explosion on a railway route to Ukraine on two Ukrainian citizens who it said were recruited by Russian intelligence.
  • Soldiers from across the NATO alliance practised counterdrone skills in Poland on Tuesday with troops from the US, UK and Romania joining their Polish counterparts at the exercises in Nowa Deba in Poland’s southeast corner.
  • The European Commission will propose a new initiative to help speed up the development and purchase of innovative defence technologies, according to a draft document seen by the Reuters news agency.
US soldiers carry an AS3 interceptor, part of the US-made, AI-powered counterdrone system MEROPS, during a presentation in Nowa Deba, Poland [Kacper Pempel/Reuters]

Ceasefire

  • Zelenskyy said Ukraine will try to “reactivate” the diplomatic process to end the war with Russia. Zelenskyy later announced he planned to go to Turkiye on Wednesday to try to revive talks with Russia on how to end the war in Ukraine.
  • No face-to-face talks have taken place between Kyiv and Moscow since they met in Istanbul in July.
  • Steve Witkoff, a US special envoy, is expected to join the talks with Zelenskyy in Turkiye, another Ukrainian official involved in the meeting’s preparations told the AFP news agency.
  • Ukraine plans to claim $43bn in climate compensation from Russia to help fund a planet-friendly rebuild after the war, Ukrainian Deputy Minister for Economy, Environment and Agriculture Pavlo Kartashov announced at the UN climate conference in Brazil.
  • “We in Ukraine face brutality directly, but the climate shockwaves of this aggression will be felt well beyond our borders and into the future,” Kartashov said.

Politics and diplomacy

  • One of Ukraine’s main opposition parties physically blocked lawmakers from holding a vote in parliament on Tuesday to dismiss two ministers over a corruption investigation, demanding the removal of the entire cabinet instead.
  • Zelenskyy made a one-day visit on Tuesday to Spain and took the opportunity to view Pablo Picasso’s Guernica, a painting that depicts the horrors of war and specifically the bombardment of civilian targets in Spain by fascist German and Italian forces.

Economy

  • Russian state conglomerate Rostec said its defence exports have fallen by half since 2022 as domestic orders became a priority during the war in Ukraine. Until 2022, Russia held second place in the world after the US in defence exports, but the volumes dropped “due to the fact that we have had to supply most of our production to our army”, Rostec chief Sergey Chemezov told reporters.
  • Russian lawmakers endorsed new tax hikes on Tuesday as Moscow looks for new revenue sources to boost its economy during its nearly four-year war with Ukraine. Legislators in the lower house of parliament, the State Duma, approved the key second reading of a bill to raise the value-added tax from 20 percent to 22 percent.

Sanctions

  • US oil firm Exxon Mobil has joined rival Chevron Corp in considering options to buy parts of sanctioned Russian oil firm Lukoil’s international assets, sources familiar with the matter told the Reuters news agency.
  • Exxon is considering options for Lukoil assets in Kazakhstan, where both the US and the Russian firm have stakes in the Karachaganak and Tengiz fields, the sources said. Chevron, another partner in these assets, is also studying options to buy.

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Israeli strike near Palestinian refugee camp in Lebanon kills 13 people

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At least 13 people have been killed in an Israeli strike near a Palestinian refugee camp in southern Lebanon, the country’s health ministry says.

The Israeli military said it had targeted members of the Palestinian armed group Hamas “operating in a training compound… in the Ein el-Hilweh area”.

It said the location was used by Hamas to plan and carry out attacks against Israel, which Hamas rejected as “fabrication and lies”.

Israel has carried out regular air strikes on people and places in Lebanon since a deal to end the conflict with the Iran-backed armed group Hezbollah. Most strikes have targeted Hezbollah but Israel has also attacked Hamas in the country.

As well as those killed, Lebanon’s health ministry said at least four people had been injured in the strike.

Images showed emergency workers at the entrance of Ein el-Hilweh, the largest Palestinian refugee camp in Lebanon.

Footage online also showed ambulances rushing through the narrow streets of the crowded camp as a huge plume of smoke billowed from the location hit.

Initial reports said the strike hit an area outside a mosque that is usually busy at night.

Condemning the attack, Hamas said it had “no military installations in the Palestinian camps in Lebanon” and that the site targeted was an “open sports field”.

In its statement, the IDF said “prior to the strike, measures were taken to reduce the chance of harm to civilians, including the use of precision munitions, aerial observations, and additional intelligence information”.

Hamas attacked southern Israel from Gaza on 7 October 2023, killing about 1,200 people and taking 251 others as hostages. Israel’s military response has killed at least 69,169 Palestinians in Gaza, according to the territory’s Hamas-run health ministry.

Fighting between Israel and Hezbollah escalated after the Lebanese group fired rockets at Israeli positions the day after 7 October 2023. Hezbollah said it was acting in solidarity with Palestinians in Gaza.

Israel and Hezbollah fought an escalating conflict for 13 months that culminated in an intense Israeli bombing campaign and ground incursion into southern Lebanon in October 2024.

Lebanese authorities said Israel’s attacks killed about 4,000 people there – including many civilians – and led to the displacement of more than 1.2 million residents. Israeli authorities said more than 80 of its soldiers and 47 of its civilians were killed in the hostilities.

Chief Business Officer of Duolingo, Meese, sells $256k worth of stock

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Duolingo’s chief business officer Meese sells $256k in stock