Good morning, Quartz readers! A hostile week of US-China relations was punctuated by forced consulate closures in Houston and Chengdu, but the dueling superpowersâ cold conflict has been heating up on the digital landscape for months, if not years.
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Good morning, Quartz readers!
A hostile week of US-China relations was punctuated by [forced consulate closures]( in Houston and Chengdu, but the dueling superpowersâ cold conflict has been heating up on the digital landscape for months, if not years.
China began censoring online speech and interfering with access[almost as soon as the internet]( off. By 2014, the country was hosting[an annual internet conference]( to promote â[cyber sovereignty]( Quartz member exclusive)âthe position that a stateâs sovereignty extends beyond its physical territory into cyberspace, and that countries, in turn, shouldnât interfere with how others regulate the internet.
Russia and Iran have also pushed forward with â[domestic]( internets, but these moves had been seen as largely the purview of authoritarian regimesâuntil last month, when [India banned 59 Chinese apps]( including TikTok, citing privacy and national security concerns. The Trump administration has signaled that the US may also block TikTokâit would be the countryâs first ban of a foreign online platformâin â[weeks not months](
This would have an enormous impact, argues Samm Sacks, a cybersecurity and China expert at the Washington, DC-based New America think tank. âIf the US does it, it opens the floodgate for advanced liberal democracies to begin doing this too,â she says.
While some China tech watchers argue that tougher measures by the US are necessary to address an imbalanced cyberspace relationship with China, experts say there are better ways to deal with an inevitably [recurring concern]( in the internet economy.
One alternative is the European model. The 2018 privacy rules known as GDPR [fragmented the internet in their own way]( with the aim of protecting user data from the prying eyes of US tech giants and government surveillance.
âPlaying whack-a-mole with companies that are deemed to have âgoodâ or âbadâ data, privacy or foreign data reporting conduct isâ¦not very productive in the absence of setting clearer data standards and issuing regulations that govern data usage by companies both domestic and foreign,â says Rui Zhong, a researcher at the Wilson Centerâs Kissinger Institute in Washington, DC. âRemoving TikTok is a band-aid on a much larger underlying problem.ââ Jane Li
Five things on Quartz we especially liked
A new Cultural Revolution. Hong Kongâs recently implemented national security law is [casting a pall]( across offices and schools, as civil servants, teachers, and even nurses fear that snitches will report on anything they say or do as being âanti-government,â reports Mary Hui. To many, itâs reminiscent of the campaign launched by Mao Zedong that implored friends, colleagues, and family members to turn on each other to purge political enemies.âIsabella Steger, news editorMint conditions. How much has Covid-19 made non-drivers consider cars? Hereâs a data point: The host of a podcast called âThe War On Carsâ admitted that even [he is considering buying one](. But if youâre not seeing many 2020 models on the road, [this piece by Micheal Coren]( (â¦) can explain. This fall, he writes, âAmericans may find the most desirable car was once someone elseâs.â âLila MacLellan, Quartz at Work senior reporter
Pull up a chair. Working from home raises many new challenges, among them: where to sit, and when to trade the kitchen-table chair for something more ergonomic and, well, permanent. As Anne Quito writes for Quartz at Work, that search will leave remote workers wanting: No major commercial furniture manufacturers have designed a convincing high-performance chair [that blends in with the rest of our homes]( (â¦). âKira Bindrim, executive editor
The final frontier of tidying. I love mess. And I love history. So itâs a real treat when senior reporter Tim Fernholz fills me in on the first Costa Rican astronaut who also happens to be launching a space junk-hunting radar. Franklin Chang Diaz is [bringing the space economy back to his native country]( with a radar that tracks tiny debris in low-earth orbit. Thatâs a big deal.âMax Lockie, deputy news editor
The arts are essential, too. While theater, museums, and comedy may not get the official âessential businessâ designation, arts and culture can bring solace and distraction during these trying times, not to mention providing livelihoods for their practitioners and other employees of the institutions that house them. For Quartz India, [Manavi Kapur details]( how exhibitions and performances have adaptedâfrom creating 3D models of artworks to selling tickets for online showsâand what adaptations might stick around once the pandemic is over. âLiz Webber, senior news curator
Quartz announcement
Weâd like to make a toast. Join us as we raise our glasses and say goodbye to the first half of 2020, and hello to the next half. As our special way to honor the mid-year milestone, weâre giving you [50% off Quartz membership](. Members enjoy unlimited access to our stories, presentations, field guides, and workshops. Cheers!
Fun fact about sunscreen
[An animated gif of a man pouring sunscreen into a paint tray. He then uses a paint roller to apply the sunscreen all over his face.]
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Say it with us: You do not need a base tan. Sure, if youâre prone to burning, having a bit of extra melanin as an adaptation will protect you from some future sun exposure. But the damage to your skin from getting a base tanâespecially if itâs from a tanning booth and not from everyoneâs favorite starâ[negates that benefit](. TLDR: Donât sleep on sunscreen.
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⦠For members: Netflix needs a James Bond
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Reuters/Mario Anzuoni
This week saw the latest major entrant to the streaming wars: NBCUniversalâs [Peacock](. While the nascent competitorâs future remains to be seen, Netflix is already planning ahead. On a recent call with investors, co-CEO Reed Hastings said the streaming giant hopes to build [the next big cinematic universe](. âWeâre definitely focused on creating franchises,â Hastings said.
The cross-cultural appeal of a franchise like Avengers would serve Netflix well, particularly in global markets. Already, the streaming giant competes internationally with [established regional streamers]( like Indiaâs Hotstar, Nigeriaâs IrokoTV, South Africaâs Showmax, and Chinaâs Tencent Video.
Burgeoning movie goals also put Netflix in even greater [competition with Disney]( which [dominates]( the Hollywood franchise game. Creating [the next James Bond]( may be exactly what Netflix needs to gain an edge on the Mouse House.
Five things from elsewhere that made us smarter
Thereâs a dark side to our obsession with resilience. I like the concept of resilience: After all, bad things happen to everyone, and itâs empowering to focus on how we recover. But [Jonathan Patrick Learyâs recent essay for Teen Vogue]( helped me see how too much focus on bouncing back can keep us from asking how to prevent more suffering in the first placeâand holding institutions accountable. âSarah Todd, Quartz at Work senior reporter
A one-man army. The lack of diversity in the upper ranks of the English Premier League has been newly challenged by Michael Emenalo, the only longstanding black technical director in league history. In an [interview with Donald McRae of The Guardian]( Emenalo, a Nigerian ex-player with a nomadic career, explains the complexities of his journey to becoming one of the most powerful men at Chelseaâone of the worldâs richest teams. âYomi Kazeem, Quartz Africa reporter
How a great engineering company chased an impossible dream. General Electric is an American and global institution, making everything from engines and lightbulbs to scanners and turbines. My father worked there for more than 30 years. But, [as Ted Mann and Thomas Gryta report in detail for the Wall Street Journal]( it recently tried to become a software company, with disastrous results. âHasit Shah, deputy editor, global finance and economics
Ben & Jerryâs roadmap for reckoning with race. For Bloomberg, Jordyn Holman and Thomas Buckley show how, in the national debate over racism in America, [the popular ice cream brand has distinguished itself]( from the many companies who âtried to write tickets seating themselves on the right side of history.â Spoiler alert: It involves a consistent and genuine approach to activism built over years and anchored by a 20-person social justice team. Get your spoons ready! âAnnabelle Timsit, geopolitics reporter
Meet the people looking for Chinese corporate scams. Even before Trump came along, the US stock market had a complicated relationship with Chinese equity listings, which were beset by a string of frauds exposed in the last decade. For Institutional Investor, [Michael Rapoport]( profiles some of the investors, lawyers, and investigators who say swindles are ongoing, and that the US regulator hasnât done enough to keep American investors from getting burned. âJohn Detrixhe, senior reporter
Quartz on the beach
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If youâre lucky enough to make it to the water this weekendâor even if youâre channel surfing at homeâ[we put together a playlist]( of our favorite beach bops to help make the most of the coast.
Our best wishes for a relaxing but thought-filled weekend. Please send any news, comments, protest songs, and favorite city misspellings to hi@qz.com. Get the most out of Quartz by[downloading our app]( and [becoming a member](. Todayâs Weekend Brief was brought to you by Jane Li, Kira Bindrim, and Max Lockie.
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