$39 billion Chinese tech giant Didi leaves New York stock exchange after new SEC rules | US State Dept. phones hacked using Israeli NSO Group spyware | Misinformation stokes anti-vaccine fear in PNG
$39 billion Chinese tech giant Didi leaves New York stock exchange after new SEC rules | US State Dept. phones hacked using Israeli NSO Group spyware | Misinformation stokes anti-vaccine fear in PNG
aspiicpc.substack.com
Follow us on Twitter. The Daily Cyber Digest focuses on the topics we work on, including cyber, critical technologies & strategic issues like foreign interference. Didi’s abrupt decision to leave brings home a stark truth for Wall Street: China doesn’t need it anymore. The world’s No. 2 economy has plenty of its own money and few problems attracting more from elsewhere. China’s friends on Wall Street have lost their sway in Washington at a time when mistrust of Beijing’s intentions is running high. And China’s leaders would rather keep tight control of its companies than open them up to investors on American markets.
$39 billion Chinese tech giant Didi leaves New York stock exchange after new SEC rules | US State Dept. phones hacked using Israeli NSO Group spyware | Misinformation stokes anti-vaccine fear in PNG
$39 billion Chinese tech giant Didi leaves…
$39 billion Chinese tech giant Didi leaves New York stock exchange after new SEC rules | US State Dept. phones hacked using Israeli NSO Group spyware | Misinformation stokes anti-vaccine fear in PNG
Follow us on Twitter. The Daily Cyber Digest focuses on the topics we work on, including cyber, critical technologies & strategic issues like foreign interference. Didi’s abrupt decision to leave brings home a stark truth for Wall Street: China doesn’t need it anymore. The world’s No. 2 economy has plenty of its own money and few problems attracting more from elsewhere. China’s friends on Wall Street have lost their sway in Washington at a time when mistrust of Beijing’s intentions is running high. And China’s leaders would rather keep tight control of its companies than open them up to investors on American markets.