EU economy, new basketball experience, soothing buzzes

Good morning, Quartz readers!

Here’s what you need to know

Europe’s first estimate of second-quarter GDP. Right after the US announced its economy plunged by a record 32.9% in the three months to June, the euro zone is also expected to show a historic decline. Germany yesterday posted a 10% drop in its economy for the quarter, while France will announce its numbers today. China’s recovery, however, seems to be on track.

Hong Kong will postpone its election. Its chief executive is widely expected to announce today that the September legislative polls will be delayed, possibly by as much as a year, on public health grounds. Yesterday the government disqualified a dozen popular pro-democracy candidates—and said that simply voicing opposition to the territory’s new national security law is enough to bar someone from running.

Alstom’s Bombardier bid is chugging along. European antitrust regulators are expected to approve the French company’s acquisition of the Canadian firm’s rail business after it offered concessions to address its market clout from the deal, which will make Alstom the world’s second-largest rail manufacturer.

Big Tech had a (mostly) great quarter. A day after their CEOs testified in a landmark antitrust hearing before the US Congress, Facebook, Amazon, Apple, and Alphabet all beat earnings estimates. But Google’s parent also posted its first ever revenue decline as advertising spending fell sharply. Meanwhile, Australia is proposing to make Google and Facebook pay for using content from news publishers.


Bouncing back from halftime

LeBron James
LeBron will usher viewers into a strange new world.
Image: AP Photo/Mark J. Terrill

The NBA’s four-month break is over, as players return to an empty arena. WarnerMedia-owned TNT as well as Disney’s ESPN are tweaking the experience for viewers at home in an attempt to make up for the lack of roaring crowds by adding more cameras and microphones. If you can’t be there in person—and you can’t—perhaps closer glimpses of sweaty brow(s) and sharper squeaks on the hardwood will bridge the gap.

Cable TV has been hemorrhaging subscribers this year due to the Covid-induced sports drought. And while basketball, baseball, hockey, and eventually football will help service providers’ bottom lines in the short-term, cord-cutters are unlikely to resubscribe permanently.


Charting refugees entering the US

Beijing’s repressive actions towards Hong Kong have prompted the White House to move forward with sanctions against figures on the island who backed China’s tactics. But there’s another way to undermine the push against freedom and boost the US economy, too: Open American borders to political refugees from Hong Kong.

The White House has called for the US to reallocate the existing refugee quota towards Hong Kong—but president Donald Trump has already cut the number of refugees admitted to the US to about 8,000, the lowest level in nearly three decades. In Congress, legislation has been introduced to grant certain Hong Kongers refugee status separate from the annual ceiling.

Image for article titled EU economy, new basketball experience, soothing buzzes

For members: Smart questions from Big Tech’s antitrust hearing

Asking four different tech bigwigs with four different business models questions about anti-competitive practices at their companies would be a daunting task for even the most knowledgeable interviewer. Past hearings—in particular Mark Zuckerberg’s 2018 appearance before Congress—didn’t inspire much confidence in politicians’ grasp of the modern tech firms, but on Wednesday, the US House Judiciary Antitrust Subcommittee, for the most part, held its own.

We compiled the questions we thought were particularly thoughtful and nuanced. Here’s a preview:

  1. “You said that Amazon focuses on customers, so how would customers… benefit when the prices were driven up by the fact that you eliminated your main competitor?” —Rep. Mary Scanlon, D-PA to Jeff Bezos, Amazon
  2. “Mergers and acquisitions that buy off potential competitive threats violate the antitrust law. In your own words, you purchased Instagram to neutralize a competitive threat. If this was an illegal merger at the time of the transaction, why shouldn’t Instagram now be broken off into a separate company?” —Rep. Jerry Nadler, D-NY to Mark Zuckerberg, Facebook
  3. “Will you certify here today that your company does not use and will never use slave labor to manufacture your products or allow products to be sold on your platform that are manufactured using slave labor?” —Rep. Ken Buck, R-CO to all four CEOs

✦ Here’s a smart question. Do you want half off a Quartz membership? If you’re already a member, consider helping us improve by taking this 3-minute survey.


You asked about vaccine safety

How can we be sure any vaccine is safe in the long term, given the speed with which the vaccine is being developed and released?

Scientists are researching Covid-19 vaccines at an unprecedented pace, but they’re still going through the standard stages, and safety trials always come first. In fact, it’s easier to establish vaccine safety than efficacy: While it is difficult to determine whether a new drug can protect humans from coronavirus, testing vaccines on thousands of people provides strong signals about safety.

That said, every medical product comes with potential side effects. And rare safety issues can only be identified once a vaccine is used at scale. The father of modern vaccination, Maurice Hilleman, used to say, “I never breathe a sigh of relief until the first 3 million doses are out there.” These unknown potential dangers ultimately have to be balanced against the risk of coronavirus, which is why the first people likely to receive any approved vaccine will be the healthcare workers who are most regularly exposed.


Surprising discoveries

Mikhail Bulgakov’s The Master and Margarita is the top read among Russian prisoners. Fyodor Dostoyevsky’s Crime and Punishment came in second.

Scientists figured out how to edit squid genes. Biologists have injected cephalopod embryos with gene-altering materials that will finally allow the marine critters to be studied more easily.

Labyrinths are for relaxation… Demand for labyrinth designers is growing as people turn to walking on spiral paths to calm anxiety.

…or you can try bees. Slovenia has harnessed the power of buzzing to calm nerves—it involves lying down in a room filled with thousands of caged bees.

The pitch for Tom Cruise’s space movie got the green light after a single Zoom meeting. According to Deadspin, Universal Pictures pledged $200 million, script unseen.


Our best wishes for a productive day. Please send any news, comments, light prison reading, and squid embryos to hi@qz.com. Get the most out of Quartz by downloading our app on iOS and becoming a member. Today’s Daily Brief was brought to you by Tripti Lahiri, Mary Hui, Susan Howson, Olivia Goldhill, Tim Fernholz, and Max Lockie.