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Here’s what you need to know
The WHO presented its findings from China. The team said its investigation didn’t “dramatically” change the picture it had of Sars-Cov-2, but uncovered new “details” about its spread.
Facebook will finally ban anti-vax content. The platform is trying to remove all posts containing false claims about any vaccine.
Reddit’s valuation doubled to $6 billion. It raised $250 million after its WallStreetBets forum drove the recent GameStop stock frenzy.
Hong Kong media tycoon Jimmy Lai was denied bail. He remains accused of foreign collusion under China’s national security law, and stays in jail until his April trial.
Clubhouse is blocked in China. The much-hyped audio app briefly provided a forum for discussion of normally banned subjects like Uyghur oppression, before Beijing clamped down.
The UK is tightening up its border, sort of. Quarantining arrivals, assuming they’re following the rules, will be required to take a Covid test on days two and eight.
Olympic organizers will meet this week to discuss a sexism furore. Hundreds of Tokyo Games volunteers quit after committee president Yoshiro Mori’s comments about women who “talk too much.”
What to watch for
The US senate begins Trump’s second impeachment trial. His legal team filed its pretrial brief on Monday, indicating that its defense would rest largely on the idea that the case is purely unconstitutional political theater.
What are the actual consequences for an impeached ex-president who is found guilty at a Senate trial?
- No more holding federal office. Though he’s well on his way to becoming a kingmaker.
- No security briefings. The current administration could decide to limit Trump’s access to classified information.
- A clear message to future presidents. Otherwise, the thinking goes, the lame duck period could become a free-for-all.
The trial will probably be a brief one, as the Senate has other work to do, and Trump will most likely be acquitted again, unless more Senate Republicans have a sudden change of heart.
Charting Tesla and bitcoin’s relationship
Bitcoin soared to a record high after Tesla said in a filing that it had invested $1.5 billion in the crypto asset. The $800 billion electric company also said it would start accepting bitcoin as a form of payment soon.
It’s like two finance bubbles getting hitched, explains John Detrixhe: Tesla has been the subject of intense speculation by retail traders, and bitcoin has had multiple booms and busts since it was created in 2009.
The virtual workplace’s billion-dollar question
Do collaboration tools actually make us more productive?
The pandemic has fueled a burgeoning market for digital tools designed to help colleagues collaborate at a distance. They certainly come with their own dangers—distracted employees and blurred lines between work and home. A workplace needs the right culture to make sure they stay useful.
“A lot of it depends on how technologies are used, how they’re adopted, and the organizational culture you develop around them,” said Jennifer Gibbs, a communication professor at the University of California, Santa Barbara.
Read more about the pros and cons of workplace tools in this week’s field guide on the future of the digital workplace.
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Surprising discoveries
SpaceX set a new record. The Crew-1 squad became the longest running crew launched from a US spacecraft.
Mars is getting crowded. China, the United Arab Emirates, and the US will—separately—descend on the red planet to study its atmosphere in the search for signs of past life.
Four Seasons Total Landscaping hits the silver screen. Production on a documentary about the site of Rudy Giuliani’s post-election speech is expected to wrap later this month.
Asia’s two biggest tech figures send each other drawings. Masayoshi Son and Jack Ma have struck up an adorably analog pandemic correspondence.
French workers can now legally eat at their desks. The tragically tasteless and wholly un-French practice does tend to help contain virus spread.
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