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    UK calls in finance heads and regulators to talk sanctions – BBC editor

    It is likely that Johnson will announce some additional military support for Ukraine, said Kuenssberg, adding that it was not clear what those will be.Britain on Tuesday imposed sanctions on five Russian banks, Gennady Timchenko and two other billionaires with close links to Russian President Vladimir Putin. More

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    Former Bored Ape Yacht Club Artist Releases 2nd Sneaky Vampire NFT Collection

    Mig joined forces with Superand, a team of experienced cryptocurrency leaders and developers, to release the first collection of 8,888 male vampires in September 2021. It has generated over 21,600 ETH in trading volume on OpenSea so far. After the successful sellout of the Gen 1 vampires, the team is bringing their female counterparts, the Sneaky Vampiresses.With the new collection, the SVS team aims to promote female inclusion and representation within the NFT space. SVS is often seen as a safe and easy-to-understand project for any new and seasoned collector. So the new “Vampiress Syndicate” collection should appeal to the females and those who are new and looking to make an entry into the NFT art world. SVS is working with eight female artists to create eight 1-of-1 unique Sneaky Vampiress NFTs to be featured in the collection. It will help the under-recognized female artists within the space gain the appropriate recognition they deserve. “The Genesis SVS NFTs were a huge success, and we’ve not let our foot off the gas. From the very beginning, we built this around nurturing our community and creating the best possible environment. We believe the release of the Vampiresses will continue the growth of our ecosystem in the right direction,”
    said Thomas Kekker, the Project Lead at SVS.The addition of female Sneaky Vampiress NFTs will also lay the groundwork for the upcoming “Blood Pact” breeding mechanism. Holders of both Vampire and Vampiress NFTs can expect to utilize them to breed in the near future. The $BLOOD token will be at the center of the breeding mechanism. The SVS holders earn three $BLOOD tokens daily when they stake their NFTs.The Sneaky Vampiress whitelist pre-sale is scheduled from February 21st at 3pm ET to February 22nd at 3pm ET. People who own the Gen 1 vampires will be automatically whitelisted for Gen 2 minting. If you don’t have a Gen 1 vampire, you can buy one before the pre-sale to automatically join the whitelist and avail discounts on the purchase of female vampires. The vampiress that your vampire mints will be its “Perfect Pair.”Out of the 12,345 Sneaky Vampiresses, 8,888 pre-sale spots have been allocated to existing Sneaky Vampire holders. The remaining spots are allocated to large and female-led communities along with the public mint.The public minting is set to commence on Feb 22nd at 4pm ET. It will go on until the big reveal on February 28th when the buyers will finally get to see what female vampire they have minted.The SVS team has taken a tiered pricing strategy where the $BLOOD utility token can be used to claim up to 50% discount on the Sneaky Vampiress NFTs. The base price is set at 0.16 ETH. People who use 100 $BLOOD tokens enjoy a reduced base price of 0.12 ETH. If you have 200 $BLOOD tokens, the price for you starts at just 0.08 ETH.EMAIL NEWSLETTERJoin to get the flipside of cryptoUpgrade your inbox and get our DailyCoin editors’ picks 1x a week delivered straight to your inbox.[contact-form-7]
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    Opensea Sued $1 Million for Negligence and Contract Breach

    The accidental sale was made for 0.01 ETH—the equivalent of around $26—and the Texan claims it occurred due to a vulnerability in the OpenSea software coding, which Opensea management and programmers knew about, that allowed deep discount sales to occur without the knowledge or consent of the asset owners.In the complaint filed in Texas federal court, Timothy McKimmy is seeking more than $1 million in damages for alleged negligence and breach of contract committed by Opensea. He asserts that he is the original and current owner of Bored Ape #3475—one of a set of 10,000 ultra pricey primate NFTs. McKimmy alleges in his claim that the digital asset was stolen from him because he never put it up for sale. Rather a sneaky seller snaked it from a prior listing of the asset that McKimmy failed to close. Even though the listing was not “active” it was still open – allowing the buyer to snatch the NFT for less than the equivalent of $30 and then quickly “flipped” for 99 Ethereum, which was worth approximately $250 thousand. “Instead of shutting down its platform to address and rectify these security issues, Defendant continued to operate. Defendant risked the security of its users’ NFTs and digital vaults to continue collecting 2.5% of every transaction uninterrupted,” the complaint states.Plaintiff McKimmy further alleges that he has tried on numerous occasions to try and resolve the situation directly with Opensea, but has instead received platitudes regarding a vague “ongoing investigation” but the company has failed to take any direct action. This is the first lawsuit filed against OpenSea related to this particular vulnerability. The company tried to resolve the issue in January by paying approximately $1.8 million in relief refunds to dozens of users affected by the exploit. Opensea has not made any public statements on the pending litigation.EMAIL NEWSLETTERJoin to get the flipside of cryptoUpgrade your inbox and get our DailyCoin editors’ picks 1x a week delivered straight to your inbox.[contact-form-7]
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    Sea cucumbers feed China’s influence in Sri Lanka

    Kandasamy Kalamohan had grown tired of the trawlers that he and his fellow fishermen alleged crossed into northern Sri Lankan waters from India, about 50 miles away, destroying their prawn nets and depleting their supplies of tuna and cuttlefish.So last year, he joined a nascent, fast-growing industry: sea cucumber farming. Supplied by a nearby Chinese-owned hatchery, he grows the barrel-shaped creatures that live on the bottom of the sea in his aquatic farm for export to China, where the delicacy sells for hundreds of dollars per kilo.“Because of the Indian trawling, there are fewer fish in the sea,” said Kalamohan, 48, who previously owned two small fishing boats. “I wanted to start something on my own and this is a very profitable business.”M Thivagaran, president of the Jaffna Sea Cucumber Cultivators’ Association, said the number of farms rose from about 40 to 250 last year, with the shallow northern waters well suited to sea cucumber cultivation. Although modest in size, the ventures have unexpectedly stoked a growing power contest between India and China in the strategic island nation of 22m.Sri Lanka’s north, scarred by a 26-year civil war that ended in 2009, has long been culturally as well as geographically close to India, with Tamil people living on both sides of the Palk Strait. Despite making extensive diplomatic and economic inroads in Sri Lanka, China has largely stayed away from the north.But recent Chinese interest in the region has raised tensions between Beijing and New Delhi, which are also engaged in a military stand-off on their Himalayan border 2,000 miles away.In December, China’s ambassador Qi Zhenhong made a rare tour to the region, visiting Chinese businesses including a sea cucumber hatchery and distributing rations to fishermen affected by Indian trawling. The visit alarmed New Delhi when the delegation flew a drone at one of the closest points to the Indian coastline.Many locals, however, see Chinese ties as a lucrative opportunity in a neglected region.“We welcome whoever is interested in investing, creating jobs and getting the return as well,” said Angajan Ramanathan, MP for the northern city of Jaffna, who is allied with President Gotabaya Rajapaksa’s government. “Jaffna has caught the attention of a lot of people . . . We need [Chinese] expertise and technology.”“Our people are hungry, and we don’t mind who helps us, whether it’s India or China,” said Annalingam Annarasa, president of the Jaffna Fisheries Federation. “China realised our difficulties and came up with help.”Sri Lanka has ties with India and China going back hundreds of years. Both Delhi and Beijing compete furiously for influence through lobbying, loans and arms sales. Their rivalry in Sri Lanka “is the most transparent and the most bare-knuckle” of any nearby country, said one diplomat. “Over the past year, it has evolved in a drastic way.”Chinese investment has taken off through its Belt and Road Initiative. China has become one of Sri Lanka’s largest creditors, with at least $3.5bn of outstanding loans, and controls the Hambantota port on its southern coast, near some of the world’s busiest shipping lanes.Critics have accused Chinese loans of pushing Sri Lanka into a debt crisis from which it is struggling to emerge, and Sri Lanka last month asked China to restructure its debts. India has responded with a diplomatic counter offensive, providing about $1bn of assistance and hosting Sri Lanka’s foreign minister this month.Some observers were sceptical that China would be able to convert its recent outreach in the north of the country into the large-scale activity it has made elsewhere.Northern Sri Lanka was the centre of the devastating war in which Tamil separatists fought for independence from the island’s Sinhalese majority. As many as 100,000 people died before Tamil fighters were crushed in an operation led by then-military chief Gotabaya.The north remains among Sri Lanka’s least developed regions and locals decry the lack of a political settlement after the conflict. There is also deep resentment towards China, which backed the Rajapaksa government, then led by Gotabaya’s brother Mahinda, during the conflict.P Mathan, head of the nearby Passaiyoor Fishermen Federation, who has organised protests against Chinese investments, said: “As long as I’m president, the Chinese won’t be allowed to come here.” India has also intervened to keep China away. Shortly before the ambassador’s visit, China announced that India had successfully lobbied to suspend a renewable energy project off the Jaffna coast owing to security concerns.

    Annalingam Annarasa, centre, president of the Jaffna Fisheries Federation: ‘China realised our difficulties and came up with help’ © Rubatheesan Sandran

    But India also faces resentment, most vocally from local fishermen who accuse its trawlers of destroying their livelihoods. The years-long dispute has escalated in recent months with dozens of Indian fishermen arrested by Sri Lanka and two Sri Lankans reportedly killed in clashes at sea.“How can we survive if these people come and take what we need to make a living?” said S Pakeekaran, a 26-year-old prawn fisherman at a protest in Jaffna. “The Indians come with a free hand, rob our fish and go.”While wild sea cucumbers have long been harvested in the area, export-oriented farming has accelerated in the past year. The creatures, which can grow to full size in a matter of months, are shipped to Hong Kong or Singapore and sold on to mainland China, where they are prized for their chewy skin and soft interior.

    At least 400 more fishermen have applied for permits to set up sea cucumber farms, and the Chinese-owned Gui Lan sea cucumber hatchery is busier than ever. But Steven Gong, one of the partners, is bemused at the geopolitical furore. Gong, who is from Taiwan and has lived in Sri Lanka for three decades, runs the hatchery with several other partners and investors from mainland China.They are yet to turn a profit and live for months at a time in a modest seafront cabin where they cultivate the baby sea cucumbers. But with a fast-growing client base and strong demand from China, Gong is bullish.“Everyone knows the sea cucumber market in China has high prospects,” he said. “There’s been a lot of sacrifice . . . I can see the future of this investment and I’m very confident.”Additional reporting by Rubatheesan Sandran in Jaffna More

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    India’s IT sector grapples with hiring ‘crisis’

    The India chief executive of software giant Salesforce said the country’s IT sector is grappling with a skills shortage “crisis”, as companies struggle to meet surging demand and compete with well-funded tech start-ups for workers.The shortage is challenging India’s IT companies, which serve as the foundation of the country’s services industry and as back offices to the world’s biggest companies, including Citibank UK, Microsoft and AstraZeneca.Arundhati Bhattacharya, Salesforce India chief executive, said that her company was rushing to hire and train staff, after the pandemic had driven up demand as companies have embraced online working and services. “We are doing certain stop-gap measures, but there is definitely a skills shortage,” said Bhattacharya, a former chair of the State Bank of India who joined the San Francisco-headquartered software company in 2020.“We are doing a number of things which we feel . . . in the medium term will solve our issues. And it’s not only us, the entire IT sector is doing [it],” Bhattacharya said in an interview with the Financial Times. “In the shorter term, however, there is a crisis.”According to data compiled by Xpheno, a specialist staffing company, the number of active job openings in India’s IT sector reached a two-year high of 129,000 in January, almost double the 68,000 registered in January last year.The root cause of the shortages predates the pandemic. “In 2018 and 2019 we had relatively a lesser intake” of new graduates, said Kamal Karanth, Xpheno co-founder.Churn in the sector, which now employs about 5mn people and generated $227bn in revenue for India’s 2022 financial year, had shot up, said experts. During the pandemic, IT companies have slashed their workforces to cut costs. Yet “demand for digital skills hit an all-time high”, said Karanth.According to InterviewBit, a company that helps IT job candidates in India prepare for interviews, software development engineers command an average annual base salary of Rs1,191,752 (about $16,000), rising to Rs2,225,470 with experience. But at the lower end of the skills scale, the average yearly salary for a technical support engineer is Rs300,000 according to jobseekers site AmbitionBox.Competition for workers with five years or more experience is being spurred by India’s booming start-ups flush with cash, said Sid Pai, co-founder of Siana Capital Management, a Bangalore-based venture capital fund investing in technology start-ups.“It’s actually ludicrous,” Pai said. “People are getting 50, 80, 100 per cent raises to move.” Tech companies are responding with massive hiring drives. Milind Lakkad, head of human resources at Tata Consultancy Services, India’s second-largest listed company by market capitalisation, said during an earnings call that TCS had hired 77,000 new graduates in nine months. The “unprecedented volumes of hiring” brought the company’s workforce to more than half a million employees.On a smaller scale, Salesforce India has expanded from 2,500 employees when Bhattacharya was appointed to 6,500.“We are talking to colleges. We are also establishing relationships with companies that will actually go into [smaller] cities, and pick out the bright guys or girls,” added Bhattacharya. “We are on the verge of creating another programme for women to return to the workforce.” More