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    Russia fines Google again over banned content

    Russia has threatened to fine Google a percentage of its annual Russian turnover for repeatedly failing to delete banned content on its search engine and YouTube, in Moscow’s strongest move yet to rein in foreign tech firms.Google confirmed Monday’s fine, but gave no additional comment. Last month Google and a Russian lawmaker said the company had paid more than 32 million roubles in previous fines.Russia also fined messaging app Telegram 4 million roubles. Telegram did not immediately respond to a request for comment.Two other administrative cases against Google were postponed until Nov. 29, the court said, in order for a Google representative to have more time to study the case materials. ($1 = 71.2111 roubles) More

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    U.S. House to hopefully vote on spending bill next week -White House

    WASHINGTON (Reuters) – White House economic adviser Brian Deese on Monday said he expects lawmakers to work through issues with Democrats’ social spending bill this week and vote on the measure in the U.S. House of Representatives next week.”We’ll move this process forward,” Deese, director of the National Economic Council, told CNBC in an interview. More

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    COP26 should distance itself from carbon shock therapy

    This is a guest post by Daniela Gabor, professor of economics and macrofinance at UWE Bristol, and Isabella Weber, an assistant professor of economics at the University of Massachusetts Amherst and the author of How China Escaped Shock Therapy, in which they argue a markets-based approach to reducing carbon emissions could sow more instability than it is worth.If COP26 is to make any meaningful progress, the common wisdom goes, it has to be around carbon prices. Big finance would like a global $50 per tonne carbon price to be set at the meeting, which ends this week. Big business is finally on board too. Corporate lobby groups recently argued that a global price on carbon would encourage energy producers, industry, consumers and financial markets to switch to low-carbon technologies and activities. Global coordination at COP26 should enlist reluctant countries (notably the US, China and India) to ensure everyone faces the disciplining hand of the market. COP26 is the last collective chance to trust the power of price signals.Those of us who lived through the transition from centrally planned economies have another name for the mantra of ‘get prices right and the market will deliver’. We know it as shock therapy. In the 1990s, shock therapists told governments in Eastern Europe and the former Soviet Union that their economies needed rapid structural change. State-owned companies had to make way for a large private sector. Shock therapy would subject them to market discipline by liberalising prices of producer goods previously controlled by the state and by ending cheap credit, subsidies and tax concessions. Indeed, shock therapists insisted that only a strong dose of fiscal and monetary austerity would finally eliminate the ‘soft budget constraint’, that peculiar socialist affliction that kept deadbeat state firms alive, tying resources in the wrong sectors. The goal was to shrink heavy industry.The real test for governments hiking prices, shock therapists warned, was not just to remain firm when real wages fell, but to stick to policies of tight credit even as bankruptcies in state sectors increased unemployment. This was an austerity test even committed governments would fail when the market delivered, rather predictably, social and economic upheaval. But shock therapists had a formidable institutional apparatus to condition reluctant governments: the IMF and the World Bank. Formerly planned economies depended for crisis support on the Bretton Woods institutions, both firm believers in the power of price signals reinforced by macro austerity. Conservative economists in local central banks were successfully rallied to their cause. 

    Video: The make-or-break issues facing the COP26 climate summit

    Look closer behind the rhetoric at COP26, and you can see the carbon shock therapists coming. The price narrative sounds eerily familiar: carbon price hikes will allocate resources, real and financial, towards the right sectors. Macro austerity may not be in the speech but it is on the menu: after nearly two years of pandemic-related monetary and fiscal expansion, we are back to calls for shrinking the public purse. The fiscal discipline fetishists are (still) in charge, and they dislike the alternative to carbon shock therapy – massive green public investment under the Keynesian motto ‘anything we can actually do we can afford’. Just like with the old shock therapists, their rejection is a political choice: state-led decarbonisation would require central banks and Ministries of Finance and Industry to work close together again after nearly 40 years of separation. It would involve central banks actively redirecting private capital flows from investment in dirty to low-carbon activities. It would mean developing public institutional capacity to rapidly steer the private sector towards low-carbon activities, and to respond dynamically to obstacles and unintended consequences of higher carbon prices. This is a bit like how China escaped shock-therapy: central planning institutions maintained control over strategic aspects of the economic system, while creating new market dynamics in an experimental and gradualist fashion. China used market signals but did not allow them to dictate the pace and direction of transition.Carbon shock therapy will not be applied everywhere. While the global momentum is ostensibly about high-income countries, the historical polluters, the institutional apparatus of carbon shock therapy is rapidly shaping to target middle-income and poor countries. Yet again, the countries most vulnerable to climate events and least responsible for the climate crisis will be the laboratory. Saddled with high external debt in the wake of the pandemic and limited access to vaccines, they will have to turn to the IMF and the World Bank for financial support. The IMF has been an early advocate of global carbon pricing. Its new Climate Change Dashboard approaches the transition in terms of lost tax revenue and pricing emissions from fossil fuels at ‘socially efficient’ level that would reduce both pollution and increase consumption tax revenue. It does not, however, compute the damage to local companies from higher carbon prices or the implications for employment and growth. The IMF’s new Climate Strategy, published in July 2021, presents carbon pricing as the only viable strategy for transition. In 42 pages, it mentions carbon pricing 23 times, green industrial policy once, and green public investments never. The turn to carbon shock therapy is spelled out in its plans to ‘green’ conditionality lending: IMF loans to countries in need will scale up experiments with (fuel and energy) subsidy cuts, carbon pricing, and financial resilience building.The emphasis on carbon pricing further sets up the central bank as a key local ally, recreating the institutional politics of shock therapy. Like its precursor, carbon shock therapy is inherently inflationary. Then, countries were promised that freely floating exchange rates would reinforce price signals, but what they got instead was higher inflation from weaker currencies, pushing central banks further into monetary austerity. Now, even if central banks refuse to selectively increase the cost of dirty credit (to high carbon industries), monetary austerity may be necessary to fight inflation from carbon pricing.Carbon shock therapists may not support green public investments, but they have a reassuring climate finance message. Countries can mobilise the trillions of dollars that global institutional investors like BlackRock are keen to pour into the low-carbon transition. These investors haven’t shown up at significant scale because climate investments in poor countries are too risky relative to returns. Besides regulatory reforms, the key to unlocking private finance is fiscal derisking: countries are expected to find fiscal resources to guarantee returns for private investors, including from official development aid. The IMF’s new Resilience and Sustainability Trust may also be enlisted to reallocate the newly created Special Drawing Rights from high income countries to global institutional investors, all in the name of derisking green private investments. The only sector that will be shielded from carbon shock therapy is private finance. Despite its devastating contribution to the climate crisis, via credit to polluters and greenwashing, is well known.It is tempting to dismiss the growing calls for carbon pricing as empty posturing from entrenched interests that bet on the continuous absence of political will. But poor and middle-income countries look set to be forced, yet again, into subjecting their economies to chaotic structural transformation. What they really need are carefully designed macrofinancial policies to adjust their productive structures.  As part of our coverage of COP26 we want to hear from you. Do you think carbon pricing is the key to tackling climate change? Tell us via a short survey. We will share some of the most interesting and thought provoking answers in our newsletters or an upcoming story More

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    Creaton Aims To Become The Decentralized Alternative To Patreon And OnlyFans

    Membership platforms provide tremendous potential for fans and creators alike. These solutions are marred by intermediaries, rules, guidelines, and potential drawbacks in the current landscape. It is time to evolve the idea of membership platforms into the modern era. Creaton is the solution to these shortcomings, as the decentralized and encrypted membership platform operates on an entirely different narrative. One can best describe Creaton as an OnlyFans / Patreon competitor who empowers the creator rather than wrests control. It removes the need for centralized platforms and intermediaries. Instead, Creaton paves the way for creators to directly engage with their fans, build new connections, and create an unlimited revenue stream that isn’t subject to third-party approval. Moreover, creators open themselves to a global audience through the use of cryptocurrencies.Everyone can use Creaton to their heart’s content. The platform goes live at the beginning of November 2021, but smaller creators are already experimenting with the technology as a final “test’. The team will reach out to influencers to bring more attention to Creaton. So far, roughly 100 creators are on board to provide bug reports and other QoL suggestions to make the decentralized platform more robust and appealing. Creaton is cryptocurrency-driven and censorship-resistant. Launching the project is the first step of a long journey to expand the platform, attract creators globally, and bring more meaningful interactions to fans worldwide. Additionally, creators and fans claim ownership of content through NFTs, with content remaining available forever through permanent storage solutions. Creaton also boasts the first-ever streamed subscription model via the integration of Superfluid, which enables on-chain gasless cashflows. And this is not the only “first” Creaton is introducing to the world of crypto. The integration of Lit protocol and Nu Cypher also makes Creaton the first-ever fully encrypted social platform to preserve the users’ and creators’ privacy at all times.The Creaton team adds:”We are very excited to finally release everything we have worked on for the last year into the hands of millions of creators and users and couldn’t be more excited to finally see what the community does with Creaton.io.”
    Creaton will release its $CREATE token, which empowers users and creators on Creaton.io, shortly. A more detailed announcement with detailed tokenomics, dates to look out for and the utility it has will occur soon. The $CREATE asset is going to benefit users as well as platform adapters and will be the anchor for the DAO. The Token Generation Event (TGE) for $CREATE will be happening in Q4 2021 with a reward for our earliest users of the platform going out shortly after. To generate more awareness, Creaton will host an AMA together with its partner Threshold Network, which is a newly formed merger between NuCypher and Keep Network, on November 1, 2021. Anyone interested in what this decentralized Patreon/OnlyFans competitor can bring to the table will want to watch Creaton’s social media channels for more details!

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    Russian Authorities Liken Mining to Entrepreneurship, Prepares to Regulate

    Russian representatives from different ministries came to a consensus to regulate mining as a sort of entrepreneurial activity. Precisely, the Ministry of Economic Development is optimistic that the recognition of mining as entrepreneurship will enable taxing income from the creation of cryptocurrencies.To clarify, the Head of the State Duma Committee on the Financial Market, Anatoly Aksakov, initiated the idea to register the mining of cryptos as a type of entrepreneurship. Adding on, Alexei Minaev, deputy head of the digital economy development department of the ministry states,Likewise, the country’s Ministry of Energy is also in support of the mining activity. However, the department asserts that the miner must report on the nature of the consumed load on the electrical system before going ahead with any connection. This is to help them monitor and prepare a special tariff for the miners that will vary from that of the Russian population.Whilst, the Ministry of Finance noted that the issues relating to mining should be seen as a formation of a legal framework in the field of digital currencies. Conversely, the Central Bank of Russia does not conform to the idea of regulating crypto. This is due to the fact that they don’t want any monetary substitute in the country.Just last month, the Governor of the Irkutsk Region Igor Kobzev alerted the government about ‘underground miners’ who are causing a high electricity consumption rate for the region. As a result, entrepreneurs in the region proposed to create special electricity tariffs for people involved in the extraction of cryptos.Currently, mining has not been spelled out by the Russian authorities as prohibited or accepted. We still await to know the final verdict on the matter.Continue reading on CoinQuora More

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    Travellers line up for U.S. flights as curbs are lifted for first time

    LONDON/PARIS (Reuters) – Travellers excited at the prospect of seeing family and friends for the first time since the COVID-19 pandemic began took off for the United States on Monday as it lifted travel restrictions slapped on much of the world for the best part of two years.The travel ban, first imposed in early 2020, had barred access to non-U.S. citizens travelling from 33 countries – including China, India and much of Europe – and had also restricted overland entry from Mexico and Canada. The United States lagged many other countries in lifting the curbs, made possible by the rollout of vaccines despite rising infections in many countries and critical to reviving tourism around the globe. Months of pent-up demand triggered a major spike in bookings on Monday, with travellers only required to show official proof of vaccination and a recent, negative viral test.”Really, really exciting. I mean, I was meant to go just before COVID happened, and obviously it’s been delayed this long, so it’s really exciting to finally be able to go,” Alice Keane, travelling to Miami to see her sister, said at London’s Heathrow airport.Long-term rivals British Airways and Virgin Atlantic carried out simultaneous take-offs from Heathrow’s parallel runways just before 0900 GMT, a stunt aimed at highlighting the importance of the transatlantic market to the UK’s aviation market. The flights were full, Virgin Atlantic CEO Shai Weiss said, while passenger volume was expected to remain high in coming weeks with the approach of Thanksgiving and Christmas.”It’s a major day of celebration,” Weiss said, adding that planes were “filling up nicely”, in what he called a significant tipping point for an industry brought to its knees by the pandemic. The United States was preparing for long lines and delays on Monday, with United Airlines alone expecting about 50% more total international inbound passengers compared to last Monday when it had about 20,000.Delta Air Lines (NYSE:DAL.N) Chief Executive Ed Bastian warned travellers should be prepared for long waits.”It’s going to be a bit sloppy at first. I can assure you, there will be lines unfortunately,” Bastian said, adding that “we’ll get it sorted out”. ‘WE MIGHT START CRYING’The prospect of long queues did little to dent the enthusiasm of those preparing to be reunited with loved ones.”I think we might just start crying,” Bindiya Patel, who was going to see her one-year-old nephew in New York for the first time https://www.reuters.com/world/the-great-reboot/grandmother-grandson-finally-meet-us-flights-reopen-2021-11-05, said at Heathrow, where jugglers dressed in the colour of the U.S. flags greeted travellers.Restrictions on non-U.S. citizens were first imposed on air travellers from China in January 2020 by then-President Donald Trump and then extended to dozens of other countries, without any clear metrics for how and when to lift them.In January, Trump issued an order to lift travel restrictions on people in Europe and Brazil. But the order was reversed by President Joe Biden before it took effect.U.S. allies had heavily lobbied the Biden administration, which had repeatedly said it did not endorse so-called “vaccine passports,” to lift the rules.Airline officials stressed that tourism and family trips alone will not be enough for carriers whose profits depend on filling the most expensive seats. [L1N2RZ0LF]Experts say the real battle of the transatlantic, the world’s most lucrative travel market, takes place at the front of the plane, in first, business, and premium economy class, where those paying the top prices help drive airline profits.”As for business, we know the recovery is slower and so it’s a question mark but what we know is that there are a certain number of sectors, especially domestic and medium-haul travel, where recovery is already happening and we hope to see this same tendency for the United States,” said Air France-KLM commercial co-director, Henri de Peyrelongue. U.S. land borders also reopened to non-essential travel on Monday, though some inoculated Mexicans will not be able to enter the United States immediately if they received vaccines in Mexico that have not been approved by the World Health Organization, such as China’s CanSino and Russia’s Sputnik V.”I never imagined that because I got the CanSino vaccine I wouldn’t be able to cross,” lamented Donato Suarez, a driver at a private university in Tijuana who had hoped to visit relatives in the United States he has not seen for nearly two years.Hundreds of migrants have arrived at Mexican border cities such as Tijuana in recent days, hoping the reset will make it easier to cross and seek U.S. asylum and despite warnings from advocates that the re-opening is for people who have papers.In Canada, long lines formed overnight at U.S. border points for an early rush of travellers but a Canadian requirement that all returning travellers have a negative PCR test is expected to dampen travel.Canada, which allowed fully vaccinated Americans to cross the land border in August, is under pressure to drop the negative test requirement from businesses and travellers, who say showing proof of vaccination should be enough.At the land border crossings from Mexico and Canada, U.S. Customs and Border Protection will ask travellers if they have been vaccinated and will spot-check some documentation.Under-18s are exempt from the new vaccine requirements. Non-tourist travellers from nearly 50 countries with nationwide vaccination rates of less than 10% are also eligible for exemption. More