Table.Briefings

Feature

DMA: before the final

The Digital Markets Act is intended to protect competition in the digital markets from big tech. The negotiators from the EU institutions have already clarified many issues, but a number of points are still open before the final trilogue. An overview.

By Till Hoppe

China Ernte Klimawandel

Climate change: poor harvest expected

China's authorities warn of a poor harvest. Extreme weather resulting from climate change has hit agriculture. However, the People's Republic has built up large stockpiles. Under certain circumstances, the country could even release supplies to aid poorer countries. However, the country's own supply clearly has priority.

By Nico Beckert

Boeing Absturz China

Boeing loses trust after 737 crash

US aircraft manufacturer Boeing has been struggling with problems in the People's Republic for some time because its new 737 Max is still not permitted to operate there. The crash of the 737-800 now makes matters even worse.

By Redaktion Table

Semiconductors: dangerous bottleneck for the noble gas neon

Putin's war is driving American, European and Chinese chip production into a dangerous bottleneck: Ukraine supplies about half of the world's neon. Even in China, the second-largest producer of neon, prices have risen 900 percent since the start of the war. Putin is now able to negotiate with the West: cutting-edge chips in exchange for neon.

By Frank Sieren

AI regulation: Parliament wants to process dossier at lightning speed

The European Parliament is beginning the real work on the artificial intelligence regulation: One committee meeting follows the next. The lead rapporteurs have presented an ambitious timetable. However, given the many open points, it is questionable whether this can be adhered to.

By Eugenie Ankowitsch

Pink slip for dark patterns?

While the European Parliament is working on new regulations against the design tricks known as "dark patterns", data and consumer protection activists are setting about enforcing the laws already in place to curb the phenomenon. The European Data Protection Board has now published guidelines for dark patterns on social media platforms. Those who deliberately deceive or trick their customers may soon be put on notice or even sued. But before that, those affected have the opportunity to comment.

By Redaktion Table

Evergrande: Insolvenz wird verschleppt

Evergrande: bankruptcy drags on

Evergrande has run out of money – that much is clear. The company cannot even present its annual balance sheet. This process shows: Large corporate bankruptcies often do not end with bankruptcy proceedings. Especially in China, an agonizingly long phase of denial of reality usually follows instead.

By

Kim Jong-un bei einem Raketentest: ungeliebter Partner von China

A stubborn partner in the northeast

Russia is not the only problematic partner for China. North Korea is also stirring up trouble with a never-ending series of missile tests. Beijing needs Pyongyang and therefore must continue to defend Kim's actions.

By Christiane Kuehl

Antibiotic resistance: EU action needed more than ever

Death by tuberculosis, pneumonia, or typhoid fever? For most Europeans, this sounds like a horror story from the imperial era. But the prevalence of antibiotic-resistant bacteria has been on the rise for years and disregards national borders. A joint European approach is, therefore, an obvious response. There are plenty of potential starting points.

By Eugenie Ankowitsch