Business
Scam centers in southeast Asia are on the rise despite crackdowns to root out the illegal industry
5 minute read 2:02 AM CSTBANGKOK (AP) — It often starts with a text message asking if you are available on weekends, looking for a part-time job or you get a simple “hello” from an unknown number. Halfway across the world, a laborer is usually pulling in 12-16 hour days, sending non-stop messages, hoping someone will take the bait.
The ultimate goal is always to take your money — victims have lost tens of billions to scams and hundreds of thousands of people are in forced labor to keep the schemes going. These workers are often housed in massive complexes scattered across southeast Asia, where the industry has flourished.
Here is why rooting out the scamming industry is such a complex issue:
The crackdown in Myanmar
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Japan resumes seafood exports to China 2 years after Fukushima wastewater release
2 minute read 1:58 AM CSTTOKYO (AP) — Japan announced Friday that its seafood exports have resumed for the first time since China imposed a ban over the discharge of treated radioactive wastewater from the tsunami-hit Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant more than two years ago.
Chief Cabinet Secretary Minoru Kihara told reporters that 6 metric tons (6.6 tons) of scallops harvested in Hokkaido were shipped to China on Wednesday, the first shipment to that country since Beijing banned all Japanese seafood in August 2023.
Beijing announced in June that it would ease the ban and prepare for the resumption of imports, following repeated negotiations between the two sides.
The wastewater discharges from the Fukushima Daiichi plant — debated for years at home over concern about the reputational damage to the region and its local produce — had also become a major political issue between Japan and its neighbors, including China and South Korea.
Trump says it would be ‘devastating’ if U.S. Supreme Court rules against his tariffs
1 minute read Preview Yesterday at 12:00 PM CSTOfficials scour charred site of Kentucky UPS plane crash for victims and answers
4 minute read Yesterday at 11:56 AM CSTLOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) — The grim task of finding and identifying victims from the firestorm that followed a UPS cargo plane crash in Louisville, Kentucky, entered a third day Thursday as investigators gathered information to determine why the aircraft caught fire and lost an engine on takeoff.
The inferno consumed the enormous plane and spread to nearby businesses, killing at least 12 people, including a child and three UPS crew on the plane, and ending any hope of finding survivors in the crash at UPS Worldport, the company’s global aviation hub.
Louisville Mayor Craig Greenberg described the scene as “horrific,” with charred, mangled metal and “still some smoke rising from piles of debris.” Part of the plane's tail, he said, appeared to be sticking out of a storage silo.
“You hear people say, ‘Oh, you only see that in the movies.’ This was worse than the movies,” Greenberg told reporters.
U of M announces Chiu Centre for Business Serving Community
1 minute read Yesterday at 2:01 AM CSTThe University of Manitoba launched a new centre on Tuesday that aims to get people thinking differently about business.
The Chiu Centre for Business Serving Community at the I.H. Asper School of Business will “foster cultural change in capitalism through research, training and promoting business models that address social and ecological crises facing humanity,” the Winnipeg-based university announced in a news release.
The centre was made possible because of a $5.4 million donation from Eleanor and Wayne Chiu, Calgary-based founders of Trico Homes and the Trico Charitable Foundation. Wayne Chiu is a U of M alumnus.
Business Prof. Bruno Dyck has been named the inaugural director of the centre.
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Windfall of funding
5 minute read Preview Saturday, Nov. 1, 2025Digesting the need for better food-chain knowledge
4 minute read Saturday, Nov. 1, 2025Admittedly, I’ve been skeptical of past efforts by the agricultural sector to build consumers’ confidence and trust in the food system.
The industry has been grappling with consumer trust issues for generations, ever since author Rachel Carson’s Silent Spring exposed DDT as a double-edged sword in the early 1960s.
Until recently, the focus was on “educating” consumers about the modern ways and why the critics are wrong. This was set against the backdrop of a growing disconnect between our increasingly urbanized society and the farmers growing the groceries.
To me, some of the early work in this area came off a little ham-fisted. The underlying message was that “The Consumer” was a homogeneous entity that should simply take what farmers wanted to produce the way the industry wanted to process it — and gobble it up because that’s what kept food prices “cheap.”
Good competition should help you win
4 minute read Saturday, Nov. 1, 2025Your response to the appearance of strong competition should help you deliver more value for your customers. I say “should” because only winning companies seem to consistently grasp this concept.
In sports, champions will play above the level of their competition. Less successful teams and players will play down to their competition. This theory applies to business, in general, too.
When your competitor makes moves in your marketplace that surprise you, customers usually take notice, too. Loss of sales is an obvious immediate negative impact.
In response, begin by gaining a deeper understanding of what value your customer sees with your product and service. Then, create the blueprint of what you need to do to stop others from leaving — and gain back those that left.
‘Friendly’ teasing at work: is it possible?
7 minute read Preview Saturday, Nov. 1, 2025Province releases inaugural innovation report
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