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Review: Katy Perry returns with the uninspired and forgettable ‘143’

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(AP) – Katy Perry’s new album title, “143,” is code for “I love you,” based on the number of letters in each word of the phrase. She may love us, but the album is more like 144 — “I made mush.”

Perry’s first LP since 2020’s lackluster “Smile” is just as lackluster, an 11-track blur of thick electronic programming and simplistic lyrics. There’s none of her past cheeky humor, virtually no personality. Even the title is filler.

The rollout has been snakebit from the jump, with the artist under fire for collaborating with music producer Dr. Luke and the video for “Woman’s World” emerging as a sloppy, puzzling attempt at satire. Then her video shoot on a Spanish beach for “Lifetimes” was investigated for potential environmental damage.

It doesn’t help that the first three singles are just OK. “Woman’s World” is a frothy Lady Gaga-esque arena pop anthem, the techno-stomper “Lifetimes” smacks of Calvin Harris from the 2010s and “I’m His, He’s Mine,” featuring Doechii, lazily lifts Crystal Waters’ “Gypsy Woman (She’s Homeless)” from 1991. It’s a trio of tunes that doesn’t scream 578 (“Katy’s totally relevant”).

Katy Perry. PHOTO: AP

“Gimme Gimme,” featuring 21 Savage, just lacks bite, a nursery rhyme from a new mother masquerading as a pop song (with crib-adjacent lyrics like “Say the right thing, maybe you can be/Crawling on me, like a centipede”).

“Gorgeous” with Kim Petras is marred by what sounds like a dog’s squeaky toy repeatedly going off in the mix, undercutting the notion of two women “coming out tonight, grab your man and hold him tight.” Squeak!

“Crush” isn’t bad, but it’s built on the repetitive, unyielding synths you’d find in Eastern European discos in the ’90s. That’s a complaint for all the Dr. Luke tracks, really — Perry may rue their reunion simply based on the ugly, unsophisticated production. “All the Love” has the phrase “back to me” repeated 23 times during its 3:15 length.

“My intuition’s telling me things ain’t right,” she sings on “Truth,” a lyric that may sum up her album and a song that includes a fake voicemail at the end. Other artists are incorporating real dialogue and recorded snippets of their lives. Perry is faking it.

She has always preferred gangs of songwriters, but “143” pushes it to an insane level, with “Nirvana” credited to an even dozen. Listen to it and see if 12 songwriters were necessary for a song that sounds like a warmed-over club track from La Bouche.

If the best song on “143” is “Lifetimes,” the worst is easily the closer, a sticky-sweet, wide-eyed plea for innocence in “Wonder,” sticking out like a sore thumb. This is a cynical attempt to have moms in the audience wave their hands in unison as balloons float up, even as it decries cynicism.

“One day when we’re older/Will we still look up in wonder?” she sings, name-checking her daughter, Daisy, who also makes a cute appearance. But by this point, she’s lost our trust, with the 10 previous songs a sonic slog. “143” has no soul or emotion; it’s just a number. – MARK KENNEDY/AP

 

Thai woman jailed for pimping; Co-accused denies involvement

PHOTO: ENVATO

A Thai woman was sentenced to 24 months’ imprisonment after pleading guilty to multiple charges related to living off the earnings of prostitution. Her co-accused, a Bangladeshi man, denied the charge.

Magistrate Syarifah Nur Baqiyah binti Malai Shahran handed the sentence to Oranee Suila, 53, on Thursday. Suila was charged with living on the earnings of prostitution from three different Thai women over the course of several months.

The co-accused, 35-year-old Md Ataur Rahman, faces charges of abetting Suila by allegedly finding customers for the prostitutes. His case has been adjourned to September 24 for trial dates to be fixed.

Prosecutor Ahmad Firdaus Mohammad presented the facts during the hearing, outlining the investigation and the arrest that took place on August 19, following a police raid at a rented house in Jalan Jerudong, Kampong Sengkurong. The raid was conducted after receiving reports of suspected immoral activities.

Investigations revealed that Suila had been assisting multiple women for prostitution in finding customers in exchange for a portion of the payments they received.

One of the victims, a 42-year-old Thai woman, provided sexual services to around 20 customers between July and August. Suila received BND10 for each client she helped secure.

Another Thai woman, known as Yong, arrived in Brunei on August 9 and engaged in similar arrangements with Suila. Yong serviced up to 20 clients, with Suila receiving a similar share of the proceeds.

Police investigations uncovered that Suila had been involved in living off the earnings of a 31-year-old Thai woman, who had worked as a prostitute at the same house since December 2023. The 31-year-old reportedly provided sexual services to approximately 120 clients, with Suila receiving a total of BND270 from the 31-year-old’s earnings over several months.

Suila admitted to committing the offences, stating that she needed the money to cover her rent. The court took into account that she had no prior convictions.

UN denounces Lebanon device blasts as violation of international law

People check the damage following an Israeli strike in Beirut's southern suburbs on September 20, 2024. The Israeli military announced that the commander of Hezbollah's elite Radwan unit, Ibrahim Aqil, and other senior figures of the Lebanese armed group had been killed in the air strike. (Photo by ANWAR AMRO / AFP)

UNITED NATIONS, United States (AFP)The United Nations said Friday the detonation of hand-held communication devices in Lebanon could constitute a war crime as Beirut’s top diplomat accused Israel of orchestrating what he called a “terror” attack.

The blasts that killed at least 37 people and wounded nearly 3,000 on Tuesday and Wednesday targeted communication devices used by the Iran-backed Hezbollah group.

Pagers and walkie-talkies exploded as their users were shopping in supermarkets, walking on streets and attending funerals, plunging the country into panic.

“International humanitarian law prohibits the use of booby-trap devices in the form of apparently harmless portable objects,” the UN’s High Commissioner for Human Rights, Volker Turk, told the Security Council during an emergency session on Lebanon requested by Algeria.

“It is a war crime to commit violence intended to spread terror among civilians,” he added, repeating his call for an “independent, rigorous and transparent” investigation.

Lebanese authorities blame Israel for the attack and have said the targeted devices were booby-trapped before they entered the country.

People check the damage following an Israeli strike in Beirut’s southern suburbs on September 20, 2024. PHOTO: AFP

Hezbollah has vowed retribution and launched its own internal probe into the explosions.

“I am appalled by the breadth and impact of the attacks,” said Turk.

“These attacks represent a new development in warfare, where communication tools become weapons,” he added.

“This cannot be the new normal.”

Speaking at the Security Council, Lebanon’s top diplomat Abdallah Bou Habib called the attack “an unprecedented method of warfare in its brutality and terror.”

“Israel, through this terrorist aggression has violated the basic principles of international humanitarian law,” he said, calling Israel a “rogue state.”

‘Diplomatic efforts’ 

 

Israel has not commented on the device blasts but has said it will widen the scope of its war in Gaza to include the Lebanon front.

“I can tell you that we will do everything we can to target those terrorists,” Israel’s ambassador to the UN Danny Danon told reporters on Friday when asked about the device explosions.

He spoke after Israel announced it had killed the commander of Hezbollah’s elite unit in a strike on Beirut on Friday.

“We have no intention to enter a war with Hezbollah in Lebanon, but we cannot continue the way it is,” Danon said.

Speaking at the Security Council, Danon said Israel will do “whatever it takes” to restore security in northern areas.

“If Hezbollah does not retreat from our border… through diplomatic efforts, Israel will be left with no choice but to use any means within our rights,” he said.

Stephane Dujarric, spokesman for UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres, said the body was “very concerned about the heightened escalation” across the Lebanon-Israel frontier after Friday’s Israeli strike on Beirut.

He called for “maximum restraint” from all sides.

Iran-backed Hezbollah is an ally of Palestinian militant group Hamas, which has been fighting a war in Gaza since October 7.

For nearly a year, the focus of Israel’s firepower has been on Gaza but its troops have also been engaged in near-daily clashes with Hezbollah militants along its northern border.

Hundreds have been killed in Lebanon, most of them fighters, and dozens in Israel, including soldiers.

Trump shooting: Secret Service admits complacency

Members of a Secret Service counter sniper team watch as US President Joe Biden meets with members of Archmere Academy's football team while visiting the school where tomorrow's Quadrilateral summit will be held on September 20, 2024, in Claymont, Delaware. (Photo by Brendan Smialowski / AFP)

WASHINGTON (AFP) The US Secret Service on Friday detailed a litany of failures uncovered by its review of the attempted assassination of former president Donald Trump at a rally in July.

Shooter Thomas Matthew Crooks was able to open fire from a nearby rooftop at the outdoor event held by Republican election candidate Trump, who narrowly escaped death and suffered a wound to his right ear.

The review “identified deficiencies in the advanced planning and its implementation,” Acting Director Ronald Rowe Jr. said at a press briefing.

“While some members of the advance team were very diligent, there was complacency on the part of others that led to a breach of security protocols.”

Alerts ‘not relayed’ 

 

Among the failures identified by Rowe were poor communication with local law enforcement, an “over-reliance” on mobile devices “resulting in information being siloed” and line of sight issues, which “were acknowledged but not properly mitigated.”

“At approximately 18:10 local time, by a phone call, the Secret Service security room calls the countersniper response agent reporting an individual on the roof of the AGR building,” Rowe recounted.

“That vital piece of information was not relayed over the Secret Service radio network.”

Two attendees of the rally in Butler, Pennsylvania were injured from gunfire and a third, 50-year-old firefighter Corey Comperatore, died as a result.

Crooks was shot dead on the roof by Secret Service personnel.

Members of a Secret Service counter sniper team watch as US President Joe Biden meets with members of Archmere Academy’s football team while visiting the school where tomorrow’s Quadrilateral summit will be held on September 20, 2024, in Claymont, Delaware. PHOTO: AFP

Secret Service director Kimberly Cheatle resigned in the aftermath of the dramatic incident, and several Secret Service agents have been put on leave.

Rowe said the Secret Service needed additional funding, personnel and equipment to complete a “paradigm shift…from a state of reaction to a state of readiness.”

The Congressional task force investigating the attempted assassination of Trump issued a statement Friday encouraging Rowe to “follow through” on holding employees accountable and to cooperate with its independent investigation.

“Complacency has no place in the Secret Service,” the task force said.

The US House of Representatives unanimously passed a bill Friday to boost Secret Service protection for presidential candidates to the same level as sitting presidents and vice presidents.

The bill now awaits a vote in the Senate and a signature by President Joe Biden before it becomes law.

Rowe said that Trump is now being given the same levels of protection as the president.

The increased demand for security came into sharp focus again after a second apparent assassination attempt on Trump’s life at his golf course in West Palm Beach, Florida last weekend.

“What occurred on Sunday demonstrates that the threat environment in which the Secret Service operates is tremendous,” Rowe said.

The gunman in Florida did not have a line of sight on the former president and failed to fire a shot before he was discovered and arrested, officials say.

Trump has sought political advantage by blaming — without evidence — Biden and Democratic election rival Kamala Harris for fueling motivation behind the plots, citing their “rhetoric” about him endangering democracy.

Both Biden and Harris have repeatedly denounced the assassination bids and any political violence, with Biden calling for Congress to provide more resources for the Secret Service.

Alcaraz defeated on Laver Cup debut

Spain's Carlos Alcaraz of Team Europe celebrates a point against USA's Taylor Fritz and USA's Ben Shelton of Team World during their 2024 Laver Cup men's doubles tennis match in Berlin, Germany on September 20, 2024. (Photo by Ronny Hartmann / AFP)

BERLIN (AFP) Carlos Alcaraz suffered a losing debut at the Laver Cup on Friday when he and Team Europe partner Alexander Zverev were defeated in straight sets in their doubles clash against Taylor Fritz and Ben Shelton of Team World.

The US pair’s 7-6 (7/5), 6-4 win in the final match of the opening day in Berlin allowed Team World to level the tie overall at 2-2.

Fritz and Shelton fired 20 winners against world number two Zverev and third-ranked Alcaraz.

US’s Taylor Fritz (R) and US’s Ben Shelton (L) of Team World celebrate during their 2024 Laver Cup men’s doubles tennis match against Germany’s Alexander Zverev and Spain’s Carlos Alcaraz of Team Europe, in Berlin, on September 20, 2024. PHOTO: AFP

“We both served really well under pressure. Ben served incredibly well, so I didn’t have to hit any volleys. That was huge,” said Fritz playing for the first time since finishing runner-up to Jannik Sinner in the US Open final in New York 12 days ago.

Earlier Friday, Argentina’s Francisco Cerundolo defeated Casper Ruud 6-4, 6-4 before Stefanos Tsitsipas pulled Team Europe level by seeing off Australia’s Thanasi Kokkinakis 6-1, 6-4.

Grigor Dimitrov then edged Europe in front with a 7-6 (7/4), 7-6 (7/2) victory against Alejandro Tabilo.

Spain’s Carlos Alcaraz of Team Europe celebrates a point against USA’s Taylor Fritz and USA’s Ben Shelton of Team World during their 2024 Laver Cup men’s doubles tennis match in Berlin, Germany on September 20, 2024. PHOTO: AFP

There will be three more singles matches and one doubles match in Berlin on Saturday.

Team World is bidding to win a third consecutive Laver Cup this year after triumphing in London in 2022 and Vancouver last year.

Sri Lanka votes in first poll since economic collapse

A voter shows his inked finger outside a polling station after casting his ballot in Sri Lanka's presidential election in Galle on September 21, 2024. Cash-strapped Sri Lanka began voting for its next president September 21 in an effective referendum on an unpopular International Monetary Fund austerity plan enacted after the island nation's unprecedented financial crisis. (Photo by IDREES MOHAMMED / AFP)

COLOMBO (AFP) Cash-strapped Sri Lanka began voting for its next president Saturday in an effective referendum on an unpopular International Monetary Fund austerity plan enacted after the island nation’s unprecedented financial crisis.

President Ranil Wickremesinghe is fighting an uphill battle for a fresh mandate to continue belt-tightening measures that have stabilised the economy and ended months of food, fuel and medicine shortages.

His two years in office restored calm to the streets after civil unrest spurred by the downturn in 2022 saw thousands storm the compound of his predecessor, who promptly fled the country.

“We must continue with reforms to end bankruptcy,” Wickremesinghe, 75, said at his final rally in Colombo this week.

“Decide if you want to go back to the period of terror, or progress.”

But Wickremesinghe’s tax hikes and other measures, imposed per the terms of a USD2.9-billion IMF bailout, have left millions struggling to make ends meet.

People wait in line outside a polling station minutes before the start of voting in Sri Lanka’s presidential election in Colombo on September 21, 2024. PHOTO: AFP

He is tipped to lose to one of two formidable challengers including Anura Kumara Dissanayaka, the leader of a once-marginal Marxist party tarnished by its violent past.

Sri Lanka’s crisis has proven an opportunity for the 55-year-old Dissanayaka, who has seen a surge of support based on his pledge to change the island’s “corrupt” political culture.

Fellow opposition leader Sajith Premadasa, the son of a former president assassinated in 1993 during the country’s decades-long civil war, is also expected to make a strong showing.

“There is a significant number of voters trying to send a strong message… that they are very disappointed with the way this country has been governed,” Murtaza Jafferjee of think tank Advocata told AFP.

‘Not out of the woods’ 

 

More than 17 million people are eligible to vote in the election, with more than 63,000 police deployed to protect polling booths and counting centres.

“We also have anti-riot squads on standby in case of any trouble, but so far everything is peaceful,” police spokesman Nihal Talduwa said.

“In some areas, we have had to deploy police to ensure polling booths are safe from wild animals, especially wild elephants.”

Polls close at 4:00 pm (1030 GMT) with counting to begin on Saturday evening.

A voter shows his inked finger outside a polling station after casting his ballot in Sri Lanka’s presidential election in Galle on September 21, 2024. PHOTO: AFP

A result is expected on Sunday, but an official outcome could be delayed if the contest is close.

Schools were closed on Friday to be converted to polling stations, which will be staffed by more than 200,000 public servants deployed to conduct the vote.

Economic issues dominated the eight-week campaign, with public anger widespread over the hardships endured since the peak of the crisis two years ago.

Official data showed that Sri Lanka’s poverty rate doubled to 25 per cent between 2021 and 2022, adding more than 2.5 million people to those already living on less than USD3.65 a day.

Experts warn that Sri Lanka’s economy is still vulnerable, with payments on the island’s USD46-billion foreign debt yet to resume since a 2022 government default.

The IMF said reforms enacted by Wickremesinghe’s government were beginning to pay off, with growth slowly returning.

“A lot of progress has been made,” the IMF’s Julie Kozack told reporters in Washington last week.

“But the country is not out of the woods yet.”

Boeing CEO says ending strike ‘a top priority’

TOPSHOT - Striking Boeing workers hold rally at the Boeing Portland Facility on September 19, 2024, in Portland, Oregon. The International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers, representing Boeing workers, said September 18 the aviation giant was not "taking mediation seriously," after some 33,000 US employees walked out last week over a contract dispute, effectively shutting down two Seattle-area plants. (Photo by Jordan GALE / AFP)

WASHINGTON (AFP)Ending a strike involving more than 30,000 of Boeing’s Seattle-area workers is “a top priority” for the aviation giant, chief executive Kelly Ortberg said in a message to staff Friday.

His note comes as the strike — which has shuttered assembly plants for the 737 MAX and 777 — enters its second week.

“Ending the strike is a top priority,” said Ortberg.

“During mediation with the union this week, we continued our good faith efforts to engage the union’s bargaining committee in meaningful negotiations,” he added.

“We remain very committed to reaching an agreement as soon as possible that recognizes the hard work of our employees and ends the work stoppage in the Pacific Northwest,” Ortberg said.

But he noted the company was “disappointed the discussions didn’t lead to more progress.”

Members of the International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers (IAM) District 751 had overwhelmingly voted on September 12 to reject a new contract, walking out hours later.

Striking Boeing workers hold rally at the Boeing Portland Facility on September 19, 2024, in Portland, Oregon. PHOTO: AFP

Their key demands include a wage hike of 40 per cent.

This is significantly higher than the 25 per cent increase touted by Boeing, but workers see the figure as misleading because the deal would also eliminate an annual bonus.

Union members complain of near-stagnant pay for more than a decade, a problem worsened by consumer inflation in recent years and by higher costs of living in the Seattle area, which is a growing tech hub.

On Wednesday, Boeing said it would start furloughs of professional and white-collar staff as it seeks to conserve cash amid the labor strike.

While both sides resumed talks on Tuesday with the help of mediators, the IAM said late Wednesday that discussions ended without result.

Leadership departure 

 

In a separate message to employees, Ortberg announced the departure of the head of Boeing’s defense, space and security subdivision, Ted Colbert. It’s the first major change of top personnel since Ortberg’s arrival.

“At this critical juncture, our priority is to restore the trust of our customers and meet the high standards they expect of us to enable their critical missions around the world,” Ortberg said.

“Working together we can and will improve our performance and ensure we deliver on our commitments.”

Boeing’s commercial aviation business has been under renewed scrutiny since a January incident in which a fuselage panel blew out of an Alaska Airlines Boeing 737 MAX plane mid-flight, necessitating an emergency landing.

But its defense, space and security unit posted heavy losses in the most recent quarter, and is losing money on its contract with NASA over continued problems with its beleaguered spacecraft Starliner.

Breaking free

PHOTO: ENVATO

BERNAMA/DPA – Whether you were in a long-term relationship or just went on a few dates, sometimes it’s hard to stop mourning a lost love.

The phrase “the one who got away” captures the regret or nostalgia for an opportunity you feel slipped through your fingers. But despite the fact that the relationship didn’t work out, why is it so difficult to move on?

While it may feel impossible, “ultimately, letting go is a decision – and it’s likely that you simply don’t want to let go”, explained German couples therapist Eric Hegmann.

This could happen for several reasons, such as holding on to hope, dissatisfaction with your current relationship, or the belief that fate brought you together only to pull you apart.

One problem can also be that you compare the ideal of what could have been with the reality, according to another couples therapist, Ilka Schutte. Thinking about the past can often be a bit more appealing than day-to-day reality. Let’s take a closer look at what is behind this idealisation of a past relationship.

ROMANTICISING THE PAST

Often, you may romanticise the past based on the idea that there was a perfect relationship in which you could have everything with a partner forever, but it didn’t work out with them, said Hegmann.

In other words, you over-romanticise a partner, projecting all your hopes and wishes onto this person.

PHOTO: ENVATO
PHOTO: ENVATO
PHOTO: ENVATO
PHOTO: ENVATO

Psychologist Felicitas Heyne said there is a myth behind this idealisation. “There is no such thing as the perfect partner,” she said bluntly. But as long as you hold onto this myth, you can never be completely happy and satisfied in a relationship.

Over-romanticising a partner can be exacerbated by memories that suggest everything was perfect, in what Heyne calls “the romanticising effect of the past”.

“In the past, bad things usually seem less bad, but nice things usually seem even nicer. We forget what was bad and exaggerate what was good.”

Such idealised moments then come to the fore, Schutte said, and we start to compare the past with reality, which can have a negative impact on your current relationship or dating life, as your past seems better, thanks to your distorted memories.

STOP IDEALISING THE PAST

Focus on reality, Schutte recommended. “What always helps is not to get lost in this fantasy world, but to look at reality and see what it was really like.”

After all, if it really was true love and you both saw it that way, then perhaps you wouldn’t have broken up after all.

You can record this process in writing or talk to close friends or family. Heyne said sharing and listening to another perspective is important as friends or family don’t look through the rose-coloured glasses of personal memory, so perhaps their memories might be more reliable than yours.

CONSCIOUSLY LETTING GO

The easiest thing to do is always to create more positive things in the here and now that bind your thoughts to the present, so you don’t have time to think about the past, Heyne said. It helps to tell yourself: “It’s not a fate that I’m at the mercy of, I create it all in my head.”

Relationship coach Hegmann said that you can let go as soon as you feel inspired and motivated to do so. It is perfectly normal to harbour the desire to win back your ex during the heartbreak phase. But you have to remember that this phase will pass if you consciously let go of these thoughts. Only then will new possibilities and opportunities open up, he said.

DON’T JUST LOOK FOR LOVE ON THE OUTSIDE

Depending on one person is often related to the fact that we are excessively self-critical and look to others for what we cannot give to ourselves. We look for love, recognition and affirmation, while forgetting to give ourselves such attention.

“After a loss, the first thing you need to do for yourself is heal, and do things to help yourself. Make your own life beautiful, fulfill your own values, wishes and dreams – independent of anyone else, independent of the outside world,” said Schutte.

Digital fragility

PHOTO: AP

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) – “Move fast and break things”, a high-tech mantra popularised 20 years ago by Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg, was supposed to be a rallying cry for game-changing innovation. It now seems more like an elegy for a society perched on a digital foundation too fragile to withstand a defective software program that was supposed to help protect computers – not crash them.

The worldwide technology meltdown caused by a flawed update installed earlier this month on computers running on Microsoft’s dominant Windows software by cybersecurity specialist CrowdStrike was so serious that some affected businesses such as Delta Air Lines were still recovering from it days later.

It’s a tell-tale moment – one that illustrates the digital pitfalls looming in a culture that takes the magic of technology for granted until it implodes into a horror show that exposes our ignorance and vulnerability.

“We are utterly dependent on systems that we don’t even know exist until they break,” said a Silicon Valley forecaster and historian Paul Saffo. “We have become a little bit like Blanche DuBois in that scene from ‘A Streetcar Named Desire,’ where she says, ‘I have always depended on the kindness of strangers.'”

‘GUM AND SHOELACES’ AND THE PERILS OF A CONNECTED WORLD

The dependence – and extreme vulnerability – starts with the interconnections that bind our computers, phones and other devices. That usually makes life easier and more convenient, but it also means outages can have more far-reaching ripple effects, whether they are caused by a mistake like the one made by CrowdStrike or through the malicious intent of a hacker.

“It might be time to look at how the internet works and then question why the internet works this way. Because there is a lot of gum and shoelaces holding things together,” said an assistant professor of engineering at Cornell University Gregory Falco.

ABOVE & BELOW: Passengers wait in front of check-in counters at the capital’s Berlin Brandenburg Airport, in Schönefeld, Germany; and passengers line up for manual check-in at the Hong Kong International Airport during a global technology outage in Hong Kong. PHOTO: AP
PHOTO: AP
Pedestrians walk by blacked out screens due to a global technology outage in Times Square in New York, United States. PHOTO: AP

The risks are being amplified by the tightening control of a corporate coterie popularly known as “Big Tech”: Microsoft, whose software runs most of the world’s computers; Apple and Google, whose software powers virtually all of the world’s smartphones; Amazon, which oversees data centers responsible for keeping websites running (another key service provided by Microsoft and Google, too, in addition to its e-commerce bazaar); and Meta Platforms, the social networking hub that owns Facebook, Instagram and WhatsApp.

It’s a highly concentrated empire with a few corridors open to a network of smaller companies such as CrowdStrike – a company with USD3 billion in annual revenue, a fraction of the nearly USD250 billion in annual sales that Microsoft reels in. All of the key players still tend to put a higher priority on the pursuit of profit than a commitment to quality, said co-director of the cybersecurity and global policy programme at Indiana University Isak Nti Asar.

“We have built a cult of innovation, a system that says. ‘Get technology into people’s hands as quick as possible and then fix it when you find out you have a problem,'” Nti Asar said.

“We should be moving slower and demanding better technology instead of giving ourselves up to these feudal lords.”

HOW ON EARTH DID WE GET HERE?

But is Big Tech to blame for that situation? Or is it 21st-Century society that obliviously allowed us to get to this point – consumers eagerly buying their next shiny devices while gleefully posting pictures online, and the seemingly overmatched lawmakers elected to impose safeguards?

“Everybody wants to point the blame somewhere else,” Saffo said, “but I would say you better start looking in the mirror.”

If our digital evolution seems to be headed in the wrong direction, should we change course? Or is that even possible at a juncture where some credit card companies charge their customers a fee if they prefer to have their monthly billing systems delivered to them through a United States. Postal Service that has become known as “snail mail” because it moves so slowly?

Remaining stuck in a different era worked out well for Southwest Airlines during the CrowdStrike snafu because its system is still running on Windows software from the 1990s.

It’s such antiquated technology that Southwest doesn’t rely on CrowdStrike for security. That sword has another, less appealing edge, though: Behaving like a Luddite hobbled Southwest during the 2022 holiday travel season when thousands of its flights were cancelled because its technology was unable to properly adjust crew schedules.

But it’s becoming increasingly untenable to toggle back to the analog and early digital era of 30 or 40 years ago when more tasks were done manually and more records were handled on pen and paper. If anything, technology appears destined to become even more pervasive now that artificial intelligence seems poised to automate more tasks, including potentially writing the code for software updates that will be checked by a computer – that will be overseen by another computer to make sure it’s not malfunctioning.

That doesn’t mean individual households still can’t revert to some of their old tricks as a backup for when technology falters, said research fellow for Mercatus Center, a research institution at George Mason University Matt Mittelsteadt. “There is this creeping realization that some of the things we once mocked, like putting a password on a Post-It note, isn’t necessarily the worst idea.”

At this juncture, experts believe both the government and the private sector need to devote more time mapping out the digital ecosystem to get a better understanding of the weaknesses in the system. Otherwise, society as a whole may find itself wandering through a field of digital land mines – while blindfolded.

Mittelsteadt said, “We have no intelligence about the environment we are operating in now other than that there is this mass of ticking time bombs out there.”

Luxury meets heritage

ABOVE & BELOW: People take photos of supercars taking part in the Gumball 3000 Rally parked in front of the Angkor Wat temple complex in Siem Reap province, Cambodia; and Cambodian tycoon Leang Pov greets people as he arrives with his supercar. PHOTO: AFP

SIEM REAP (AFP) – The centuries-old temples of Cambodia’s famed Angkor Wat played host to a parade of Rolls-Royces, Ferraris and Lamborghinis on Tuesday, although drivers were banned from revving their super-charged engines.

The event was intended to promote the environmentally-sensitive United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO)-listed World Heritage site, where the ruins of the Khmer empire’s greatest monuments are surrounded by lush forests and giant trees.

Tourism is vital to the Southeast Asian country and received around 6.6 million visitors a year before the COVID-19 pandemic, when numbers nose-dived to below 200,000 in 2021.

Visitors rebounded to nearly 5.5 million last year, netting over USD3 billion in revenue, but remained below pre-pandemic levels. Asked about the apparently incongruous nature of the occasion, Cambodia’s Tourism Minister Sok Soken told AFP that strict guidelines had been imposed, with engine-revving banned “in terms of disrespect to our heritage here”.

He spoke a few metres away from a Bugatti Chiron, some models of which reportedly have list prices of more than USD3 million.

“The display of cars is an art of technology, an inclusion of technology and a modern way of travelling,” he said, adding Cambodia “will be ready to provide hospitality to all forms of travellers”.

An attempt by organisers Gumball 3000, a British lifestyle brand, to set a record for the number of supercars and hypercars at a World Heritage site fell short.

However, the vehicles saw high traffic from locals and tourists taking pictures and selfies.

“This is the first time I have seen such modern cars at Angkor Wat,” said university student Kuy Tola, 19. “It is amazing.”

ABOVE & BELOW: People take photos of supercars taking part in the Gumball 3000 Rally parked in front of the Angkor Wat temple complex in Siem Reap province, Cambodia; and Cambodian tycoon Leang Pov greets people as he arrives with his supercar. PHOTO: AFP
PHOTO: AFP
Tourists visit the Angkor Wat temple complex. PHOTO: AFP