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Cycling On-Chain #2: Bitcoin Enters Geopolitics

China cracks down against Bitcoin while El Salvador adopts it as legal tender; who’s making the right move?

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China cracks down against Bitcoin while El Salvador adopts it as legal tender; who’s making the right move?

Dilution-proof, July 1, 2021

Cycling On-Chain is a monthly series that uses on-chain and price-related data to better understand recent market movements and estimate where we are in bitcoin’s larger market cycle. After providing a broader look back and forward in the previous edition, we’ll now look at Bitcoin’s on-chain data through the lens of June’s two most impactful events that introduced Bitcoin to the geopolitical stage: China cracking down against Bitcoin while El Salvador accepts it as legal tender.

China Crackdowns

Since mid-April, China has played a large role in Bitcoin-related news. Following some coal mine accidents in Xinjiang, the Chinese government instituted a power blackout for a ‘comprehensive power outage safety inspection’ on April 15, 2021. Because that area was accounting for a relatively large part of Bitcoin’s overall hash rate (the computational power of miners that is used to create new blocks and secure the network), the blackouts severely slowed down the Bitcoin network for one or two weeks.

A month later on May 18, when Bitcoin’s hash rate had largely recovered, China banned its financial institutions from offering Bitcoin services. This drove further fear into a market that was already anxious after Elon Musk tweeted the prior week that Tesla would stop accepting bitcoin for payments out of environmental concerns.

China’s offensive stance against Bitcoin continued in early June. Reports emerged that China started actively censoring bitcoin and cryptocurrencies exchanges to slow down their adoption and, more importantly, shut down Bitcoin mining operations in Xinjiang. This was later followed up by similar reports in the Yunnan province on June 14, as well as in Sichuan four days later.

There is no fundamental reason why price should decline along with hash rate; hash rate follows price since that drives incentives by increasing or decreasing profit margins, but not the other way around. Nonetheless, the recent bitcoin price drop further cut into miners’ profit margins. This possibly exacerbated the hash rate drop due to miners that are running on older equipment and/or more expensive energy (temporarily) pulling their own plugs.

Figure 1 shows that since the blackouts instituted on April 15, Bitcoin’s hash rate has fallen by ~50% and is now at levels not seen since briefly after the May 2020 halving.

Figure 1: Bitcoin's mean hash rate (orange) and the bitcoin price (black) over time.

The hash rate drop means that there is much less computational power trying to guess the same difficult random number, which significantly slows down the creation of new blocks. The magnitude of this can be seen in figure 2, which shows that the block intervals on June 27 were by far the largest since the start of 2010, illustrating how much Bitcoin has slowed down as a result of the hash rate drop.

Figure 2: Bitcoin's mean block interval since the start of 2010.

The next difficulty adjustment, projected to happen on July 3, is expected to be a record-breaking -27.2% (figure 3), which provides a large and immediate increase in miner profitability, incentivizing miners to start or restart mining operations. Bitcoin will therefore continue to function as normal and will only have been temporarily slowed down as the result of these recent negative actions by China.

Figure 3: Bitcoin price (black), mean hash rate (green) and mining difficulty (blue) over time.

Experienced Bitcoin market participants know not to trust every report that comes out of China, but recently reports of Chinese miners relocating to more mining-friendly jurisdictions like Kazakhstan and Texas are piling up. However, with China now actively working on the implementation of their own Central Bank Digital Currency (CBDC) that increases their surveillance and control, a case can be made to take their current moves against Bitcoin more seriously.

While these actions surely have a large economic impact on Chinese miners, those miners will have no problems finding a new home. Due to global supply chains being severely slowed down during the COVID-19 pandemic, there are large worldwide chip shortages. The recent actions by the Chinese government actually exacerbated the Bitcoin mining equipment shortages as Bitmain, a Chinese company that is one of the largest producers of mining equipment, had to halt their sales.

Figure 4 shows that since the start of June, the amount of bitcoin in miner wallets (green line) dropped by 6,701 BTC (-0.37%), but that drop is quite modest compared to the 28,266 BTC (-1.54%) decline in miner wallets in the first months after breaking the $20,000 previous all-time high, selling into market strength. The amount of bitcoin that are being sent from miners to exchanges (blue line) is also very low right now, further illustrating that the impact of the Chinese crackdowns on miner sell pressure has been modest – at least so far.

Figure 4: Miner wallet bitcoin balances (green), miner wallet to exchanges bitcoin transfers (blue) and the bitcoin price (black) over time.

While this event certainly is very important from a fundamental perspective, its (potential) impact on the bitcoin market is overblown by many. Hash rate may stay low or even further decline as more Chinese miners shut down or relocate elsewhere, but it will likely come back sometime in the coming weeks to months as there is massive demand for their equipment and services. Even if hash rate doesn’t come back, Bitcoin’s beautifully designed internal difficulty adjustment mechanism will ensure that blocks will continue to be produced, while current hash rate levels are likely more than enough to keep the network secure. As the popular meme goes: honey badger don’t care.

If the Bitcoin network does indeed remain strong, China’s crackdowns against it will actually go down as a great example of Bitcoin’s anti-fragility. The whole point of a truly decentralized system is that you cannot ban that system – you can only ban yourself from using it. Hash rate moving away from China also lowers the impact of future recurring China FUD (Fear, Uncertainty & Doubt), as their potential control over the system will have actually decreased.

The magnitude of how historically abnormal the current situation is can also be seen in the Puell Multiple, which is a measure for how many bitcoin are issued on a given day in comparison to how many were issued on an average day over the previous year. As can be seen in figure 5, the large hash rate drop and resulting slowdown of Bitcoin block creation have caused the Puell Multiple to make its steepest decline ever. The Puell Multiple is now in the green zone, which has historically only been seen around market cycle bottoms and the 2020 halving.

Figure 5: The Puell Multiple.

Although the long-term fundamental impact of these events is limited, they do have a very real impact on the bitcoin market – at least in short-term. China banning their institutions from offering Bitcoin services and actively censoring exchanges mean that Chinese investors will have a higher threshold to participate in the market. Another appropriate concern is that these actions could set an example for other governments to take similar actions.

One thing is quite clear though: the number of entities that are (on-chain) active on Bitcoin have declined a lot after the recent turn of events. This number was already mildly trending down since the January local top, but dropped dramatically after these events and is now back to levels not seen since briefly after the March 2020 market crash (figure 6).

Figure 6: The weekly number of entities that are active on-chain.

It is likely that fear and anxiety drove out investors with low confidence, but this activity decline could also mean that others are waiting to see how this plays out.

On-chain data suggests that, in reality, we’re likely seeing a combination of both. The first chart to support that thesis is displayed in figure 7. Over the last few months there has been a clear downtrend in “dormancy,” which means that an increasing proportion of the bitcoin being moved on-chain consists of relatively “young” coins; weaker hands are moving their more recently acquired coins. The weekly averaged dormancy per entity on the network is now back to levels not seen since September 2019 – well before the recent bull run started. Longer term holders aren’t selling.

Figure 7: Entity-adjusted (weekly) dormancy.

Another chart that clearly shows that it is particularly the newer market participants that are in pain right now is shown in figure 8. The Spent Output Profit Ratio (SOPR) is a measure that represents to what extent the average of all coins that moved at a certain time were in profit (above the solid gray line) or at a loss. Figure 8 shows this metric for the bitcoin of short-term holders (STH), which is defined as coins that are less than 155 days old.

Current STH-SOPR levels clearly show that short-term holders are in a lot of pain right now and are moving their coins around on-chain at losses only seen during some of the more painful downturns in Bitcoin history. The main question on everyone’s mind right now is whether the current capitulation will end up like the ones during the bear cycles that followed after reaching a halving cycle blow-off top (red ovals) or more like a mid-cycle market flush (green and orange ovals).

Figure 8: Short Term Holder (STH) Spent Output Profit Ratio (SOPR) over time.

Figure 9 shows that, overall, bitcoin is being accumulated by long-term holders (recent uptrend in orange line). During strong run-ups towards new all-time highs, these long-term holders tend to sell some of their coins to take profit (temporary declines in orange line). As price runs up, new market participants rush in and start to accumulate bitcoin (increase in blue line), but they either end up selling their coins after the market turns or they turn into long-term holders themselves (decrease in blue line + increase in orange line).

Figure 9: The bitcoin price (black), circulating supply (green), long-term holder supply (orange) and short-term holder supply (blue) over time.

During the recent market downturn, bitcoin’s liquid supply increased a lot, as some existing holders were scared out of their positions (figure 10). The trend in the daily change of the liquid supply turned around after the May 19, 2020 capitulation event (red area), where bitcoin traded down more than $10,000 within a single day for the first time. Since June 16, the daily change flipped negative again, which means that the liquid supply of bitcoin that is available on the market is now decreasing again (green area), building towards the next potential supply shock. This could be an early sign of sell pressure exhaustion (as we saw before, mostly from short-term holders).

Figure 10: Daily changes in bitcoin liquid supply over time.

El Salvador Adopts Bitcoin As Legal Tender

On June 5 Jack Mallers and the President of El Salvador, Nayib Bukele, surprised the world with an announcement at the Bitcoin 2021 Conference that El Salvador would make bitcoin legal tender in the country. A few days later the law was approved with a vote of 62 out of 84 congressional votes.

With this historic move, El Salvador became the first country in the world where bitcoin can be used as a legal form of payment. This step means that the about 70% of the country that is unbanked now has a digital payment option. Merchants in the country are required to accept bitcoin, but will be able to instantly swap the received bitcoin for U.S. dollars, the other legal tender in the country. To achieve this, the country will provide an official wallet called Chivo, which runs on the Lightning Network and is based on Jack Mallers’ strike. However, Salvadorans will be free to use any other bitcoin wallet available on the market as well. To further support its adoption, the government of El Salvador will be giving each of their 6.8 million citizens thirty dollars worth of bitcoin upon opening the Chivo wallet.

El Salvador’s bitcoin adoption also means that citizens will have a much cheaper option for remittances, which represented 20.8% of El Salvador’s Gross Domestic Product (GDP) in 2019. The country also sent out its invitations to Bitcoin corporations and individuals that are considering moving to the country due to its now more Bitcoin-friendly tax regime, offering full residence to anyone that spends three BTC in the country. To top things off, El Salvador is incentivizing Bitcoin miners to come to the country, offering them access to 100% carbon-free geothermal energy powered by volcanoes.

An ironic confluence of circumstances meant that while China pushed Bitcoin and its miners away from its country, El Salvador opened its arms to it as far as it could. El Salvador’s move and the worldwide responses to it have triggered politicians in a large number of other countries to publicly advocate for Bitcoin as well. An opposition party in Paraguay has already taken it as far as to announce their plans to introduce a similar law in their country in July.

Since El Salvador’s legal tender law doesn’t fully go into effect until September 7, 2021, its impact on Bitcoin on-chain metrics is likely to gradually come into place over the months leading up to it. While it is too early to draw any firm conclusions at the time of this writing, there are at least some indications that new people are coming onto the network.

Figure 11 shows that over the last few weeks, the net growth of entities on the Bitcoin network has seen a steep rise. Even if this turns out to be completely unrelated to the developments in El Salvador, it is encouraging to see this type of new adoption,especially during a period when price has fallen.

Figure 11: Weekly net growth of entities on the Bitcoin network.

Another metric that suggests increased Bitcoin adoption is the number of accumulation addresses (figure 12), which are Bitcoin addresses with at least two inputs and no outputs. The clear uptrend that was already present before the El Salvador news suggests that those are unrelated, but will be interesting to follow over the upcoming months as well.

Figure 12: Number of Bitcoin accumulation addresses.

Another possible sign of adoption by citizens of El Salvador would be to see the supply held by entities with relatively small balances increase – which is exactly what is happening right now for entities holding up to 0.1 BTC (figure 13). Like in figure 12, this uptrend was already present before the news which means that it may be unrelated to the events in El Salvador, but an interesting trend to see during a price decrease nonetheless.

Figure 13: Bitcoin price (black) and supply held by entities holding <0.001 BTC (green), 0.001 to 0.01 (blue) and 0.01 to 0.1 BTC (orange). 

Since El Salvador’s government wallet will run on Lightning and any bitcoin use for day-to-day payments is likely to utilize Lightning as well, it will also be interesting to see what their new law does for Lightning Network adoption. Figure 14 shows that while it is unclear if the recent events in El Salvador changed anything, Lightning Network adoption has been going incredibly well throughout this bull run, as the number of nodes, public channels and total value on the network have been steeply rising.

Figure 14: The number of public lightning nodes (top left), lightning network liquidity dispersion (top right), number of public lightning channels (bottom left) and total BTC value on the lightning network (bottom right). 

The big question on everyone’s minds is whether the current bitcoin bull market is now over, or if we will see a double top like scenario like we saw in 2013.

Bitcoin bulls will look for the El Salvador legislation to go into full effect after the summer, possibly combined with a hash rate recovery and improved miner decentralization if the Chinese miners indeed successfully relocate, to provide a tailwind for a shift to a more bullish market sentiment. Bears, on the other hand, will point out the market craze during Q1 as a clear market mania top, expecting to see bearish sentiment prevail from here on out.

Figure 15 shows the results of a bitcoin market sentiment poll taken on Twitter on June 30, 2021. As can be seen, respondents are leaning bullish on all timeframes - especially the longer ones. Polls like this are unscientific and rife with selection bias and need to be taken with a grain of salt, but these results at least illustrate that there is still hope amongst a certain segment of Bitcoin Twitter that prices may go back up again throughout the upcoming period.

Figure 15: Bitcoin market sentiment based on a one-day Twitter poll ending on June 30th, 2021.

We like to close off this monthly column with the “Bitcoin Halving Cycle Roadmap” that combines several popular prediction models that are based on time, the Stock-to-Flow models, cycle indexes and the Bitcoin Price Temperature (figure 16). Will this be the most underwhelming halving cycle in Bitcoin’s existence (and thus basically the end of several of these models), or are we still in for a treat later?

Figure 16: The Bitcoin Halving Cycle Roadmap.

Previous editions of Cycling On-Chain:

Disclaimer: This article was written for educational, informational and entertainment purposes only and should not be taken as investment advice.

This is a guest post by Dilution-proof. Opinions expressed are entirely their own and do not necessarily reflect those of BTC, Inc. or Bitcoin Magazine.

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Another major retailer cracks down on self-checkout at its stores

The value retailer is discouraging theft at its self-checkout counters by introducing more associate-assisted checkout transactions in its stores.

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Huge retail chains like Walmart  (WMT) , Target  (TGT) , CVS  (CVS) and others have faced a high amount of retail theft, or what they call inventory shrink, since 2020 and have been implementing measures to eliminate those costly losses.

Among the most common measures used by Walmart, Target and some others has been locking up popular items behind glass cases to prevent shoplifting. Customers shopping at these stores have encountered a lot of their favorite products, such as cosmetics, shampoo, over-the-counter drugs and even laundry detergent locked up in those cases.

Related: Target limits self-checkout, makes a change customers will love

Shoppers need to either push a button near the product to alert a worker to unlock the case or, in some situations, run around the store looking for a worker with the proper key to open the case. It's a very inconvenient problem for shoppers, and not all stores are consistent with their lockup policies.

For example, one Walmart store might lock up some of their instant coffee products, while another cross-town Walmart location, or even a Target competitor, doesn't lock up any coffee.

Retail stores have also implemented new self-checkout rules to discourage inventory shrink, but again, stores are inconsistent with their rules. Walmart stores have a 20 items or less rule for their self-checkout lanes to try to steer shoppers with more items to checkout clerks that might help reduce the occurrence of theft. But neither customers, nor workers seem to be observing that rule. Target on March 17 implemented a new 10 items or fewer rule in its self-checkout lanes, but we'll see if anyone enforces it.

These self-checkout requirements are also supposed to speed up the checkout process, but that only works if all the self-check registers are working and an adequate amount of checkout clerks are working registers as well.

The next step for retailers in addressing inventory shrink at self-checkout would be to eliminate self-check altogether.

Shopping in a Five Below store.

Pat Greenhouse&sol;The Boston Globe via Getty Images

Five Below cuts back on self-checkout lanes 

After finishing the fourth quarter of 2023 with a "higher-than-planned shrink," or higher level of theft than expected in its stores, value retailer Five Below  (FIVE)  has implemented associate-assisted checkout in all of its stores for 2024, CEO Joel Anderson said on the company's earnings call on March 20.

"In addition, in our high-shrink stores, the primary option for checkout is more of the traditional, over-the-counter associate checkout," Anderson said. "We expect to have 75% of our transactions chain-wide assisted by an associate with a goal of 100% in our highest shrink, highest-risk stores to be fully transacted by an associate."

The retailer also checks receipts and adds guards

"Additionally, in those stores, we’re implementing further mitigation efforts, including receipt checking, additional store payroll and guards. We intend to measure progress as soon as Q2 when we perform a limited number of store counts," Anderson said.

Five Below tested several inventory shrink mitigation initiatives late in the third quarter and into the fourth quarter of 2023, which included product-related tests, front-end initiatives and guard programs, Anderson said in the earnings call. He said the most significant change the Philadelphia-based company made across most of the chain was to limit the number of self-checkout registers that were open, while positioning an associate upfront to further assist customers.

Anderson said he is confident the company's measures will help it over time, but the company has not included any financial impact for shrink reduction in its 2024 guidance. The company, however will aggressively pursue returning to pre-pandemic levels of shrink or offsetting the impact over the next few years, he said.

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CCP-Linked Virologist Fired After Transferring Ebola From Winnipeg To Wuhan Resurfaces In China – And Is Collaborating With Military Scientists

CCP-Linked Virologist Fired After Transferring Ebola From Winnipeg To Wuhan Resurfaces In China – And Is Collaborating With Military Scientists

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CCP-Linked Virologist Fired After Transferring Ebola From Winnipeg To Wuhan Resurfaces In China - And Is Collaborating With Military Scientists

A virologist who had a "clandestine relationship" with Chinese agents and was subsequently fired by the Trudeau government has popped back up in China - where she's conducting research with Chinese military scientists and other virology researchers, including at the Wuhan Institute of Virology, where she's allegedly studying antibodies for coronavirus, as well as the deadly Ebola and Niaph viruses, the Globe and Mail reports.

Xiangguo Qiu and her husband Keding Cheng were fired from the National Microbiology Laboratory in Winnipeg, Canada and stripped of their security clearances in July of 2019.

Declassified documents tabled in the House of Commons on Feb. 28 show the couple had provided confidential scientific information to China and posed a credible security threat to the country, according to the Canadian Security Intelligence Service.

The Globe found that Dr. Qiu’s name appears on four Chinese patent filings since 2020, two with the Wuhan Institute of Virology whose work on bat coronaviruses has placed it at the centre of concerns that it played a role in the spread of COVID-19 – and two with the University of Science and Technology of China, or USTC. The patents relate to antibodies against Nipah virus and work related to nanobodies, including against coronaviruses. -Globe and Mail

Canadian authorities began questioning the pair's loyalty, as well as the potential for coercion or exploitation by a foreign entity, according to more than 600 pages of documents reported by The Counter Signal.

Highlights (via CTVNews.ca):

  • Qiu and Cheng were escorted out of Winnipeg's National Microbiology Laboratory in July 2019 and subsequently fired in January 2021.
  • The pair transferred deadly Ebola and Henipah viruses to China's Wuhan Institute of Virology in March 2019.
  • The Canadian Security Intelligence Service assessed that Qiu repeatedly lied about the extent of her work with institutions of the Chinese government and refused to admit involvement in various Chinese programs, even when evidence was presented to her.
  • [D]espite being given every opportunity in her interviews to describe her association with Chinese entities, "Ms. Qiu continued to make blanket denials, feign ignorance or tell outright lies."
  • A November 2020 Public Health Agency of Canada report on Qiu says investigators "weighed the adverse information and are in agreement with the CSIS assessment."
  • A Public Health Agency report on Cheng's activities says he allowed restricted visitors to work in laboratories unescorted and on at least two occasions did not prevent the unauthorized removal of laboratory materials.
  • Cheng was not forthcoming about his activities and collaborations with people from government agencies "of another country, namely members of the People's Republic of China."

Following their firings, Qiu returned to China despite it being under a pandemic travel lockdown until January, 2023.

"It’s very likely that she received quite preferential treatment in China on the basis that she’s proven herself. She’s done a very good job for the government of China," said Brendan Walker-Munro, senior research fellow at Australia’s University of Queensland Law School. "She’s promoted their interests abroad. She’s returned information that is credibly useful to China and to its ongoing research."

More via the Globe and Mail;

Documents reviewed by The Globe show that Dr. Qiu is most closely aligned with the University of Science and Technology of China (USTC) in Hefei. In March, 2023, a document posted by a Chinese pharmaceutical company listed Dr. Qiu as second amongst “major completion personnel” on a project awarded by the Chinese Preventive Medicine Association for study related to an anti-Ebola virus therapeutic antibody. Most of the other completion personnel were associated with the Chinese People’s Liberation Army.

USTC was founded by the Chinese Academy of Sciences and initially established to build up Chinese scientific expertise useful to the military, which at the time was pursuing technology to build satellites, intercontinental ballistic missiles and atomic bombs. The university has continued to maintain close military ties.

The document says Dr. Qiu works for USTC. Jin Tengchuan, the principal investigator at the Laboratory of Structural Immunology at USTC, lists her as a co-inventor on a patent. Mr. Jin did not respond to requests for comment.

A person who answered the phone at USTC told The Globe, “I don’t have any information about this teacher.”

In 2012, USTC signed a strategic co-operation agreement with the Army Engineering University of the People’s Liberation Army, designed to strengthen research on cutting-edge technology useful for communications, weaponry and other national-defence priorities.

Dr. Qiu is also listed as a 2019 doctoral supervisor for students studying virology at Hebei Medical University.

Well, that makes me wonder what circumstances she was under when she emigrated to Canada. Why did she come?” asked Earl Brown, a professor emeritus of biochemistry, microbiology and immunology at the University of Ottawa’s faculty of medicine who has worked extensively in China in the past. “People leave for more freedom from China, or to make more money. But China keeps tabs on most people so I am not sure if she came over to infiltrate or whether she came and the infiltration happened later through contact with China.”

It may be impossible to answer that question. Three former colleagues at the National Microbiolgy Lab have indicated that Dr. Qiu and her husband were diligent and pleasant to deal with, but largely kept to themselves outside of work. They say Dr. Qiu was a brilliant scientist with a strong work ethic, although her English was weak. The Globe is not identifying the three who did not want to be named.

Dr. Qiu is a medical doctor from Tianjin, China, who came to Canada for graduate studies in 1996. She started at the University of Manitoba, but began working at the national lab as a research scientist in 2006, working her way up to become head of the vaccine development and antiviral therapies section in the National Microbiology Laboratory’s special pathogens program.

She was also part of the team that helped develop ZMapp, a treatment for the deadly Ebola virus, which killed more than 11,000 people in West Africa between 2014 and 2016.

“My sense is this was part of a larger strategy by China to get access to our innovation system,” said Filippa Lentzos, an associate professor of science and international security at King’s College London. “It was a way for them to to find out what was going on in Canada’s premier lab.”

Initially trained as a medical doctor, Dr. Qiu graduated in 1985 from Hebei University in the coastal city of Tianjin, which lies southeast of Beijing. Dr. Qiu went on to obtain her master of science degree in immunology at Tianjin Medical University in 1990.

Her career at Canada’s top infectious disease lab in Winnipeg began in 2003, only four years after Ottawa opened this biosafety level 4 facility at the Canadian Science Centre for Human and Animal Health.

Over time, she built up a reputation for academic collaboration, particularly with China. It was welcomed by management who felt her work was helping build a name internationally for the National Microbiology Lab.

By the time Canadian officials intervened in 2018 and began investigating, documents show, Dr. Qiu was running 44 separate projects at the Winnipeg lab, an uncommonly large workload.

Her work with former colleague and microbiologist Gary Kobinger vaulted Dr. Qiu into the international spotlight. The pair developed a treatment for Ebola, one that in its first human application led to the full recovery of 27 patients with the infection during a 2014 outbreak in Liberia.

Mr. Kobinger’s career continued to soar and he is now director of the Galveston National Laboratory, a renowned biosafety level 4 facility in Texas. In 2022, he told The Globe that it was “heartbreaking” to see what had happened to his colleague. He declined to speak for this article.

“She had lost a lot of weight with all the stress. She was so convinced that this was all a misunderstanding … and she would go back to her job,” he said in 2022. “ Her career has been destroyed with all this. She was one of the top female Canadian scientists of virology and Canada has lost that.”

Over a period of 13 months, though, the Chinese-Canadian microbiologist and her biologist husband’s lives were turned upside down.

She went from being feted at Ottawa’s Rideau Hall with a Governor-General’s Award in May, 2018, to being locked out of the Winnipeg lab in July, 2019 – the high-security facility where she had made her name as a scientist in Canada. By January, 2021, she and Mr. Cheng were fired.

Last month, after being pressed into explaining what happened, the Canadian government finally disclosed the reasons for this extraordinary dismissal: CSIS found the pair had lied about and hid their co-operation with China from Ottawa.

A big question remains following their departure: Why would Dr. Qiu risk her career, including the stature associated with developing an Ebola treatment, for China?

Read the rest here...

Tyler Durden Thu, 03/21/2024 - 18:40

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You can now enter this country without a passport

Singapore has been on a larger push to speed up the flow of tourists with digital immigration clearance.

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In the fall of 2023, the city-state of Singapore announced that it was working on end-to-end biometrics that would allow travelers passing through its Changi Airport to check into flights, drop off bags and even leave and exit the country without a passport.

The latter is the most technologically advanced step of them all because not all countries issue passports with the same biometrics while immigration laws leave fewer room for mistakes about who enters the country.

Related: A country just went visa-free for visitors with any passport

That said, Singapore is one step closer to instituting passport-free travel by testing it at its land border with Malaysia. The two countries have two border checkpoints, Woodlands and Tuas, and as of March 20 those entering in Singapore by car are able to show a QR code that they generate through the government’s MyICA app instead of the passport.

A photograph captures Singapore's Tuas land border with Malaysia.

Here is who is now able to enter Singapore passport-free

The latter will be available to citizens of Singapore, permanent residents and tourists who have already entered the country once with their current passport. The government app pulls data from one's passport and shows the border officer the conditions of one's entry clearance already recorded in the system.

More Travel:

While not truly passport-free since tourists still need to link a valid passport to an online system, the move is the first step in Singapore's larger push to get rid of physical passports.

"The QR code initiative allows travellers to enjoy a faster and more convenient experience, with estimated time savings of around 20 seconds for cars with four travellers, to approximately one minute for cars with 10 travellers," Singapore's Immigration and Checkpoints Authority wrote in a press release announcing the new feature. "Overall waiting time can be reduced by more than 30% if most car travellers use QR code for clearance."

More countries are looking at passport-free travel but it will take years to implement

The land crossings between Singapore and Malaysia can get very busy — government numbers show that a new post-pandemic record of 495,000 people crossed Woodlands and Tuas on the weekend of March 8 (the day before Singapore's holiday weekend.)

Even once Singapore implements fully digital clearance at all of its crossings, the change will in no way affect immigration rules since it's only a way of transferring the status afforded by one's nationality into a digital system (those who need a visa to enter Singapore will still need to apply for one at a consulate before the trip.) More countries are in the process of moving toward similar systems but due to the varying availability of necessary technology and the types of passports issued by different countries, the prospect of agent-free crossings is still many years away.

In the U.S., Chicago's O'Hare International Airport was chosen to take part in a pilot program in which low-risk travelers with TSA PreCheck can check into their flight and pass security on domestic flights without showing ID. The UK has also been testing similar digital crossings for British and EU citizens but no similar push for international travelers is currently being planned in the U.S.

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