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TikTok sued after 10-year-old girl dies in blackout challenge — Netizen says, “Clear case of parenting mistake with blame being pushed to TikTok!”

A family in the US is suing TikTok after their 10-year-old girl choked to death while allegedly participating in one of the challenges that went viral on the social media platform. Nylah Anderson died after spending five days in an intensive care unit. Her family found her in her bedroom, unconscious, in December 2021 and rushed her to the hospital.

The girl had reportedly participated in the “blackout challenge” where individuals choke themselves until they pass out, and then regain consciousness while still on camera. Several other people, some of whom were also children, have reportedly died doing this challenge.

@drippydarion

#greenscreen These kids could’ve had a great life but now their gone forever RIP to all of them😂🥺benadryl #blackout #rip

♬ dont talk x who got you cryin like that – MASN

Nylah’s mother, Tawainna, has accused TikTok, along with ByteDance, its parent company, of negligence. 

Ms Anderson says that the platform has a “defective design” that “thrust” the challenge in front of a young girl. 

She wrote in her complaint, “Algorithm determined that the deadly blackout challenge was well-tailored and likely to be of interest to 10-year-old Nylah Anderson and she died as a result.”

“It is time that these dangerous challenges come to an end so that other families don’t experience the heartbreak that we live every day,” she added.

The family’s lawsuit also says that “social media superpowers like the TikTok defendants have seized the opportunity presented by the digital wild west to manipulate and control the behavior of vulnerable children to maximize attention dedicated to their social media platforms and thus maximize revenues and profits, all while shirking any safety responsibilities whatsoever.”

Responses to the lawsuit on The Straits Times Facebook page have been mixed, with some commenters warning against the dangers of social media.

One netizen blamed “the lack of common sense.”

However, some said that the girl’s parents were at fault. 

 

/TISG

Another TikTok ‘Devious Licks’ challenge, youth walks away with gantry barrier

Despite CNA apologising for mismatching countries & flags for SEA Games medal tally table, netizens have a field day

Netizens on Reddit had a field day in the comments section, despite CNA apologising for broadcasting a SEA Games medal tally table that mismatched nine out of 11 countries’ names and flags.

Out of the 11 countries, only Myanmar and Timor-Leste were matched correctly. The erroneous table was shown for less than half a minute and then corrected for subsequent updates.

In a Facebook post on Thursday (May 12), CNA said: “We made a mistake in our SEA Games medal tally table which aired on Asia First on CNA at around 7:50am this morning. The names of the countries participating in the SEA Games and their respective national flags were mismatched.

The error was on air for about 25 seconds. This error was corrected for subsequent SEA Games updates during Asia First, which included an on-air apology. We deeply regret this happened. It falls short of the professional standards that we expect of ourselves and we extend a sincere apology to our viewers. We will strive to do better.”

Despite their apology, netizens of Reddit were rather unforgiving in their comments. Here’s what they said:

Last year, CNA published a commentary on Wednesday (Jun 30) that many netizens, especially females, were not too happy about.

The commentary was originally entitled “Are university-educated women in Singapore asking too much for marriage?” and was later amended with the word “No” at the end.

Freelance writer Tracy Lee noted that based on the latest Population Census, 8.7 per cent of women from the ages of 40 to 49 were single in 2020, while more than twice that figure or 18.7 per cent of women in the same age bracket, who had gone to university were single. 

“A figure that was roughly the same 10 years ago,” she noted.

Netizens slam CNA piece that asks if university-educated women in Singapore are asking too much for marriage

‘More foreign workers required’ — Singapore Business Federation on SG’s manpower shortage

The Singapore Business Federation (SBF) issued a policy paper on Thursday (May 12) recommending steps to support the needs of the services sector, including reclassifying different businesses within the sector. This would allow them to have more foreign workers in order to fight the manpower shortage.

The steps would enable businesses to have the workers they need in the light of reopened borders and the resumption of tourism, social, and business activities. “There is an urgent need to recalibrate manpower supply in the Services industries to enable companies to operate at optimal capacity, so as to deliver the level of service that Singaporeans and visitors expect,” SBF said in the policy paper.

The SBF also recommended that personnel who worked in pandemic-related jobs be moved to the services sector. 

“As the demand for temporary jobs relating to the enforcement of safe management measures tapers, there is scope for workers to be intentionally redirected to the lifestyle services with close coordination between the agencies hiring these workers and NTUC’s e2i, and businesses tapping on various government schemes to offer good jobs in adjacent customer-facing roles,” it said.

It added that in the past two years, companies in food services, retail, hotels, nightlife, waste management, cleaning, security, landscaping, and other facilities upkeep services have coped during the Covid-19 pandemic and are now “positioned to emerge.”

Three critical success factors, developed in close consultation with trade associations and chambers (TACs) were outlined in the paper, namely “(A) Talent – a diverse pool of players and intentional line-up selection, (B) Teamwork – a synergistic effort to improve manpower utilisation and allocation, and (C) Rules – A more targeted and nuanced manpower policy.”

The paper said that while manpower needs are expected to be met more fully as the country adjusts to living with Covid, this is not entirely true for the services sector.

It said, “The reality on the ground is a record rise in job vacancies with the ramp-up in economic activity, but met with difficulties in filling job vacancies, which reflects the growing mismatch of skills and attitudes in the labour market.” 

“To maintain Singapore’s reputation as an efficient and vibrant business and leisure destination of choice, the services industries need access to suitable and sufficient manpower to support their operations and even as they double down on automating processes and redesigning jobs, businesses still need to be able to recruit and retain sufficient local and foreign manpower.”

SBF is happy to be able to work with fellow TACs to put together this policy paper. We look forward to working with fellow TACs, our member companies, NTUC and government agencies to follow-up on the key actions outlined in the paper,” Mr Lam Yi Young, the CEO of SBF, said.

SBF’s policy paper may be found here. /TISG

MAS’ Ravi Menon: Immigration and the intake of foreign workers, ‘one of the more effective ways’ to address workforce shortage

Morning Digest, May 14

Woman screams & kicks young boy in public at Boon Keng, netizen says, “If she can do this in public, imagine what happens behind closed doors”

 

Photo: FB screengrab/Complaint Singapore

A video of a woman screaming and kicking a young boy in public along McNair Road got netizens concerned about a possible case of child abuse, urging the witness to report the incident promptly.

“The way he flinched looks like he gets hit on a regular (basis),” wrote Facebook page Complaint Singapore member Anama O’Reilly, referring to the boy who was screamed at and kicked by a woman.

Read more here.


Woodlands HDB executive flat selling for over S$1M, Netizen says, ‘Then town area HDB flats S$2M or more. How can my children afford it?’

 

Photo: Taken from Google Maps

After hearing that a Housing and Development Board (HDB) executive flat in Woodlands recently sold for over a million dollars, parents expressed concern that their children would never have the means to afford housing in the future.

HDB resale prices continued on their upward trajectory since 2020, with one flat in Woodlands reselling for S$1,040,000, the highest price of its kind in the last six months.

Read more here.


 

“No wonder items received damaged/broken” — Netizen witnessed courier staff tossing parcels around at void deck

 

Photo: FB screengrab/Complaint Singapore

A group of men were caught on camera tossing items around while seated across a void deck, sparking concern in the manner they were sorting out the parcels for a courier service company.

No wonder items received damaged/broken,” wrote Facebook page Complaint Singapore member Jasmine Kaur on Thursday (May 12).

Read more here.


Woman left family for guy who’s back in jail, asks: How to mend family relationship without listening to “I told you so” from them?

 

Photo: freepik/DCStudio (for illustration purposes only)

A woman wrote on the NUS Whispers Facebook page on Wednesday (May 11) that her family had been “super against” her relationship with a man with a criminal past, to the point of “kicking me out of the family because they wanted nothing to do with anyone with a criminal record.”

And despite her attempts to explain that he had changed and deserved a second chance, her father would say things like “it’s possible for people to change, but people rarely do” and “it takes a different kind of screw up to make a mistake to land you in jail.” The poster wrote that she made “a big stink” by calling her family names, and finally, left. However, she added that what her father said has come to pass, and the man is now back in jail.

Read more here.


 

‘Crazy Rich Asians’ opened doors for Asian actors — Michelle Yeoh

 

Photo: IG scgreengrab/michelleyeoh_official

Michelle Yeoh, the grande dame of Asian actresses in Hollywood, told Variety that it was the success of 2018’s Crazy Rich Asians that has opened the doors for her fellow Asian actors, especially for comedians.

At one point, she wondered what the effect would be if the film, was one of the few in Hollywood to feature an all-Asian cast. Crazy Rich Asians went on, however, to earn more than US$200 million (SGD$280 million) in box offices worldwide.

Read more here.


Li Ka-shing, Hong Kong’s richest man, to open Singapore office

Another person from the world’s ultra-wealthy set is starting an office in Singapore. This time, it’s Hong Kong business magnate Li Ka-Shing, whose 2022 net worth is said to be US$36.2 billion (SGD50.5 billion).

Li was listed as the 30th richest person in the world in 2019, and last year took pole position as the richest person in Hong Kong. He operates the largest health and beauty retailer in Europe and Asia and is the leading port investor in the world.

But the tycoon has evidently not stopped his expansion plans. Bloomberg reports that he is opening an office in Singapore as he aims to discover new deals as well as support portfolio companies trying to expand in Asia.

It is Horizons Ventures, Li’s private investment firm, that’s opening a new Singapore office, the first to be established outside Hong Kong.

Bloomberg reported that senior investment manager Jacky Li and portfolio curator Jeffrey Ho are part of the Horizon staff to be based in Singapore.

Li is just the latest among the ultra-wealthy to set up an office in Singapore, where low taxes and a path to permanent residency remain highly attractive. The list includes Google co-founder Sergey Brin, the world’s 9th richest tycoon, and UK inventor James Dyson. Hedge fund billionaire Roy Dalio, the founder of Bridgewater Associates, also opened a family office in Singapore.

Many choose to set up a family office, which is a private wealth management firm that caters to ultra-high-net-worth individuals — people who have $1 million or more in liquid financial assets. 

Such firms manage the investments and finances of well-heeled individuals or families and offer consultancy services on varied aspects of finance including taxes, insurance, donations, and wealth transfer.

Several high-profile investors are choosing Singapore over Hong Kong, where Covid-related travel restrictions and tighter national security laws have made the city less attractive. But Bloomberg says that Horizons claims neither of these reasons is why it’s starting an office in Singapore, touting the city’s plusses as a hub for investors and expansion as the reason instead.

The report quotes Horizons portfolio curator Chris Liu as saying, “We have about 23 investments across the region, and operating out of this hub actually becomes pretty important because everyone is here. Building a hub out of Singapore and helping our companies create and identify strategic opportunities and partnerships in the South East Asian region makes total sense.”

“Connecting into this region, it makes more sense to be in Singapore than Hong Kong. A lot of our co-investors are in this part of the world rather than in the greater China region,” he added. /TISG

Why millions of dollars are pouring into Singapore, especially from China’s wealthy

Read also:

Razer partners with 3 Group, raises US$50-100M from Li Ka-Shing’s Horizons Ventures – Singapore News 

One of Asia’s richest man, Li Ka-Shing, hit hard in UK polls – Singapore News 

Crazy Rich Asians spinoff in the pipeline

When Crazy Rich Asians hit the big screen in 2018, filmgoers, particularly in Asia, were thrilled that finally, a show which depicts diversity could so charmingly woo audiences all over the world. Capitalizing on the success of the movie, a new spinoff film adapted from Kevin Kwan’s book is now in the pipeline focusing on the characters of Astrid Young Teo and Charlie Wu played by Gemma Chan and Harry Shui Jr.

The screenplay for the spinoff will be written by Jason Kim and is a separate movie from the Crazy Rich Asians sequel itself, though it is loosely based on Kwan’s second book entitled Crazy Rich Girlfriend.

Kim was nominated for an Emmy for producing the HBO hit Barry, and is also known for his work on Girls.

The storyline for the spinoff will revolve around Astrid reconnecting with Charlie. Charlie was her first love, and they had been engaged, but Astrid’s parents had broken them up as Charlie was not seen as suitable husband material.

The movie Crazy Rich Asians was a box office hit, raking in $238.5 worldwide, and is also the first Hollywood film since the Joy Luck Club in 1993 to have an all Asian cast. The beautiful and intriguing Chan was one of the most compelling performers, and her character quickly built a steady fan following.

Post Crazy Rich Asians, Chan has gone on to star in films like Raya and the Last Dragon, Captain Marvel and Eternals. She will be seen next in Olivia Wilde’s thriller Don’t Worry Darling in September.

In the meantime, fans of the book and movie can keenly anticipate how the spinoff will go as Astrid Teo as well as Charlie Wu’s character unfolds and evolves.

No date has been slated for the release of both the sequel and the spin-off as of now.


The post Crazy Rich Asians spinoff in the pipeline appeared first on The Independent News.

‘Crazy Rich Asians’ mystery estate, owned by Johor’s Crown Prince, in talks of becoming luxury housing development

 

‘Crazy Rich Asians’ opened doors for Asian actors — Michelle Yeoh

Michelle Yeoh, the grande dame of Asian actresses in Hollywood, told Variety that it was the success of 2018’s Crazy Rich Asians that has opened the doors for her fellow Asian actors, especially for comedians. 

At one point, she wondered what the effect would be if the film, was one of the few in Hollywood to feature an all-Asian cast. Crazy Rich Asians went on, however, to earn more than US$200 million (SGD$280 million) in box offices worldwide.

Yeoh, 59, who most recently starred in the hit movie Everything Everywhere All at Once, was interviewed in Variety on the occasion of Asian American Pacific Islander Month in the United States. 

The Malaysian actress said, “It was a big moment for us, but looking back, what if it didn’t work? Would it have set our community back many years? A lot was riding on the success of the film, and a lot of Asian leading roles would not have been greenlit. Because that’s showbiz.

Fortunately, it was about great storytelling.”

She praised Jon Chu, the film’s director, for doing “an amazing job of telling this story, which was so relatable and transcends just Asian casts. It sets up the tone that shows that people do love to see leading Asian men and women and to hear their experiences. So, it did change a lot of things.”

She noted that her Crazy Rich Asians co-stars, especially comedians Ronnie Chieng and Jimmy O. Yang, who are finding success in their stand-up comedy shows.

“And to see them be respected and loved for what they have been trying to do so well for so long, but not given the same kind of accolades, as they now so rightly deserve, it’s so great.

We can’t afford to go backward in time,” she added.

Last month, Yeoh’s co-star in Everything Everywhere All at Once, Ke Huy Quan, said that it was seeing Crazy Rich Asians that inspired him to return to acting after a decades-long hiatus.

Quan, 51, had risen to fame in the 1980s with roles in Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom and The Goonies. In the years that followed, Quan worked as an assistant director for Wong Kar-Wai and choreographed fight scenes for different Asian films, but hardly appeared onscreen.

And then Crazy Rich Asians came along.

“For a long time I thought I was at peace with it, but something was missing, and I really didn’t know what it was until ‘Crazy Rich Asians’ came out. I saw my fellow Asian actors up on the screen, and I had serious FOMO (fear of missing out) because I wanted to be up there with them,” he told Indiewire in April.

Quan earned rave reviews for his part in Everything Everywhere All at Once, where he played Yeoh’s husband. /TISG

Michelle Yeoh almost gets killed doing stunt with Jackie Chan, she said ‘I didn’t want to just play the damsel in distress’ 

Stories you might’ve missed, May 13

Loud noise from HDB neighbour for about a dozen years, woman says authorities could not do anything

 

Photo: TikTok screengrab/ myneighbourfromhellsg

The problems of one Hougang woman concerning the noise her neighbour has made for about a dozen years have been documented on TikTok, shared on Facebook, and even made it to the news.

And yet, she says her problems are ongoing, with the latest clip of the noise from her neighbour’s unit uploaded on Wednesday (May 11).

Read more here.


 

Tay Ping Hui tells fans he’s just an actor, stop the obsession, stalking & suicide threats, pay more attention to those around you, especially your parents

 

Photo: FB screengrab/Tay Ping Hui

Actor Tay Ping Hui said that a male fan attempted to see him recently and is probably the same one who, in 2016, wrote a suicide note that had bloodstains on it. The male fan, pretending to be a graduate from the same school as the actor, reached out to Tay’s friends and tried to get a basketball game going.

“Basically he wanted to know when we would play and then appear at the same place,” Tay, 51, told Shin Min Daily News in an article published on May 10 (Tuesday). The actor, who is known to be direct and outspoken, made a direct appeal to the fan, calling his actions a “waste of time.”

Read more here.


 

Pritam Singh promises to keep working on his ‘limited conversational Mandarin’

 

Photo: FB screengrab/Pritam Singh

After receiving a boost from a longtime Eunos resident to whom he spoke in Mandarin, Workers’ Party chief and Leader of the Opposition Pritam Singh said he will “keep working” on learning the language.

Mr Singh has made speeches and appeals in Mandarin and has been caught on video singing in Hokkien. He is of Punjabi ancestry and shared in an Instagram post last year that Punjabi is his two young daughters’ mother tongue. But the 45-year-old WP leader isn’t done with learning yet, based on his Facebook post on Wednesday night (May 11).

Read more here.


 

Woman left family for guy with criminal record, who’s back in jail, asks advice: ‘How to mend relationship with family without hearing “I told you so”?’

 

Photo: Unsplash/Helena Lopes (for illustration purposes only).

A woman wrote on the NUS Whispers Facebook page on Wednesday (May 11) that her family had been “super against” her relationship with a man with a criminal past, to the point of “kicking me out of the family because they wanted nothing to do with anyone with a criminal record.”

And despite her attempts to explain that he had changed and deserved a second chance, her father would say things like “it’s possible for people to change, but people rarely do” and “it takes a different kind of screw up to make a mistake to land you in jail.” The poster wrote that she made “a big stink” by calling her family names, and finally, left. However, she added that what her father said has come to pass, and the man is now back in jail.

Read more here.


 

Ong Ye Kung: COVID-19 cases rising, public express concern if it will trigger changes to Safe Management Measures (SMMs)

 

Photo: FB screengrab/Ong Ye Kung

Despite Covid-19 community cases in Singapore doubling in a week, from 1,638 cases on May 4 to 3,890 on May 11, Health Minister Ong Ye Kung said on Thursday (May 12) that this is not a new wave.

“We have been seeing an uptick in Covid-19 cases in recent days. Some members of the public have written to me expressing concerns, while others wonder if it will trigger changes to Safe Management Measures (SMMs),” he said in a Facebook post.

Read more here.


Woman left family for guy who’s back in jail, asks: How to mend family relationship without listening to “I told you so” from them?

A woman wrote on the NUS Whispers Facebook page on Wednesday (May 11) that her family had been “super against” her relationship with a man with a criminal past, to the point of “kicking me out of the family because they wanted nothing to do with anyone with a criminal record.”

And despite her attempts to explain that he had changed and deserved a second chance, her father would say things like “it’s possible for people to change, but people rarely do” and “it takes a different kind of screw up to make a mistake to land you in jail.” The poster wrote that she made “a big stink” by calling her family names, and finally, left. However, she added that what her father said has come to pass, and the man is now back in jail.

She asked for advice from netizens, writing, “I broke up with that boy and am now living alone. How do I mend my relationship with my family without hearing all the ‘I told you so’ from my family?”

Would be advice dispensers, including NUS Professor Ben Leong, who often weighs in on posts on the page, said that there is very likely no way to avoid the “I told you so.”

“You should thicken your skin,” wrote one commenter.

Many told her that apologizing to her parents is step one.

Some assured her that her parents love her and have never given up on her.

A number of commenters told her to “just go home.”

Some netizens told her she had not been wrong to give someone a second chance.

/TISG

Man shouted “Stop it!” to his girlfriend’s sexual advances, now she doesn’t want to see him anymore, asks advice: “I’m not sure what to do”

MAS imposes $100K civil penalty on woman for false trading

The Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS) said on 11 May that it has imposed a civil
penalty of $100,000 on Mdm Tan Su Lan for false trading in the shares of Aspial Corporation Limited (ACL) and Far East Orchard Limited (FEOL).

MAS said Mdm Tan had pledged ACL and FEOL shares as collateral for share margin purposes. For three consecutive days in May 2016, Mdm Tan purchased shares in ACL and FEOL near or during the close of the days’ trading sessions, resulting in her purchases artificially raising and setting the closing prices of these shares on all three days. As the closing prices of these shares had an impact on the value of her collateral, her collateral value increased correspondingly.

MAS said she had executed her trades in a manner that was likely to create a false appearance with respect to the price of the shares and was reckless about whether the trades would be likely to create such a false appearance. In doing so, she contravened the Securities and Futures Act. Mdm Tan admitted liability for her actions and paid MAS the civil penalty.

A civil penalty action is not a criminal action and does not attract criminal sanctions. MAS said the civil penalty regime is designed to complement criminal sanctions and provide a nuanced approach to combat market misconduct.

Under the Securities and Futures Act 2001 (SFA), MAS may enter into an agreement with any person for that person to pay, with or without admission of liability, a civil penalty for contravening the SFA.

The civil penalty may be up to three times the amount of the profit gained or loss avoided by that person as a result of the contravention, or $2 million, subject to a minimum of $50,000 (if the person is not a corporation) or $100,000 (if the person is a corporation).

Ms Loo Siew Yee, Assistant Managing Director (Policy, Payments & Financial Crime), MAS, said, “Trading behaviour that has the effect of distorting prices adversely affect the fair and orderly functioning of our capital markets. MAS will take firm action against participants who are reckless as to whether their trades are likely to create a false appearance in the prices of securities.”

Mdm Tan is the founder of Lee Hwa Jewellery which is now being helmed by her younger son Koh Wee Seng. Wee Seng is the CEO of jewellery retailer Aspial, which also owns the Lee Hwa, Goldheart, Niessing and Citigems brands.

He has been named as one of the richest man in Singapore who just missed Forbes list of Singapore’s richest. Wee Seng’s older brother is budget hotelier Koh Wee Meng. He made No. 32 on the Singapore rich list in 2019.


The post MAS imposes $100K civil penalty on woman for false trading appeared first on The Independent News.