Living In The Uk-life Of An Immigrant (part 3) - Travel (929) - Nairaland
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| Re: Living In The Uk-life Of An Immigrant (part 3) by Zahra29: 1:53pm On Jan 20 |
RodgersAkpafu:Remember that embassies have inviolability and so the Met, MI5 etc cannot enter without permission from the Head of the mission - so they could feasibly run any operation on site without being found out easily. One of the mitigating measures that was mooted by UK officials is re-routing the cables if necessary (at what cost?!!!!).... sigh....anyways hopefully it won't come to all that. I'm sure the Chinese have zero interest in our financial data, fingers crossed. |
| Re: Living In The Uk-life Of An Immigrant (part 3) by HustlaOfLagos: 1:57pm On Jan 20 |
Zahra29:I think a lot of EUs problem has to do with welfare spending and encouraging people to not be productive enough. A 2nd problem is over taxation which removes the incentive for people who aspire to do more to be productive. Third issue is what I will call EU risk transference syndrome where they transfer all their problems and risk to the US to solve which tethers them to the US and makes them go along with whatever bad decision the US makes so as to enjoy the benefits of the transference syndrome. The risk transference approach is a pretty bad one and is made pretty obvious under DJT. UK having left the EU also does not help things .. Also, why mention Russia? I thought they were lumped together with China? |
| Re: Living In The Uk-life Of An Immigrant (part 3) by Zahra29: 2:08pm On Jan 20 |
HustlaOfLagos:Agree, in the peaceful (in western Europe) years following WW2, many EU countries redirected a lot of their spending from defence to welfare. For example the NHS was built in 1948. Our spending ratio needs to be rebalanced as we are now in a different world era. I mentioned Russia simply because they also have nuclear weapons. However they are reliant on their allies like China, Iran and NK to boost their military capability. |
| Re: Living In The Uk-life Of An Immigrant (part 3) by HustlaOfLagos: 2:21pm On Jan 20 |
Zahra29:More or better alliances will need to be formed. Canada moving swiftly in that regard, it seems ![]() |
| Re: Living In The Uk-life Of An Immigrant (part 3) by 4ever1: 6:07pm On Jan 20 |
Very soon this people will look for another set of riff raffls to come and defend their country Used and discard country |
| Re: Living In The Uk-life Of An Immigrant (part 3) by HustlaOfLagos: 7:26pm On Jan 20 |
Very funny videos emerging from the World Economic Forum ![]() |
| Re: Living In The Uk-life Of An Immigrant (part 3) by jedisco(m): 9:10pm On Jan 20*. Modified: 4:16am On Jan 23 |
HustlaOfLagos:The sinophobe narrative is beginning to fall. Fact is some of these narratives are not impossible. Most modern electronic devices with a camera or microphone which can be reverse engineered/hacked to take photos or record surreptitiously and send these back with little or no trace. Most of these 'hacks' are purposeful backdoors tech companies create and give to select government agencies. One would wonder the practicality of doing this on a widescale though. If highly targeted, its possible This critisicm comes from two places 1. A place of paranoia. If these clandestine operations have been done by you to others, every moving cockroach becomes a suspect. 2. Information overload to drive a narrative. Manytimes putting so much information out there muddies the water. It not clear what's true and what's fabricated. This creates information overload/paralysis among recipients. We saw this with the GEJ government in Nigeria who sat on huge sums the Chinese afforded due to loads of warnings from western agencies. In the west, people who want to buy EVs might decide to 'err on the side of caution' and buy known brands. Fortunately or unfortunately for them, the Chinese brands are becoming very good and cheap which makes that decision all the more difficult. |
| Re: Living In The Uk-life Of An Immigrant (part 3) by HustlaOfLagos: 9:14pm On Jan 20 |
jedisco: ![]() |
| Re: Living In The Uk-life Of An Immigrant (part 3) by jedisco(m): 9:24pm On Jan 20 |
Goodenoch:With the much of the UK I know, I doubt this would have been approved if there was a demonstrable security concern that could not be easily achieved elsewhere. It's manytimes just a smokescreen to drive a political narrative. Similar to the Huawei issue where the UK didn't see any concern after checks but went ahead to kowtow to the U.S and restrict a budding Chinese company. Remember 'dem migrants are eating our cats'? Similar talk here |
| Re: Living In The Uk-life Of An Immigrant (part 3) by Goke7: 9:48pm On Jan 20 |
jedisco:😂 na person wey Dey manufacture his or her own thing go sell im market e no go get time for Cho Cho Cho! Oyingbo market no know who no come market |
| Re: Living In The Uk-life Of An Immigrant (part 3) by RodgersAkpafu: 10:03pm On Jan 20 |
4ever1: ![]() Riff raffs that are ready to fight for this country plenty Just watch and see lmaooo |
| Re: Living In The Uk-life Of An Immigrant (part 3) by Zahra29: 10:16pm On Jan 20 |
MI5 to move cables away from China mega-embassy over spy fears The security services have drawn up plans to relocate critical internet cables away from China’s new mega-embassy in London as part of measures to reduce the risk of espionage.... ...This is expected to include the supervised relocation of fibre-optic cables that carry financial and internet data between the City of London and Canary Wharf. https://archive.ph/20260120200543/https://www.thetimes.com/uk/politics/article/china-embassy-internet-cables-london-cpg8gqdg5 Shows that national security concerns were valid and not just manufactured hysteria, and fortunately it appears that the government is prepared to act. Win- win for the UK....we can press forward with expanding our trading relationship with China, without compromising our sensitive assets. And now let's wait and see how long it takes China to approve the UK's planning application for a larger embassy in Beijing 😄 |
| Re: Living In The Uk-life Of An Immigrant (part 3) by jedisco(m): 12:04am On Jan 21*. Modified: 2:16am On Jan 21 |
RodgersAkpafu:You sound quite similar to a cousin who told me all ladies who wear trousers will go to hell. I asked him why and he mumbled something similar to the above. Finally told him if that was his vision of heaven, I don't want to be part of his heaven. RodgersAkpafu:Hehe... I thought Trump was your favourite- the one who'd help you fight Indians... Well, seems he didn't just stop with Indians as every sensible person thought. |
| Re: Living In The Uk-life Of An Immigrant (part 3) by Goodenoch: 2:20am On Jan 21*. Modified: 2:35am On Jan 21 |
Zahra29:Yes this was in the article I posted as well: ‘It is understood that the full plans were well known to the security services as part of the planning process, now led by the communities secretary, Steve Reed. Insiders add that even though the Royal Mint Court site is roughly between London’s two financial districts in the City and Canary Wharf, the concerns about cabling are exaggerated. “Traffic can be re-rerouted and, if necessary, cabling removed,” an official said.’ Which is why all my comments referenced risks being identified and mitigated. The idea that such an obvious thing was visible to everyone and their granny but the government still went ahead and granted approval without assessing it was not a real risk or could be mitigated effectively, is what was and continues to be, hysteria. |
| Re: Living In The Uk-life Of An Immigrant (part 3) by WanderingChild: 5:40am On Jan 21 |
Some Crazy Observations Introduction We had an interesting discussion today with our patent attorney who stylishly revealed to us the long-term goal of patents. A few years ago, I read the book titled Capitalism Without Capital: the rise of the intangible economy by Stian Westlake and Jonathan Haskel and the summary was humbling – wealth is no longer tangible but intangible. Basically, the way to generate wealth in today’s world and in the future is by IP and owning a business. Via IP you can build a defensible and an attack mechanism over a product, process or name which enables you to extract rent from anyone who wants to leverage the IP. What was shocking from our discussion was that Howard Lutnick, the current US Commerce Secretary holds over 400 patents. Yes, you heard me. The guy working on those tariffs and responsible for trade within and without the US holds a staggering number of patents. Holding this amount of patent is not the end, there is an end game and that is IP-Feudalism. Having this number of patents means Lutnick can rent the patent collection to a hedge fund or PE or some other boutique businesses focused on IP infringements. These businesses then go on the offensive looking for anyone who has infringed and sue them to bankruptcy. This is the future that is being built. Lutnick does not want to compete with Google and Apple and Nvidia and Amazon who are playing the game of Techno-Feudalism (credit to Yanis Varoufakis), rather, he wants to play the game of IP-Feudalism. What is even humbling is that you do not need to build or design the product for which the patent is being filed for (I know this for utility patents, not sure of others). What is the implication? Most US patents (utility and plant based) give you exclusivity for 20 years (e.g. 2020 – 2040) and 15 years for design patents. This means that no one can wake up and just implement some design or concept that infringes on a patent within its validity period and think they can sell into the US markets – you will be sued to bankruptcy. Via owning a business, the game being played is the game of valuation. When you approach investors to raise $X, investors depending on the round get greedy and want to put your pre-raise valuation at say $2X - $5X. This implies that for a $10M raise, the business has a post raise valuation of $30M - $60M. When will this business become a unicorn? However, imagine raising $100M at $1B pre-raise (or $10M at $100M - $150M pre-raise), that automatically puts that business at the unicorn status opening crazy opportunities for it. Revenue will come but valuation now matters more at the beginning. That unicorn status gives you access to any tech major for partnerships. It gives you crazy access to cheap credit and makes it easier for you to scale and become a monopoly. There is no doubt that the next subsequent raises will be $0.5B - $1B at $10B, $1B - $5B at $150B and $5B - $10B at $1T and then IPO where access to funds becomes “unlimited”. As crazy as this sounds that is the game being played by all the majors. OpenAI is over $0.5T, SpaceX is estimated at $0.8T, etc. The investments put in by VCs early on are now worth crazy sums because the valuation is at a crazy level. This is why Tesla, Apple, Nvidia, etc with their appalling book value and revenue are worth trillions. The game is valuation. The implication? Unfortunately, raising crazy amounts today is only possible in the US and is a network thing. The easiest network is via an MBA at one of the “legacy or elite” universities - M7, T10 or T15. These are schools where family office operators are coming to get the stamp of the school and go on to inherit family businesses. These are the places where networks can be built with crazy RoI. These are the places that give you direct access to Silicon Valley or New York finance players. Underlying factors The current administration despite their crazy display is very friendly towards software-based patents because both the commerce secretary and the US PTO administrator (undersecretary for commerce) both worked together professionally, are friends and are building a crazy portfolio of patents. In fact, the Inter Parties Review (IPR) that big companies regularly used to kill patents at the US PTO has essentially been killed by the new administrator. Previously, big companies like Microsoft and hedge funds could spend $250K litigating against your patent to the Patent Trial and Appeal Board (PTAB) where such litigation is meant to just kill the patent progress. The current US PTO administrator, John Squires has now killed that. In fact, he adjudicates on appeals and by the wordings of the law, his opinion on whether to take a case forward or not cannot be litigated against. He has rejected all the last six of such filings. Another worrying factor is China. They have the largest trove of AI and software patents in the world and the gap between China and the US in patent ownership is widening at an alarming rate. To limit this, US PTO is being primed to be more favourably disposed to software-based patents. Recent appeal rulings against 101 rejections from examiners have evidenced this. Summary It is an interesting time, but it is crucial to understand how the game is being played right before our very eyes. We cannot idly watch another wealth bifurcation happen again (Covid was one, the 2008 financial crisis recovery was another, etc.) simply because we claim to be over worked or poor or unable to access what needs to be done. We must also note that the wealth bifurcation happening now is at orders of magnitude that excessively increase wealth for the already rich and will make it very difficult for the poor to even survive. This is because valuations generate crazy wealth which allows these wealthy folks to put huge pressure on the cost of living making it almost impossible for previously ok people to survive leading to gentrification. We must have a game plan to escape. |
| Re: Living In The Uk-life Of An Immigrant (part 3) by justwise(mod): 6:25am On Jan 21 |
| Re: Living In The Uk-life Of An Immigrant (part 3) by Cyberknight: 6:34am On Jan 21 |
Zahra29:At the bolded, hopefully someone with a pulse within the UK government made it clear to China that this should come almost immediately after the UK's own approval or else they'll withdraw the UK one. |
| Re: Living In The Uk-life Of An Immigrant (part 3) by RodgersAkpafu: 6:52am On Jan 21*. Modified: 8:25am On Jan 21 |
jedisco:🤡 🤡 Lmao ![]() Apparently you haven't cured yourself of the "i must defend a jeet" virus Well done 👏 Talmbout "helping me fight them" like i give a f.... bout them. ![]() I told you this was what they will face, and they are bearing the huge brunt of the seeds they sowed, (by claiming assistant white supremacist and supporting a wicked supremacist) thinking they were the "special migrants" and the rest were inferior migrants How market now? lmao ![]() Give Vivek a hug when you see him ![]() He is going through a lot I don't even see their rantings anymore ![]() Esp on X their body don calm down (they better join the majority within their community to NEVER vote like that again) "We are the highly skilled and the others are low skilled" my Black rear Next time, everybody will know their place and the reality abd not align with forces that are clearly against their interests If anything, those who may want to support reform here are watching a prelude to what will be the case if they make the same mistake here Having said that, I will pretend I didnt read whatever you were trying to write up in paragraph 1 Even both parties know they are adversaries There is a reason why china is paranoid and is heavy on censoring media esp western platforms And rhat is why Xi in particular is very wary of the Chinese returnees from the west. But no, they are NOT adversaries 🤡 🤡 Una go dey alright |
| Re: Living In The Uk-life Of An Immigrant (part 3) by Diplomacy2020: 7:49am On Jan 21 |
Can you imagine how inhumane Nigerians are? They are killing people but someone is interested in dirty December. Omo Thoma Hobbes was referring to Nigerians I believe. So we should keep quite and pretend that all is well and terrorists will continue killing people because you want to still be coming back for dirty December. Nigerians are impossible[/quote] |
| Re: Living In The Uk-life Of An Immigrant (part 3) by RodgersAkpafu: 7:55am On Jan 21 |
Diplomacy2020:Would you care to further give us some context to this, because this was quite a curve ball |
| Re: Living In The Uk-life Of An Immigrant (part 3) by Goke7: 9:40am On Jan 21 |
justwise: wahala America don buy market no be smalldem go feel am! |
| Re: Living In The Uk-life Of An Immigrant (part 3) by HustlaOfLagos: 10:18am On Jan 21 |
jedisco:Best thing you can do is to ignore that attention seeking child else you are at the risk of reducing your IQ with its childish antics ![]() |
| Re: Living In The Uk-life Of An Immigrant (part 3) by justwise(mod): 11:42am On Jan 21 |
Goke7:He will desperately start one so as to avoid election…giving him longer time to stay in office. |
| Re: Living In The Uk-life Of An Immigrant (part 3) by Zahra29: 11:50am On Jan 21 |
Goodenoch:Previously there were only oblique mentions of possible measures, including potentially moving the cables "if necessary" - and given the significant cost and disruption involved, this wasn't guaranteed. Reed, Jarvis et co (understandably) didn't want to be drawn into the details of any plans. This is the first time there has been confirmation that the government will go ahead with moving the cables - perhaps disclosed now to allay public concern and stave off impending legal challenges on the decision. |
| Re: Living In The Uk-life Of An Immigrant (part 3) by Zahra29: 11:54am On Jan 21 |
Cyberknight:"Labour government left the chat" 😬 Lol...I personally wouldn't put money on KS giving giving Xi that (or any) ultimatum. |
| Re: Living In The Uk-life Of An Immigrant (part 3) by Goke7: 2:53pm On Jan 21 |
justwise:Dude never believed in democracy, Americans were just dumb yes I mean too dumb to have him in the White House. Remember he had to be chased out in 2020 after the January 6 royal rumble 😂 in the Capitol and 2029 may not be too different |
| Re: Living In The Uk-life Of An Immigrant (part 3) by lavida001: 3:15pm On Jan 21 |
RodgersAkpafu:The level of espionage China will carry out will be shocking and out of this world to them. Nothing will happen after the scandal uk is an ant compare to modern day elephant china. |
| Re: Living In The Uk-life Of An Immigrant (part 3) by lavida001: 3:34pm On Jan 21 |
HustlaOfLagos:No allow benefit boys see this post o |
| Re: Living In The Uk-life Of An Immigrant (part 3) by lavida001: 3:47pm On Jan 21 |
WanderingChild:I always look forward to your post and books recommendation. I enjoy the capitalism without capital one. Kindly recommend more books if you can 🙏🏿 |
| Re: Living In The Uk-life Of An Immigrant (part 3) by RodgersAkpafu: 3:52pm On Jan 21 |
lavida001:OK saar We hear you UK is "ant" China is "elephant" 🤡 🤡 |
| Re: Living In The Uk-life Of An Immigrant (part 3) by RodgersAkpafu: 3:53pm On Jan 21 |
Zahra29:Right But a neophyte is claiming otherwise up there lol China na "elephant" |
| Re: Living In The Uk-life Of An Immigrant (part 3) by Raalsalghul: 8:24pm On Jan 21 |
RodgersAkpafu:The question in bold you'll probably ask yourself again in five years time when Nigel Farage is the P.M. ![]() If there's one thing I've learnt from history is that humans never learn from it. They'll keep making the same mistakes time and time again. Also 'Do not underestimate the power of fools in large numbers.' |
Living In The USA - Life Of An Immigrant Part 1 • Living In The Uk-life Of An Immigrant (part 2) • Living In Canada/Life As A Canadian Immigrant Part 2 • 2 • 3 • 4
Canadian Express Entry/federal Skilled Workers Program - Connect Here Part 8 • USA Visit Visa Part 3 • Canadian Student Visa Thread Part 21
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