Where ancient traditions meet modern technology

Glenn Harvey for RoW

Where religion and technology meet

Rest of World set out to document the myriad ways that religious believers are using new technologies in their daily practices. This illustrated storybook represents a broad spectrum of themes and trends playing out across a number of religions and countries that include Hindu temples made by 3D printers to priests that dance on TikTok. READ MORE >

Apple manufacturers moved from China to Vietnam. Now they're desperate for workers

Recruiters are wooing new workers with bonuses and gifts. READ MORE >

India shuts down the internet far more than any other country

The country had 771 blackouts between 2016 and 2023, and there have been 51 so far this year. We mapped the affected areas. READ MORE >

"China's K-pop moment": Wukong's global success sparks government embrace of video games as soft power

China is changing its long-critical stance thanks to the smash hit, according to Chinese game developers and industry analysts. READ MORE >

Singapore's gig workers worry new benefits could mean lower pay

A first-in-the-region law gives gig workers injury compensation and retirement benefits. But some workers fear the higher costs will be passed on to them. READ MORE >

Dispatches from the ground 

The biggest stories in tech from the regions that we cover.

Africa
Facebook's parent company, Meta, might be in for a wave of litigation in Kenya. In September, a Kenyan court ruled that Meta — despite being a foreign entity — could be sued in Kenya for any malpractice by the company or its third-party contractors. The decision may have opened a can of worms. A few days later, the Katiba Institute, a Kenyan civil society organization, and two Ethiopian citizens took Meta to court over Facebook's algorithm promoting content that led to ethnic violence and killings during the Tigray conflict. It looks like fighting local litigation might be Meta's new reality in Kenya. — Damilare Dosunmu from Lagos

China
As China's economy slows, labor protests are on track to exceed last year's count of nearly 1,800 incidents. Many of these small-scale protests are documented online by tech-savvy factory workers. Wired highlighted a form of online dissent: In dozens of videos, Chinese social media users purporting to be Shein warehouse workers talk about grueling 11.5-hour shifts and sacrificing bathroom breaks. Although their complaints are subtle, they could intensify scrutiny on Shein, which has faced mounting pressure and new restrictions from U.S. policymakers. — Joanna Chiu from Vancouver

Latin America
Mercado Pago, the fintech arm of Argentine e-commerce giant MercadoLibre, applied for a banking license in Mexico last week. The app has offered digital payments and remittance services for years, but the license will allow it to offer savings and checking accounts, certificates of deposit, commercial loans, and mortgages. This comes at a time when the competition in Mexico's banking space has been heating up. Over the past year, at least three digital banks have been launched in Mexico, where nearly 50% of adults still don't have a bank account. — Daniela Dib from Mexico City

South Asia
More than 1,000 workers have been protesting outside Samsung's factory in the southern Indian state of Tamil Nadu since September 9, demanding wage hikes and a recognition of their union. The prolonged strike could have a detrimental impact on India's image, according to Amitabh Kant, a key architect of the government's Make in India program that hopes to boost manufacturing in the country. It's no wonder then that the Indian government wants the issues to be resolved quickly. Last week, Labor Minister Mansukh Mandaviya wrote to Tamil Nadu's chief minister calling for "an early and amicable resolution." Meanwhile, Samsung has said that their Chennai plant workers are paid nearly twice as much as workers employed in other regions.— Ananya Bhattacharya from Mumbai

Southeast Asia
YouTube is driving shopping in Southeast Asia unlike any other region in the world, according to Ajay Vidyasagar, the streaming platform's Asia-Pacific director. Users worldwide watched more than 30 billion hours of shopping-related videos on YouTube last year; in Indonesia, a majority of users watch videos to research products before purchasing them. Earlier, YouTube Shopping, in partnership with e-commerce platform Shopee, was launched in Indonesia, to be followed by Thailand and Vietnam. Creators can tag products sold on Shopee in their videos.— Rina Chandran from Bangkok

On location 

Many older gig workers have turned to online "clickwork," a type of cloudwork in which people label and annotate data to train AI systems. After the U.S., this country hosts the largest number of data workers in the world. Can you guess which one?
Andrea Hernández Briceño for RoW
Kenya
Venezuela
Vietnam

What we're reading

  • Google will invest $1 billion to build a data center in Thailand and meet growing cloud demand. (Nikkei Asia)
  • ByteDance is shutting down its music streaming service, TikTok Music. (South China Morning Post)
  • Data centers are clustering in the Mexican state of Querétaro, which locals say will strain local water supplies. (The Guardian)
  • A study on gender bias in Indian LLMs that are used in social sectors like health care and agriculture. (Digital Futures Lab)

And one more thing...

Google is serving AI-generated images of mushrooms that look nothing like the real species that people are searching for. Critics say this puts foragers — who use search engines to figure out what is safe to eat — at risk, and that Google should do more to flag and remove these misleading images.

Thank you for reading! Please forward this to a friend and do reach out to us via hello@restofworld.org. — Edited by Paula Cho
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