On any normal weekday, Dubai’s food delivery riders would be up and out early, but in recent days, banks of motorbikes have been parked outside their budget dormitories. “They are all sleeping,” said one doorman in Bur Dubai, the central district where many cram into apartments. Food delivery riders for Talabat, a unit of Germany’s
A small but potent piece of history is up for sale in Zurich this month, when Numismatica Ars Classica offers one of only three known examples of the “Eid Mar” aureus, celebrating the “liberation” of Rome after the bloody assassination of the dictator Julius Caesar on the Ides of March in 44BC. “This is among the most
It was just after Christmas when we finally snapped. My partner and I decided we had to tell the world about our second child, who had been born four months earlier. It couldn’t wait any longer. Some friends already knew. But we’re millennials, so only a social media post could mint it with the currency
Venture capitalists are ploughing millions into digital art, virtual land and online collectibles, the new frontier for investors seeking big returns in crypto. Digital items known as non-fungible tokens (NFTs) burst into mainstream culture last year, quickly becoming a multibillion-dollar market ranging from computer-generated art pieces to cartoon characters costing thousands of dollars. Andreessen Horowitz
It seems as though everywhere one looks in New York City, Latinx artists are making their mark. In April, El Museo del Barrio in East Harlem, established in 1969 as a neighbourhood museum by and for the Puerto Rican community, opened a major retrospective devoted to the work of its founder, Raphael Montañez Ortiz. Venture
EU high representative for foreign policy Josep Borrell is to be commended for his disarmingly frank comments (“EU weighs giving Hungary time and cash to agree oil sanctions”, Report, May 7) on the constraints facing Hungary as well as Slovakia and the Czech Republic endorsing the EU’s proposed embargo on Russian oil imports. Borrell rightly
With regard to Alan Beattie’s insightful commentary “Trade policy cannot fix America’s inequality problem” (Opinion, FT.com, May 11), we need to add one major issue — education and training. Presidents Bill Clinton and George W Bush, and former vice-president Al Gore, when promoting free trade, overlooked President Teddy Roosevelt’s belief that trade agreements should only
JML Stone highlights the “constant predatory (recruitment) activities of for-profit and non-profit US (healthcare) corporations in the UK” (Letters, May 9). Such “skimming off the top” of the NHS “inevitably means that excellent nurses and specialists are being sucked from the health service, but without any perceivable benefit to the indigenous population — in fact,
Sam Bankman-Fried, the billionaire founder of cryptocurrency exchange FTX, has amassed a 7.6 per cent stake in online retail brokerage Robinhood, calling it an “attractive investment”. Bankman-Fried said in a securities filing he has no “intention of taking any action toward changing or influencing the control of [Robinhood]” and bought the stake purely as an