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Vietnamese culture community

This is a place for discussing the Vietnamese culture, language, and locations, and anything else related.

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Fun story of a backpacker from when Viet Nam first open.

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A Vietnamese click farm is accused of duping Elon Musk’s X out of a small fortune by exploiting apparently lax controls surrounding its “Creator Revenue Sharing Program” – an initiative touted by the world’s richest person as a purported way for premium users to “earn a living” through their activity on the site.

The eight-man crew operated out of a dingy office space in downtown Hanoi, where they “programmatically post[ed] computer-generated content” to a network of “inauthentic” X profiles set up using stolen identities “to engage in coordinated platform manipulation,” according to a federal lawsuit filed Thursday and obtained by The Independent.

It says these automated profiles would subsequently “‘like,’ ‘repost,’ and otherwise artificially engage with each other’s content, all for the purpose of deceiving X into paying out funds” based on what the company – which just last year enthusiastically touted a new “improved authentic engagements algorithm” – now claims were bogus clicks.

The “fraudulent scheme,” X’s complaint contends, extracted payouts from the Creator Revenue Sharing Program “by manufacturing the appearance of content engagement where none really exists.”

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Although the company’s complaint does not specify the exact amount of the outfit’s total take, it says the payments were funneled into at least 125 U.S. bank accounts, set up using stolen identities, and transferred to accounts in their real names at nine banks in Vietnam, across more than 1,700 individual transactions. The complaint was filed in Texas, where X is headquartered.

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The group also sold their automation tools and techniques, generating a separate stream of income by teaching others how to help themselves to a slice of X’s money, the complaint contends. One script, called the “XGPT Tool,” was advertised to tens of thousands of users on YouTube, TikTok, Telegram, Discord, Facebook, Instagram and X itself, the complaint goes on.

On top of the fraud allegations central to X’s complaint, the filing also accuses the Hanoi hackers of trademark infringement, asserting they specifically “misuse[d] and misappropriate[d] the Twitter and X Trademarks” in thumbnails for instructional videos posted to YouTube.

Broadly speaking, X’s complaint claims the alleged scam “has harmed [its] reputation and customer relationships by introducing low-quality content to the platform.”

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They sell hacked profiles, provide fake comments and likes and boost fake news. Investigation into the social media fraudsters based in Vietnam.

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cross-posted from: https://lemmy.world/post/29983590

Immigrant rights advocates say White House violated court order and ask judge to order nearly a dozen people’s return

Immigrant rights advocates have accused the Trump administration of deporting about a dozen migrants from countries including Myanmar and Vietnam to South Sudan in violation of a court order, and asked a judge to order their return.

Lawyers for the migrants made the request in a court filing on Tuesday directed to US district judge Brian Murphy, who had barred the Trump administration from swiftly deporting migrants to countries other than their own without first hearing any concerns they had that they might be tortured or persecuted if sent there.

They said they learned that nearly a dozen migrants held at a detention facility in Texas were flown to South Sudan on Tuesday morning. Murphy told a lawyer with the US Department of Justice during a hastily arranged virtual hearing that the potential violation might constitute criminal contempt and he was weighing ordering a plane carrying the migrants to the African country to turn around.

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The Trump administration has told its senior diplomats in Vietnam not to take part in events marking the 50th anniversary of the end of the war.

Four U.S. officials who insisted on anonymity to describe sensitive diplomatic decision-making said that Washington had recently directed senior diplomats — including Marc Knapper, the U.S. ambassador to Vietnam — to stay away from activities tied to the anniversary on April 30.

That includes a hotel reception on April 29 with senior government leaders and an elaborate parade the next day — gatherings hosted by Vietnam in Ho Chi Minh City, also known as Saigon, where the war ended with South Vietnam’s surrender.

Veterans returning to Vietnam have also been told they’re on their own, for public discussions they organize on war and reconciliation, and anniversary events. For many, it amounts to a sudden reversal after months of anticipation.

“I really don’t understand it,” said John Terzano, a founder of the Vietnam Veterans of America Foundation who served two tours in Vietnam and has attended anniversary events for decades. “As a person who has dedicated his life to reconciliation and marveled at how it’s grown over the last 20 years or so, this is really a missed opportunity.”

“It really doesn’t require anything of the United States to just stand there,” Mr. Terzano added, in an interview after landing in Hanoi. “This is all ceremonial stuff — that’s what makes it sound crazy and disappointing.”

State Department and embassy officials did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

A half-dozen people with knowledge of the directive said it was not clear where it originated or why it had been issued.

April 30 is the 100th day of Mr. Trump’s second term. Some U.S. officials speculated that a Trump appointee or a State Department leader feared drawing attention away from that milestone with events that might highlight America’s defeat in a war that Mr. Trump managed to avoid.

In 1968, a year when 296,406 Americans were drafted into military service, Mr. Trump received a diagnosis of bone spurs in his heels that led to a medical exemption.

Regardless of the reasoning for Washington’s retreat from the 50th-anniversary events, it adds another blow to decades of painstaking diplomacy by Republican and Democratic administrations, which had sought to both heal the war’s wounds and build a strategic partnership for countering China.

Mr. Trump had already frozen U.S.A.I.D. money allocated for addressing the legacy of the war. Even after officials restored some of it, many programs — for finding missing soldiers and demining old battlefields, for example — are still struggling with layoffs and uncertainty.

The foundation of bilateral relations, built by veterans from both sides, has essentially been weakened.

It was their emotional and physical hard work, with visits and civil society partnerships in Vietnam, that had persuaded former enemy governments to work through complicated issues like unexploded ordnance, soldiers missing in action and the toxic legacy of Agent Orange and other American herbicides.

The momentum of postwar bonding led in 2023 to a new level of strategic partnership between the two nations. And the work had been on track to expand, until Mr. Trump’s approach to the world, pugilistic and allergic to the acknowledgment of errors, strained relations.

“It’s taken decades to build the current level of mutual trust and cooperation between the United States and Vietnam,” said George Black, the author of “The Long Reckoning,” a study of U.S.-Vietnam relations after the war. “And the whole process has been underpinned by our willingness to deal with the worst humanitarian legacies.”

Mr. Knapper, the son of a Vietnam veteran who was sworn in as the U.S. ambassador in 2022, had embraced his diplomatic mission. As of a few weeks ago, he had been expected to attend the main anniversary events on April 29 and 30 alongside delegations from other countries, including Australia and the Netherlands.

He has often led ceremonies in which the United States gave artifacts from the war back to Vietnamese military families, and repatriated the remains of what were believed to be missing Americans.

In an essay for this month’s Foreign Service Journal, he wrote about traveling to Vietnam with his father and son in 2004, describing the trip as “a clear reminder of the sacrifices on both sides and the enduring importance of reconciliation.”

“As ambassador,” he added, “I believe that to truly strengthen our ties, we must engage deeply and directly with the people and leaders of Vietnam.”

With that goal in mind, before Mr. Trump took office, the two countries had planned to show off their hard-earned bond in a new exhibit at the War Remnants Museum in Ho Chi Minh City.

The museum, Vietnam’s most visited cultural institution, chronicles American war atrocities. Under the plan, one of its wings was to be transformed: Design blueprints aimed for a lively introduction to the activists and officials who helped forge a model of postwar recovery.

Organizers had hoped the ambitious exhibit would open this month, or at least by July 11, the 30th anniversary of the restoration of American diplomatic relations with Vietnam.

But it’s now in limbo. The project was funded by U.S.A.I.D., while the United States Institute of Peace managed the details. The Trump administration has dismantled both agencies.

“Reconciliation is in our economic, geopolitical and moral interest,” said Andrew Wells-Dang, a senior program officer at the peace institute who oversaw the museum project until he was fired a few weeks ago.

“U.S. government and nongovernmental partners alike,” he added, “are reeling from the effects of the new administration’s actions, leaving our Vietnamese colleagues distraught and confused.”

Vietnamese officials did not respond to requests for comment about the anniversary. But they have repeatedly nudged the United States toward responsibility for the war’s lingering impact, with some success. After high-level discussions, the Defense Department recently restored money it had set aside for war legacy issues, even though its administrative partner, U.S.A.I.D., is gone.

As a result, the cleanup process for contamination from Agent Orange at the Bien Hoa air base has been revived, at least for this year.

Mr. Trump’s tariffs, however, have added another layer of vexation. With a rate set at 46 percent for Vietnam — above nearly every other country — some U.S. officials thought Vietnam might disinvite diplomats to the anniversary events.

That did not happen. The tariffs are now paused, and the two countries are locked in negotiations, with Vietnam seeking a reprieve and U.S. officials pushing Hanoi to decouple from China.

Vietnam has often made clear that it would like to find room for its fierce independence and pursuit of prosperity.

The Chinese leader, Xi Jinping, recently visited Hanoi. The anniversary events could have provided a way for the United States and Vietnam to show that, despite a brutal war, they are still close strategic partners.

Instead, Vietnam is left to wonder how much it will now be asked to endure from its former adversary.

Mr. Terzano said that in a proud nation that cares deeply about symbolism, the U.S. decision to avoid the events looks “petty and nonsensical.”

He argued that the absence would strengthen the world’s gathering storm of doubt about America.

“You take a look at the chaos that has transpired,” he said. “Nations around the globe are all questioning: ‘Where is the U.S.? What does it mean?’”

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cross-posted from: https://lemmy.world/post/28219321

China and Vietnam signed dozens of cooperation agreements during a state visit by Chinese President Xi Jinping, as he aimed to strengthen ties in Southeast Asia on his first overseas trip of the year.

Vietnam is seeking to further strengthen cooperation with China in security, transport and securing preferential loans as well as technology transfers from China, VTV said. Hanoi also expects more balanced trade with its neighbor, it said.

Xi landed in Vietnam days after Donald Trump raised tariffs on China but gave everyone else — including Vietnam, which is negotiating over its 46% rate — a 90-day pause.

His regional tour, which will also see him visit Malaysia and Cambodia, highlights the tricky position Southeast Asian nations face. They’ve become key routes for Chinese exports to reach the US since Trump’s tariff hikes on Beijing in his first term.

Vietnam’s economy is heavily reliant on Chinese parts and raw materials, and the two sides are working to develop infrastructure to connect them more closely. China is Vietnam’s largest bilateral trade partner, with commerce totaling over $205 billion last year, and is a major market for Vietnam’s agricultural products from fruit to seafood, cashew nuts and coffee.

Vietnam’s government has vowed to speed up the progress of three railway projects connecting the two countries. This includes the $8.4 billion cross-border railway that will link the northern border city of Lao Cai to Hanoi and Haiphong port city.

Vietnamese Prime Minister Pham Minh Chinh said that aviation cooperation between Comac and Vietnamese partners has produced “increasingly positive outcomes,” after meeting the company’s chairman on Monday, according to a post on the government website.

Xi said at the meeting that China welcomes more trade with Vietnam and seeks increased cooperation in manufacturing and supply chains, as well technology including AI and semiconductor sectors, VTV said.

Archive link

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submitted 2 months ago* (last edited 2 months ago) by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
 
 

A new Bloomberg report suggests Nintendo will be able to “build a stockpile of millions of consoles” shipped from Vietnam to the United States ahead of June’s Nintendo Switch 2 launch. That’s based off data provided by global trade data and customs analysis company NBD, which showed Nintendo shipped more consoles from Vietnam in February than it had “in the previous six months combined,” Bloomberg reported.

Nearly all of the output from Hosiden Corp. — one of three Nintendo Switch 2 assembly companies — was sent to the United States beginning in January, per Bloomberg’s data. The jump was from 11% to “two-thirds over the previous 12 months.” That’s good news for Nintendo, which, up until Wednesday, was facing President Trump’s 46% tariff on imports from Vietnam. Those tariffs are on a 90-day hold, save for a universal 10% tariff; that hold may not last forever, but it gives Nintendo time to ship tons of consoles to the United States. Bloomberg said “roughly a third” of Switch 2 consoles are assembled in Vietnam.

Indeed, Nintendo of America president Doug Bowser told CNBC this week that a number of Switch 2 consoles are already in the United States and ready to go.

Nintendo moved some its console production out of China and into Vietnam and Cambodia during the first Trump administration — a move that will protect the company from Trump’s 125% tariffs on Chinese imports. Trump’s announcement of 46% tariffs on items from Vietnam threw Nintendo’s pre-order plan into a frenzy; the day Nintendo announced the console’s price at $449.99, the Trump administration announced tariffs on dozens of countries, including Vietnam. Pre-orders were set to begin April 9, but by April 4, Nintendo had delayed the process indefinitely.

“Pre-orders for Nintendo Switch 2 in the U.S. will not start April 9, 2025 in order to assess the potential impact of tariffs and evolving market conditions,” Nintendo said in a statement provided to Polygon. “Nintendo will update timing at a later date. The launch date of June 5, 2025 is unchanged.”

With the tariffs on pause — for now — Nintendo has time to build up its stockpile; Bernstein analyst Robin Zhu told Bloomberg that if tariffs stay at 10%, he doesn’t believe Nintendo will up its price. Nintendo hasn’t yet announced a new date for pre-orders.

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Google translate:

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Riot Games is surveying and planning to film a 9-episode TV series based on the League of Legends game and the online cartoon of the same name in Cat Ba, Hai Phong at the end of 2025. The episodes will be widely shown on platforms such as Netflix, HBO...

According to Ms. Rose Lam, Riot Studios surveyed many other countries in Asia such as Japan, Korea, Thailand and found that Vietnam is the best location for the company's creative and production needs. The team surveyed and evaluated Cat Ba as a suitable and highly feasible location.

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Emphasizing the viewpoint of the Party and State of Vietnam always wanting to be friends with all countries in the world for peace, friendship and development cooperation, the Minister affirmed that Vietnam is ready to cooperate and create the most favorable conditions for the research team and filming. At the same time, he suggested the film crew the following issues:

First of all, the delegation needs to clearly understand the consistent viewpoint of the Vietnamese Government that any activity on Vietnamese territory must comply with Vietnamese law, in the spirit of cooperation for mutual development, harmonious benefits, and shared risks.

Second, this is an entertainment film, so the company needs to study Vietnam's Cinema Law to have the highest quality footage, limiting offensive and violent elements that are not suitable for Vietnamese and international cinema.

Third, the filming location is Cat Ba archipelago, a world natural heritage. Therefore, the issue of heritage protection and environmental protection must be given top priority. Vietnam's viewpoint is not to trade the environment for economic benefits.

Fourthly, this cooperation activity is a vivid proof of the two countries upgrading their relationship to a Comprehensive Strategic Partnership. The Ministry of Culture, Sports and Tourism is ready to accompany and cooperate with the film crew and hopes that after this start, more Hollywood films will be filmed in Vietnam.

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submitted 3 months ago* (last edited 3 months ago) by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
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cross-posted from: https://lemmy.ca/post/39649897

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Fun video about football subculture of Vietnam and other Southeast Asia countries.

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cross-posted from: https://lemmy.world/post/23522006

Summary

Vietnam’s Decree 147, a restrictive internet law, takes effect, granting the government expanded control over online content under the pretext of “national security” and “social order.”

The law requires tech platforms like Facebook and TikTok to store user data, verify accounts, and comply with takedown requests within 24 hours.

Critics, including Human Rights Watch, warn it suppresses dissent and stifles free expression, while activists fear increased censorship and intimidation.

The decree also limits gaming sessions and impacts those earning livelihoods through social media. Activists see it as a growing crackdown on civil liberties.

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cross-posted from: https://lemm.ee/post/48659236

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