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Trump Lashes Out at Elon Musk and ‘Rotten’ Twitter Deal

(Bloomberg) — Former US President Donald Trump had harsh words for billionaire Elon Musk at a rally in Alaska Saturday, accusing the Tesla Inc. chief of inconsistency.

Referring to Musk’s recent pronouncement that he’d never voted Republican until this June, Trump said that contradicted with what Musk had told him. Trump followed with an expletive description of the world’s richest man and voiced his judgment on the Twitter Inc. acquisition deal that Musk struck but has since decided to withdraw from, calling it “rotten.”

Read more: Musk Backs Out of $44 Billion Bid for Twitter, Citing Bots

Trump’s comments come in the wake of Musk expressing a leaning toward Ron DeSantis, currently the Florida governor and a favored Republican candidate for the 2024 presidential election. DeSantis is, so far, the strongest potential competitor to Trump for the Republican nomination, and Musk’s influence — now numbering over 100 million followers on Twitter alone — could make his endorsement significant.

“I’m undecided at this point on that election,” Musk said in a June 21 interview with Bloomberg News. He said he will commit $20 million to $25 million to support his chosen contender.

After stressing the importance of free speech online, Trump urged the crowd to join his own Truth Social, a network closely modeled on Twitter’s interface and functionality where the retweet button has been replaced with a “retruth” option.

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©2022 Bloomberg L.P.

Rogers CEO Apologizes, Blames Network Failure on Maintenance

(Bloomberg) — Rogers Communications Inc.’s new chief executive officer apologized and offered both compensation and an explanation to customers after a prolonged network failure left millions in Canada without phone or internet service, knocked businesses offline and affected payment systems.

Industry Minister Francois-Philippe Champagne said the situation was “unacceptable” and that he had conveyed his frustration directly to Rogers CEO Tony Staffieri. Champagne’s department has the final call on whether to approve Rogers’ proposed C$20 billion ($15.5 billion) acquisition of rival Shaw Communications Inc. 

Rogers said Saturday afternoon that services had been restored and its “network and systems are close to fully operational” after a systemwide wireless and Internet outage that began Friday morning.

In the first explanation of what happened, Staffieri said the company believes the network failed after a maintenance update in its core network, causing routers to malfunction early Friday morning.

“We know how much our customers rely on our networks and I sincerely apologize,” Staffieri said in a letter posted to the company’s website Saturday. Rogers is treating the fact “that some customers could not reach emergency services” as a priority, he said. The company didn’t give an estimate of financial impact, but did say customers would be credited.

The service failure had wide-ranging impacts beyond an inability to make calls or use the internet. Interac, a payment system used by financial institutions across Canada, was unable to process debit-card transactions, which hurt sales at retail stores. Banks said some of their services were knocked out. Major events were canceled. Even the country’s telecommunications regulator said its phones weren’t working properly on Friday.

Fans of Canadian singer The Weeknd were disappointed as a concert in Toronto to kick off his world tour was postponed. “Been at the venue all day but it’s out of our hands because of the Rogers outage,” the artist wrote on Twitter, adding he was “crushed and heartbroken.” The venue was the Rogers Centre stadium — owned by the communications firm. 

The long disruption heaps more pressure on Staffieri, who was named permanent CEO in January after an extraordinary public fight among members of the Rogers family over who should run the company. 

Staffieri had been chief financial officer and was sacked by then-CEO Joe Natale last September for his part in plotting a palace coup to oust Natale. 

One of Staffieri’s allies, Edward Rogers, then went to court to assert his right to control the board, over the objections of his mother and sisters. He won, the board fired Natale and brought Staffieri back to run the company — with closing the Shaw deal as his top priority. 

Shaw is one of the largest internet and cable providers in the Canada’s western provinces. The transaction was announced in March 2021, but has been held up by objections from Canada’s Competition Bureau.

(Updates with CEO statement on service restoration, cause of disruption starting in third paragraph.)

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©2022 Bloomberg L.P.

Canada Will Return Sanctioned Nord Stream Turbine to Germany

(Bloomberg) — Canada has agreed to export a natural-gas turbine back to Germany for use in the Nord Stream pipeline, issuing a “time-limited and revocable” permit to exempt it from sanctions on Russia’s oil and gas industry.

The decision was made over the objections of Ukraine’s government and the large Ukrainian diaspora in Canada, who argued that sending the pressurization turbine back would undermine the sanctions regime. 

German officials have urged Canada to find a way to return the turbine, fearing Russia would use the issue as an excuse to shut down Nord Stream and cripple Germany’s ability to fill its gas storage tanks ahead of winter.

In a statement released Saturday, Canadian Natural Resources Minister Jonathan Wilkinson said the export permit was issued after extensive discussions with “our European friends and allies,” as well as the International Energy Agency.

“Canada will grant a time-limited and revocable permit for Siemens Canada to allow the return of repaired Nord Stream 1 turbines to Germany,” Wilkinson’s said in a statement.

“Absent a necessary supply of natural gas, the German economy will suffer very significant hardship and Germans themselves will be at risk of being unable to heat their homes as winter approaches.”

The turbine, built in Canada by Siemens Energy AG, was sent to Montreal for repairs and became stranded due to sanctions on Russia’s oil and gas industry because of its invasion of Ukraine.

Also on Saturday, Canada announced it would expand its sanctions on Russia to include industrial manufacturing.

“These new sanctions will apply to land and pipeline transport and the manufacturing of metals and of transport, computer, electronic and electrical equipment, as well as of machinery,” said a news release from Foreign Affairs Minister Melanie Joly.

“Once the measures are in effect, Canadian businesses will have 60 days to conclude contracts with targeted industries and services.”

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Musk Dodges Twitter Questions in Hot Sun Valley Speech

(Bloomberg) — The collapse of Elon Musk’s Twitter Inc. deal made the billionaire’s appearance at Allen & Co.’s Sun Valley Conference an even hotter ticket, but ultimately it left many attendees cold.

He declined to answer questions on the deal, though he did reiterate gripes over the company’s treatment of former President Donald Trump and how it shares user data. For many of those who had extended their stays in Sun Valley, Idaho, to listen to Musk, it was probably a disappointment, according to people at the closed-door session.

Instead, he took to the stage Saturday, less than 24 hours after scrapping his $44 billion bid to buy Twitter, and spent much of the time outlining his vision for mankind’s future on Mars, the people said, asking not to be identified.  

In the marquee address — typically reserved for the likes of legendary investors such as Warren Buffett — the SpaceX chief executive officer called Mars a “civilian life insurance” policy should disaster hit on Earth. The planet is necessary as a platform for human life to go on, when the sun eventually burns out, Musk added. 

Musk has long been a proponent of colonizing Mars, tweeting earlier this year about a possible human landing by 2029. SpaceX investors were in attendance at the Sun Valley conference, some of whom stayed for Musk’s address. The private company’s valuation has surged in its most recent funding round.

During the session, Musk was questioned on Twitter by OpenAI CEO Sam Altman, whose organization has worked closely with the world’s richest man. Musk was formerly on OpenAI’s board and has made sizable donations to the research company, which works to make artificial intelligence a benefit to society. Musk continues to be an adviser to OpenAI.

In a filing Friday, Musk accused Twitter of misrepresenting user data and of not complying with “contractual obligations” to provide information about how to assess the prevalence of bots on the social media network. His decision to walk away from the deal sets the stage for an arduous court brawl, with Twitter vowing minutes after the filing landed to fight back in court.

Read more: Musk Effort to Void Twitter Buyout Sets Up Delaware Court Fight

Hesitation

At least one attendee present sympathized with Musk’s decision to avoid discussing the deal, citing the pending litigation. A few attendees said they had mulled investing in Twitter’s stock in anticipation of the deal, however they hesitated due to the volatile nature of Musk and the reality that he may pull out of an agreement.

Musk did speak about the need for Twitter to share its algorithms and be more transparent on user data. He reiterated that he believed Trump needed a “time out” from the platform rather than the lifetime ban imposed after the former president encouraged supporters to march on the US Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021. 

During his appearance, Musk also spoke about his unhappiness at President Joe Biden’s administration for snubbing him and Tesla Inc. with its electric-vehicle push. The billionaire, who tweeted in May that he is no longer supporting the Democrats and will instead vote Republican, has been ratcheting up criticisms of the current White House. 

At the conference on Thursday, Twitter CEO Parag Agrawal didn’t respond to a question from Bloomberg on whether he’s worried about Musk walking away from the deal.

Read more: Musk Effort to Kill Deal Leaves Twitter With Only Bad Options

(Updates with more comments from Musk)

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BlockFi Investor Prepared for Heavy Losses as FTX Forged Deal

(Bloomberg) — Investors in BlockFi Inc., the hobbled crypto lender that received a capital injection from digital-asset exchange FTX US, are prepared for some of their holdings to be wiped out.

The Private Shares Fund, a fund overseen by Liberty Street Advisors, marked down BlockFi’s warrants as worthless in its fund report at the end of June, according to an analysis of data compiled by Bloomberg. On June 30, FTX offered a lifeline in the form of a $400 million revolving credit facility with an option to buy the company in a bid to save BlockFi after it was hit by recent liquidations. 

The Private Shares Fund, which specializes in investing in late-stage private companies, gave BlockFi series E warrants a valuation of as much as $67 per unit as recently as April. It also cut its valuation of BlockFi’s preferred shares to about $20 per share, down from $77 at the end of April.

All investment rounds in BlockFi are pari-passu, meaning that investors are on equal footing, according to people familiar with the matter who declined to be identified discussing confidential matters. Proceeds from the deal with FTX US will be also be pari-passu. 

The Private Shares Fund didn’t respond to Bloomberg’s request for comment. BlockFi directed Bloomberg to Chief Executive Officer Zac Prince’s Twitter feed where he announced on July 1 that the company had reached a deal with FTX US. 

The transaction represents a total value of as much as $680 million, a drastic shrinkage from BlockFi’s $3 billion valuation as of March 2021. BlockFi also previously looked to raise funding at a reduced valuation of $1 billion in the weeks leading up to its financial troubles.

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New York Cuts Back Covid Testing Amid US Summer Surge in Cases

(Bloomberg) — New York City is scaling back on Covid-19 testing sites despite omicron subvariants that are driving a nationwide rise in new case and hospitalization rates.

The city’s public health system has been shutting down hundreds of testing sites as public attention to the virus fades, according to its website. Meanwhile, the rate of positive results to total tests, an indicator of the speed of spread, rose to 15.4% this week, about four times what it was in April. 

Hospitalizations and deaths, which can be a lagging indicator, have fallen slightly in recent weeks, according to reports from the city’s health department. Mayor Eric Adams said Thursday that its hospitals aren’t stressed and the city is in a “good, stable place.”

“New York City and its Test & Trace Corps operate over 300 testing sites per day, including over 110 mobile testing sites and over 200 at-home test distribution sites,” a city hall spokesperson said in a statement. “Our shift to mobile testing and at-home test distribution dramatically expands the number of sites available for New Yorkers to get tested, ensuring that fast, flexible, no-cost COVID-19 testing is available to all New Yorkers.”

The omicron subvariants BA.4 and BA.5 are boosting infections, accounting for at least 70% of the total nationwide, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. While they’re more transmissible and better able to evade immune defenses than earlier versions, people who have been vaccinated or previously infected are generally suffering low rates of severe illness, according to Dan Barouch, a virologist at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center in Boston.

“I think the vaccines essentially have done their job,” said Barouch, who developed Johnson & Johnson’s Covid shot, in an interview. “They have transformed a life-threatening disease into one that is, in most individuals, a mild illness.”

Earlier this month, the Adams administration ended its use of a color-coded Covid alert system it implemented after he took office in January. 

The city, which is focusing on the rate of new cases per 100,000 people instead of positivity numbers as a key indicator, is still urging New Yorkers to get boosted and mask up indoors. But, according to Adams, the alert system was “not good for the war that we’re currently fighting.” 

‘See No Evil’

Not everyone is applauding the move. Gregg Gonsalves, an infectious disease expert at the Yale School of Public Health, said it’s short-sighted and ignores the reality of the ongoing outbreak.

“We’ve entered the see-no-evil, speak-no-evil, hear-no-evil phase of the pandemic: if we pretend it’s not there, even stop counting it, we think it will go away,” he said. “Sadly, planned ignorance is not bliss.” 

The nationwide, seven-day average of daily cases is over 106,000 as of Wednesday, according the CDC, up from about 25,000 in most of March and April. US hospitalization rates are also up slightly, from a daily seven-day average of 4,930 as of June 28 to 5,080 in the week of July 5. 

Confidence in the public health response appears mixed, according to a Pew Research survey showing that 43% of Americans say the country has correctly prioritized public health during the pandemic, while 34% say the outbreak has received too little attention. 

Mask Up 

Meanwhile, the virus’s continued march across the US has brought varying responses from health officials. Texas has seen an overall uptick in Covid cases over the past two months, and hospitalizations for the disease reached their highest since March.

Austin city officials have been urging residents to wear N95 face masks indoors amid widespread transmission and declining immunity. In June, the city reversed plans to shut down a mass vaccination site as demand surged for children younger than 5. 

In California, the daily positivity rate of 15% is the highest since January. Counties with high community levels of transmission include San Francisco, Sacramento and Ventura, according to the CDC.

While hospitalization rates in the Los Angeles County have remained relatively stable in the past month, BA.4 and BA.5 have become a cause for concern, Public Health Director Barbara Ferrer said in a Thursday briefing. Their ability to reinfect people who have been infected with other strains is particularly disturbing, she said. 

Other new variants could present the threat of a return to widespread severe disease, Barouch said, so it is important to remain vigilant. That means continued testing and monitoring, said Yale’s Gonsalves. 

The coronavirus “will continue to infect Americans, disrupt lives, send people to the hospital, some to the morgue, leave some with lingering symptoms for months, if not years,” he said. Stepping back from testing “isn’t a plan, it’s an abdication.”

(Updates with statement from city hall spokesperson in fourth paragraph)

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Bankers Look Past Musk’s Twitter Fickleness for Future Deals

(Bloomberg) — It isn’t the first time billionaire Tesla Inc. founder Elon Musk burned his investment bankers on deals and it may not be the last.

When Musk dropped a regulatory filing late Friday saying he was walking away from his $44 billion agreement to buy Twitter Inc., some of the bankers who were backing him felt a mixture of disappointment and relief even with millions of dollars in fees at risk, according to people familiar with the matter.

“He did burn bankers for tons of time,” said Susan Wolford, a former investment banker who was vice chair and ran the tech group at Bank of Montreal. “You have to take this to committee, you have to do all the work for something that large.”

While Musk has said he’s walking away, Twitter has vowed to keep the deal alive and has threatened legal action.

Many of the bankers, as well as Musk’s equity backers, had no heads-up from Musk’s camp that the filing was coming, with one person saying that, for legal reasons, the group in the know was kept small. Another person noted that the deal is now effectively a one-man show.

Asking not to be identified because the matter is private, they said they had an inkling of Musk’s second thoughts from the first time he tweeted that the deal was on hold in May.

Busted Hopes

It was the second time in five years that Musk fielded an ambitious acquisition idea that got Wall Street’s hopes up, only to change his mind. In that 2018 episode, Musk tweeted about taking Tesla private with the claim “funding secured.”

The Twitter agreement had made it to the announcement stage, though, with many banks lending their balance sheets and names to his effort, led by Morgan Stanley. According to Musk’s Friday filing, Morgan Stanley has spent much of the past two months “requesting critical information from Twitter.”

A representative for Morgan Stanley couldn’t be reached for comment. 

Fees Imperiled

The fee bonanza from the deal is now in peril. Twitter bankers Goldman Sachs Group Inc. and JPMorgan Chase & Co. were set to earn a combined $133 million in fees once it closed, according to filings. Morgan Stanley and the other banks working with Musk were also expected to have a big payday.

Banks and other advisers could still get a small fee even if the deal dissolves — but likely only a fraction of their take if it closed.

Even though they said Musk had lost some credibility, most of the bankers, who didn’t want to be identified, said they would jump at the chance of working with Musk again.

Musk’s business empire is the main reason. SpaceX was worth $125 billion in a fundraising round in May, making it the most valuable US startup on record, according to data from CBInsights. The bankers who stand to lose out on the Twitter deal still got closer to Musk during this process, perhaps allowing them to still feast on fees if SpaceX goes public as expected in the next few years.

Musk Owes

“After doing this, the bankers can say, you kind of owe me now. I didn’t get paid,” Wolford said. “They’re in pole position to lead the next deal. He’s informally obliged to pay them with something else.”

Tesla, which has a market value of almost $780 billion, could also pursue transactions, whether it’s M&A or debt financing. Musk’s futuristic brain-computer interface startup Neuralink has also been in fundraising mode and has attracted more money than other companies in the field. Meanwhile, his tunneling startup, Boring Co., was valued at $6 billion in April.

One banker said it’s hard to ignore the mercurial Musk, the world’s richest person, even if he shoots from the hip on megadeals. Musk’s personal wealth totals almost $227 billion, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

“He’s a once in a lifetime client,” said Mark Boidman, head of media and entertainment at Solomon Partners. “He’s created some of the most iconic companies, of course everybody wants to be his banker.”

While deal teams at the banks toiled over holiday weekends and through sleepless nights to get Musk to the finish line, it’s the nature of the business for those efforts to often go to waste, they said. Usually that happens before a deal gets announced, though, one person acknowledged.

Off Hook

Some of the advisers were relieved at the prospect of getting off the hook for the billions of dollars they agreed to lend Musk.

Since the merger was announced, the financing market for take-private deals has melted down. Banks have been struggling with more traditional technology acquisitions.

The buyout of Citrix Systems Inc., which was expected to generate hundreds of millions of dollars in fees, could now deliver $1 billion in losses instead, Bloomberg News previously reported. 

It’s also not the end of journey. Bankers will be closely watching the legal situation play out and haven’t ruled out the possibility that the deal could still close, they added. Twitter said within minutes of Musk’s filing Friday that it would seek to enforce its agreement in a Delaware court, one that typically frowns on efforts to back out of merger agreements.

Whatever the outcome, Musk seems likely to have his choice of bankers whenever he needs them next.

“I would work for Elon Musk any day,” said John Chachas, founder and a managing principal at Methuselah Advisors.

“He has flaunted convention,” Chachas said. “He is unconventional. He has no patience for bureaucracy, which he views as value negative. So if people find him frightening maybe that’s an institutional bias against creativity?”

(Adds more on equity backers in fifth paragraph)

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Adani, Asia’s Richest, Is Bidding for Indian 5G Phone Airwaves

(Bloomberg) — Billionaire Gautam Adani’s conglomerate is participating at an auction of 5G airwaves by India scheduled for later this month, the company said in a statement Saturday, as it seeks to enhance its presence in the country’s digital space.

The company, which is seeking to build its own digital platform, superapps and data centers, said it will need ultra-high quality data streaming capabilities that the 5G network offers. Besides, it will also help set up a private network spanning all its businesses — from airports to manufacturing companies.

“We are participating in the 5G spectrum auction to provide private network solutions along with enhanced cybersecurity in the airport, ports and logistics, power generation, transmission, distribution, and various manufacturing operations,” Adani group said.

The company will join India’s three private-sector mobile operators — Reliance Jio Infocomm Ltd., Bharti Airtel Ltd. and Vodafone Idea Ltd. — that are expected to bid for the airwaves. Adani, however, will not be entering the consumer mobility space, according to the statement.

Companies other than phone carriers can also bid for airwaves at the latest auction that will begin July 26, the Department of Telecom said in rules released last month, allowing companies to set up their own private captive networks.

With a net worth of almost $101.5 billion, according to the Bloomberg Billionaires Index, Adani has added about $25 billion to his wealth this year on the back of a runaway rally in his companies’ shares, making him the biggest wealth gainer globally.

Last month, Adani who is also Asia’s richest person, along with his family, pledged to give 600 billion rupees ($7.7 billion) to a slew of social causes to celebrate his 60th birthday. The donation will be managed by the Adani Foundation and will be targeted at bolstering health care, education and skill development.

The company said if it wins airwaves, that will help enhance investments by the Adani Foundation.

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Social Media Buzz: Musk’s Non-Surprise, Sunak, Holocaust Bill

(Bloomberg) — Here’s what’s buzzing on social media this morning: 

BUZZING COMPANIES

The internet is shocked, shocked that Elon Musk said he will walk away from his deal to buy Twitter. As its share price dropped, the company said it will take Musk to court to enforce the $44 billion purchase. The Tesla founder is scheduled to speak at Allen & Co.’s Sun Valley Conference on Saturday.

BUZZING TWEETS

Rishi Sunak’s slick video detailing his vision for Britain as Conservative leader and prime minister has raised eyebrows among potential supporters after the speed with which it was released prompted accusations of treachery against Boris Johnson. The former Chancellor of the Exchequer, whose wife Akshata Murty has a net worth of more than $1 billion, also faced criticism for being out of touch with ordinary Britons. 

An Ohio bill that would ban teaching or “advocating” divisive concepts — which would include the Holocaust — is receiving new attention after a Democratic state lawmaker reminded voters the legislation was still being advanced. Republican backers defended the bill, saying that “both sides” of the Holocaust would be taught. 

New York City has renewed its recommendation to wear high-quality masks indoors in public spaces, as the BA.4 and BA.5 subvariants of omicron push up Covid-19 cases again. The city’s public health system has been shutting down hundreds of testing sites as public attention to the virus fades, even as the rate of positive tests rose to 15.4% this week. 

 

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Rogers CEO Apologizes as Canada Blasts Firm for Network Failure

(Bloomberg) — Rogers Communications Inc.’s new chief executive officer apologized and offered compensation to customers after a prolonged network failure left millions in Canada without phone or internet service, knocked businesses offline and affected payment systems.

Industry Minister Francois-Philippe Champagne said the situation was “unacceptable” and that he had conveyed his frustration directly to Rogers CEO Tony Staffieri. It’s Champagne’s department that has the final call on whether to approve Rogers’ proposed C$20 billion ($15.5 billion) acquisition of rival Shaw Communications Inc. 

Rogers said Saturday morning it had restored services “to the vast majority of our customers,” more than 24 hours after the disruption began.  

“We know going a full day without connectivity has real impacts on our customers, and all Canadians,” Staffieri said in a letter posted to the company’s website Friday night, in which he apologized and offered a credit to customers. The company didn’t give an estimate of financial impact. 

The service failure had wider-ranging impacts beyond an inability to make calls or use the internet. Interac, a payment system used by financial institutions across Canada, was unable to process debit-card transactions, which hurt sales at retail stores. Banks said some of their services were knocked out. Major events were canceled. Even the country’s telecommunications regulator said its phones weren’t working properly on Friday.

Fans of Canadian singer The Weeknd were disappointed as a concert in Toronto to kick off his world tour was postponed. “Been at the venue all day but it’s out of our hands because of the Rogers outage,” the artist wrote on Twitter, adding he was “crushed and heartbroken.” The venue was the Rogers Centre stadium — owned by the communications firm. 

Network data from Rogers’ border gateway protocol indicates the problem was “likely to be in an internal error, not a cyberattack,” software developer Cloudflare Inc. wrote in a post on its website.

The long disruption heaps more pressure on Staffieri, who was named permanent CEO in January after an extraordinary public fight among members of the Rogers family over who should run the company. 

Staffieri had been chief financial officer and was sacked by then-CEO Joe Natale last September for his part in plotting a palace coup to oust Natale. 

One of Staffieri’s allies, Edward Rogers, then went to court to assert his right to control the board, over the objections of his mother and sisters. He won, the board fired Natale and brought Staffieri back to run the company — with closing the Shaw deal as his top priority. 

Shaw is one of the largest internet and cable providers in the Canada’s western provinces. The transaction was announced in March 2021, but has been held up by objections from Canada’s Competition Bureau.

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