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On a quiet Tuen Ng: Appreciating Hong Kong’s dragon boat culture
By Truston Yu
Tuen Ng, commonly referred to as the Dragon Boat Festival, is celebrated on the fifth day of the fifth lunar month. 2021 marks a significant occasion for dragon boat in Hong Kong and the rest of the world. It has been three decades since this ancient Chinese tradition was institutionalized into a competitive sport, and Hong Kong will be hosting one of the biggest race events later this year. © Hong Kong Free Press Dragon boats racing in Hong Kong. Photo: Wikimedia Commons.
Today, Tuen Ng is mostly associated with a patriotic statesman called Qu Yuan. Qu was an official in the Kingdom of Chu during China’s Warring States period. After being falsely accused by other court officials and losing favour with the king, Qu committed suicide by jumping into the river. Countrymen paddled on long boats in search of Qu, and tried to scare away the fishes with loud splashes. They threw in glutinous ri
Kids in Hong Kong and other highly surveilled states worry infosec careers are just asking for trouble
Asia is already short millions of trainees; expert warns talent pipeline will dry up in response to government snooping
Laura Dobberstein Fri 7 May 2021 // 05:11 UTC Share
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Black Hat Asia Asian nations in which governments are keen on citizen surveillance struggle to develop ethical hackers, as prospective workers fear their activities may be misunderstood, according to security specialist Mika Devonshire.
Devonshire spent much of 2019 and 2020 in Hong Kong, working as a digital forensics and incident response specialist at Blackpanda and serving as assistant faculty at Hong Kong University.