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The tech guys are fighting. Literally.

The tech guys are fighting. Literally.

Indian Express12-05-2025
Written by David Yaffe-Bellany
Walking into the crowded hotel conference room, Andrew Batey looked like any other tech guy attending ETHDenver, an annual cryptocurrency conference. A venture capital investor based in Florida, Batey wore a black sweatshirt emblazoned with the logos of more than a dozen crypto companies, with names like LunarCrush and bitSmiley.
Batey, however, was at the conference not to network with fellow crypto enthusiasts but to fight one of them — live on YouTube. At the hotel, a short drive from the conference convention center, he was preparing for his official weigh-in, the final step before a fight the next evening in an arena packed with crypto colleagues. Under the watchful eye of a representative from the Colorado Combative Sports Commission, Batey, 40, stripped down to his boxers.
He weighed in at just under 195 pounds, on target for the fight. The bare-chested venture capitalist raised his biceps and flexed for the cameras.
The nation's tech elite, not content with unfathomable wealth and rising political influence in Washington, have recently developed a new obsession — fighting. Across the United States, men like Batey are learning to punch, kick, knee, elbow and, in some cases, hammer an opponent over the head with their fists. The figurehead of the movement is Mark Zuckerberg, the billionaire CEO of Meta, who has charted his impressive physical transformation from skinny computer nerd to martial arts fighter on Instagram, one of the apps he owns.
The tech industry's newfound devotion to martial arts is one facet of a broader cultural shift that has upended U.S. politics. Many of these tech founders-turned-fighters are chasing a testosterone-heavy ideal of masculinity that is ascendant on social media and embraced by President Donald Trump. An enthusiastic practitioner of Brazilian jujitsu, Zuckerberg, 40, lamented this year that corporate culture was getting 'neutered' and was devoid of 'masculine energy.' In 2023, Zuckerberg's fellow billionaire Elon Musk, a longtime corporate rival, challenged him to a televised cage match. (The fight never took place.)
Most of the tech world's aspiring fighters have a crucial thing in common: Before they started pursuing their extravagant new hobby, they made a lot of money.
In 2018, Batey founded Beatdapp, a company that develops software to eliminate fraud in music streaming. He also runs a venture capital firm, Side Door Ventures, that invests in crypto startups.
Two years ago, Batey's venture fund invested $500,000 in Karate Combat, a would-be competitor to the Ultimate Fighting Championship. The league operates as a hybrid between an athletic competition and a tech startup. Rather than offering traditional shares, Karate Combat gave Batey's firm Karate tokens — a cryptocurrency that fans can wager on Karate Combat fights, which stream on YouTube as well as TV channels like ESPN Deportes.
Karate Combat's primary business is professional fighting — mixed martial arts contests featuring seasoned athletes, some of whom also fight in UFC. (A representative for Karate Combat declined to reveal how much money the league generates.) Last year, the company created a new competition for amateurs and started offering it as the undercard at pro events, which are sometimes held at crypto conferences. The competition was called Influencer Fight Club, and its premise was simple: Put a couple of tech guys in the ring and see what happens.
Karate Combat's fights have an extensive following on Crypto Twitter, and Influencer Fight Club has helped attract more of those super-online fans. Over the past 18 months, the competition has featured some big names in the crypto world, including Nic Carter, a venture investor. At a crypto conference in Nashville, Tennessee, last summer, Carter knocked out a tattooed crypto marketer in one round. On social media, he was hailed as 'kingly' and adopted the nickname 'Tungsten Daddy.'
'This is an amazing clout-forming exercise,' Carter said in a recent interview. 'Not to be cynical about it.'
Batey attended an Influencer Fight Club event in Austin, Texas, last year and decided he wanted to fight, too. Once an amateur athlete who dabbled in boxing, he had gained a lot of weight as his career took off. He was about to turn 40 and needed to get into shape for health reasons. But he also wanted to have the sort of athletic experience usually reserved for serious fighters, who sometimes train their entire lives for the chance to compete on TV.
'This is my 40th birthday party — me fighting,' Batey explained. 'Maybe it's a midlife crisis.'
For four months, Batey put his career on hold and spent $75,000 on a trainer, a nutritionist and a rotating cast of professional sparring partners. After the fight was scheduled for ETHDenver, a conference devoted to the cryptocurrency Ethereum, he booked a block of nearly 30 hotel rooms to accommodate his friends and supporters.
At first Batey had trouble finding a suitable opponent.
Then a solution emerged: Chauncey St. John, a crypto entrepreneur based in upstate New York.
St. John does not seem much like a fighter. 'I've got this Mister Rogers vibe to me,' he said recently. But he had endured his share of hardship in the crypto world. In 2021, he founded Angel Protocol, a startup that aimed to help charities raise money using crypto. Unfortunately, he steered his clients toward an investment platform tied to Luna, a digital currency whose price crashed overnight in 2022, erasing much of what the charities had raised.
After the Luna crash, St. John, 38, retreated from public view. He reimbursed the charities with money his firm had saved up and embraced Christianity, searching for meaning in the worst moment of his career. One day in January, St. John glanced at a group chat that included other crypto enthusiasts. His eyes fell on a message from an industry colleague who goes by the nickname 'The Degen Boii': Karate Combat needed a fighter for ETHDenver.
The invitation 'felt like testimony from God,' St. John said.
A few hours after the weigh-in, Batey drove to the Stockyards Event Center, a venue on the outskirts of Denver where Karate Combat had erected four sets of stands, overlooking a pit lined with mats. An entourage came along: two trainers, a couple of fighters from Batey's gym and a filmmaker shooting footage for a documentary.
With 24 hours to go until the fight, it was time for the ceremonial face-off, an opportunity for trash talk.
Batey drew close to St. John, almost nose to nose. 'Are you gonna kiss me?' St. John asked.
'We'll find out,' Batey replied.
When the theatrics concluded, St. John walked down to the pit. Unlike Batey, he had not had much time to prepare; his entourage consisted of a single person, a trainer with no pro fighting experience.
Chiheb Soumer, a former professional kick boxer, was watching him closely. A native of Hamburg, Germany, Soumer, 36, had once worked as an in-house trainer for Snap in Los Angeles, teaching tech employees how to box. He traveled to Denver as Batey's trainer.
'I love to see these nerds all of a sudden try to man up,' he said.
On fight night at the Stockyards, the enemy combatants warmed up a few feet from each other as the arena slowly filled with spectators — men in crypto T-shirts and backward baseball caps, swigging beer and taking photos. At 6 p.m., a roar spread through the building, as St. John and Batey slid into the pit.
What followed more closely resembled a schoolyard scrap than a professional martial-arts bout. The choreographed moves that Batey had rehearsed were nowhere to be seen. Over and over, he threw punches and missed, lunging forward and then lurching back. St. John swung his arms wildly, whirling in a circle, like a helicopter. Next to the pit, a panel of announcers offered live analysis for the YouTube audience. 'What they lack in technical, they make up for in the heart,' one commentator said. His partner offered a blunter assessment: 'It's hilarious.'
By the end of the first round, Batey's nose was bleeding heavily. But soon he forced St. John to the ground and straddled him, raining punches down onto his head. Within 10 seconds, the referee intervened: St. John couldn't continue. It was over.
Batey held his arms aloft and started to dance, thrusting his pelvis toward the crowd. 'I just want to thank my wife,' he told the cheering crowd. 'Thank you for supporting me, making my meals, putting the kids to bed.'
Backstage, St. John was smiling. 'I didn't embarrass myself,' he said. All the effort had been worth it. He would happily do it over again.
This article originally appeared in The New York Times.
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Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 7 review: A new perspective on foldables
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Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 7 review: A new perspective on foldables

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It's still not a mass-market device, and I don't think Samsung is marketing it that way either. After reviewing the Z Fold 7, I was reminded me of the meeting with the real estate agents and the Z Fold 6 (if I'm not mistaken). I couldn't ignore the Z Fold 6 in their hands, and maybe those who have bought or are looking to buy a foldable have this psychology in mind: a show-off. That's definitely part of it, no doubt. But as a tech reviewer, I feel foldables are genuinely useful: the form factor the Z Fold 7 offers enables things you simply can't do on a traditional smartphone. This is something I have highlighted before and continue to highlight with the Z Fold 7. Not everyone wants a book-style foldable, but I guess more functions and features naturally mean higher cost. That should come as no surprise. It probably won't be for most people (and that's okay!), but I do want to point out that a lot of that cost is likely tied to aspiration value. 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Saudi Arabia plan Earth-shattering €350 million bid for Real Madrid winger Vinicius Junior: Report
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Saudi Arabia plan Earth-shattering €350 million bid for Real Madrid winger Vinicius Junior: Report

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India's playbook for US trade deal: Engage, but don't kneel
India's playbook for US trade deal: Engage, but don't kneel

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India's playbook for US trade deal: Engage, but don't kneel

President Donald Trump's tariff strategy is less about trade and more about geopolitical blackmail. By refusing to be rushed and diversifying its trade horizons, New Delhi shows that strength lies in patience and strategy, not submission read more As the new deadline for reciprocal tariffs looms large, US President Donald Trump on Wednesday said that the US and India are very close to finalising a trade deal, as high-level talks between the two sides continue. Both sides have sounded optimistic about the deal and signalled a potential breakthrough. But India must proceed with extreme caution while negotiating with the United States. The story behind Trump's tariff letters—sent to over 20 countries but conspicuously absent for India—reveals a troubling truth. These are not invitations to negotiate; they are ultimatums designed to bend nations to America's will. Trump's tariff strategy is less about trade and more about geopolitical blackmail. STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD President Donald Trump cranked up the pressure on nations like Japan, South Korea, and Indonesia by sending them the tariff letters. Penned in Trump's signature style—blunt warnings and a 'take it or leave it' tone—they outline steep import duties, some as high as 40 per cent, set to take effect on August 1, 2025. Trump's deal with Indonesia, which slashed tariffs from a threatened 32 per cent to 19 per cent, is touted as a victory, but it came only after Jakarta agreed to buy $15 billion in American energy and 50 Boeing jets. India, notably, has not received such a letter, a fact that speaks volumes about its strategic manoeuvring. Trump's approach is not negotiation but coercion, a high-stakes gamble that risks alienating allies and destabilising global trade. The problem lies in the mechanics of Trump's strategy. These letters are not opening bids in a good-faith dialogue; they are orders. To Japan, Trump wrote, 'Starting on August 1, 2025, we will charge Japan a tariff of only 25 per cent,' as if the rate were a favour. The subtext is unmistakable: comply or face economic punishment. This is not the art of the deal but the art of the shakedown. For countries like Brazil, slapped with a 50 per cent tariff, the message feels personal—it was slapped due to former Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro's legal troubles. It indicates political grievance diplomacy. The approach upends decades of trade diplomacy, which, for all its flaws, relied on mutual concessions and predictable rules. Trump's tariffs, by contrast, thrive on unpredictability, weaponising uncertainty to extract concessions. India's absence from the tariff letter roster is no accident. New Delhi has played a shrewd game, engaging Washington without bowing to its deadlines. Indian officials, led by Commerce Minister Piyush Goyal, have insisted on a deal that serves national interests, not one dictated by Trump's timetable. This defiance is rooted in pragmatism. India, one of the major suppliers of generic drugs to the United States, faces a looming threat of 200 per cent tariffs on pharmaceuticals. Yet, by holding firm and diversifying export markets—potentially to Asian nations hit harder by US tariffs—India has carved out leverage. This is a calculated refusal to be bullied. STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD The US must return to principled trade negotiations. Tariffs can be a tool, but they should be precise, not scattershot. Trump's unilateralism invites retaliation—retaliatory tariffs against the US in the name of safeguard measures if pushed. Allies like India should be treated as partners, not pawns. A trade deal with New Delhi, focused on sectors like pharmaceuticals and digital commerce, could yield mutual gains without the need for public ultimatums. Finally, global leaders must come together to resist coercive tactics, forming coalitions to counterbalance Trump's economic threats and taunts. Trump's supporters argue his approach gets results. The Indonesia deal, they say, proves tariffs can help open markets and boost American exports. There's truth here: the threat of high tariffs did push Jakarta to the table. And India's ongoing talks suggest Trump's pressure has accelerated negotiations. But the cost—strained alliances, disrupted supply chains, and higher consumer prices—may outweigh the benefits. A trade war with no winners is a poor legacy. STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD India's defiance offers a blueprint for navigating Trump's tariff storm. By refusing to be rushed and diversifying its trade horizons, New Delhi shows that strength lies in patience and strategy, not submission. The world is watching. Nations facing Trump's letters would do well to study India's playbook: engage, but don't kneel. For the United States, the lesson is simpler: true leadership persuades, not bullies. As August 1 looms, the global economy hangs in the balance. It's time for diplomacy, not diktats. The writer is a columnist. His articles have appeared in various publications like The Independent, The Globe and Mail, South China Morning Post, The Straits Times, etc. Views expressed in the above piece are personal and solely those of the author. They do not necessarily reflect Firstpost's views.

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