As a Mage, I Only Want to Pursue Truth

A mage accidentally drifts to Blue Star. The intelligent life on Blue Star cannot influence reality by manipulating dark matter, thus the mage loses their casting ability.

In order to recover...

Chapter 219 Antitrust Fines

"Our products should be sold all over the world, and our technology should not be limited to the Chinese market."

"The fine imposed on us by the Europa League is within our means, and to date, our revenue within the Europa League has exceeded RMB 100 billion."

"A fine of five billion is expensive, but for now, it seems worthwhile compared to what we have gained."

The longer Li Miaomiao remained in her senior management position at a manufacturing and R&D conglomerate, the more rational she became.

If she were still a freshman in college, she would probably think, "Why not just not go into this market?"

However, when she truly has to take responsibility for the company and consider the needs of tens of thousands of employees, she cannot act based on her own emotions.

"We cannot survive without the global market."

"A complete ecosystem cannot be achieved by relying solely on the Chinese market."

"Unless we become like Tencent and only dominate the domestic market."

"The VR ecosystem is becoming increasingly complete, and we may become an indispensable part of the next information age."

"Therefore, appropriate compromises are necessary."

After sensing the dissatisfaction in Zheng Li's tone, Li Miaomiao offered some words of comfort.

Zheng Li: "These are within your authority, and you can decide for yourself."

"Also, I had a lot of inspiration when I went to study at the Chinese Academy of Sciences some time ago. You need to pay more attention to the company's affairs."

In Suzhou, Zheng Li's clone is now completely taken over by rudimentary artificial intelligence in the Pacific Ocean.

He is more rational than people think they are.

The AI ​​analysis concluded that the appeal would inevitably be rejected, and that the matter should be abandoned.

Instead of simply imposing a fine, the Europa League could increase its patent royalties after the patent for endorphin manufacturing expires.

Why not just contact the Europa League companies directly to recover the losses?

Why bother with pointless struggles?

Selling brain-computer interface VR devices at a markup is not unreasonable for monopolistic products, is it?

The explanation given is that rising raw material costs necessitate a corresponding price increase.

While endorphins can be replaced by morphine-like substances, brain-computer interface (BCI) VR has no substitute.

Consumer electronics batteries can be sold to European companies at a higher price.

How can we recover the losses without affecting the company itself, and what are the best course of action?

Artificial intelligence analysis should not fight on the enemy's battlefield, but rather be drawn into one's own familiar territory.

On the second day of trading, Kechuang Bio opened sharply lower, but the decline narrowed to less than 2 points by the close.