Business
Lina Khan Raises the Heat on Amazon

Lina Khan takes on her longtime target
In 2017, Lina Khan, then a 29-year-old law student, shot to fame with an academic article about why Amazon should be contained. Cutting against prevailing trends in antitrust law, Khan argued that the e-commerce giant was unfairly dominating huge swaths of the American economy.
Now the chair of the F.T.C., Ms. Khan has finally taken on Amazon, though her agency’s new lawsuit against the company isn’t focused on antitrust. Still, legal experts are wondering whether, or when, she will follow through on the theory that won her renown in the first place.
On Wednesday the F.T.C. accused Amazon of duping customers into signing up for Prime, the company’s shipping-and-video-streaming service. Amazon, according to the agency, used “manipulative, coercive or deceptive” design tactics — known as “dark patterns” — on its website to push millions into enrolling, and “knowingly complicated” the cancellation process.
“Amazon tricked and trapped people into recurring subscriptions without their consent,” Ms. Khan said. The F.T.C. wants the courts to stop Amazon from engaging in those practices and impose a financial penalty.
The company denied the F.T.C.’s claims, calling them “false on the facts and the law” and contending that it makes things “clear and simple for customers to both sign up for or cancel their Prime membership.” Amazon added that the F.T.C. sued without advance notice, while the two were still negotiating over the claims.
This isn’t the showdown that Washington had expected. To be fair, the F.T.C. has made manipulative design practices around subscriptions a focus, and “going after a company as big as Amazon is sending a message to other players in the industry,” John Davisson, a senior counsel at the Electronic Privacy Information Center, told The Times.
Amazon had already girded itself for a fight with Ms. Khan, having moved in 2021 for her to be recused from F.T.C. antitrust inquiries into the company because of her earlier criticism. (Meta, the parent of Facebook and Instagram, had previously and unsuccessfully sought something similar.)
Still, the F.T.C.’s antitrust bureau has investigated Amazon over its competitive practices for years. And Khan has put the broader ideas behind her law review article into practice as the agency’s chief, leading many in Washington to speculate that a bigger battle with Amazon is a matter of when, not if.
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In other news, the F.T.C. and Microsoft will face off in court on Thursday over whether the tech giant’s $69 billion takeover bid for Activision Blizzard should proceed. On the witness list for the proceedings are Satya Nadella, Microsoft’s C.E.O., and Bobby Kotick, Activision’s chief.
HERE’S WHAT’S HAPPENING
The search for the missing submersible enters a “critical day.” More rescue vessels are poised to join efforts to find the Titan, including a robot capable of reaching the sea floor. Air supplies for the five passengers on board are believed to be close to running out, though some experts say careful breathing may extend that for some time.
Senator Chuck Schumer lays out a path for A.I. regulation. The majority leader called for an approach that prioritizes objectives like accountability, innovation and security, without endorsing any specific proposals. Emphasizing that Congress “must join the A.I. revolution,” Mr. Schumer is hoping that lawmakers can produce a bill within months.
The Senate Banking Committee approves a revamp of banking rules. All but two members of the panel agreed to tougher penalties for the leaders of failed lenders, more oversight of the Fed and other measures proposed in the wake of the regional banking crisis. The bipartisan move will put pressure on House Republicans to adopt similar legislation.
The Bank of England raises rates by more than expected. The central bank on Thursday increased rates by 0.5 percentage points, defying predictions that it would opt for a quarter-point rise. The decision was announced a day after the latest data showed that headline inflation in Britain was stuck at 8.7 percent in May, higher than economists had forecast.
‘A long way’ from Powell’s liking
Stocks appear headed for their fourth consecutive day of losses as investors worry that persistent inflation will pressure the Fed to raise interest rates not once, but twice more this year, risking a hit to the economy.
But not all is dreary in the markets, with the price of Bitcoin surging on hopes that the cryptocurrency may soon go mainstream, after a regulatory crackdown on some of the crypto industry’s largest exchanges.
Investors are coming around to the idea of prolonged higher rates. Testifying before the House Financial Services Committee on Wednesday, Jay Powell, the Fed chair, said that more increases to the prime lending rate may be needed to discourage spending by businesses and consumers.
“Inflation pressures continue to run high, and the process of getting inflation back down to 2 percent has a long way to go,” Mr. Powell told lawmakers.
That assessment is driving pessimism in the markets. Stocks fell, particularly tech shares that only a few weeks ago propelled the S&P 500 into a bull market on hopes that the Fed was nearly done tightening rates.
Meanwhile, bearish investors are increasingly betting that stock prices will go down. And economists are worried about the consequences of ending a pause on federal student loan repayments.
Bucking the gloom is … Bitcoin, which jumped above $30,000 on Thursday morning. Behind its rally is hope that regulators will finally accept the cryptocurrency into Main Street finance: Its price has jumped more than 20 percent over the past week, ever since BlackRock filed with the S.E.C. to run a spot Bitcoin exchange-traded fund. Shortly after, rival money managers followed suit. Another vote of confidence came from Mr. Powell himself, who said on Wednesday that cryptocurrencies such as Bitcoin have “staying power.”
The S.E.C. hasn’t approved any spot Bitcoin E.T.F. applications before, worrying that such investment products would be vulnerable to fraud and wild market swings. But Bitcoin enthusiasts are hoping that BlackRock — the world’s biggest manager of E.T.F.s, with plenty of influence in Washington — can change that.
“The likely assumption is that BlackRock may know something,” Nate Geraci, the president of the advisory firm The ETF Store, told Bloomberg.
The U.S. opens a new front in its fight with China
As the Biden administration seeks to check China’s technological expansion in the name of national security, it is looking into a new area of concern, The Times’s David McCabe reports: cloud computing.
The move may further complicate the digital cold war between the two countries, as American officials send mixed signals about how they want to deal with Beijing.
The White House is studying potential limits on Chinese cloud providers when they operate in the United States, and have discussed ways to restrict their growth abroad. As part of that effort, officials have spoken with American tech giants like Microsoft and Alphabet about how their Chinese peers like Alibaba and Huawei operate.
Behind the move is concern that Beijing could use data centers in the U.S. and abroad to get access to sensitive data. Similar worries underlie American efforts to contain Chinese telecom companies and TikTok, the video app. Chinese companies account for a tiny fraction of cloud services in the U.S., but have been making inroads in Asia and Latin America.
Among the steps the White House is weighing are tightening Commerce Department rules for Chinese cloud companies and talking to foreign governments about the issue. The Biden administration is also studying ways to help American cloud providers compete with Chinese rivals that, backed by government subsidies, could undercut them on pricing.
The potential cloud fight may only complicate U.S.-China ties, which have zigzagged in recent days. Secretary of State Antony Blinken’s visit to Beijing was meant to stabilize relations and produced positive noises from both sides, but the Chinese government bristled at remarks by President Biden on Tuesday likening President Xi Jinping to a dictator.
“It used to be you’d say someone is an investment banker, and that was a big deal. Now it’s like meh. … If I had to pick my favorite buyers, it would be big-time lawyers.”
— Lisa Lippman, a Manhattan real estate broker, on an apparent power shift on Wall Street: Bankers are no longer the top moneymakers.
Why antitrust cops may fight for wealthy golfers
As the Justice Department scrutinizes the potential merger of the PGA Tour and the Saudi-backed LIV Golf for antitrust concerns, a common question has been asked among deal watchers: Will the government really defend millionaire golfers who would be affected by the move?
The answer, DealBook hears: quite possibly — and there’s a legal reason for that.
The Justice Department under President Biden is focused on labor issues. The agency’s antitrust division cited them as a rationale for its successful effort to block Penguin Random House’s takeover bid for Simon & Schuster, saying that deal would have reduced author compensation. Labor concerns are also at the heart of the department’s existing investigation into the PGA Tour.
The department is looking to build up case law on the impact of deals on labor. While the “efficiencies” that companies tout as a benefit of mergers often translates to “fewer employees,” it’s difficult to pin those job cuts directly on takeovers.
But it’s easier to demonstrate a deal’s effect on labor in specialized industries like sports, where athletes don’t have many options on where they can work. Any work the Justice Department does here could then lay the groundwork for opposing deals in other areas, including entertainment, hospitals and media.
The politics of this now favor regulators. When the F.T.C. investigated the PGA Tour in the 1990s, several lawmakers wrote to the department defending the organization, and the inquiry fizzled out.
But the involvement of Saudi Arabia in the PGA-LIV deal changes the calculus in Washington. In scheduling a hearing on the potential deal, Senator Richard Blumenthal, the Democratic chair of a Senate panel looking into the matter, cited concerns about “what the Saudi takeover means for the future of this cherished American institution and our national interest.”
THE SPEED READ
Deals
Artificial intelligence
Best of the rest
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A first look at “Dumb Money,” the forthcoming movie about the GameStop trading frenzy that features Paul Dano as Keith “Roaring Kitty” Gill, Seth Rogen as Gabe Plotkin and Vincent D’Onofrio as Steve Cohen. (Vanity Fair)
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How Steven Spielberg and Martin Scorsese were drawn into efforts to protect Turner Classic Movies amid a potential reorganization by its parent, Warner Bros. Discovery. (Hollywood Reporter)
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Will Elon Musk and Mark Zuckerberg actually step into the octagon? (CNBC)
We’d like your feedback! Please email thoughts and suggestions to dealbook@nytimes.com.

Business
Help! I Couldn’t Take My Tall-Ship Voyage, and I Want My Money Back.

Dear Tripped Up,
Last summer, I booked a five-day sailing trip with Tall Ship Experience, a company based in Spain. For 1,350 euros, or $1,450, I would be a volunteer on the crew of the Atlantis, sailing between two ports in Italy. But eight days before, I had a bad fall that resulted in multiple injuries, including eight stitches to my face that doctors said I could not expose to sun or water. The Tall Ship Experience website clearly states that I could cancel for a full refund up to seven days before the trip. But the company revealed it was just an intermediary and the Dutch organization actually running the trip, Tallship Company, had different rules, under which I was refunded 10 percent. I offered to take credit for a future trip, to no avail. Finally, I disputed the charges with my credit card issuer, American Express. But Tall Ship Experience provided a completely different set of terms to Amex, saying I canceled one day in advance. The charges were reinstated. Can you help? Martha, Los Angeles
Dear Martha,
This story reads like a greatest-hits playlist of travel industry traps: a middleman shirking responsibility, terms and conditions run amok, a credit card chargeback gone wrong, and the maddening barriers to pursuing justice against a foreign company. However, the documentation you sent was so complete and the company’s website so confusing that I was sure Tall Ship Experience would quickly refund you.
Tallship Company did not respond to requests for comments, but did nothing wrong. It simply followed its own terms and conditions that Tall Ship Experience, as a middleman, should have made clear to you. When you canceled, Tallship Company sent back a 10 percent refund to Tall Ship Experience to then send to you.
That’s why I was surprised that the stubborn (though exceedingly polite) Tall Ship Experience spokeswoman who responded to me on behalf of the Seville-based organization argued repeatedly that although she regretted your disappointment, Tall Ship Experience was not at fault. At one point she suggested you should have purchased travel insurance, even as the company scrambled to adjust and update its website as we emailed.
Before the changes, the site contained two distinct and contradictory sets of terms and conditions: one for customers who purchased via the website’s English and French versions, and another on the Spanish version. (Confusingly, both documents were in Spanish.)
The English/French version — the one you had seen — promised customers a full refund for trips canceled more than seven days in advance. The Spanish one is vastly more complex, offering distinct cancellation terms for each ship. The Atlantis offered customers in your situation only 10 percent back.
Enter the stubborn spokeswoman: “The terms and conditions in Spanish correctly reflected the cancellation policy of the ship in the moment the client made the reservation,” she wrote via email. “We are conscious that at the time, the English version of the terms was not updated, which may have generated confusion. However, the official terms of the reservation were applied correctly.”
In other words, customers should somehow know to ignore one contract and seek out another on a different part of the site, both in a language they may not read.
But I am no expert in Spanish consumer law, so I got in touch with two people who are: Marta Valls Sierra, head of the consumer rights practice at Marimón Abogados, a law firm based in Barcelona; and Fernando Peña López, a professor at the Universidade da Coruña in A Coruña.
They examined the documentation and each concluded independently that Tall Ship Experience had violated basic Spanish consumer statutes. When I passed along their convincing points to the spokeswoman and alerted her that you were considering taking the company to Spanish small-claims court, she finally said it would refund you the remaining €1,215.
I felt a bit sheepish about exerting so much pressure on this small company — actually, an arm of the nonprofit Nao Victoria Foundation, which operates several replicas of historic ships — but the company should have taken much more care when it set up its website, Ms. Valls Sierra told me.
“If in your terms and conditions you say that up until seven days before departure you have the right to cancel,” she said in an interview, “and a consumer comes and says, ‘I want to cancel,’ you have to cancel their trip and return their money. They can’t use ‘Sorry, we forgot to put it on one web page, but we put it on another web page’ as an excuse.”
It is a principle of consumer law, she added, that confusing or contradictory contracts are interpreted in favor of the consumer.
The other troubling issue with the website is that you had no way of knowing that your trip was not operated by Tall Ship Experience. There was no such mention I could find on the website, which relies on marketing copy like this: “On board you will learn everything you need to know that will allow you to become one of our crew.”
Dr. Peña López, the law professor, wrote me in an email that “Tall Ship Experience is obligated to inform the consumer about the service it provides in an accessible and understandable manner, clearly indicating whether it is an intermediary.” He added that Tall Ship Experience “clearly” presented itself as the ship’s operator in this case.
As I mentioned, Tall Ship Experience did begin updating its site almost as soon as I got in touch, calling itself a “marketplace” for experiences and posting the correct terms and conditions (in the correct languages) on its English and French pages.
But Tall Ship Experience agreed to a refund only after I sent the company a compilation of the two experts’ legal analyses. “We are dedicated to creating experiences aboard unique boats, and not to legal matters,” came the spokeswoman’s response. “Regardless of which party is correct in this case, we would like to refund the full amount. We look forward to putting this to rest and to focus on continuing to improve customer experiences.”
You also said that American Express had let you down, by taking the company’s word over yours when you contested the charge. It is true that the document Tall Ship Experience sent to Amex (which forwarded it to you, who forwarded it to me), is wildly inaccurate, including only the terms favorable to the company and saying you canceled only one day in advance.
A spokeswoman for American Express emailed me a statement saying that the company “takes into account both the card member and the merchant perspectives.” But travelers should not mistake credit card issuers for crack investigators who will leave no stone unturned in pursuit of travel justice. A chargeback request works best when the problem is straightforward — you were charged more than you agreed to pay, or you never agreed to pay at all. Asking your card issuer to do a deep dive into terms and conditions is a much longer shot.
And as we’ve seen before (and might be seeing in this case) such chargeback requests often anger the companies involved to the point that they refuse to deal with you further.
If all else had failed, as I told you before the company gave in, you could have requested a “juicio verbal,” Spain’s version of a small-claims-court proceeding, via videoconference. It would not have been easy, said Dr. Peña López. Cases under €2,000 do not require a lawyer, but they do require you to have a Foreigner Identification Number, to fill out forms in legal Spanish (A.I. might help) and to find an interpreter to be by your side.
When I finally told you — in our 39th email! — you’d get a refund, you told me you had been “almost looking forward to a Spanish small-claims experience.” I admire your spirit, although I suspect it would have been quickly broken by bureaucratic and linguistic barriers.
If you need advice about a best-laid travel plan that went awry, send an email to TrippedUp@nytimes.com.
Follow New York Times Travel on Instagram and sign up for our Travel Dispatch newsletter to get expert tips on traveling smarter and inspiration for your next vacation. Dreaming up a future getaway or just armchair traveling? Check out our 52 Places to Go in 2025.
Business
In dizzying reversal, Trump pauses tariffs on most Mexican products
MEXICO CITY — In a dizzying turn, President Trump said Thursday that the U.S. would temporarily reverse the sweeping tariffs it imposed just days ago on most Mexican products.
In a post on Truth Social, Trump said he would delay for one month the imposition of 25% taxes on Mexican imports that fall under a free trade agreement that he negotiated during his last term.
His remarks follow comments from U.S. Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick, who on Thursday said in a television interview that Trump was “likely” to temporarily suspend 25% tariffs on Canada and Mexico for most products and services, widening an exemption that was granted Wednesday only to vehicles.
Lutnick told CNBC that the one-month delay in the import taxes “will likely cover all USMCA-compliant goods and services,” a reference to the U.S.-Mexico-Canada trade agreement, the North America free trade pact Trump negotiated in his last term. Lutnick said around half of what the U.S. imports from Mexico and Canada would be eligible.
Lutnick said the reprieve will last only until April 2, when the Trump administration has said it will impose reciprocal tariffs on countries to match the ones they have on U.S. exports. Later, he said that if Canada and Mexico don’t do enough to stop fentanyl from entering the United States, the 25% tariffs could be reapplied in a month as well.
On Tuesday, the U.S. began placing duties of 25% on imported goods from Mexico and Canada, with a 10% rate on Canadian energy products. It also began imposing a new 10% tax on all imports from China.
Trump has said the tariffs are punishment because the three countries haven’t done enough to stop the flow of immigrants without proper documentation and drugs into the United States — and are an attempt to lure manufacturing back to the United States.
China and Canada responded forcefully, both imposing retaliatory tariffs on U.S. goods. Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum had said that Mexico would also respond with counter tariffs, and had planned to announce them Sunday at a public rally in Mexico City’s central square.
In Canada, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said he welcomed news that the U.S. would delay, but said Canada’s imposition of retaliatory tariffs will remain in place for now. “We will not be backing down from our response tariffs until such a time as the unjustified American tariffs [on] Canadian goods are lifted,” he said.
Trudeau told reporters that the U.S. and Canada are “actively engaged in ongoing conversations in trying to make sure these tariffs don’t overly harm” certain sectors and workers.
Business
Trump’s Cuts to Federal Work Force Push Out Young Employees

About six months ago, Alex Brunet, a recent Northwestern University graduate, moved to Washington and started a new job at the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau as an honors paralegal. It was fitting for Mr. Brunet, 23, who said he had wanted to work in public service for as long as he could remember and help “craft an economy that works better for everyone.”
But about 15 minutes before he was going to head to dinner with his girlfriend on the night before Valentine’s Day, an email landed in his inbox informing him that he would be terminated by the end of the day — making him one of many young workers who have been caught up in the Trump administration’s rapid wave of firings.
“It’s discouraging to all of us,” Mr. Brunet said. “We’ve lost, for now at least, the opportunity to do something that matters.”
Among the federal workers whose careers and lives have been upended in recent weeks are those who represent the next generation of civil servants and are now wrestling with whether they can even consider a future in public service.
The Trump administration’s moves to reduce the size of the bureaucracy have had an outsize impact on these early career workers. Many of them were probationary employees who were in their roles for less than one or two years, and were among the first to be targeted for termination. The administration also ended the Presidential Management Fellows Program, a prestigious two-year training program for recent graduates interested in civil service, and canceled entry-level job offers.
The firings of young people across the government could have a long-term effect on the ability to replenish the bureaucracy with those who have cutting-edge skills and knowledge, experts warn. Donald F. Kettl, a former dean in the School of Public Policy at the University of Maryland, says that young workers bring skills “the government needs” in fields like information technology, medicine and environmental protection.
“What I am very afraid of is that we will lose an entire generation of younger workers who are either highly trained or would have been highly trained and equipped to help the government,” Mr. Kettl said. “The implications are huge.”
The administration’s downsizing could have a lasting impact, deterring young workers from joining the ranks of the federal government for years, Mr. Kettl said.
About 34 percent of federal workers who have been in their roles for less than a year are under the age of 30, according to data from the Office of Personnel Management. The largest single category of federal workers with less than a year of service are 25- to 29-year-olds.
The federal government already has an “underlying problem” recruiting and retaining young workers, said Max Stier, the president of the Partnership for Public Service. Only about 9 percent of the 2.3 million federal workers are under the age of 30.
“They’re going after what may be easiest to get rid of rather than what is actually going to make our government more efficient,” Mr. Stier said.
Trump administration officials and the billionaire Elon Musk, whom the president has tasked with shrinking the federal government, have defended their efforts to cut the work force.
“President Trump returned to Washington with a mandate from the American people to bring about unprecedented change in our federal government to uproot waste, fraud and abuse,” Harrison Fields, a White House spokesman, said in a statement.
Mr. Trump has vowed to make large-scale reductions to the work force, swiftly pushing through drastic changes that have hit some roadblocks in court.
Last week, a federal judge determined that directives sent to agencies by the Office of Personnel Management calling for probationary employees to be terminated were illegal, and the agency has since revised its guidance. Still it is unclear how many workers could be reinstated.
The abrupt firings that have played out across the government so far came as a shock to young employees.
They described being sent curt messages about their terminations that cited claims about their performance they said were unjustified. There was a frantic scramble to download performance reviews and tax documents before they were locked out of systems. Some said they had to notify their direct supervisors themselves that they had just been fired.
On the morning of Feb. 17, Alexander Hymowitz sat down to check his email when he saw a message that arrived in his inbox at 9:45 p.m. the night before. An attached letter said that he had not yet finished his trial period and was being terminated from his position as a presidential management fellow at the Agriculture Department. It also said that the agency determined, based on his performance, that he had not demonstrated that his “further employment at the agency would be in the public interest.”
Mr. Hymowitz, 29, said he was dumbfounded. “My initial thought was, obviously something is wrong,” he said. “How could I get terminated for performance when I’ve never had a performance review?”
Mr. Hymowitz, who had worked on antitrust cases and investigations in the poultry and cattle markets for about six months, said he was not given many further instructions. The next day, he decided to walk into the office and drop off his work equipment. “I just assumed that’s what people do when they get fired,” he said.
Around 8 p.m. on Feb. 11, Nicole Cabañez, an honors attorney at the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, found out that she had been terminated after she realized she could not log into her work laptop. Ms. Cabañez, 30, worked in the agency’s enforcement division for about four months, investigating companies that violated consumer financial laws.
“I was prepared to help make the world better,” Ms. Cabañez said. “It’s honestly very disappointing that I never got that chance.”
During her first year at Yale Law School, Ms. Cabañez said she originally planned to work at a large law firm, where she would have defended companies and made a lucrative income after graduation. But she said she wanted to work in public service to help people get relief through the legal system.
Ms. Cabañez said she was now applying for jobs with nonprofits, public interest law firms and local governments. But she said she worried that the job market, especially in Washington, would be “flooded with public servants.” She said she could not file for unemployment benefits for three weeks because her agency had not sent her all of the necessary documents until recently.
The impacts have stretched beyond Washington, reaching federal workers across the country, including in Republican-led states.
At 3:55 p.m. on Feb. 13, Ashlyn Naylor, a permanent seasonal technician for the U.S. Forest Service in Chatsworth, Ga., received a call from one of her supervisors who informed her that she would be fired after working there for about nine months. Ms. Naylor said she initially wanted to stay at the agency for the rest of her career.
“It was where I have wanted to be for so long, and it was everything that I expected it to be from Day 1,” Ms. Naylor said.
Ms. Naylor, 24, said she felt a mixture of anger and disbelief. She said her performance evaluations showed she was an “excellent worker,” and she did not understand why she was fired. Although she said she was devastated to lose her job, which primarily involved clearing walking trails in the Chattahoochee-Oconee National Forest, she was not sure if she would return to the agency in the future.
“It would be really hard to trust the federal government if I were to go back,” Ms. Naylor said. She said she was considering enrolling in trade school and possibly becoming a welder since she is still “young enough” to easily change her career.
Although some said their experiences have discouraged them from pursuing jobs with the federal government again, some said they were intent on returning.
Jesus Murillo, 27, was fired on Valentine’s Day after about a year and a half working as a presidential management fellow at the Department of Housing and Urban Development, where he helped manage billions of dollars in economic development grants. After standing in countless food bank lines and working in fields picking walnuts to help his family earn additional income growing up, Mr. Murillo said he wanted to work in public service to aid the lowest income earners.
“I’ve put so much into this because I want to be a public leader to now figure out that my government tells me that my job is useless,” Mr. Murillo said. “I think that was just a smack in the face.”
Still, he said he would work for the federal government again.
“For us, it’s not a partisan thing,” Mr. Murillo said. “We’re there to carry out the mission, which is to be of service to the American public.”
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